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Style Wars
UPC: 804791000412
Studio: Music Video Distributors
MPAA Rating: NR Contains:null
Summary: Calisthenic breakdancing and big, bold graffiti art were in top form and popularity in the U.S. in the early and mid-'80s, and this documentary extols the spirit and the talents of a variety of New York youngsters who were expert in either one or both of these challenging pastimes. Public reactions are wildly varied. On the one hand, the youth brave a police crackdown on graffiti and face barbed-wire fences and guard dogs in the railroad yards where they spray paint subway cars with oversized lettering. On the other hand, their art is shown in a municipal gallery and analyzed with the same seriousness as a Rembrandt or a Renoir. Whether viewers judge the graffiti an "eyesore" or a bit of post-modern expressionism, it is true that both the art and the dancing are incisively presented in this hour-long exploration. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
Category: Culture & Society
Awards: Grand Prize: Documentary – Sundance Film Festival
Features:
Style Wars
Over 23 minutes of original outtake footage
Feature commentary by director-producer Tony Silver and producer Henry Chalfant
Interview with Tony Silver and Henry Chalfant
Interview with Style Wars editors Victor Kanefsky and Sam Pollard
English subtitles for the hearing impaired
Digitally remastered 5.1 Dolby soundtrack featuring classic tracs from Grandmaster Flash, The Treacherous Three, Trouble Funk, The Fearless Four, Rammellzee vs. K-Rob and more
32 artist galleries including new interviews, trains and rare photos of Blade, Cap, Cey, Crash, Crazy Legs, Daze, Dez, Dondi, Doze, Duro, Duster, Frosty Freeze, Iz the Wiz, Kase 2, Kel First, Ken Swift, Lee, Mare139, Min One, Noc 167, Paze (Erni), Pink, Quik, Rammellzee, Revolt, Sach, Seen TC5, Seen UA, Shy 147, Skeme, Tracy 168, and Zephyr
Tributes to Dondi and Shy 147
Guest interviews of Fab 5 Freddy, Goldi, Guru, DJ Red Alert, and photographer Martha Cooper
"Destroy All Lines" 30 minute loop of over 200 whole cars and burners
Featuring music from Def Jux recording artists El-P, RJD2, and Aesop Rock, plus Mr. Wiggle Kimson "Angola-Red" Albert, and Darryl Jenifer
Style Wars
Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)
Release Date: 08/23/2005
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Pre-1954 Standard
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo
Runtime: 70 Minutes
Sides: 2
Number of Discs: 2
Subtitles: English
Region: Universal Compatability
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- The Film/The Filmmakers
1. Detective Bernie Jacobs [:31]
2. Kase, Butch, Dee5 & Dez [3:01]
3. Skeme & Barbara [1:14]
4. Dondi, Duro & Marisol [4:41]
5. Iz the Wiz [1:27]
6. Rock Steady [2:54]
7. Lady Pink & Cap [1:03]
8. Detective Hickey, Crash & Shy 147 [2:15]
9. Seen [4:28]
1. New York 1982 [2:12]
2. It's Called Bombing [1:20]
3. The Bench [1:02]
4. Going All City [2:43]
5. It Started in the Bronx & Harlem [1:40]
6. Under the City [2:10]
7. Dondi [:57]
8. Death Penalty [1:04]
9. A Beautiful Wall [4:03]
10. Doodling [1:42]
11. A Whole Miserable Subculture [1:57]
12. Getting Up: The Pioneers [3:44]
13. Vicious Style [3:11]
14. Fresh Extrateless Brothers [3:11]
15. Throwdown at USA [4:54]
16. How Big, How High [1:53]
17. The Buff [2:53]
18. People Are Amazed [1:57]
19. Blood Wars [6:39]
20. A New Movement [3:27]
