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Chi-Raq

  • 2015
  • R
  • 2h 7m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Teyonah Parris in Chi-Raq (2015)
After the murder of a child by a stray bullet, a group of women led by Lysistrata organize against the on-going violence in Chicago's Southside creating a movement that challenges the nature of race, sex and violence in America and around the world.
Play trailer1:31
27 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyCrimeDramaMusical

A modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes, set against the backdrop of gang violence in Chicago, Illinois.A modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes, set against the backdrop of gang violence in Chicago, Illinois.A modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes, set against the backdrop of gang violence in Chicago, Illinois.

  • Director
    • Spike Lee
  • Writers
    • Kevin Willmott
    • Spike Lee
    • Aristophanes
  • Stars
    • Nick Cannon
    • Teyonah Parris
    • Wesley Snipes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Spike Lee
    • Writers
      • Kevin Willmott
      • Spike Lee
      • Aristophanes
    • Stars
      • Nick Cannon
      • Teyonah Parris
      • Wesley Snipes
    • 95User reviews
    • 160Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos27

    90-Second Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    90-Second Trailer
    Exclusive Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Exclusive Trailer
    Exclusive Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Exclusive Trailer
    Exclusive Trailer
    Trailer 2:34
    Exclusive Trailer
    John Boyega and Teyonah Parris Want Clones to Live Their Best Lives
    Clip 3:05
    John Boyega and Teyonah Parris Want Clones to Live Their Best Lives
    A Guide to Spike Lee Joints
    Clip 2:03
    A Guide to Spike Lee Joints
    sexy teyonah
    Clip 0:54
    sexy teyonah

    Photos167

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    + 161
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    Top Cast99+

    Edit
    Nick Cannon
    Nick Cannon
    • Chi-Raq
    Teyonah Parris
    Teyonah Parris
    • Lysistrata
    Wesley Snipes
    Wesley Snipes
    • Cyclops
    Angela Bassett
    Angela Bassett
    • Miss Helen
    Samuel L. Jackson
    Samuel L. Jackson
    • Dolmedes
    John Cusack
    John Cusack
    • Father Mike Corridan
    Jennifer Hudson
    Jennifer Hudson
    • Irene
    David Patrick Kelly
    David Patrick Kelly
    • General King Kong
    D.B. Sweeney
    D.B. Sweeney
    • Mayor McCloud
    Dave Chappelle
    Dave Chappelle
    • Morris
    Steve Harris
    Steve Harris
    • Old Duke
    Harry Lennix
    Harry Lennix
    • Commissioner Blades
    Tony Fitzpatrick
    Tony Fitzpatrick
    • Chief Riptide
    Anya Engel-Adams
    Anya Engel-Adams
    • Rasheeda
    Ebony Joy
    Ebony Joy
    • Marcy
    Eryn Allen Kane
    • Tee-Tee
    • (as Erin Allen Kane)
    Michelle Mitchenor
    Michelle Mitchenor
    • Indigo
    Felicia Pearson
    Felicia Pearson
    • Dania
    • (as Felecia "snoop" Pearson)
    • Director
      • Spike Lee
    • Writers
      • Kevin Willmott
      • Spike Lee
      • Aristophanes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews95

    5.911.2K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Chi-Raq' tackles gun violence, gang culture, and social justice in Chicago, inspired by 'Lysistrata'. The film blends satire, music, and vivid cinematography. Critics commend performances by Teyonah Parris, Samuel L. Jackson, and John Cusack. Some find the satire and tonal shifts problematic, diminishing the gravity of its themes. Others criticize it for cultural appropriation and oversimplifying social issues. Despite these concerns, 'Chi-Raq' is viewed as a daring commentary on urban violence and inequality.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    7orphicdragon

    It's based on a Greek Comedy folks...solid film.

    First for the "haters" negative Nancy crowd: I'm bright white, don't love or hate Lee and don't know squat about Chicago.

    I thought this was pretty solid. All the valid intelligent criticism I've seen involves elements tying this to Aristophanes work.

