Always Outnumbered



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Laurence Fishburne Socrates Fortlow
Daniel Williams Darryl
Bill Cobbs Right Burke
Natalie Cole Iula Brown
Laurie Metcalf Halley Grimes
Alan Wilder Anton Crier
Cicely Tyson Luvia
Bridgid Coulter Corina M'Shalla
Bill Nunn Howard M'Shalla
Isaiah Washington Wilfred
Bill Duke Blackbird Wills
Kevin Carroll Pegus
Jamaal Carter Phillip
John Toles-Bey Stoney Wiley
Brooke Marie Bridges Winnie M'Shalla

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24 Comments »

    Pages: « 5 4 3 [2] 1 » Show All

  • Love, Death, Hero

    "You can’t save me"Worthwhile movie; almost experimental in its creativity and effort to avoid
    cliche’s. Doesn’t really matter whether I think this movie is "Good" or
    not;
    it is there; you have time. Watch it; feel it; think it for
    yourself.

    thumper-19 from Oak Island NC - 4 June 2002
  • Questionable Messages

    Laurence Fishburne is one of my favorite actors, and he is tremendous in
    this. The problem I had with this movie is the motivations and lessons it
    portrays. The messages seem to be self-defeating for a black man living in
    the circumstances he did. There seems to be a cycle, and a
    simple-mindedness, to his thoughts and behaviors, that will always lead him
    back to where he is. He tries to find a job with a store, which is a good
    distance from where he lives. He is told that he lives out of the store’s
    area, and he has no phone. He fumes and complains about the unfairness of it
    all, but instead of looking for a job closer to where he lives, he wants to
    continue to press the issue with this particular store, as if this will
    prove some point. There doesn’t seem to be anything to gain here. He
    continually makes things harder on himself, and then complains that he can’t
    get a break. Of course, the message is to become a more self-reliant man, and there is
    certainly nothing wrong with that, but the self-reliance aspect is almost
    taken to the point of absurdity, and to the point where he is likely to put
    himself right back in prison. This may be a reality for some people, but it
    is a reality that has no real, positive outcome. There are better ways to
    lift himself out of the circumstances he finds himself in, but pursuing
    solutions that are guaranteed to fail, and the bitterness that follows,
    pretty well ensures continued poverty.There just wasn’t much to uplift you in this movie. Not that there had to
    be, but I would have much rather seen a more realistic take on a man, who
    has seen more than his share of hard luck and hard times, struggling to make
    a better life for himself with whatever the world can offer, instead of
    dragging himself down when he feels someone has slighted
    him.The friendship of the young boy was troubling, also. The message Socrates
    conveys to the kid is that force is what gains respect from your peers. This
    was a stupid, infantile approach for this at-risk kid. The fact that the kid
    picks up a gun should not have been surprising to anyone. This would
    naturally follow exactly the lesson he was trying to teach. The fact is,
    there were far too many young boys and men prowling those streets who had
    been taught the same lessons, and now were simply applying what they had
    learned out on those streets.A very interesting character study of this man, and a fine performance by
    Laurence Fishburne, but the movie glorified self-destructive
    thought-processes, and cyclical poverty.

    jmorrison-2 from Farmington Hills, MI - 24 May 2002
  • A big waste of film

    What was the purpose of this film? To show us what it’s like for a poor
    black man to live…? Lawrence Fishburne is a good actor, and he always
    will be, but this movie was just plain boring and never got my attention as
    "moving". The plot was nowhere to be seen. This movie began and ended with
    no sense to it. No thought was put into the movie, only how a poor
    can-collecting black man can hassel a grocery store into getting him a job.
    My suggestion of course is to not see this movie, but if your a huge
    Fishburne fan, go right on ahead, you might enjoy it. The only enjoyment I
    recieved was how Fishburne took no BS from anyone and how he taught a bad
    kid a lesson. That was really it, and this was my score:
    5/10

    encyclpedia (encyclpedia@go.com) from Flordia, USA - 28 March 2002
  • The Intelligent Bum

    By giving him the name Socrates, Laurence Fishburne’s character is an
    attempt to place him as an intelligent bum in the same way that Samuel L.
    Jackson appeared as the intelligent gangster in ‘Pulp Fiction’. Fishburne
    does look menacing, but is not convincing as an intelligent bum who tries
    to
    get a job in the supermarket. I certainly wouldn’t hire
    him.

    jyoung-11 - 26 October 2001
  • A superior film with a meaningful message

    This can be a tough video to find, but when I finally did it turned out to
    be well worth the effort. This is a great film, it rates right up with
    "Citizen X" as one of the best made for HBO movies. Laurence Fishburne is
    terrific as Socrates Fortlow, an ex-con living in inner L.A. and attempting
    to carve a new life for himself while just barely getting by. Fishburne
    gives the character real grit, anger, and pride, but most of all he shows us
    a man who is committed to living life honorably after making some very
    serious mistakes. You can feel the frustration of a man who is trying to
    live right in a world that is seldom fair, but he won’t give in to the
    temptation to make an easy buck or to compromise his principles. The film
    is presented as a series of intertwining stories about the people in
    Fortlow’s life, and the other actors in the film are superb - there is never
    a moment that doesn’t feel real. The stories all have meaning - love,
    prejudice, empathy, sorrow, friendship, honor and death. It’s not often
    that a film says this much without seeming to, and it’s not often you see a
    film this moving. If your video store doesn’t have it, be like Socrates and
    just keep coming back and protesting loudly until they
    do.

    snake77 from Portland, OR - 24 June 2001

Pages: « 5 4 3 [2] 1 » Show All

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