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IMDbPro

Baadasssss!

Original title: How to Get the Man's Foot Outta Your Ass
  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
5.4K
YOUR RATING
Mario Van Peebles in Baadasssss! (2003)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer2:15
12 Videos
83 Photos
BiographyDrama

Mario Van Peebles' half-documentary/half-homage to his father Melvin Van Peebles' movie Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971).Mario Van Peebles' half-documentary/half-homage to his father Melvin Van Peebles' movie Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971).Mario Van Peebles' half-documentary/half-homage to his father Melvin Van Peebles' movie Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971).

  • Director
    • Mario Van Peebles
  • Writers
    • Melvin Van Peebles
    • Mario Van Peebles
    • Dennis Haggerty
  • Stars
    • Mario Van Peebles
    • Nia Long
    • Joy Bryant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    5.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mario Van Peebles
    • Writers
      • Melvin Van Peebles
      • Mario Van Peebles
      • Dennis Haggerty
    • Stars
      • Mario Van Peebles
      • Nia Long
      • Joy Bryant
    • 53User reviews
    • 92Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos12

    Baadasssss!
    Trailer 2:15
    Baadasssss!
    Baadasssss!
    Trailer 2:18
    Baadasssss!
    Baadasssss!
    Trailer 2:18
    Baadasssss!
    Baadasssss Scene: No Crew Has Ever Looked Like This
    Clip 1:18
    Baadasssss Scene: No Crew Has Ever Looked Like This
    Baadasssss: Teaching The Boy About Work
    Clip 0:35
    Baadasssss: Teaching The Boy About Work
    Baadasssss Scene: I Shoulda Known Better
    Clip 1:47
    Baadasssss Scene: I Shoulda Known Better
    Baadasssss Scene: We're Sold Out
    Clip 1:53
    Baadasssss Scene: We're Sold Out

    Photos83

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    Top Cast56

    Edit
    Mario Van Peebles
    Mario Van Peebles
    • Melvin Van Peebles
    Nia Long
    Nia Long
    • Sandra
    Joy Bryant
    Joy Bryant
    • Priscilla
    T.K. Carter
    T.K. Carter
    • Bill Cosby
    Terry Crews
    Terry Crews
    • Big T
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Granddad
    David Alan Grier
    David Alan Grier
    • Clyde Houston
    Paul Rodriguez
    Paul Rodriguez
    • Jose Garcia
    Saul Rubinek
    Saul Rubinek
    • Howard 'Howie' Kaufman
    Vincent Schiavelli
    Vincent Schiavelli
    • Jerry
    Khleo Thomas
    Khleo Thomas
    • Mario
    Rainn Wilson
    Rainn Wilson
    • Bill Harris
    Karimah Westbrook
    Karimah Westbrook
    • Ginnie
    Len Lesser
    Len Lesser
    • Manny & Mort Goldberg
    Sally Struthers
    Sally Struthers
    • Roz
    Jazsmin Lewis
    Jazsmin Lewis
    • Working Girl
    Adam West
    Adam West
    • Bert
    Ralph P. Martin
    • Tommy David
    • (as Ralph Martin)
    • Director
      • Mario Van Peebles
    • Writers
      • Melvin Van Peebles
      • Mario Van Peebles
      • Dennis Haggerty
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    7.35.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Great

    Baadasssss (2003)

    **** (out of 4)

    When I first heard Mario Van Peebles was going to be playing his father in a film about the making of a film his father made, my first thoughts were an actor down on his luck who was going to try and pay homage to his father and make his father out to be some sort of icon. I expected a film that showed how great Melvin Van Peebles was at black power and we'd see a film showing what a wonderful man he was. Some of that is true in Baadasssss! but make no mistake—this is far from being a picture just to show how great someone is.

    Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song was a revolutionary film for its day and I can't help but feel the same way about Baadasssss!. I believe you should wait at least ten years before calling a film a classic so I won't do that here but I will say Mario Van Peebles has created a masterpiece that works wonders throughout its running time. I've seen many films that deal with the making of movies and they usually show the high points and a few low points. Tim Burton's Ed Wood is the perfect example of this but Mario's film takes a different look at things. For once, we get an accurate account of a film being made by someone who was actually there.

    The basic concept of the film works out like a documentary because Van Peebles takes us from the pre-production all the way up to the premiere and in between we're taking for one hell of an exciting ride. We've seen this type of stuff in countless films but here we are seeing it for the first time because we actually get to see the director not only dealing with losing his film but also losing his family, friends and possibly his life. Low budget film-making has always been a dream of many but I'm sure several of those dreamers might think twice after seeing this film because it doesn't paint movie-making as some beautiful, sexy job. Instead, we see the movie-making as something that eats into your soul.

    However, the film's greatest aspect is the relationship between the father Melvin and his son Mario. Once again, there have been many films that dealt with the relationship between father and son but this is a rather unique one because the relationship is rather ugly in many ways. Director Mario doesn't sugar coat some very serious issues dealing with his father's anger, cheating and other cruel things. If you've seen Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song then you remember a shocking scene where a young boy loses his virginity to a woman. This young 13-year-old actor was Mario Van Peebles and it's interesting to see Mario, as the director of this film, look back at his father's incredible stupidity of forcing his young son to get naked and force him into a sex scene at an young age.

    Those scenes between the father and son are very touching, honest and interesting to view because we know they're real and it's all the more interesting seeing the director of this film work out problems on camera that he had with his father. Another interesting thing the film tackles is why Melvin wanted to create an independent film when he had offers from major studios. Black people in American movies were always used as comic relief, usually appearing on screen bug eyed and telling silly one-liners followed up by "yesss sir". The film has some wonderful flashback scenes where we see these stereotypes being played out in a theater with the white children laughing at them and the black children hiding their head in shame because they know what they're seeing on screen isn't how black people really act.

    Mario Van Peebles, the actor, turns in the greatest performance of his career and easily one of the greatest performances I've seen in quite some time. I'm sure he knows his father inside and out but I'm one who believes it's not easy playing someone you know or playing yourself. Van Peebles does a brilliant job at showing off various emotions and the scenes where he has to rally his crew is full of such monumental force that you can help but get pumped up. The best scene in the movie involves the father falling on the ground only to have his young son come to his help. The way Van Peebles plays this scene is quite unforgettable and should certainly earn him an Oscar nomination.

    Baadasssss! is a beautiful love story from a son to his father but thankfully Mario doesn't sugar coat anything and instead delivers a film, which certainly looks and feels like the truth. In the film Melvin is shown as a hero for starting the blaxploitation genre but the film never hides the fact that he did a lot of bad things and certainly shows the bad things he did to his kids. This movie took a lot of guts to make and it took more guts by showing things how they really were. Every singe frame of this film is shot and told with loving detail and if the Academy doesn't recognize this film then that should be the nail in the coffin on their credibility. Baadasssss! is a one-on-a-kind film that should be viewed by any fan of cinema.
    noralee

    Portait of the Father as a Driven Artist

    There have been many movies, usually bittersweet comedies, about movie-making with the director as the put-upon ringmaster of eccentrics, like Truffaut's "Day for Night" or "Living in Oblivion," or bio-pics that show the director as eccentric visionary, like "Ed Wood" or "Matinee."

    But I think "Baadasssss!" is one of very few to show the filmmaker as a driven artist, more comparable to the intense look at a ground-breaking creator like "Pollock."

    Writer/director/producer Mario Van Peebles eerily reenacts how his father Melvin wrote/directed/produced the seminal "Sweet Sweetback's Baad Asssss Song," one of the first indie movies that also virtually created the potent blaxpoitation genre and guerrilla moviemaking; I thought I had seen it back in '71, but as soon as this film started I realized my memory was, embarrassingly, confusing it with Robert Downey Sr.'s "Putney Swope," so now I do need to see the original.

    The production design, including costumes and hair styles, exquisitely recreates the era, but the editing and cinematography suck us even further into Melvin's head as he incisively surveys the state of the image of blacks in movies up to that time and story boards his response.

    Melvin's obsession to create and complete the film according to his vision and on his terms threatens his health and his personal and business relationships, but we are caught up in his whirlwind and root for him no matter how ruthless and prickly he becomes as the odds get ever longer and more frustrating and he refuses to compromise, taking offense at lame, well-meaning suggestions, for example, that he might get further if he would at least smile. But he everywhere, rightly or overly sensitively, only sees racism and condescension, including when he has to part layers of irony to beg Bill Cosby for help.

