Chris Rock - Bigger And Blacker 65 min. NR 1999
Comedian Chris Rock makes a raucous return to his stand-up roots in this HBO special filmed at Harlem's legendary Apollo Theater. Despite his manic and profane delivery, Rock's comedy is often rooted in traditional subjects for comedians: family relationships, misunderstandings between men and women, and observations on how childhood has changed. But he takes his material right to the edge, proving himself to be a sharp-eyed satirist. Serious and timely issues, such as school shootings or children being neglected by partying parents, are tackled by Rock, who's not afraid to slip in a serious point while being hysterically funny. His defense of President Clinton against his accusers is a good example of how Rock's material is almost always bound to offend someone: he slices through the self-righteous rhetoric of the impeachment spectacle, but even the behavior he defends comes in for ridicule with jokes that are extremely funny as well as extremely coarse. The pace of this one-hour show is uneven, and some viewers will no doubt find Rock's penchant for using profanity as punctuation tiresome. But those who like intelligent comedy with a hard edge will find much to laugh.
Chris Rock: Bring The Pain 65 min. NR 1996
After two years of performing and refining his material in night clubs, Chris Rock launches his national tour.
Chris Rock: Never Scared 91 min. NR 2004
Chris Rock: Never Scared is the hot comic's fourth HBO special and proves as disciplined and trenchant as his previous cable concerts. Announcing he's a recent father, Rock proclaims his biggest job is keeping his daughter "off the pole," i.e., steering her away from the life of a stripper. Warming to the theme, Rock asks why so many strippers earn money to pay for expensive tuitions yet he's never received "a smart lap dance." Things turn topical as Rock argues that his government won't solve the murders of rappers. ("More people saw Tupac get shot than watched the last episode of Seinfeld.") After taking broadsides at Michael Jackson ("Ed Bradley tried his best to make Michael look like a mammal!") and David Blaine ("Are we so desperate we fall for a trickless magician?"), Rock builds to a near-lecture (funny, though) on why white America won't let people of color acquire real wealth. --Tom Keogh
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Chris Rock | Self |
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Slick Rick | Self - Guest Appearance |
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Doug E. Fresh | Self - Guest Appearance |
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Monteria Ivey | Self - Announcer |
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D. Life | Self - Guest Appearance |
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Ice Cube | Black Man |
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Horatio Sanz | Police Officer |
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Wanda Sykes | Self |
| Director | Keith Truesdell |
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| Writer | Chris Rock | |
| Producer | Tom Bull, Scott Butler, Sandy Chanley, Chris Rock, Michael Rotenberg | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
|---|---|
| Nr Discs | 3 |
| Screen Ratios | 4:3 Full Frame |
| Audio Tracks | English |
| Subtitles | Croatian | Danish | Dutch | English | Finnish | Greek | Hebrew | Norwegian | Romanian | Slovenian | Turkish |
| Distributor | Hbo Home Video |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | Apr 02, 2002 |
| Regions | Region 2 |
| Purchased | For $ 14.98 |
|---|---|
| Index | 237 |
| Added Date | Dec 12, 2012 01:15:23 |
| Modified Date | Mar 26, 2019 21:51:31 |