Description: Classic Hood Movies Lot - South Central, Trespass, Menace II Society, Blood In Blood Out, and A Bronx Tale DVDs We gave all these movies a great rate............. Trespass have some very light surface scratches and Case have a sticker on it... A Bronx Tale have some very light surface scratches and Artwork have light wear... The other DVDs is in great condition.. Cases and Cover Artwork is in very good condition.... **Free Shipping and Fast Delivery** South Central DVD (1992) South Central is a 1992 American crime-drama film, written and directed by Stephen Milburn Anderson. This film is an adaptation of the 1987 fiction novel, The Original South Central L.A. Crips by Donald Bakeer, a former high school teacher in South Central Los Angeles. The film stars Glenn Plummer, Byron Minns and Christian Coleman. South Central was produced by Oliver Stone and released by Warner Bros. The movie received wide critical acclaim, with many praising Plummer’s performance, and New Yorker Magazine praising it as one of the year's best independent films.[citation needed] Janet Maslin of The New York Times named Anderson in the "Who's Who Among Hot New Filmmakers" in 1992, along with Quentin Tarantino and Tim Robbins. Upon his parole from the California Youth Authority, Hoover Street Deuces gang member Bobby Johnson meets with girlfriend Carole, son Jimmie, and fellow "Deuces" Ray Ray, Loco, and Bear. The gang attends a party thrown by a heroin dealer named Genie Lamp, who forces Bobby to snort a line of heroin. Bobby and Jimmie return home in the morning to find Carole passed out on the couch from smoking PCP. The Deuces return to Genie Lamp's club for retaliation where they shoot Genie's bodyguard and Bobby shoots and kills Genie. Bobby returns home and tells Carole that they have to move immediately. Soon after, the gang is caught and Bobby gets a ten year prison sentence for the murder. Ten years later, Bobby's son Jimmie has followed his father into the gang life. He begins stealing car stereos and selling them to Ray Ray for $20 each. Jimmie is shot in the back by a man named Willie Manchester while attempting to steal Willie's car radio. After recuperating in the hospital, he goes to a juvenile halfway house. In prison, Bobby becomes a respected gang leader, falls from grace, and turns his life around with the help of his cellmate, Ali. Once released, he returns to South Central Los Angeles and drives to the halfway house to find Jimmie. Jimmie is shocked that his father has denounced the Deuce gang and will not seek revenge against Willie Manchester. Jimmie insults Bobby for not being the proud Deuce gang leader that he thought his father would be. Jimmie goes AWOL from the halfway house and hides out with Ray Ray. Bobby goes to Ray Ray's warehouse and the two have a talk. Ray Ray opens up a door that reveals a kidnapped Willie Manchester. Ray Ray gives Jimmie a gun and tries to talk him into shooting Willie. Willie begs for his life and tells Jimmie that he did not mean to shoot him. Bobby takes Bear's gun and threatens to kill Ray Ray, but puts the gun down when he sees the look on Jimmie's face. Bobby talks to Jimmie about the mistake it would be if Jimmie killed Willie Manchester. Bobby states that Jimmie can replace goods that he steals from a man, but he cannot replace a man's life that he took. Jimmie lets go of the gun he had been holding. Ray Ray lets go of Jimmie, Bobby, and Willie Manchester. Bobby tells Jimmie that they must start their lives over, but this time they will do it the right way. The scene fades to black as the two walk out of the warehouse together as father and son. Trespass DVD (1992) Trespass is a 1992 American crime thriller film directed by Walter Hill, written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis, and starring Bill Paxton, Ice T, William Sadler, and Ice Cube. In the film, two firemen decide to search an abandoned building for a hidden treasure, but wind up being targeted by a street gang. The screenplay, originally titled The Looters, was written in 1977. Filming took place in Atlanta, Georgia and Memphis, Tennessee. Following the 1992 Los Angeles riots, the film was retitled and its original release date of July 3, 1992 was pushed back. It was released on December 25, 1992, by Universal Pictures. It received mixed reviews from critics and was a box-office bomb, grossing $13.7 million against a budget of $14 million. Two Fort Smith, Arkansas firemen, Vince and Don, meet a hysterical old man in a burning building. The old man hands them an envelope, telling them that he stole from Jesus Christ. The old man tells them that he stole some things and stashed them on the fifth floor of an apartment, and he never told anyone. He forces them to take the envelope and leave at gunpoint, prays for forgiveness, then commits suicide by allowing himself to be engulfed in flames. Outside the fire and away from everyone else, Vince uncovers what was in the envelope and turns out to contain a newspaper article, the old man's