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Epicurus.com - Black Sister's Revenge

Black Sister's Revenge
List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $19.95
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Xenon
Starring: Jerri Hayes, Jewell Williams, Synthia James, Teri Taylor, Eddie Allen (II)
Directed By: Jamaa Fanaka
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

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Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786303491387
Format: Color
ISBN: 6303491383
Label: Xenon
Manufacturer: Xenon
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Xenon
Release Date: 2002-01-01
Running Time: 100
Studio: Xenon
Theatrical Release Date: 1976

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Editorial Reviews:



Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Oh, what a day in the hood it turned out to be for Jesse
Comment: I was lucky, or unlucky, enough to see this movie Fri. night 3/21/08 on the TCM channel. This is what you get when you can't sleep. By the way, it was followed by Penitentiary, but I digress. This movie hooked me like a roadside fatality car accident, I didn't want to look, but I couldn't look away. The acting was awful, but the story was interesting; it showed the lengths a sister would go to for her man, when she ain't got nothing to lose and she is from "Sippi" or Mississippi for the unhip. And, let those last five minutes be a lesson to those of you who don't know that "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned". Especially a country black woman who has robbed a bank to bring about the release of her man from the big house.

I'm going to buy this movie right now so I can watch it again at my leisure with my friends.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Old School
Comment: I love this movie! I grew up in the 70's and just takes you back to the days in the "hood" and how things use to be.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: Title is misleading
Comment: I saw this movie way back in '91. You see the cover and you think a soft porn, women prison flick. Actually it's about hustling black youths in poverty stricken, Compton. Has its hysterically funny moments like Burgeouis (Boo-zwah) Californian cousins looking down on cornbread, southern accented Emma and her World War 2 looking sandles.
'Will somebody please buy the girl some new sandles.' No wonder her feet is so rough she can walk on fire and feel nothing.
Or you can laugh hard at how she kicks Jess' behind for cheating on her with a bald headed woman complete with red lipstick, (Remember those old bald headed mannequins that used to scare the pants off you, when you were a kid in those dept. stores? Yeah, she looked like that.)
You also laugh at the music score and how the movie really looks like someone was bored, rounded up a few kids from the hood, grabbed a camcorder, gave 'em a few cheasy lines, started filming, gave 'em $20 for their time and sparse acting skills, and somehow managed to get it all on VHS/DVD. This movie couldn't have cost more than $1000 to make, but it isn't bad for a few laughs when you're rained in, tired of watching tv and movie reruns and looking to make fun of something.
By the way, you have to see one of the boyfriends tie his shirt into a bow in the front. Women used to do that in the '70's. It's funny to see.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Watch it for what it is - Blaxploitation
Comment: When I brought this movie I wasn't expecting much. I thought maybe a movie that would show me a good plot and a low budget production set but nothing more. However, when I started to watch "Black Sisters Revenge" I saw how fast it moved from when Emma (a country girl and the star of the movie) first came to Compton to live with her aunt's family to how she started to shuffle and jivin' in the "chicken n' biscuit joint"; she went to a house party where of course the movie had to show "brothers and sisters" smoking weed and drinking beer; oh yes, we can't forget the gangs that where at the party to `cause some trouble and have a shoot-out; and last but not least Emma fell in love and went to bed with an idiot junkie(the whole plot for the movie. He is the one she goes to bat for when he is in jail). You would think this all happened over a month or so; nope not this movie. This all happened within a 24hr period!
Watching this movie made me realize why white people think so low of black people. This movie made absolutely no sense. I don't want to give a way the whole story for the movie but I can tell you this. If you like shows like Archie Bunker and GoodTimes (which I do) watch the movie with a grain of salt; see it for what it was at that present time and learn from it. Yes the movie is horrible but if it makes you wiser (especially if you are black) than I give the movie a passing grade.

Peace!


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: "Nobody, I mean nobody, celebrates at Jack In The Box."
Comment: I love the plot keywords listed for the film Black Sister's Revenge (1976) aka Emma Mae on The Internet Movie Database...Hit In Crotch, Racial Slur, Independent Film, Blaxploitation...not much, but you had me at `Hit In Crotch'. Written, produced, and directed by Jamaa Fanaka (Penitentiary, Penitentiary II, Street Wars), the film features a cast of relative unknown performers, many in their only screen role, including Jerri Hayes, Eddie Allen, Charles D. Brooks III (Soul Vengeance), Malik Carter (Black Belt Jones), and Ernest Williams II, whom some may remember in the pivotal role as `Customer', from the television role "That's My Mama", specifically the episode titled "The Gun"...give me a break, as I had not a lot to work with here...

Jerri Hayes play Emma Mae, a young woman from rural Mississippi (or `Sippi' as was referred to in the film) who has come to L.A. (Compton to be exact) live with her aunt and her family after the passing of Emma Mae's mother. As Emma Mae gets off the bus, her cousins look at her like she's some sort of alien, as the chick is pure corn pone, if you know what I mean. Anyway, her cousins reluctantly let Emma Mae tag along as they go to the local college student union, and the joint is jumping. Her cousins try to set her up, but there are no takers. Emma Mae does eventually catch the eye of a local hoodlum and pill pusher named Jesse (Williams II) after she beats the tar out of his weasely friend named Zeke (Brooks III), earning the respect of her peers (seems Zeke was more vocal than the others in terms of her funky appearance, to which Emma Mae laid a few smacks upside his head). Emma Mae ends up falling hard for Jesse who eventually has an altercation with The Fuzz, goes into hiding (call me mint jelly baby, cause I'm on the lam), eventually gets popped and thrown into the can, the joint, the slammer, the hoosegow, the pen, the tank, the cooler, the jug, the cooler, the brig...what I'm trying to say is he was committed to a house of correction. Anyway, being smitten with the lug, