Shadow And Act on Facebook

15 black films from the 70’s you must see

After Entertainment Weekly posted their so-called list of “blaxploitation films that you can’t miss,” or something like that, a few folks asked me to put together my list. It was easy at first, but then I quickly realized that the 70’s were a great time for black films and there was such a wide diversity of films, that I couldn’t just list ten blaxploitation flicks, but instead, expanded the list to include other films from that period that would not easily fit into the ‘blaxploitation’ genre. Keep in mind that this is my list and not the last definite word on the subject. Feel free to add, subtract or argue with my choices. We still have freedom of speech.

1) Three The Hard Way – (1974  dir. Gordon Parks Jr.) The great Gordon Parks’ son had quite a ride in the 70’s cranking out films at an active pace with this film, Super Fly, and another one we’ll get into later. But for my money this is da’ bomb. A low rent, low budget (though at the time with it’s $1.5 million budget, it was considered the most expensive black  film at the time) James Bondian rip-off about three friends who get together to stop a white supremacist organization from killing all black people by poisoning the water supply, giving them all sickle cell. Now c’mon, who today would make a film about three brothers saving the entire black race? Yeah I thought so. And you couldn’t even do a remake of this today. Name me three three hardcore, macho, black actors today to play these parts. Idris Elba? O.K. Michael Jai White? Maybe, but too cartoonish.  And….. see???  Can’t think of one can you? (Available on a bootleg DVD and is shown occasionally on cable on Showtime and Retroplex)

2) Leadbelly – (1976 dir. Gordon Parks) Parks Jr’ father’s compelling, haunting, moving film about the legendary blues singer, played magnificently by Roger E. Mosley. The studio that made the film, Paramount, fearing no audience appeal, dumped the film in a few cities to little fanfare. Needless to say, it’s never been released on DVD. One of the truly great lost films of the 70’s.

3) Melinda -  (1972 dir. Hugh Robertson) A film I’ve written about before on this blog. A really terrific, complex and sexy mystery thriller, directed by one of the first major African American Hollywood film editors, Robertson, who had previously edited Midnight Cowboy and Shaft, and who, unfortunately, died at an early age (available on a bootleg DVD made from a poor print).

4) Gordon’s War -  (1973 – dir.  Ossie Davis) Released by Fox, a totally forgotten and  terrific, cracking action thriller about an ex-Vietnam vet (Paul Winfield), who leads a vigilante group of ex-vets to rid Harlem of drug dealers. Do I hear remake anyone?  (Not available on DVD).

5) Top of the Heap – (1972 - dir. Christopher St. John) Truly one of the weirdest films of the era about a corrupt, unhappily married, drug addict cop (played by St. John who also wrote the film) on the verge of a nervous breakdown who goes into occasional fantasies, imaging himself as an astronaut on the moon. Highly regarded when it first came out, it vanished without a trace, but is still fondly remembered by the few who saw it when it came out… like me.

6) Black Caesar – (1972 - dir. Larry Cohen) Basically an updated reworking of those old 1930’s Warner bros crime dramas like Little Caesar and Public Enemy, but made with a real grittiness, and one of Fred Williamson’s most iconic roles. Also, the soundtrack by the great  James Brown is the coldest, hardcore, f—-g  greatest soundtrack ever for a blaxplotation film. Sorry for those who think Curtis Mayfield’s soundtrack for Super Fly is the standard. (Available on DVD or you can watch the complete film in parts on You Tube).

7) Aaron Love Angela – (1975 – dir. Gordon Parks Jr)  Not admittedly the greatest film and it does have it problems including a cop out ending that resolves nothing, but this reworking of Romeo and Juliet, about a black high school basketball player who falls in love with a Puerto Rican girl, despite their parents objections, is a sweet-toned film, with some real toughness. Another film by Parks Jr., who was on the verge of becoming  a major player in Hollywood, when his life was sadly cut short in a plane crash, in Kenya, in 1979, while scouting locations for a new movie (Not available on DVD or anywhere)

8.) Let’s Do It Again – (1975 – dir. Sidney Poitier) Of the three comedies Poitier made with Bill Cosby (the other two being Uptown Saturday Night and A Piece of the Action) the second one, this one, is by far the funniest and stills hold up today despite its absolutely, far-fetched plotline about a con job involving hypnotism, and a rigged boxing mtach (Available on DVD)

9) The Education of Sonny Carson – (1974 – dir. Michael Campus)  A brutal, tough, unflinching movie about Carson’s life, growing up on the mean streets of Harlem (Available on DVD).

