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Menace Ii Society And Colonization

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"A crooked childhood it's what the way I am,

It's got me in the state where I don't give a damn,

Somebody helped me but now they don't hear me,

I guess I be another victim of the ghetto

So I guess I gotta do what so I ain't finished

I grew up to be a streiht up menace, geah."

-"Streiht Up Menace" by MC Eiht

The song lyrics above are from the soundtrack of the film Menace II Society and correspond directly to the hardships that people are given when growing up in the ghetto and when surrounded by a life of violence. Because they know nothing other than this aggressive and brutal way of life, they continue this violent cycle and rarely break away to begin a new way of life.

Twin brothers Albert and Allen Hughes direct the film. The Hughes began making movies at age 12, but their formal film education began their freshman year of high school when Allen took a TV production class. They soon made a short film entitled How To Be A Burglar and people began to take notice. Their next work, Uncensored Videos, was broadcast on cable, introducing them to a wider audience. After high school, Albert began taking classes at the Los Angeles Community College Film School. Two short films established the twins' reputation as innovative filmmakers and allowed them to direct Menace II Society (1993), which made its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and grossed nearly 10 times as much as its $3 million budget. After following up with Dead Presidents (1995) they directed the feature-length documentary American Pimp (1999).

From the very first scene, detailing Caine and O-Dog's fatal armed robbery of a Korean market, violence is cruelly graphic. "In this instance, the film succeeds in painting a disturbing picture of violence, one in which the characters' lack of remorse, rather than stylistic convention, shapes and colors the horror of the image." Although most of the violence is filmed realistically and unfolds in real time, the Hughes can't seem to resist stylizing some of the more important narrative events. Thus, while the robbery introduces violence, O-Dog's shooting of the Korean market owner is shown directly only further into the story, when black and white images of the store's stolen surveillance video are played and replayed for the entertainment of Caine, O-Dog, and their friends. While an innovative means of conveying action, the video becomes nothing more than a diversion. While it builds tension and a false sense of foreboding, nothing comes of it; the video never connects directly to the film's later events.

The next scenes are of the Watts riots in 1965. With the passage of the Civil Rights Act, a new age in race relations appeared to begin. But the states acted quickly to circumvent the new federal law. California reacted with Proposition 14, which moved to block the fair housing components of the Civil Rights Act. This, and other acts, created a feeling of injustice and despair in the inner cities. On August 11, 1965, a routine traffic stop in South Central Los Angeles provided the spark that lit the fire of those incensed feelings. The riots lasted for six days, leaving 34 dead, over a thousand people injured, nearly 4,000 arrested, and hundreds of buildings destroyed.

The Watts riots are extremely important in this film and are shown to illustrate and symbolize the oppression of the African American race, which was taken to an extreme during the Civil Rights Movement of this era. The directors use these clips from the Watts riots to stimulate the audience and to make them think more deeply about not only the scenes and occurrences of the film, but of all films and all instances relating to colonization and the oppression of the African American race as a whole.

Menace II Society is a coming of age film detailing the summer after its protagonist, Caine, graduates from high school. This is Caine's story, made literal through the film's use of voice-over narration to convey his point of view. In this narration, Caine repeatedly questions his actions and seemingly makes a decision, only to oppose that decision through his actions that follow, without offering any explanation. Menace II Society also strives, with varying degrees of success, to break from traditional and generic depictions of violence.

Introduced in flashback when he murders a man in front of his young son in their home, Caine's father initiates his son into a life of crime. After his death, Caine's father figure becomes Pernell, and serves as Caine's criminal mentor and surrogate father until a life term in prison limits his daily influence. While responsibility for Caine's welfare also falls into his grandparents' hands and home, their attempts (especially his grandfather's) to set him straight are disregarded. Caine can neither accept his grandfather's religious beliefs nor respond when his grandfather poses the pivotal question, "Don't you care whether you live or die?"

Caine's former teacher, Mr. Butler, also attempts to intervene, suggesting that Caine get out of the hood before he gets into any more trouble. Mr. Butler, himself a father of Sharif, an ex-knucklehead and now a Muslim convert, is only a minor character. The intervention scene set in Mr. Butler's classroom motivates Caine to reflect upon his life, but the effect of Mr. Butler's words, like that of Caine's grandfather, is only momentary.

Mr. Butler says critical words that every character in the film seems to be living by, yet somehow cannot put them to good use. Mr. Butler tells Caine, "Being a black man in America isn't easy. The hunt is on, and you're the prey. All I'm saying is... All I'm saying is... Survive! All right?" Caine listens to Mr. Butler, but as his previous and future actions illustrate, he doesn't really hear. Caine says himself that advice like this "goes in one ear and out the other."

In a film in which relationships among men are founded on violence, it is no coincidence that Caine's father and Pernell influence Caine in the most pervasive ways. Rather than standing for the son's salvation, these fathers only make Caine's downfall inevitable.

With all influential father figures either dead or behind bars, the unprepared Caine must adopt the role of father when Pernell accepts Caine's relationship with Ronnie (Jada Pinkett), Pernell's former lover and the mother of his young son Tony. Pernell gives his blessing, as

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