Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby Pass The Popcorn topic #428931

Subject: "Chris Rock's New Flick: GOOD HAIR" Previous topic | Next topic
iamibe7
Member since Jan 22nd 2009
226 posts
Thu Jan-22-09 05:29 PM

Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy list
"Chris Rock's New Flick: GOOD HAIR"


  

          

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/movies/396948_chrisrockfilm22.html?source=rss

Chris Rock's 'Good Hair' shines at Sundance Film Festival
By DAVID GERMAIN
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARK CITY, Utah -- Chris Rock was having a good hair day at the Sundance Film Festival.

Hours after President Barack Obama's inauguration, Rock sat down to talk about his Sundance entry, "Good Hair," a hilarious examination of the cultural pressures that prod blacks into costly, often painful methods to care for their hair.

The idea first hit Rock in the mid-1990s on a stand-up tour through Atlanta, where he came across the Bronner Bros. International Hair Show, a glitzy convention for black stylists.

"I thought, 'Wow, this would make a great movie,' but that was like 15 years ago, and no one was making funny documentaries 15 years ago," Rock said in an interview Tuesday alongside Nia Long, one of many actors and other celebrities Rock interviews in the film.

"So you cut to now, and I have daughters, and I'm really dealing with them and their hair a lot, and my friends have daughters, and we talk about our daughters' hair issues. I kind of saw where to go at it, and now people are making funny documentaries," he said.

"Good Hair," one of 16 films in Sundance's U.S. documentary competition, follows Rock from the Bronner Bros. show to neighborhood salons, businesses dealing in hair-care products and the streets of India, where human hair is a huge export industry for hair weaves.

"I was kind of scared to come to Sundance in a sense, because I think this is the blackest movie ever made," said Rock, a producer and co-writer on the film. "So I was kind of scared to come to Utah, because it's so white."

But Rock said Sundance crowds have given "Good Hair" an enthusiastic reception, bolstering his hopes that it can find a broad audience. Produced by HBO, "Good Hair" eventually will air on the cable channel, but Rock and his collaborators are considering a theatrical release first.

While loaded with the 43-year-old actor-comedian's wisecracking humor, "Good Hair" also raises serious questions about identity and equality among black women who feel they need long, straight, silky hair to fit into white society.

"It's this whole thing about approval. That approval is not simply, 'I want white people to love me.' It's like, 'I need a job. I want to move forward, and if I have a hairstyle that is somewhat intimidating, that's going to stop me from moving forward,' " said Nelson George, executive producer of "Good Hair."

Rock interviews women who undergo hair-relaxing treatments with chemicals that burn their scalps and others who pay thousands of dollars for hair weaves. Along the way, he trades witty, insightful observations with such figures as Maya Angelou, the Rev. Al Sharpton, actors Raven-Symone and Tracie Thoms, and singers Eve and Ice-T.

Long talks candidly in the film about her own perms and weaves, but in the interview with Rock she also speaks hopefully about how Obama, his wife and their two daughters can help blacks overcome the cultural inferiority complex that prompts them to change their hair.

"Just seeing that family photo and seeing the daughters with their hair in cornrows sometimes, it resonates for me in such a huge way," Long said. "I just feel finally we have an image that's the most powerful image in our country that actually is a part of who I am."

Rock also reveled in Obama's inauguration, but he joked about another hurdle still facing blacks.

"Excellent black people have always been compensated for excellence. Always," Rock said. "The real equality is when we can have a black president as dumb as George Bush. That's when we're really equal. That's when the dream has come true."

  

Printer-friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote


Chris Rock's New Flick: GOOD HAIR [View all] , iamibe7, Thu Jan-22-09 05:29 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I just read about it, am looking forward to it
Jan 22nd 2009
1
Documentaries is probably a good vehicle for Rock...
Jan 22nd 2009
2
^^^The truth^^^
Aug 03rd 2009
11
      LOL@ Money Talks
Aug 03rd 2009
12
           The Vic Damone segment alone makes that classic, but I digress...
Aug 12th 2009
16
What does he mean by "Good Hair?"
Jan 23rd 2009
3
well played
Jan 23rd 2009
4
I'm just 1 black woman, but this smells like some bullshit to me.
Jan 23rd 2009
5
What set off alarm bells for you?
Aug 03rd 2009
9
Trailer's up
Aug 03rd 2009
6
Looks great.
Aug 03rd 2009
7
Looks promising
Aug 03rd 2009
8
I think it'll be good...and LOL @ Rev. Al.
Aug 03rd 2009
10
That looks good
Aug 04th 2009
13
i lol'd @ calling Eve and Ice-T "singers"
Aug 04th 2009
14
I'm in
Aug 04th 2009
15
Seen it. It's hilarious, touching, and undeniably BLACK.
Sep 25th 2009
17
"So that can there, has a good perm"
Sep 25th 2009
18
Al Sharpton had the Best Quote in that flick:
Oct 27th 2009
19
Me and the wife saw it Sunday
Oct 29th 2009
20
RE: Very informative and entertaining
Oct 30th 2009
21
Very illuminating
Nov 04th 2009
22
just saw it, here are my comments
Nov 10th 2009
23
That Indian Temple stuff was wild.
Feb 22nd 2010
24
Informative and better than anticipated
Feb 22nd 2010
25
too much focus on the competition
Feb 22nd 2010
26

Lobby Pass The Popcorn topic #428931 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com