    Recalling the spirit of Werner Herzog's documentary "My Best Fiend" about his tortured collaboration with Klaus Kinski to portray obsessives in "Fitzcarraldo" and "Aguirre: The Wrath of God," Mario adds layers of Freudian issues as this filial tribute unflinchingly includes the father's treatment of the son on set and off in the original film and unsparingly brings to life everyone around them.

    Mario effectively borrows other bio-pic techniques, such as the camera-facing interviewees in "Reds," first by their portrayers, then, next to the closing credits, the real people, concluding with a loving portrait of his father.

    Contrary to the original film, which boosted the careers of the fledging Earth, Wind, and Fire, the soundtrack instrumentation here is surprisingly traditional and sentimental.

    The Portrait of the Artist can rarely be a Portrait of a Nice Guy and "Baadasssss!" beautifully and honestly shows why.
    7Ronin47

    Almost great, but not quite (***)

    Aw, damn. We can't make fun of Mario Van Peebles anymore. Always something of a laughing stock (despite a few good contributions, like a good performance in "Ali" and directing "New Jack City"), Mario Van Peebles has made himself instantly much cooler by making this fun and suitably chaotic film, which chronicles the making of his father Melvin's landmark film "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song".

    I've never seen that film, but from what I understand it's not exactly great, but was revolutionary for existing at all. It's about a black man "taking it to the man" and actually getting away with it, which was unheard of at the time.

    Mario plays his own father, and "Baadasssss!" certainly doesn't candy-coat it. Melvin was essentially a good man, but could be incredibly cold and mean, and to his own family, and the film shows that. It also takes us back to the notorious scene in "Sweetback" where Melvin used his own 13 year-old son in the scene where the the titular character loses his virginity. This scene was difficult and uncomfortable for everyone involved, EXCEPT Melvin, which is telling.

    The movie is swiftly paced and stylish, but I couldn't help feeling that it could be a little better. It feels a little messy and disorganized at times. Still, good stuff.
    BlackFilm

    Sweet

    I can't begin to say how great this film is, and how much it meant to me. I'm not a big fan of some of Mario Van Peebles' work, so to me, this is by far his best job, acting and directing. He captured the power and the struggle of fighting for a dream/vision, and he made the audience take the journey with him. In fact, this film renewed by interest in the original "Sweetback ..." and made me appreciate the original film to a much greater degree. I saw this film on it's opening weekend, and I pre-ordered it as soon as I found out it was coming to DVD.

    Essentially, Mario plays Melvin (his father) while he was creating the independent film classic, 'Sweet Sweetback's Baad Asssss Song'. We watch as Van Peebles struggles with family, "the man" and his own personal demons to complete a film that, by all industry models, should not have been made. It was black, sexual, political, and there was barely enough money to get it off the ground. But Van Peebles was a bad mother{watch your mouth}, and he was determined to make it anyway.

    If you are a filmmaker, put this film in your "must see" list. If you are struggling to build a business, follow a path less traveled, or go for any dream that seems almost out of reach, this film is also a must see for you. And, if you just want to see the power of passion, and see what a person can do on too little budget with too little time when all he has to make up for the deficit is his heart, see this film! (That last comment was about Mario, but it is also apropos for Melvin, the subject of this film).

    There is nudity and strong language in the film. I mention that because I wouldn't want to send anyone to a film that might offend them without forewarning. That said, see this film!
    8anhedonia

    A must-see for anyone interested in film-making or screen writing

    It's a real shame that mediocre indie films, such as "Open Water" and "Napoleon Dynamite," get tons of publicity while a gem like "Baadasssss!" goes unnoticed.

    Director and co-writer Mario Van Peebles affectionately, but truthfully, chronicles a fictional telling of his father, Melvin Van Peebles' attempt to make "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song," modern black cinema's groundbreaking film, which was compulsory viewing for the Black Panthers and paved the way for countless black actors, filmmakers and film technicians. The Spike Lees, Ernest Dickersons, John Singletons and Wayanses owe a huge debt of gratitude to not only what Melvin accomplished 33 years ago, but also how he did it.

    Mario Van Peebles' previous directorial efforts, "New Jack City" (1991), "Posse" (1993) and "Panther" (1995), showed potential, but were mired in clichés and turned out to be rather forgettable. That's not the case with "Baadasssss!"

    This is an exciting, funny and moving film about one man's zeal to make the movie he wants to make. Melvin did not want to kowtow to studios and was fed up with how blacks were portrayed in Hollywood movies. So he set out to make a movie where the black man fought back, then went on the run and got away. And he did it with an ethnically diverse crew (which was unheard of then), many of whom knew little or nothing about movie-making.

