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Clockers (film)

Clockers is a 1995 American crime drama film directed by Spike Lee. It is an adaptation of the 1992 novel of the same name by Richard Price, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Lee. The film stars Harvey Keitel, John Turturro, Delroy Lindo, and Mekhi Phifer in his debut film role. Set in New York City, Clockers tells the story of Strike (Phifer), a street-level drug dealer who becomes entangled in a murder investigation.

Clockers
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySpike Lee
Screenplay byRichard Price
Spike Lee
Based onClockers
by Richard Price
Produced byMartin Scorsese
Spike Lee
Jon Kilik
Starring
CinematographyMalik Hassan Sayeed
Edited bySam Pollard
Music byTerence Blanchard
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • September 15, 1995 (1995-09-15)
Running time
128 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million
Box office$13,071,518[1]

The film originally entered production with Martin Scorsese attached to direct; he had previously collaborated with Price on his 1986 film The Color of Money. Scorsese eventually dropped out of production to focus on his passion project Casino, at which point Lee stepped in to direct and rewrite the script, Scorsese remained a co-producer alongside Lee. Clockers received generally positive reviews from film critics, but was a box office failure, grossing only around $13 million on a $25 million budget.

Plot

In a Brooklyn housing project, a group of clockers — street-level drug dealers — sells drugs for Rodney Little, a local drug lord. Rodney tells Ronald "Strike" Dunham, one of his lead clockers, that another dealer, Darryl Adams, is stealing from him and that he wants Strike to kill him. Strike then meets with his brother, Victor, and asks if he knows someone who could kill Darryl.

Homicide detectives Rocco Klein and Larry Mazilli, riding to the scene of Adams' murder, receive a phone call from another detective who says a man has confessed at a local church to killing Adams. The police meet Strike's older brother Victor at the church and take him in for questioning. In the interrogation room, Victor tells Rocco that he shot Adams in self-defense. Rocco finds holes in this story and starts looking into Victor's background, which includes two jobs, a wife, two children, no criminal record, and aspirations to move out of the projects, and concludes that Victor is covering for his younger brother.

Rodney discusses Darryl's death with Strike. Later, Rodney tells Strike a story of a younger Rodney and Errol, where Errol threatened Rodney at gunpoint to kill a dealer, which he did. Back in the present, he tells Strike the reason Errol forced him at gunpoint to do so was so that Errol could hold something over him if he ever decided to tell on Errol, which was why he told Strike to kill Darryl Adams. Strike and Rodney have a falling-out after Rodney denies telling Strike to kill Darryl.

Rocco pressures Strike, but Victor sticks to his story, so Rocco convinces Rodney that Strike has confessed and informed on Rodney's drug ring. Rocco arrests Rodney and then implicates Strike in front of his crew. Strike tries to play it off and deny that he was involved in Rodney's arrest, but his crew begins to turn on Strike, leading to them labeling him a snitch. Rodney, calling Errol to notify him that he is in jail, puts a hit out on Strike. Strike then gets together some money and decides to leave town.

As Strike walks to his car, he sees Errol sitting on his car, deducing that Errol is there to kill him. Strike hides behind a fence, but a younger boy who admired Strike, Tyrone (Pee Wee Love), rides up to Errol on a bike and shoots him dead with Strike's gun. Later, Tyrone is taken into custody. With Rocco, Tyrone's mother (Regina Taylor) and Andre listening, Tyrone confesses that he got the gun from Strike. Andre storms out of the interrogation room and proceeds to look for Strike.

Andre angrily beats Strike in front of the whole project, and with a gun threatens the onlooking bystanders to stay back. As Andre threatens to kill Strike if he ever talks to or even looks at the young boy again, Rodney pulls up, which leads to Strike jumping in his own car and driving to the precinct, with Rodney following. Strike runs into Rocco, who now has an arrest warrant for Strike, and runs into the precinct just as Rodney pulls up.

