Movie Review: Life Is Hot In Cracktown

The gritty and devastating realities of life in downtrodden communities across the United States are made easily accessible in Life Is Hot In Cracktown, a powerful and emotionally involving film from writer/director Buddy Giovinazzo.

A smorgasbord of drugs, sex, murder, prostitution and poverty, race and class informs the captivating storytelling, made all the more appealing by the strong performances from an impressive roster of actors, which comprises Kerry Washington, Evan Ross, and Vondie Curtis Hall, among others. Against this backdrop, we are introduced to a fascinating array of multi-layered characters, each dealing with a particular crisis by which they are increasingly tormented as they strive to make life in the fictitious, crime-plagued community of Cracktown.

Among the film’s main characters are Romeo (Ross), the ruthless leader of a teenage gang that terrorizes residents; a transgendered prostitute named Marybeth (Washington) living with her overprotective boyfriend (Victor Rasuk); a young Latino store operator (Edoardo Ballerini) grappling with frequent break-ins and the demands of a family at home. We also meet a young boy who must take care of his little sister after their drug-addicted mother and stepfather skip out. The common thread that binds these people together is the resolve to survive in the face of the most extreme repression and hopelessness.

With nods to films like Tsotsi, Crash, and City of God, Life Is Hot In Cracktown is a vivid exploration of the conflicting forces and obstacles often attendant to the pursuit of one’s happiness. While Giovinazzo’s writing occasionally loses focus here, the courage of his characters to be true to themselves and survive in a hostile society is compelling.

Giovinazzo gets props for his candid illustration of life in certain quarters too often ignored by the mainstream. He does a highly commendable job at weaving together the different strands of the story and building suspense (particularly as the ending approaches) in crafting his film, a hard-hitting meditation on crime, class and community.

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Article Author: TYRONE S REID

Tyrone S Reid is a Jamaican writer and cultural critic who is passionate about the arts and providing cultural information for people who need it.

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  • Life Is Hot In Cracktown Life Is Hot In Cracktown

    Based on the 1993 best-selling novel by Buddy Giovinazzo, LIFE IS HOT IN CRACKTOWN shows the gritty, hard realities of a neighborhood, as well as the struggling, proud people who attempt to survive. ...

Article comments

  • 1 - Troy

    Oct 16, 2009 at 9:05 am

    I saw the movie and it was pretty good. I'm always impressed by Evan Ross's acting skills, just like his mother Diana, he is a natural at playing dramatic, gritty roles. It would be good to see them do a movie together. Overall Kerry Washington was impressive as well as the other actors, and actresses in the movie. I recommend it to anyone who loves drama.

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