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School Daze

  • 1988
  • 14A
  • 2h 1m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,1/10
8,6 k
MA NOTE
Laurence Fishburne, Spike Lee, Giancarlo Esposito, Tisha Campbell, and Kyme in School Daze (1988)
Regarder Official Trailer
Liretrailer1:43
3 vidéos
29 photos
SatireComédieComédie musicaleDrame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA not so popular young man wants to pledge to a popular fraternity at his historically black college.A not so popular young man wants to pledge to a popular fraternity at his historically black college.A not so popular young man wants to pledge to a popular fraternity at his historically black college.

  • Réalisation
    • Spike Lee
  • Scénariste
    • Spike Lee
  • Vedettes
    • Laurence Fishburne
    • Giancarlo Esposito
    • Tisha Campbell
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,1/10
    8,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Spike Lee
    • Scénariste
      • Spike Lee
    • Vedettes
      • Laurence Fishburne
      • Giancarlo Esposito
      • Tisha Campbell
    • 52Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 33Commentaires de critiques
    • 52Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:43
    Official Trailer
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    Clip 3:39
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    Clip 3:39
    Three Movies That Changed Billy Porter's Life
    School Daze: You Still Don't Understand
    Clip 1:59
    School Daze: You Still Don't Understand

    Photos29

    Voir l’affiche
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    + 23
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    Distribution principale95

    Modifier
    Laurence Fishburne
    Laurence Fishburne
    • Dap Dunlap
    • (as Larry Fishburne)
    Giancarlo Esposito
    Giancarlo Esposito
    • Julian 'Big Brother Almighty' Eaves
    Tisha Campbell
    Tisha Campbell
    • Jane Toussaint
    Kyme
    • Rachel Meadows
    Joe Seneca
    Joe Seneca
    • President McPherson
    Ellen Holly
    • Odrie McPherson
    Art Evans
    Art Evans
    • Cedar Cloud
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Coach Odom
    Bill Nunn
    Bill Nunn
    • Da Fella Grady
    James Bond III
    James Bond III
    • Da Fella Monroe
    Branford Marsalis
    Branford Marsalis
    • Da Fella Jordan
    Kadeem Hardison
    Kadeem Hardison
    • Da Fella Edge
    Eric Payne
    Eric Payne
    • Da Fella Booker T.
    • (as Eric A. Payne)
    Spike Lee
    Spike Lee
    • Gammite Half-Pint
    Anthony Thompkins
    • Gammite Doo-Doo Breath
    Guy Killum
    Guy Killum
    • Gammite Double Rubber
    Dominic Hoffman
    Dominic Hoffman
    • Gammite Mustafa
    Roger Guenveur Smith
    Roger Guenveur Smith
    • Gammite Yoda
    • (as Roger Smith)
    • Réalisation
      • Spike Lee
    • Scénariste
      • Spike Lee
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs52

    6,18.6K
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    Avis en vedette

    FWTxrunner

    A Breath of Fresh Air

    I am only 18 years old and I just saw the movie School Daze. I do not attend a H.B.C.U., but I have friends that tell me what goes on there. To the older people out there, can you believe that that type of stuff is still going on?! My friends and I were just talking the other day about how this guy on her campus would only date lighter skinned girls. If that is his thing, than it is, however, he would not date them because of their personality. He said they just "looked better on his arm." My mother and I always discuss the future of African-Americans and I am going to tell the truth. I am scared. We hurt each other more than any other race and we have to stop. I am a dark-skinned female and I just learnd to love myself. I thank Spike Lee for not being ashamed to call us out when we needed it. No, I do not think that the movie was an Oscar winner, but I do know that it was a mind opener and should be a lesson to all of us on how we allowed the European standard of beauty to shape our self-worth.
    9ceebeegee

    Fascinating, flawed but compulsively watchable

    School Daze is billed as a musical comedy but is better described as a comedy-drama with musical numbers as commentary--the only non-diegetic number is "Good and Bad Hair," Lee's all-girl fantasy homage to West Side Story that addresses colorism between the "paper bag-light" sorority Gamma Rays and the darker activist girls. Ebert wrote that this was the first movie he'd seen in a while where the black characters relate to each other instead of a hypothetical white audience--it is this that gives the movie its engrossing authenticity. (If it matters, I'm white.)