    I get it,gangsta's and Aristophanes are not things that are closely associated but darn it fruity arty farty reviewers should have read a freaking Greek play at least once or twice in life.

    I think Lee did an awesome job here. I gave a s*** about Chicago. The use of Aristophanes Lysistrata was a brilliant way to illustrate how long humanity has been doing this dumb crap. It's a fantastic way to illustrate just how universal this nonsense is.He managed to tie a modern day cultural issue's to ancient Greece. It's real daggum difficult to call Lysistrata "a black thing" or blame "thugs".

    Kiddies, that "weird stuff" and "sing song" is the classic Greek comedy influences. Chi-Raq is a melding of modern culture and ancient Greek comedy. Now, Disney's Hercules ya'll have seen and loved that movie. The muses that sing all the songs you love? Zero to Hero 'member? You 'member...same thing. Keep that in mind when you're watching Chi-Raq.

    It's fine if you hate it, not everyone digs it. Not everyone loves Broadway either, but at least judge it for what it is. Don't condemn it because of or due to ignorance.

    Literature is history,we've got to remember that and teach the kids better. This is just depressing. Kind of adds to Lee's point/message though doesn't it?

    Ah well, at least nobody is screaming about Lee being a bastid patriarch co opting Lysistrata and perverting it for his male needs...yet.

    As for me, it was different, interesting in a good way and funny. It had raunchy humor mixed with some higher brow stuff. It was thought provoking and chees-ily preachy at times. There's thought in this. There's concern.

    I think what's best,for me anyway, was that somebody left the box FINALLY and looked at this from an entirely new perspective. It's not the same boxed up thugs and gangsta garbage. It's not classic men vs women tropes. I loved it for it's oddities. I loved it for the new angles on age old problems.
    4dmuel

    a big disappointment

    I'm a fan of Spike Lee's movies and was expecting to be cajoled into deep thought on today's urban problems by this film. Mr Lee has directed some very good films. Do the Right Thing is still one of my favorites. However, in Chi-raq Mr Lee has taken a highly stylized approach to his subject, and this becomes evident early in the film when every character is speaking in rhyming couplets. This continues nearly unbroken throughout the movie. I must say I found urban poetry in Do the Right Thing, but none in this film. The rhyming began to feel artificial, not conducive to either the mood or the setting, and it quickly wore thin.

    Additionally, Mr Lee gave the film a strongly burlesque quality, at times extremely so, and this was clearly meant to be comic. The humor was so exaggerated, however, that it seemed ill- suited to the very serious problem it was trying to address: the murder rate of young African-Americans at the hands of other African-Americans in urban America.

    Some reviewers on IMDb have asserted that Mr Lee failed to address the real problem, the "war on drugs", but the topic of the film is more complicated than simple bad law enforcement policy. Lee gave the film a hard sexually charged theme, focusing on reducing violence through female induced sexual abstinence. But he reduces the focus of responsibility in the broader society to white racism, which is likely partially true but not completely so, and even this aspect of the film is presented as burlesque.

    The film's principle faults: It is not good drama, it is not good comedy, and it is not a film which provokes much thought on a problem that truly deserves attention.
    7bkrauser-81-311064

    A Review Written in Ironic Pentameter

    The newest joint from director Spike Lee, is a bizarre experiment for all to see.

    Told in a brash tone, preaching with a megaphone, promising to make heads roll, And influenced by the writings of old Aristophanes.

    Lysistrata (Parris) is the main squeeze of Chi-Raq (Cannon), A man with hopes to rap and plans attacks with and between two rival clans.

    There's similarities between another two households alike in dignity, Down to the the colors worn during their mutiny.

    So hopeless is their feud, no faction can collude to end, The violence penned and pent up in the hearts of these men.

    So too does Lysistrata makes her nihilism known, Until an innocent is slain by a bullet in stray.

    Plotting with Miss Helen (Bassett) and her sisters to atone, The ladies decide to keep their menfolk at bay.