Rocco tries to intimidate Strike into confessing to the murder, but he loses his composure when Strike continues to change his story. When Rocco grabs Strike and throws him against the wall, Strike's mother walks in with Mazilli and Victor's wife. She advises Rocco that Victor confessed to the murder immediately when he got home, and how Victor was physically unable to leave his bed. Strike asks his mom what happened to the bail money he gave Victor's wife, which leads to Strike's mother angrily throwing the money in Strike's face.

Meanwhile, Rodney proceeds to damage Strike's car, going as far as breaking the windows, damaging the doors and urinating in the car. Left with no other options and unable to go home, Strike asks Rocco to drive him to Penn Station.

As they are sitting in a car, Rocco threatens Strike that if he ever sees him again he will arrest him, let Andre beat him down again, then arrest Rodney on the same charges and make sure that Rodney and Strike share a cell and a bed in prison. Strike boards a train and leaves town. While Tyrone is playing inside his apartment with the train set that Strike gave him, outside the apartment, Rocco and Mazilli respond to the homicide of Scientific, one of the guys in Strike's old crew. The film ends with a shot of Strike looking outward on a moving train, apparently far away from the city.

Cast

Film poster

Critics and film buffs were quick to notice that the poster, designed by Art Sims, was similar to the artwork of Saul Bass for Otto Preminger's 1959 film Anatomy of a Murder. Sims claimed that it was a homage, but Bass regarded it as a rip-off.[2]

Release

Critical reception

The film received generally positive reviews. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes records that 73% of the 62 reviewers viewed it positively. The site's consensus reads, "A work of mournful maturity that sacrifices little of its director's signature energy, Clockers is an admittedly flawed drama with a powerfully urgent message".[3] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 71 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[4]

Roger Ebert gave the movie three-and-a-half stars.[5]

David Denby of New York said that while the original novel was "filled with operational detail" the film adaptation was "more emotional" and "less factual". Denby further explained that Spike Lee was "concerned less with Strike's spiritual condition than with the survival of the entire community."[6] Denby said that Lee, in the work, "jumps around a lot, telling his story in hot flashes" as typical in Spike Lee films, arguing that the technique makes the film "difficult to follow". In regard to the cinematography of Malik Sayeed, Denby said that it was "rough and dark-hued, with an almost tabloid angriness in the scenes of violence."[6]

Box office

The movie was a box office failure.[7]

Soundtrack

Clockers (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Soundtrack album by
Various artists
ReleasedAugust 25, 1995 (1995-08-25)
Recorded1994-95
Genre
Length51:48
LabelMCA Soundtracks
Producer
Singles from Clockers
  1. "Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers"
    Released: 1995
  2. "Love Me Still"
    Released: August 29, 1995
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [8]

Clockers (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) was released on August 25, 1995, through MCA Soundtracks. Composed of twelve songs, it features performances from Marc Dorsey, Rebelz of Authority, BrooklyNytes, Buckshot LeFonque, Chaka Khan, Crooklyn Dodgers '95, Des'ree, Mega Banton, Seal and Strictly Difficult. The album made it to #54 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart in the United States,[9] spawning two singles: "Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers" by Jeru the Damaja, O.C. and Chubb Rock, which peaked at #96 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Love Me Still" by Chaka Khan.

One song featured in the film but not included in the original motion picture soundtrack is R&B artist Philip Bailey's "Children of the Ghetto," from Bailey's 1984 album Chinese Wall.

Track listing

No.TitleProducer(s)Length
1."People in Search of a Life" (performed by Marc Dorsey)Raymond Jones6:13
2."Love Me Still" (performed by Chaka Khan and Bruce Hornsby)David Gamson3:26
3."Silent Hero" (performed by Des'ree)
5:01
4."Bird of Freedom" (performed by Seal)Trevor Horn5:14
5."Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers" (performed by Crooklyn Dodgers '95)DJ Premier5:04
6."Bad Boy No Go a Jail" (performed by Mega Banton)Salaam Remi4:22
7."Blast of the Iron" (performed by Rebelz of Authority)
  • Salaam Remi
  • DJ Trouble (co.)
4:12
8."Reality Check" (performed by Buckshot LeFonque)Branford Marsalis2:51
9."Illa Killa" (performed by Strictly Difficult)Ski4:29
10."Sex Soldier" (performed by Rebelz of Authority)
  • DJ Ali
  • DJ Trouble
3:32
11."Reality" (performed by BrooklyNytes)Uneek3:23
12."Changes" (performed by Marc Dorsey)4:13
Total length:51:48

Charts

Chart (1995) Peak
position
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[9] 54

See also

References

  1. ^ "Clockers". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
  2. ^ Schaefer, Stephen (September 8, 1995). "Poster Imposter". Entertainment Weekly.
  3. ^ "Clockers (1995)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved August 26, 2022.
  4. ^ "Clockers (1995)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
  5. ^ "Clockers". Chicago Sun-Times. September 13, 1995. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
  6. ^ a b Denby, David (September 18, 1995). "Hard Time". New York. Vol. 28, no. 37. New York: New York Media, LLC. pp. 72–73. ISSN 0028-7369.
  7. ^ Dutka, Elaine (September 19, 1995). "Weekend Box Office : 3 New Films Open Quietly". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
  8. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Clockers [Original Soundtrack] - Original Soundtrack | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
  9. ^ a b "Soundtrack Clockers Chart History". Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. Retrieved August 20, 2021.

External links

clockers, film, clockers, 1995, american, crime, drama, film, directed, spike, adaptation, 1992, novel, same, name, richard, price, also, wrote, screenplay, with, film, stars, harvey, keitel, john, turturro, delroy, lindo, mekhi, phifer, debut, film, role, yor. Clockers is a 1995 American crime drama film directed by Spike Lee It is an adaptation of the 1992 novel of the same name by Richard Price who also co wrote the screenplay with Lee The film stars Harvey Keitel John Turturro Delroy Lindo and Mekhi Phifer in his debut film role Set in New York City Clockers tells the story of Strike Phifer a street level drug dealer who becomes entangled in a murder investigation ClockersTheatrical release posterDirected bySpike LeeScreenplay byRichard PriceSpike LeeBased onClockersby Richard PriceProduced byMartin ScorseseSpike LeeJon KilikStarringHarvey Keitel John Turturro Delroy Lindo Mekhi Phifer Isaiah Washington Keith David Pee Wee LoveCinematographyMalik Hassan SayeedEdited bySam PollardMusic byTerence BlanchardProductioncompany40 Acres and a Mule FilmworksDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease dateSeptember 15 1995 1995 09 15 Running time128 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 25 millionBox office 13 071 518 1 The film originally entered production with Martin Scorsese attached to direct he had previously collaborated with Price on his 1986 film The Color of Money Scorsese eventually dropped out of production to focus on his passion project Casino at which point Lee stepped in to direct and rewrite the script Scorsese remained a co producer alongside Lee Clockers received generally positive reviews from film critics but was a box office failure grossing only around 13 million on a 25 million budget Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Film poster 4 Release 4 1 Critical reception 4 2 Box office 5 Soundtrack 5 1 Track listing 5 2 Charts 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditIn a Brooklyn housing project a group of clockers street level drug dealers sells drugs for Rodney Little a local drug lord Rodney tells Ronald Strike Dunham one of his lead clockers that another dealer Darryl Adams is stealing from him and that he wants Strike to kill him Strike then meets with his brother Victor and asks if he knows someone who could kill Darryl Homicide detectives Rocco Klein and Larry Mazilli riding to the scene of Adams murder receive a phone call from another detective who says a man has confessed at a local church to killing Adams The police meet Strike s older brother Victor at the church and take him in for questioning In the interrogation room Victor tells Rocco that he shot Adams in self defense Rocco finds holes in this story and starts looking into Victor s background which includes two jobs a wife two children no criminal record and aspirations to move out of the projects and concludes that Victor is covering for his younger brother Rodney discusses Darryl s death with Strike Later Rodney tells Strike a story of a younger Rodney and Errol where Errol threatened Rodney at gunpoint to kill a dealer which he did Back in the present he tells Strike the reason Errol forced him at gunpoint to