    As funny as the movie can be, it's also incredibly hard-hitting--there's a sequence in the last 20 minutes where Julian, "Big Brother Al-migh-tee," insists his girlfriend "prove" her love, that's almost unwatchable and yet brutally honest. Lee has been called sexist for his underwritten female characters--there may be some truth to that but School Daze is far more critical of the men than the women. Rachel, Dap's girlfriend, is perhaps the most levelheaded, likable character in the movie, and is strong and supportive of Dap while still maintaining her independence. Even the Gamma Rays, who come off as shallow and colorist in the beginning, are sympathetic as they stand up for and try to aid the pledges during hazing. The characters who come off the worst are the GPG brothers who are, almost to a man, brutish, sadistic and crude. Julian in particular is unredeemable--clever, manipulative and almost sociopathic in his treatment of Jane. Lee supposedly based the movie on his observations at Morehouse and the movie stands as a scathing indictment against the black fraternity system and its abuse of the women's auxiliaries (aka "Little Sisters").

    The movie has structural weaknesses (the ending is problematic and seems to come out of nowhere although it fits thematically) but its biggest problem is Lee's flat performance as Half-Pint (and, frankly, he looks a little too old for it). I love Lee's movies but his early tendency to cast himself in major roles was a real weakness--he's just not a good enough actor and his performance always jerks me out of the story. The rest of the cast is fantastic, though, especially Tisha Campbell as Jane and Giancarlo Esposito as Julian. Notice must also be given to Bill Lee's wonderful score. Ultimately it's a movie whose heart and imagination overcome its flaws.
    Jaime N. Christley

    a blunder, but an early one

    There are things I liked about "School Daze." In particular, there was the scene near the end of the film between Giancarlo Esposito's Julian and his girlfriend. It's when he breaks up with her for sleeping with another student, all the while completely aware that he made her do it. I've actually seen guys do this -- trick their girlfriends into doing something that, later on, they can use as cause to dump them -- and the reality of the scene carried such a raw, emotional weight that it nearly derailed the rest of the film.

    "School Daze" is, first and foremost, a period piece of 1980s pop culture. Many of the sequences, especially the ones requiring dancing and choreography, are hopelessly dated, like early break-dancing videos.

    Dated is okay, as long as there are other elements to counterbalance its datedness. Example: "All That Jazz" is a relic of Bob Fosse's toxic, overindulgent mind, a '70s time capsule item. However, the untouchable authority and supreme confidence he brought to it, along with the visual beauty, and the letter-perfect performances, made up for any drawbacks, and then some. "...Jazz" went from silly to sublime inside of sixty seconds.

    Lee's direction is alarmingly hesitant and amateurish, giving no hint of the originality, vitality, and sheer genius he would display in his later films. It's certainly difficult to believe he made this film between "She's Gotta Have It" and "Do the Right Thing." His editing is sloppy, his staging is slapdash, and the performances from his actors and actresses range from sleepy to histrionic. The stories lose their punch through careless juggling, and the illogical "Wake Up!" scene at the end is unearned and unwarranted. Most disappointing of all, the thing I value his films for most -- his constant pushing of the cinematic envelope in all sorts of unexpected ways -- is all but totally absent.

    I love most of Lee's films. I'll go so far as to say that he's one of the last risk-takers left in the business (Stanley Kubrick is dead, Quentin Tarantino is MIA, and anything done by Spielberg, God love him, automatically becomes non-risk). His "Do the Right Thing" is as good as any other film released in the '80s. The best thing I can say about this one is: I'm glad he got it out of his system.
    Deceptikon225

    An examination of one of the worst forms of racism that African-Americans deal with!

