
Ultra-meta. Fantastically. Great.

Ultra-meta. Fantastically. Great.

If you can accept that the “Rocky” films are genre films within themselves, you’re fine here.

The hardcore climax, albeit obvious, was still good!

See comments on “Creed” above.

Time to end it, Craig. This film is your “A View To A Kill.” Not that you’re now too old, like Roger Moore was; you’re just tired of it, and it shows in your eyes.
To Protect and Serve Who? Organizing a Movement to Abolish Police Violence.
Mumia Abu-Jamal.
City Lights Open Media Series.
San Francisco: City Lights Books.
16 pp., $5
Mumia Abu-Jamal, the imprisoned journalist known worldwide for his writing and speaking, has, not unsurprisingly, hand-typed a document about fighting as he battles to get the needed medication that could cure his Hepatitis C. A memorable pamphlet responds to the current moment with both stationary (historical) and fluid (current) thought, and this one doesn’t disappoint. In his first pamphlet in nearly three decades, the former Black Panther Party member attempts a tutorial for the Black Lives Matter movement. The radical writer gives a revisionist history of the Civil Rights Movement that centralizes the blood and anger of young people. He reminds his symbolic charges that movements come from oppression and will guarantee violent resistance. A brief-but-serious examination of the cost of struggle as Black America heads into the 50th anniversary of both the Black Power movement and the founding of the Black Panther Party during 2016, Abu-Jamal continues to step into the role of social historian legends Lerone Bennett Jr. and Howard Zinn, in his own, deceptively simple agitprop style.
And DC decides three is a magic number here! Take that, “Captain America: Civil War!”
Here’s my informed trailer review: YYYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!!!!!!!! 🙂
DECEMBER 2nd UPDATE:

Thirty years ago today, at the ripe age of 17, I covered my first news story professionally. I covered a huge anti-apartheid rally in Newark, N.J. for The New Jersey Afro-American newspaper, the “baby” of what then was a chain of weeklies that went up and down the East Coast. Deborah P. Smith-Gregory, my journalism teacher at Seton Hall University’s Upward Bound project in 1983, brought me into The AFRO. She allowed me to share her byline with her. The article made it onto the front page, and I never looked back. Thanks, Mrs. Deborah Smith-Gregory!

….is here!
….makes me think of the first time I paid attention to his voice 30 years ago, which was on this song on a cassette tape and the above PSA that I saw on New York local television.
I guess the PSA came as a result of the below.