ID, a map, and a gold cross. Vince and Don research the man, discovering that he was a thief who, in 1940, stole a large amount of gold valuables from a church that were on loan from Greece and hid them in a building in East St. Louis, Illinois. The two decide to find the treasure and drive to the building, thinking they can get there, get the gold, and get back in one day. While searching the building, Vince then Don are spotted by a gang, led by King James, who is there to execute an enemy. Vince and Don witness the murder, but give themselves away and only manage to force a stalemate when they grab Lucky, King James' half-brother. Barricading themselves behind a door, they continue trying to find the gold. Adding to their troubles is an old homeless man, Bradlee, who had stumbled upon them while they were trying to find the gold. King James eventually calls in some reinforcements. While doing some reconnaissance, Raymond, the man who supplies guns to King James, finds Don and Vince's car and the news of the gold, and figures out why "two white boys" would be in their neighborhood. Raymond manipulates Savon, one of James' men (who would rather just kill Don and Vince than follow James' approach of trying to talk to them) into shooting at Don and Vince. Lucky says he needs to have shot of heroin from his drug bag he had on him as he starts to cough continuously. Don releases one of Lucky's arms so he can use the syringe but instead stabs Don in the neck and tries to escape. Vince and Lucky get into a struggle and then one of James men, Luther, spots the struggle through the window and takes aim with a sniper rifle which eventually leads to Lucky being shot by accident. King James is now furious thinking that Don and Vince killed Lucky and runs after them, who have now found the stash of gold (having determined the map was drawn with the intention of looking UP at the ceiling, instead of down at the floor) and are trying to get out with it while avoiding King James. Vince orders Bradlee to take the weakened Don into the other room and lock themselves while he climbs up the chimney to get some help. Once up on the roof, Vince repels down the building but James spots him and before he can shoot Vince, Vince crashes through the window of another floor and escapes down the stairs. Meanwhile Bradlee accidentally makes a noise, drawing the attention of one of James men, Wickey, who grabs an axe and breaks down the door. Wickey is then ambushed by the now recovered Don who then takes his gun and Don is confronted by James. Don and James end up shooting and killing each other. Savon and Raymond also kill each other. The building they were in gets burned to the ground. Vince encounters Bradlee outside the building, and Bradlee tells Vince to run. (Vince cannot drive away, since Raymond ripped out the wires in the engine of Don's SUV, gave the SUV four flat tires, and cut the line to Don's CB radio). Once Vince is out of the way, Bradlee picks up the haul of gold that was left behind and walks away, laughing. Menace II Society DVD (1993) Menace II Society (pronounced Menace to Society) is a 1993 American teen drama film directed by the Hughes Brothers[3] in their directorial debut. Set in the Watts and Crenshaw neighborhoods of Los Angeles, the film follows the life of Caine Lawson (Tyrin Turner) and his close friends. It gained notoriety for its scenes of violence, profanity, and drug-related content, and also received critical acclaim for the performances of Turner, Jada Pinkett (in her film debut), and Larenz Tate, the direction, and its realistic portrayal of urban violence and powerful underlying messages. Kaydee "Caine" Lawson and his best friend Kevin "O-Dog" Anderson enter a liquor store to buy some malt liquor, where a Korean cashier and his wife suspiciously rush them to buy their drinks and leave. As they walk out, the cashier provokingly tells O-Dog "I feel sorry for your mother," leading to deadly consequences for the cashier and his wife as O-Dog kills them both. O-Dog then confiscates the surveillance tape, robs the cashier's wallet and the cash register, and flees with Caine. Caine recounts that his father Tat, a drug dealer, was killed in an unsuccessful drug deal when Caine was 10, and his heroin-addicted mother Karen died of an overdose soon afterwards. This led to his maternal grandparents raising him in the crime-ridden Jordan Downs housing projects. Following several years of struggling in class, Caine, himself a low-level drug dealer, finally completes high school. On graduation night, Caine and his cousin Harold attend a party, where O-Dog flaunts the surveillance tape to a group of their closest friends, much to Caine's dismay. Later, the cousins are carjacked en route from the party, with Caine suffering a shoulder wound and Harold being murdered. After learning the carjackers' whereabouts, Caine, O-Dog, and their friend A-Wax, an OG, locate and execute them, avenging Harold's death. Sometime later, Caine visits Ronnie, the girlfriend of his childhood mentor and Tat's business partner Pernell, who is serving life in prison. He bonds with Ronnie’s young son, Anthony, and ensures she has sufficient finances. That night, tasked by their colleague Chauncey, Caine and O-Dog attempt car theft but are arrested. As he is still underage, O-Dog is released with a warning, but Caine is detain ed as his fingerprints match those on a beer bottle he dropped during the liquor store murders. During an interrogation, a detective tries tricking Caine by changing the questions multiple times, but Caine is soon released due to insufficient evidence. Caine is given advice to change his ways and is warned about possibly being jailed or killed by Caine's religious grandfather and Sharif's father, a teacher at a local high school. Caine's friends Stacy, a teenage father, and Sharif, a devout Muslim, also try to keep Caine out of trouble by convincing Caine to accompany them to Kansas but fail. Caine, nevertheless, ignores all advice. Influenced by his late parents’ lifestyle of drugs and crime, Caine purchases and begins cooking a large quantity of crack cocaine, soon becoming a hustler. He also encounters and eventually has sexual intercourse with a local girl named Ilena. One night, he and Sharif are stopped and assaulted by cops, who then dump them in a Hispanic neighborhood. However, the sympathetic Hispanic gang members surprisingly take them to a hospital rather than further assault them as the police anticipated. During his hospitalization, Ronnie invites him to accompany her to her new secretarial job in Atlanta. Initially hesitant, he ultimately agrees. At a party, Caine rescues Ronnie from Chauncey's drunken sexual advances and starts pistol-whipping him, prompting Stacy and Sharif to restrain him. Chauncey retaliates by sending his copy of the surveillance tape to the police, initially unbeknownst to Caine and O-Dog. Ilena phones Caine about her pregnancy, but he denies paternity and rejects her. Ronnie and Caine visit Pernell in prison, where Caine is gripped by the sight of his incarcerated mentor. Hoping Caine can more positively influence Anthony, Pernell encourages him to relocate to Atlanta. Afterwards, Caine returns home from visiting Pernell when he is approached by Ilena's cousin outside his house. An exchange of words between the two about Ilena and her pregnancy ensues, causing Caine to brutally stomp on Ilena's cousin which attracts the attention of Caine's neighbors as they crowd to watch the stomping. Caine's grandfather soon comes outside to stop Caine and bring him inside, then firmly tells Caine he no longer wants him in their house and to be out by the evening. Caine then pleas to his grandparents to stay until he leaves for Atlanta, but, because of his trouble-prone nature, they reject his plea and stand firm to kick Caine out. Learning from their friend Doc that Chauncey betrayed them, Caine and O-Dog, now wanted for the liquor store murders, seek refuge at Ronnie's and other friends' houses. O-Dog vows revenge on Chauncey while Ilena's cousin gathers his friends to seek revenge on Caine. As Caine and Ronnie are preparing to depart, Ilena's cousin and his friends drive by Ronnie's house and engage in a drive-by shootout. Sharif is instantly killed, while Caine is fatally wounded while attempting to shield Anthony. After the shootout, Stacy and Ronnie emerge from the house, respectively tending to Caine and Anthony. As Caine's life flashes before him, he recalls his grandfather asking him if he cares about being alive, and he realizes in his dying moment that he does. Blood In Blood Out: Bound by Honor W/ Insert DVD (1993) Blood In Blood Out (also known as Bound by Honor and Blood In Blood Out: Bound By Honor) is a 1993 American epic crime drama film directed by Taylor Hackford that has become a cult-classic film among the Mexican-American community.[3][4] It follows the intertwining lives of three Chicano relatives from 1972 to 1984. They start out as members of a street gang in East Los Angeles, and as dramatic incidents occur, their lives and friendships are forever changed. Blood In Blood Out was filmed in 1991 throughout Los Angeles and inside California's San Quentin State Prison. In 1972, after a violent confrontation with his father, Miklo Velka, a teenager of half-Mexican descent, leaves Las Vegas for East Los Angeles. He moves in with his cousins, Paco and Cruz, who are members of the Vatos Locos gang. Miklo joins the gang following an attack on their rivals, the Tres Puntos. Tres Puntos retaliates by attacking Cruz, permanently damaging his back. When Vatos Locos counterattack the next day, Miklo kills Spider, the leader of Tres Puntos. Fleeing the scene, Paco crashes their car; both he and Miklo are arrested. The cousins' paths diverge: Miklo is imprisoned in San Quentin for murder, Paco volunteers for military service in the Marine Corps in lieu of prison, and Cruz continues his passion for art. Due to his back pain, Cruz becomes addicted to heroin, leading to the accidental overdose of his 12-year-old brother, Juanito. After the Marines, Paco joins the Los Angeles Police Department, working as an undercover policeman for them. Meanwhile, Miklo finds that San Quentin is run by three racially defined prison gangs: the Black Guerrilla Army (BGA) led by Bonafide, the Aryan Vanguard led by Red Ryder, and La Onda led by Montana Segura. Popeye, a high-ranking member of La Onda, tries to rape Miklo at knifepoint but is stopped by Montana, who finds Popeye's intentions dishonorable. Miklo learns that the only way into La Onda is by killing an inmate from a rival gang. He forms a rapport with Aryan Vanguard associate Big Al, then kills him in the prison kitchen. Now initiated, Miklo rises through the La Onda ranks, eventually joining its Ruling Council. After serving nine years, Miklo is granted parole. On the outside, disgusted by his menial job, he joins in an armed robbery. The heist goes poorly and Miklo is intercepted by Paco, who tries to persuade him to surrender his weapon and resolve the situation peacefully. Miklo instead starts to flee, and Paco shoots him in the leg. The leg is amputated, and Miklo is sent back to prison. Miklo notices that cocaine use is now rampant, driven by competing supplies from the BGA and La Onda council member Carlos. The Aryan Vanguard want to partner with Carlos as his supplier, offering to help Carlos take the BGA out of the cocaine business. Montana, against La Onda being in the drug trade, warns that the Aryans want to start a war between the Black and Chicano inmates. The Council votes in agreement with Montana, resulting in Carlos and some others leaving La Onda to work with the Aryan Vanguard. Carlos has his non-inmate brother, Smokey, bomb the BGA's stash house in the city. Carlos also kills "Pockets", who runs the BGA's operation in San Quentin. As Montana feared, the Aryan Vanguard then lets the BGA murder Carlos. With rising hostility between Blacks and Chicanos, Montana and Bonafide meet in the prison yard. Montana convinces Bonafide to agree to a truce if Montana reaches out to La Onda leaders in other prisons to end the violence. The warden grants Montana special permission to visit the prisons and Miklo is left in charge. Montana is granted a special request to have his daughter visit him at a prison. Before she arrives, he is stabbed to death by someone from the BGA. Believing the Aryan Vanguard sent forged orders to the hitman, Paco arranges a peace conference between La Onda and the BGA, but Miklo uses the talks to build an alliance with the BGA and plan the joint killing of Aryan Vanguard leaders. After the Aryans are killed, Miklo's men double cross and murder the BGA leaders as well. Furious, Paco confronts Miklo, disowning him forever. The warden vows to split La Onda's ruling council by sending them to prisons in other states. Miklo uses this to expand La Onda across the Southwest. It is later revealed that Magic, not the Aryan Vanguard, sent the forged orders to have the BGA kill Montana at Miklo's behest. As Miklo destroys the evidence of their betrayal, Magic swears his life to Miklo as his jefe. In East Los Angeles, Paco visits one of Cruz' murals, showing a portrait of his former life. In a pep talk with Cruz, Paco realizes that by ordering Miklo to go after Spider, Paco is responsible for what Miklo has become. He forgives Miklo, as well as himself. A Bronx Tale DVD (1993) A Bronx Tale is a 1993 American coming-of-age crime drama film directed by and starring Robert De Niro in his directorial debut and produced by Jane Rosenthal, adapted from Chazz Palminteri's 1989 play of the same name. It tells the coming-of-age story of an Italian-American boy, Calogero, who, after encountering a local Mafia boss, is torn between the temptations of organized crime and the values of his honest, hardworking father, as well as racial tensions in his community. The Broadway production was converted to film with limited changes, and starred Palminteri and De Niro. De Niro, who first viewed the play in Los Angeles in 1990, acquired the rights from Palminteri, intent on making the play his directorial debut. The duo then worked heavily together on the screenplay, with Palminteri aiming to retain many of the aspects of the original script, as it was based largely on his own childhood. Production began in 1991, and was funded in collaboration with De Niro's TriBeCa Productions and Savoy Pictures, as the first film released by each studio. A Bronx Tale premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 14, 1993, and released in the United States on September 29, 1993. The film achieved limited commercial success, grossing over $17 million domestically. However, it fared much better with critics, who praised the performances of the leads, and launched Palminteri's acting career, while also helping De Niro gain acceptance as a director. In 1960, nine-year-old Calogero lives in Belmont, a working-class Italian-American neighborhood in the Bronx with his father, Lorenzo, an MTA bus driver, and his