    "Baadasssss!" brilliantly illustrates Melvin's struggles, including pretending he was shooting a black porno film to hide his real intent from the crafts unions, running out of money, losing his vision in one eye and finding a distributor for "Sweet Sweetback."

    Mario shows a deep sense of love and respect for his father's achievement. But Mario definitely doesn't sugarcoat his depiction of Melvin. The Melvin we see in this film is a driven, obsessive man who loves his friends and family deeply, but won't let anything or anyone stop his film, including the weekend jailing of his crew. Mario's reluctance about being forced to be in a "sex scene" in his dad's movie is one of the film's highlights. The moment works thanks to a nicely subdued and thoughtful performance by Khleo Thomas as the young Mario.

    Mario Van Peebles and Dennis Haggerty penned a smart, energetic script. They add a nice undercurrent to the story by creating a father-son dynamic, which adds a layer of surprising depth to the story. Mario Van Peebles so completely immerses himself into the role of his father that we forget we're watching Mario play Melvin.

    Where the script falters is in its over-reliance on voice-over narration used to to convey Melvin's thoughts. It works sometimes. But it also seems obtrusive. For instance, Melvin's thoughts about the contents of the props drawer aren't needed because we're smart enough to know how dangerous or funny it could have all turned out.

    "Baadasssss!" is as much about Melvin's passion to make his influential film as it is about the importance of maintaining one's integrity. Just as Melvin didn't compromise his story, Mario, too, apparently held out and refused to compromise. Producers wanted him to make the film more acceptable to "a white audience" or toss in some hip-hop. But Mario didn't relent and made the film he wanted to make.

    The paradox about this film about the making of a film is that while Mario's movie is technically and cinematic ally superior to Melvin's seminal film, "Baadasssss!" ultimately isn't as politically, socially or historically influential as the film it chronicles. Nevertheless, for anyone interested in movie-making, "Baadasssss!" is a must, along with the documentaries, "Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse" (1991) and "Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography" (1992). "Baadasssss!" is one of the best and most enjoyable films ever made about film-making.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During a July 2004 interview with Terry Gross on the National Public Radio program "Fresh Air," Mario Van Peebles explained that he did not want to put any child actor in the same position he was put in on the set of Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971), especially because he felt like, as a thirteen-year-old, his father had given him no choice but to participate in a sex scene with a much older woman--partly by threatening to confiscate the bicycle he had received as a Christmas present if he didn't perform. "I didn't enjoy it at all. I didn't want to be in that scene. I didn't want to have to give that bike back--that bike had a banana seat!...I didn't want to make anyone do that scene twice, so in Baadasssss! (2003) I just used the original footage of me as a kid in "(Sweet) Sweetback('s Baadasssss Song)" during that scene. So the kid I cast (to play the younger version of me, Khleo Thomas) wasn't going to have to do anything like that. And that's just something that I wanted to do--I said, 'well, I'm not going to repeat, do unto someone else what I didn't like having done unto me. ' But I did want to show the scene because I thought it was a point in my life, and it just showed something interesting about Melvin, that he was sort of like that 'Great Santini-esque' father--almost that which does not kill in a Friedrich Nietzsche-esque way you makes you stronger."
    • Goofs
      While in the "D"...Detroit, The DJ announces the radio station's call letters beginning with "K" Call letters for radio and television stations in that area of the country start with "W".
    • Quotes

      Melvin Van Peebles: Is this something negative, Priscilla? Because if it's negative, I can't even deal with it right now. I'm a broke, pissed off nigger from Chicago, and I'm down to my last cigar.

    • Crazy credits
      Real-life participants of the production of "Sweet Sweetback's..." give testimony during the closing credits, including Earth, Wind & Fire founding member Maurice White, who confirmed the "bounced check" story. Melvin Van Peebles himself appears onscreen when the credits finish.
    • Connections
      Featured in Anatomy of a Scene: Baadasssss (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Damn All the Fallacies
      Performed by Tree Adams

      New Dog Old Trix Publishing

      Written by (c) Adam Hirsh

      Courtesy of Treehouse Music Inc.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 17, 2005 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures Classics
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Badass
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bad Aaas Cinema
      • MVP Films
      • Showtime Networks
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $365,727
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $45,331
      • May 30, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $365,727
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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