Rize

Tommy the Clown  Actor

PG13

MPAA Rating: PG13
Contains:Brief Nudity,Adult Situations,Adult Language,Drug Content

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  • Overview
  • Format Details
  • Edtitorial Reviews
  • Cast & Production Credits
Rize

Theatrical Release Date: 2005 06 24 (USA)

UPC: 031398183112

Studio: Lions Gate

MPAA Rating: PG13   Contains:[Brief Nudity, Adult Situations, Adult Language, Drug Content]

Summary: Noted photographer David LaChapelle makes his feature directorial debut with this documentary on a new facet of street culture in South Central Los Angeles. In 1992, after long-simmering racial tensions in Los Angeles erupted in riots following the verdicts in the Rodney King trial, a man named Tommy Johnson sought to spread a new message in a new way to the city's African-Americans. Creating a character called Tommy the Clown, Johnson developed an act that combined hip-hop-flavored comedy and dancing with an anti-gang and anti-violence message. Johnson's performances became wildly popular in South Central -- so much so that at one point, 50 different groups inspired by Johnson's example were performing in the area. In time, Johnson's loose-limbed dance style inspired a new wave of hip-hop street dancing called "krumping," a wildly athletic style in which arms, legs, and bodies fly with a frenzied abandon that moves at almost inhuman speeds. Rize follows the birth of clown dancing and krumping in South Central, and records how many young people have adopted the dance as a style of competition, offering a safer and healthier alternative to the gang culture that has long dominated Los Angeles. Rize premiered at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Category: Culture & Society

Features: Theatrical full screen version
DVD introduction with cast and director David LaChapelle
Filmmaking insight with director and director of photography
New dancer interviews with director David LaChapelle
Tribeca film festival Q&A with cast
David LaChapelle photo gallery
Dance moves by Rize dancers
Extended dances
Deleted scenes
Director commentary
5.1 and 2.0 Dolby Digital audio
English and Spanish subtitles
Trailers

Rize

Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)

Release Date: 10/25/2005

Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Pre-1954 Standard

Audio: DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo, DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1

Runtime: 84 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: English,Spanish

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Chapters: Disc #1 -- Rize
1. Main Titles/The Riots [3:11]
2. Take It by Storm [1:31]
3. Tommy the Clown [7:37]
4. Doing Something Positive [4:37]
5. Happy Birthday [2:10]
6. Stripper Dance [3:38]
7. Krump [5:49]
8. Our Ghetto Ballet [5:12]
9. Tight Eyez and Family [3:54]
10. Miss Prissy [2:39]
11. Don't Hold Back [2:26]
12. The Battle Zone [3:43]
13. Preparing for Battle [3:28]
14. Miss Prissy Vs. La Ni?a [2:34]
15. Clowns Vs. Krumpers [5:23]
16. Backstage [2:57]
17. Amazing Grace [8:47]
18. God's Gift [6:02]
19. Curtain Call [3:57]
20. There is No Limit/End Credits [7:13]

-1

The subject matter of Rize may be familiar to some as the target of a famous South Park parody, or as the central activity in You Got Served, the failed fiction-film treatment of competitive urban dancing (which that classic South Park episode also skewers). But only in the documentary format -- where the moves aren't, nor could they possibly be, choreographed -- can a viewer truly appreciate the whiplash bursts of adrenaline known as krumping. Even those who think they understand the scene may not be aware that this electric form originated, more or less, with a man in clown makeup. Rize not only explains that apparent paradox, but goes far deeper into the surrounding Los Angeles youth culture -- chosen by many as an alternative to gang violence -- than it might need to. Why wouldn't it need to? Because the phenomenon David LaChapelle's film captures is so vibrant, so unpredictable, and so enthrallingly watchable, it would work almost as well with no narrative spine at all. The fascination of watching body parts flail -- in all their incomprehensible, improvisational brilliance -- never dwindles. It is, however, somewhat disappointing that the film closes with a Hollywood-style climax, a dance-off known as Tommy the Clown's Battle Zone. The essence of clowning and krumping is that they channel the emotional landscape of an individual dancer, making them too subjective to be compared qualitatively, and it's often difficult to determine why one side is awarded victory over the other, except for the relative boisterousness of the crowd. Most of this film's viewers won't have that problem, wanting to cheer all the participants in Rize with equal vigor. Not only are they genius performers, but they stand triumphant over other life choices that operate perilously close to their arena. ~ Rovi

Cast and Crew: Baby Tight Eyez  Actor 
Lil C  Actor 
Dragon  Actor 
Larry  Actor 
Quinesha  Actor 
Tommy the Clown  Actor 
Ms. Prissy  Actor 
El Nino  Actor 
Swoop  Actor 
Daisy  Actor 
Lil Tommy  Actor 
La Nina  Actor 
Tight Eyez  Actor 
Big X  Actor 
Stavros Merjos  Executive Producer 
David LaChapelle  Director 
David LaChapelle  Producer 
Marc Hawker  Producer 
Ishbel Whitaker  Executive Producer 
Richmond Talauega  Producer 
Ellen Jacobson-Clarke  Executive Producer 
Ellen Jacobson-Clarke  Producer 
Tone Talauega  Producer 
Barry Peele  Executive Producer 
Rebecca Skinner  Executive Producer 
Amy Marie Beauchamp  Composer (Music Score) 
Jose Cancella  Composer (Music Score) 

Country: USA

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