mother, Rosina. Calogero becomes enamored of the Mafia presence in his neighborhood led by local boss Sonny. One day, Calogero sees Sonny shoot and kill a man assaulting his friend. Calogero keeps quiet when questioned by NYPD detectives. Sonny's men offer Lorenzo a better-paying job but, preferring a law-abiding life, he politely declines. Sonny befriends Calogero and gives him the nickname "C". Calogero earns tips working in Sonny's bar and throwing dice, and is admonished by Lorenzo when he discovers the cash. Lorenzo returns the money to Sonny and warns him to keep away from Calogero. Eight years later, a 17-year-old Calogero has been visiting Sonny regularly without his father's knowledge. Calogero is part of a gang of local Italian-American boys, which concerns Sonny. Calogero meets an African-American girl, Jane, and a tentative romance blossoms between them. Despite the high racial tensions between Italian-Americans and African-Americans in the area, Calogero arranges a date with Jane. He asks for advice from Sonny, who lends Calogero his car to impress her. Later, Calogero's friends beat up a group of African-American cyclists riding through their neighborhood. One of the cyclists turns out to be Jane's brother, who accuses Calogero of beating him up when he and Jane meet for their date. Calogero loses his temper over the accusation, and calls him a nigger, which he instantly regrets. Jane leaves with her brother. At home, Lorenzo confronts Calogero after seeing him driving Sonny's car. They argue and Calogero storms out. He runs into his friends, who tell him that some African-Americans egged their social club in retaliation to the earlier beating. Sonny and his crew confront Calogero after finding a bomb on Sonny's car. Calogero tearfully pleads his unwavering dedication to Sonny, who recognizes his innocence and allows him to leave. Calogero meets up with friends, who plan revenge on the African-Americans using Molotov cocktails. They pressure Calogero into participating, but Sonny stops their car and orders Calogero out. Calogero catches up with Jane, who tells him that her brother admitted that Calogero was not his assailant. Jane and Calogero make amends, but he suddenly remembers his friends' plans to attack Jane's neighborhood, and the two rush to stop them. During the attack, an African-American shopkeeper throws an unbroken Molotov cocktail back at the boys' car, which enters through the window and ignites the Molotov cocktails still inside, causing an explosion that kills everyone inside. When Calogero and Jane arrive, they find the car engulfed in flames. Calogero leaves and rushes into Sonny's bar to thank him for saving his life, but an assassin shoots Sonny in the back of the head before Calogero can warn him. Calogero later learns that the killer was the son of the man he witnessed Sonny kill when he was nine. At Sonny's funeral, countless people come to pay their respects, but none seem to really care about his death. When everyone but Calogero disperses, a lone man, Carmine, visits the funeral, and tells Calogero that Sonny once saved his life as well. Calogero does not recognize Carmine until he sees a scar on his forehead and realizes he was the man Sonny defended by shooting the other man eight years ago. Carmine tells Calogero that he is filling in for Sonny in the neighborhood for the time being and promises Calogero help should he ever need it. Carmine leaves just as Lorenzo unexpectedly arrives to pay his respects to Sonny. Lorenzo thanks him for saving his son's life and admits that he never hated him, but that he resented him for making Calogero grow up so quickly. Calogero bids Sonny goodbye and walks home with Lorenzo while narrating the lessons he learned from his two mentors. **Free Shipping and Fast Delivery**
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Video Format: NTSC
Music Artist: Tim Truman, Ry Cooder, QD III, Bill Conti, Butch Barbella
Case Type: Tall/DVD Case
Rating: R
Subtitle Language: English, French, Spanish
Director: Stephen Milburn Anderson, Walter Hill, The Hughes Brothers, Taylor Hackford, Robert De Niro
Edition: Standard Edition
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Type: Movie
Format: DVD
Region Code: DVD: 1 (US, Canada...)
Language: English, Spanish
Producer: William B. Steakley, Oliver Stone, Janet Yang, Neil Canton, Darin Scott, Taylor Hackford, Jerry Gershwin, Jane Rosenthal, Jon Kilik
Actor: Ice Cube, Glenn Plummer, Carl Lumbly, Bill Paxton, Ice T, William Sadler, Tyrin Turner, Jada Pinkett, Bill Duke, Charles S. Dutton, Jesse Borrego, Benjamin Bratt, Enrique Castillo, Damian Chapa, Robert De Niro, Chazz Palminteri, Lillo Brancato Jr., Taral Hicks, Kathrine Narducci
Features: Behind The Scenes Featurette, Commentary, Full Screen, Widescreen, With Subtitles
Genre: Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama, Gangster
Season: n/a
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Movie/TV Title: Classic Hood Movies Lot - South Central, Trespass, Menace II Soci