do so was so that Errol could hold something over him if he ever decided to tell on Errol which was why he told Strike to kill Darryl Adams Strike and Rodney have a falling out after Rodney denies telling Strike to kill Darryl Rocco pressures Strike but Victor sticks to his story so Rocco convinces Rodney that Strike has confessed and informed on Rodney s drug ring Rocco arrests Rodney and then implicates Strike in front of his crew Strike tries to play it off and deny that he was involved in Rodney s arrest but his crew begins to turn on Strike leading to them labeling him a snitch Rodney calling Errol to notify him that he is in jail puts a hit out on Strike Strike then gets together some money and decides to leave town As Strike walks to his car he sees Errol sitting on his car deducing that Errol is there to kill him Strike hides behind a fence but a younger boy who admired Strike Tyrone Pee Wee Love rides up to Errol on a bike and shoots him dead with Strike s gun Later Tyrone is taken into custody With Rocco Tyrone s mother Regina Taylor and Andre listening Tyrone confesses that he got the gun from Strike Andre storms out of the interrogation room and proceeds to look for Strike Andre angrily beats Strike in front of the whole project and with a gun threatens the onlooking bystanders to stay back As Andre threatens to kill Strike if he ever talks to or even looks at the young boy again Rodney pulls up which leads to Strike jumping in his own car and driving to the precinct with Rodney following Strike runs into Rocco who now has an arrest warrant for Strike and runs into the precinct just as Rodney pulls up Rocco tries to intimidate Strike into confessing to the murder but he loses his composure when Strike continues to change his story When Rocco grabs Strike and throws him against the wall Strike s mother walks in with Mazilli and Victor s wife She advises Rocco that Victor confessed to the murder immediately when he got home and how Victor was physically unable to leave his bed Strike asks his mom what happened to the bail money he gave Victor s wife which leads to Strike s mother angrily throwing the money in Strike s face Meanwhile Rodney proceeds to damage Strike s car going as far as breaking the windows damaging the doors and urinating in the car Left with no other options and unable to go home Strike asks Rocco to drive him to Penn Station As they are sitting in a car Rocco threatens Strike that if he ever sees him again he will arrest him let Andre beat him down again then arrest Rodney on the same charges and make sure that Rodney and Strike share a cell and a bed in prison Strike boards a train and leaves town While Tyrone is playing inside his apartment with the train set that Strike gave him outside the apartment Rocco and Mazilli respond to the homicide of Scientific one of the guys in Strike s old crew The film ends with a shot of Strike looking outward on a moving train apparently far away from the city Cast EditHarvey Keitel as Det Rocco Klein John Turturro as Det Larry Mazilli Delroy Lindo as Rodney Little Mekhi Phifer as Ronald Strike Dunham Isaiah Washington as Victor Dunham Keith David as Andre The Giant Ashley Sticky Fingaz as Andres Scientific Atkins Regina Taylor as Iris Jeeter Fredro as Elvis Go Atkins Tom Byrd as Errol Barnes Lawrence B Adisa as Stan Gilmore Hassan Johnson as Trevor Skills Jeeter Michael Imperioli as Det Joey Jojo Thompson Mike Starr as Det Shawn Thumper Ferrell Paul Calderon as Jesus at Hambones Lisa Arrindell Anderson as Sharon Dunham Spike Lee as Chucky Big Chucky Bridges Sr Harry Lennix as Bill Walker Michael Badalucco as Michael Lil Chief James Peewee Love as Tyrone Shorty JeeterFilm poster EditCritics and film buffs were quick to notice that the poster designed by Art Sims was similar to the artwork of Saul Bass for Otto Preminger s 1959 film Anatomy of a Murder Sims claimed that it was a homage but Bass regarded it as a rip off 2 Release EditCritical reception Edit The film received generally positive reviews The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes records that 73 of the 62 reviewers viewed it positively The site s consensus reads A work of mournful maturity that sacrifices little of its director s signature energy Clockers is an admittedly flawed drama with a powerfully urgent message 3 On Metacritic the film has