    Thus swayed with a solemn oath to end the specter of death, From the streets of the City with Big Shoulders, The women of Chicago swear with resounding shibboleth, To go on sex strike until the violence is over.

    Much like this review, the film is in rhyme, which can grind, The gears of many not willing to meet it halfway, The characters imbue parody and are unable to find, Balance between the real and distorted morality play.

    Overwrought with the thoughts and ersatz of bathetic farce, There's still something radical with which few can parse; Like when the gals take the armory, like Greeks to the treasury, The choruses of men and women can't help but find, A sincere quest for peace too abstruse for the blind.

    Thus this film is a siren's call for peace that should be heard, Even if it is incredibly uneven in places.

    The sui generis of such a movie bends to the absurd, Yet the message is true thus putting me in it's good graces.

    There was much hullabaloo about it's offensive fantasy, Minimizing the tragedy of a besieged Windy City.

    I for one stopped myself from attending a screening, As Chicago is second home thus this treatment is demeaning.

    Yet firstly, this film is supposed to be skit and travesty, While the reasons for violence is complex, the act is absurdity! Why not have an expression that typifies the high camp of low brutality.

    Why not revel in the message of love, that which comes from above, Below and inside the mourning, healing hearts and souls thereof.

    There are many reasons to hate: revenge, opportunity, resource, religion, Politics, poverty, power, cash, race and competition.

    Yet there is only one reason for love.

    Secondly the source material is Greek in more ways than one, Comprehending the pathos of such a think piece maligned, Appropriates the fields of Thalia, Euterpe and Clio entwined.

    It's not the who, what, where or when but why, when all is said and done.

    And how strongly you feel by the tears and blood shed, When all players arrived, sheathed in white, bathed in the glory, Indemnified by a campaign ignited by Leymah Gbowee.

    They end in the way a comedy should, in jubilation and ascension.

    A better understanding made possible by an old form.

    In modernity and convention we're given new dimension, With which to understand what's sadly a new norm.

    Manipulative? Simplistic? Sexist? Maybe; Greek comedies are not exactly known for their subtlety.

    Neither is Lee who hungrily experiments with novelty, Blusters with the voracity of his new expression, Not bothered or concerned with the asylum of discretion.

    He's a maverick through and through, taking risks made bear, By a new form first fashioned by the surname Lumiere.

    It tries, it fails, it gets back up again and fights the good fight, Using to make right the names of Jackson, Bassett and Snipes.

    Is this movie acropolis or apocryphal? Watch and decide.

    www.theyservepopcorninhell.blogspot.com
    Michael_Elliott

    Some Great Performances but a Misfire

    Chi-Raq (2015)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    When a woman's (Jennifer Hudson) daughter is killed by a stray bullet, Lysistrata (Teyonah Parris) begins to rethink the situation in Chicago. Her boyfriend is the gangster/rapper Chi-Raq (Nick Cannon) and she wants him to put down the weapons. The town's other big gangster (Wesley Snipes) doesn't see the point so soon the mothers decide to team up and battle the gangsters themselves. How they going to bring peace? By refusing sex.

    Spike Lee's CHI-RAQ contains some really, really great moments and things but at the same time I honestly can't remember such a serious subject being tackled in such a rather silly way. After I was done viewing the movie I went and read several reviews on it and they were extremely mixed to say the least. Some called it a masterpiece. Some said it was one of the worst movies of the year. Others said people were misunderstanding the tone of the picture because it was meant to be a black comedy. A comedy? Really?

    I will start off with the great stuff. For starters, Lee does a tremendous job in the directing duties as he certainly handles the material in a terrific way and I'd argue he did a remarkable job considering the time and budget that he was working with. I'd also add that the cinematography was flawless and the soundtrack was great as well. The real shock for me was the excellent performance by Cannon who really does give a "movie star" performance here. I mean, I was really shocked at how wonderful he was in this role and he made the character rather fearful yet when it came time to show the heart, the actor did a fabulous job. John Cusack was also strong in his role as was Snipes, Parris and Angela Bassett. Samuel L. Jackson is also good playing Dolmedes.

