IMDb RATING
7.0/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.
Lee Quiñones
- Raymond 'Zoro'
- (as 'Lee' George Quinones)
Lady Pink
- Rose 'Lady Bug'
- (as Sandra 'Pink' Fabara)
Fab 5 Freddy
- 'Phade'
- (as Frederick Braithwaite)
Andrew Witten
- Z-Roc
- (as Zephyr)
William Rice
- Television Producer
- (as Bill Rice)
Daze
- Union Crew
- (as Chris 'Daze' Ellis)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe stick-up guys were cast when Charlie Ahearn saw them hanging around the location. Ahearn offered them a prop gun but they insisted on using their real sawed-off shotgun. All of their lines were improvised.
- GoofsAt 6:18 Hector tells Raymond 'Zoro' to take off his do-rag. Then Ray's hair pops back and forth between being flat from the do-rag to a picked out Afro during their conversation.
- ConnectionsEdited into And You Don't Stop: 30 Years of Hip-Hop (2004)
Featured review
This film does not have a very good plot or actors, but it is a must see for fans of Hip-Hop. This film shows us what Hip-Hop started out as and what it was meant to be, before it was corrupted by the mainstream media. Hip-Hop in the mid seventies was a form of free expression for the young people living in the boogie down bronx. D.J.'s started looping breaks just like the Selectas in Jamaica, except they were using Disco and Funk singles instead of Reggae and Ska, and the crowds responded to this by doing crazy acrobatic or robotic dance moves. The D.J.'s called these people breakers, breakdancers or b-boys/girls. The kids started forming D.J. and breaker crews and they would tag the names of their crews on the subway trains and alleyways in the Bronx using spraypaint. D.J.'s used to shout out the names of the breakers and crews by saying, "Yo crazy legs is in the house.", they would also brag about themselves on the mic by making up rhymes about themselves. But as the break looping became more artistic and complex to keep the b-boys/girls breaking the D.J.'s had to get someone else to do the rhyming. Thus giving us the emcees or M.C.'s or Master of Ceremonies.
- How long is Wild Style?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Graffiti Wild Style
- Filming locations
- New York, USA(Location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $4,948
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