a score of 71 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 4 Roger Ebert gave the movie three and a half stars 5 David Denby of New York said that while the original novel was filled with operational detail the film adaptation was more emotional and less factual Denby further explained that Spike Lee was concerned less with Strike s spiritual condition than with the survival of the entire community 6 Denby said that Lee in the work jumps around a lot telling his story in hot flashes as typical in Spike Lee films arguing that the technique makes the film difficult to follow In regard to the cinematography of Malik Sayeed Denby said that it was rough and dark hued with an almost tabloid angriness in the scenes of violence 6 Box office Edit The movie was a box office failure 7 Soundtrack EditClockers Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Soundtrack album by Various artistsReleasedAugust 25 1995 1995 08 25 Recorded1994 95GenreHip hopR amp BLength51 48LabelMCA SoundtracksProducerBill Stephney exec Spike Lee exec Salaam RemiDJ TroubleBranford MarsalisDavid GamsonDJ AliDJ PremierGordon ChambersIke Lee IIIPrince SampsonRaymond JonesSkiSean Uneek McFaddenTim AtackTrevor HornSingles from Clockers Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers Released 1995 Love Me Still Released August 29 1995Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 8 Clockers Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released on August 25 1995 through MCA Soundtracks Composed of twelve songs it features performances from Marc Dorsey Rebelz of Authority BrooklyNytes Buckshot LeFonque Chaka Khan Crooklyn Dodgers 95 Des ree Mega Banton Seal and Strictly Difficult The album made it to 54 on the Billboard Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums chart in the United States 9 spawning two singles Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers by Jeru the Damaja O C and Chubb Rock which peaked at 96 on the Billboard Hot 100 and Love Me Still by Chaka Khan One song featured in the film but not included in the original motion picture soundtrack is R amp B artist Philip Bailey s Children of the Ghetto from Bailey s 1984 album Chinese Wall Track listing Edit No TitleProducer s Length1 People in Search of a Life performed by Marc Dorsey Raymond Jones6 132 Love Me Still performed by Chaka Khan and Bruce Hornsby David Gamson3 263 Silent Hero performed by Des ree Prince SampsonTim Atack5 014 Bird of Freedom performed by Seal Trevor Horn5 145 Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers performed by Crooklyn Dodgers 95 DJ Premier5 046 Bad Boy No Go a Jail performed by Mega Banton Salaam Remi4 227 Blast of the Iron performed by Rebelz of Authority Salaam RemiDJ Trouble co 4 128 Reality Check performed by Buckshot LeFonque Branford Marsalis2 519 Illa Killa performed by Strictly Difficult Ski4 2910 Sex Soldier performed by Rebelz of Authority DJ AliDJ Trouble3 3211 Reality performed by BrooklyNytes Uneek3 2312 Changes performed by Marc Dorsey Gordon ChambersIke Lee4 13Total length 51 48 Charts Edit Chart 1995 PeakpositionUS Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 9 54See also EditPortals New York City Film Law 1990s List of hood filmsReferences Edit Clockers Box Office Mojo IMDb Retrieved August 20 2021 Schaefer Stephen September 8 1995 Poster Imposter Entertainment Weekly Clockers 1995 Rotten Tomatoes Flixster Retrieved August 26 2022 Clockers 1995 Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved August 20 2021 Clockers Chicago Sun Times September 13 1995 Retrieved August 20 2021 a b Denby David September 18 1995 Hard Time New York Vol 28 no 37 New York New York Media LLC pp 72 73 ISSN 0028 7369 Dutka Elaine September 19 1995 Weekend Box Office 3 New Films Open Quietly Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 20 2021 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Clockers Original Soundtrack Original Soundtrack Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic Retrieved August 20 2021 a b Soundtrack Clockers Chart History Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Retrieved August 20 2021 External links EditClockers at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clockers film amp oldid 1129040782, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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