    Now, for the flaws. For the life of me I couldn't understand why the Lysistrata and Dolmedes thing was used. Yes, it turns the material into a musical and it gives the subject a rather fresh and original take but why was it needed? The film is a very political one and it really does beat the viewer over the head with the subject matter of blacks killing blacks but is this a way to get through to anyone? The film takes on a dark subject but I just couldn't help but think that it took an easy way out by not really giving any real answers. With holding sex? Really? I wish the screenplay had been done in a different fashion and the political message also got way off track and really derailed the film towards the end.

    CHI-RAQ is a film that I greatly admired at times but at other times I really thought it was a misfire. Lee deserves credit for tackling the subject and he deserves credit for trying to tell the story in a different way but in the end the two things just didn't mix too well.
    bob the moo

    Plenty of interesting elements, but really all over the shop tonally and in terms of content

    I knew little of this film when I sat to watch it, only that it was from Spike Lee, and I was open to whatever it chose to do. The opening credits suggest seriousness and grit; this is an impression that continues even at the same time as it adds theatrical presentation to the delivery, and rhyming couplets to the dialogue. At this point I was intrigued by the style as well as the content but as the ideas grew the film really gets out of control. I am really not sure what the vision for the film was, and what was told to the cast to draw in so many big names – but I'm guessing different things attracted them since so many of them appear to be in different films from the others.

    The film touches on a lot of serious subjects, but at the same time it tries to involve comedy, musical numbers, sexual farce, and generally odd or misjudged attempts at comedy. The result is a film that feels so totally unfocused that it is really difficult to stay with it. Being kind, you could describe this wild energy as being enough to carry the viewer along, but I did not find this to be the case. Instead I wanted it to be better – to be worthy of its subject matter and its better elements; but this never came together, and I found it quite frustrating just how messy it was.

    The starry cast doesn't help because even when they are really good, they are distracting by their fame, as well as the disjointed nature of their individual material. Parris is strong in the lead, but struggles to find a through-line across all her varying material. Cannon is wholly unconvincing throughout, while Snipes' comedy gangster undercuts the grit of this part of the film. Bassett and Hudson are excellent in their scenes – and it is not their fault that their scenes exist in a film different from the other scenes. The parade of familiar faces is distracting (Cusack, Jackson, Harris, Chappelle etc), although some are used well. I do always enjoy seeing people from The Wire and Oz, however getting Whitlock Jr. to deliver his most famous line (well, word) was just another misjudged moment.

    Chi-Raq has a lot of ideas and energy, and it is an experience to watch it for these. However the film is wildly unfocused and messy, ultimately failing to hold it all together or to deliver a satisfying whole.

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    Related interests

    Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Sian Clifford in Fleabag (2016)
    Dark Comedy
    Peter Sellers in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
    Satire
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama
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    Musical

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This is the first original film to be released by Amazon Studios.
    • Goofs
      At the end when the peace signing ceremony is being conducted all the parties involved are on one side of the signing table which is in front of them between the seats of the amphitheater with all the visible seats empty.
    • Quotes

      Father Mike Corridan: Yellow police tape, teddy bears, t-shirts, balloons - these are the national memorials of our neighborhoods. And it doesn't look good.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Rachel Weisz/Spike Lee/R. Kelly (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Pray 4 My City
      Written by Rico Cox, Robert Amparan, Leroy Griffin, Jr., and Nick Cannon

      Published by Rico Cox (NA), Robert Amparan (BMI), Leroy Griffin Jr (BMI), and N CAN N Music (ASCAP)

      Performed by Nick Cannon

      Produced by Spike Lee, Michael Drayton and Rico Cox

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 2, 2016 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 芝拉克
    • Filming locations
      • Double Door - 1572 N. Milwaukee Avenue, West Town, Chicago, Illinois, USA
    • Production companies
      • 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks
      • Amazon Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,653,032
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,198,453
      • Dec 6, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,719,699
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 7m(127 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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