    This film dealt with a lot of inner conflicts that African-Americans where unwilling to deal with at the time. Class struggles, light skinned vs. dark skinned and greeks vs. non-greeks. I just purchased it on DVD, but I remember seeing this film when it first came out in February of 1988 and it is just as powerful and entertaining now as it was then. It's amazing to look at this film now and see all of the actors who went on to successful careers afterwards, like Laurence(then Larry) Fishburne, Tisha Campbell, Giancarlo Esposito, Roger Guenveur Smith, Kadeem Hardison, Jasmine Guy, Darryl Bell, Rusty Cundieff(director of "Tales From The Hood"), Bill Nunn, Branford Marsalis, and of course I can't forget Samuel L. Jackson. Three years after this film came out a cousin from Seattle came to visit, I showed him this film and he was surprised to discover that there were actually historically black colleges and universities(HBCU's) in this country. He later attended Southern University here in Baton Rouge. That was the effect this film had and continues to have on young African-Americans and their views of HBCU's.
    7bwhyte17

    It's not a good movie because you didn't go to a Black school?

    So what if you went to Harvard and not Hampton, this film is still well-shot, well-acted and damn funny. If you can't understand the light vs. dark, town vs. gown, Greeks vs. GDI conflicts, maybe you don't... under... stand... English... well. I never saw the movie in its entirety until I was about 20 (and pledging at an HBCU, but that's another story) but it just got better as I got older. This movie is like many of Spike's: it's for a group of people (Black ones) that rarely get to tell their own stories. If other people get it, super. On a sidenote, what's so "universal" about Dirty Dancing? I've never had to drop out of a contest because of my botched abortion that Lenny from Law & Order had to come help me out with. I've also never been a small, Jewish man in New York City, but people seem to find Woody Allen's movies "universal" enough. Why don't these issues come up with movies made by whi... (ahem) other filmmakers?

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    Intérêts connexes

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    Comédie
    Julie Andrews in La mélodie du bonheur (1965)
    Comédie musicale
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    Drame

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Spike Lee had the actors stay in separate hotels during filming. The actors playing the "wannabes" had better accommodation than those playing the "jigaboos", which contributed to the on-camera animosity between the two camps. The step show scene was the result of that animosity. According to Lee, the fight between the jigaboos and wannabes was real.
    • Gaffes
      During "I Don't Want To Be Alone Tonight," the Gamma Rays' black gloves go from above the elbow, to below the elbow, and back again between shots.
    • Citations

      Rachel Meadows: [as the "Jiggaboos" and the "Wannabes" encounter each other in the hallway] The word is "Excuse me."

      Jane Toussaint: No one told you to stand in the hall, either. "Excuse me."

      Rachel Meadows: That's better, Ms. Thing.

      Doris Witherspoon: [as Jane turns and flips her hair] It's not real!

      Dina: [as the Jiggaboos laugh] Say what?

      Lizzie Life: You heard

      Rachel Meadows: It... ain't... even... real.

      Jane Toussaint: You wish you had hair like this.

      Doris Witherspoon: Girl, you know you weren't even born with blue eyes!

      Lizzie Life: That's right. Blue contact lenses.

      Dina: They're just jealous!

      Rachel Meadows: Jealous?

      Jane Toussaint: Rachel! I've been watching you look at Julian. You're not slick.

      Rachel Meadows: If that was true, he wasn't much to look at.

      [Snaps fingers]

      Doris Witherspoon: Mmm-hmm. Tell her, girl!

      Jane Toussaint: Picaninny!

      Doris Witherspoon: Barbie doll!

      Rachel Meadows: High-yellow heifer!

      Dina: Tar baby!

      Lizzie Life: Wannabe white!

      Kim: Jiggaboo!

      Rachel Meadows: Don't start!

      Jane Toussaint: We're gonna finish it!

    • Connexions
      Edited into The Rays: Be Alone Tonight (1988)
    • Bandes originales
      I'm Building Me a Home
      Arranged by Uzee Brown (as Dr. Uzee Brown)

      Performed by Morehouse College Glee Club (uncredited)

      Solo by Tracy Coley (uncredited)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is School Daze?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 février 1988 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Okul Yılları
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Atlanta, Géorgie, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • Columbia Pictures
      • 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 6 500 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 14 545 844 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 1 802 656 $ US
      • 15 févr. 1988
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 14 545 844 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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