10 and 11) Coffy/Foxy Brown (1973/74 dir- Jack Hill) How could I not put these two films on the list and not pay my respects to The Goddess, The Queen, the  stone-cold most beautiful, and baddest chick there ever was – Pam Grier? (Both available on DVD)

12) Truck Turner (1974 – dir. Johnathan Kaplan ) A violent, very funny, always exciting action film about a skip tracer, which, for a second, made Issac Hayes a major movie star. Lt. Uhura, Nichelle Nichols, is incredibly sexy and jaw-dropping awesome as the evil brains out to kill Hayes and the final insane, shootout through a hospital, was stolen from the shootout sequence in a hospital maternity ward, from director, Sam Fullers’ little seen 1972 thriller Dead Piegon on Beethoven Street (Available on DVD)

13) Bingo Long’s Traveling All Stars and Motor Kings – (1976 – dir John Badham) An affectionate but a tad too jokey and rambunctious film about the Negro League baseball team in the 1930’s players with Richard Pryor stealing every scene he’s in. The film originally was to be directed by Steven Spielberg after Jaws (available on DVD).

14) Slaughter’s Big Rip Off (1973 – dir. Gordon Douglas) – This sequel to 1972’s Slaughter starring the absolute definition of hardcore black masculinity, James Brown,  is far superior to the first one, mainly thanks to director Gordon Douglas, a long time Hollywood veteran director who had been directing films for over 30 years for every studio with every major star (Available on DVD)

15) Claudine (1974 – dir. John Barry) Hard to believe but this simple and very charming but tough  at times romance about a single mother on welfare, who falls in love with a garbage man, caused quite a ruckus when it came out. Some objected to the premise and felt that the lead character presented a “negative” portrayal of black women, but the biggest objection was due to the casting of Diahann Carroll (who got an Oscar nomination as best actress for her performance) in the lead role, who was thought to be too “bougie,” not ”black enough,” and too beautiful to play a welfare mother.  One of the few films made in the U.S. by director Barry after he left for France, after being “blacklisted” as Communist during the 1950’s Senator McCarthy’s “Red Scare,” during the 1950’s (Available on DVD).

10 comments to 15 black films from the 70’s you must see

  • Ash

    Thanks for this list. I have more movies to look forward to watching now.

  • Moni

    Aaron Loves Angela is available on Amazon.com on DVD and VHS. I have DVD copy. Film came out on VHS in 2000.

  • Moni

    Hey, gotta let ya know where to find it! : )

  • You know what, just like there’s a TCM (Turner Classic Movies) for classic Hollywood cinema, I wonder how viable a cable TV channel dedicated almost solely to black films of this period. I think there’s more than enough content to fill airtime; we’re talking late 60s until maybe early 80s, the good, the bad and the mediocre films, all on rotation – The Blaxploitation Channel.

    It could sell…

  • Harlepolis

    I love “Claudine” so much,,,,but I too had some “eyebrow raising” moments in some parts of the movie, even though Ms.Carroll acted her pretty tail off,,,,I still couldn’t digest her fully in that rule, I guess she didn’t make her portrayal believable enough.

  • Harlepolis

    BTW…
    The person who TRULY stole the show IMO, is the actress who played her daughter(the girl who got knocked up by Abdullah). I only saw that woman TWICE, in “Claudine” and playing a VERY funny & obedient maid(surprise! suprise!) in “The Jeffersons”.

  • Urban Cineaste

    Interesting list.

    Notable Omissions if the criteria is 70s films

    Sounder
    Spook Who Sat at the Door

    Loved the fact you chose Claudine a forgotten classic in my opinion. The original lead Diana Sands collapsed on set 3 days into the shot & died from Cancer a short while after.

  • Sergio

    I wanted to avoid the obvious which is why Spook Who Sat by the Door isn’t on the list. Everybody who wants to prove their “revolutionary street cred” always puts the film on theit list. (No reflection on you of course.) Sounder isn’t on the list because I HATE that film. I remember reading a piece a long long ago by someone who actually grew up on the Delta explaining how that film got everything wrong. And besides give me Pam Grier than a hot, sweaty, downtrodden Ciecly Tyson any day of the week. and you’re right I forgot to mention that sands was the original lead in that film

    And the girl Harepolis is referring to is Tamu Blackwell. (Amazing I can still remember her name!) She was a familar face back during that time and appeared in a bunch of Tv and films roles during the 70’s

  • Art

    “Everybody who wants to prove their “revolutionary street cred” always puts the film on theit list.”

    Sigh. Or maybe it’s the superior satirical and non-stereotypical narrative that causes them to list it.

    If people wanted to prove revolutionary street cred then they’d list Conquest Of The Planet Of The Apes, with the unedited speech by Caesar.

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>