21. The Professionals [1:48]
22. Negotiations [3:01]
23. Holding Back the Enemy [4:43]
24. When There Were Kings [3:22]
25. Rock You Out (End Credits) [:12]
Disc #2 -- Hall of Fame
1. Chapter 1 [:10]
2. Chapter 2 [:10]
3. Chapter 3 [:10]
4. Chapter 4 [:10]
5. Chapter 5 [:10]
6. Chapter 6 [:10]
7. Chapter 7 [:10]
8. Chapter 8 [:10]
9. Chapter 9 [:10]
10. Chapter 10 [:10]
11. Chapter 11 [:10]
12. Chapter 12 [:10]
13. Chapter 13 [:10]
14. Chapter 14 [:10]
15. Chapter 15 [:10]
16. Chapter 16 [:10]
17. Chapter 17 [:10]
18. Chapter 18 [:10]
19. Chapter 19 [:10]
20. Chapter 20 [:10]
21. Chapter 21 [:10]
22. Chapter 22 [:10]
23. Chapter 23 [:10]
24. Chapter 24 [:10]
25. Chapter 25 [:10]
26. Chapter 26 [:10]
27. Chapter 27 [:10]
28. Chapter 28 [:10]
29. Chapter 29 [:10]
30. Chapter 30 [:10]
31. Chapter 31 [:10]
32. Chapter 32 [:10]
33. Chapter 33 [:10]
34. Chapter 34 [:10]
35. Chapter 35 [:10]
36. Chapter 36 [:10]
37. Chapter 37 [:10]
38. Chapter 38 [:10]
39. Chapter 39 [:10]
40. Chapter 40 [:10]
41. Chapter 41 [:10]
42. Chapter 42 [:10]
43. Chapter 43 [:10]
44. Chapter 44 [:10]
45. Chapter 45 [:10]
46. Chapter 46 [:10]
47. Chapter 47 [:10]
48. Chapter 48 [:10]
49. Chapter 49 [:10]
50. Chapter 50 [:10]
51. Chapter 51 [:10]
52. Chapter 52 [:10]
53. Chapter 53 [:10]
54. Chapter 54 [:10]
Michael Buening
Shot between 1981 and 1983 and aired on PBS, Style Wars is remarkable as a relatively early filmed document of hip-hop culture at its source and an intelligent defense of an oft-maligned and misunderstood art form, graffiti. It is constructed as an investigative news piece with stentorian narrator Sam Schacht, presenting an equally weighed back and forth debate over whether graffiti is art or vandalism. But from an opening scene, when a young writer pouts while his mom harangues him over his hobby, it's clear where directors Henry Chalfant andTony Silver's sympathies lie. Cameraman Burleigh Wartes captures subway train murals at opportune locations, where the car-length paintings majestically unfurl for maximum impact. Editors Sam Pollard, Victor Kanefsky, and Mary Alfieri edit these sequences to the 4/4 beat of early rap music, one of the first attempts to develop a hip-hop-influenced cutting technique. Though not addressed directly, the documentary also helps refute a common myth about graffiti culture -- that it had an integral connection with break dancing and rapping and was mostly carried out by black and Hispanic kids. Some of the most interesting footage tracks writers on tagging runs -- jumping fences into train yards and navigating the city's underground tunnels. Though the passion and thrill of artistic discovery is palpable, one is left with the feeling that graffiti was, for the most part, a movement that flowered during a unique situation in New York's history. Style Wars captures this movement as it is just starting to wane, when mayor Ed Koch's crackdowns started having a serious effect and a general overall increase in New York City's quality of life demanded more effective cleanups. The growing media saturation is typified by the clueless and somewhat exploitative attention given by the Soho galleries crowd. Of further note are appearances by writers Dondi, Daze, and Cap One, and a performance by the Rock Steady Crew. ~ Michael Buening, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Sam Schacht
Actor
Wayne Frost
Actor
Tony Silver
Director
Tony Silver
Producer
Henry Chalfant
Producer
Country: USA










