Let me tip my rabbit-fur fedora to Invisible Woman, who found on YouTube the 1999 Hughes Brothers documentary “American Pimp.”
It’s a humane study of an inhumane hustle... a window onto a hidden world. Albert and Allen Hughes showcase some real-life characters (such as Bishop Don Magic Juan, pictured) who, by the nature of their game, glisten and glide across the screen.
I got four slices of “American Pimp” now showing on my Video Bar.
Watch it as sociology, or listen to it as folklore – as vernacular poetry. You can hate it for the way of life it records. Or you can appreciate it as a skillful piece of filmmaking.
Or all of the above.
Thursday, August 9, 2007
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5 comments:
Nice post. Like it or not, we cannot deny the impact the pimp has had on the black community and to Hip Hop. Ice T is still trying to be a celebrity pimp.
i was more partial to pimps up, ho's down -- it aired on HBO. i liked american pimp, but i first saw don magic juan (who's EVERYWHERE now) and mr. whitefolks on pimp's up.
I thought the documentary was FASCINATING and at the same time repellent. You can sort of see why these guys are good at what they do; they have charisma. But the callous way they refer to the women who support them is disturbing. But I'm just glad it was available. I saw it a long time ago, on HBO? IFC? Can't remember. That censorship hadn't removed this interesting "slice of life" from distribution is a good thing.
Love your fur lid UBM.... @novelera: very well said.
I found "Pimps Up Hoes Down" to be absolutely hilarious. "American Pimp" seemed to provide more authentic details about the realities of the lifestyle. That was a true documentary.
L
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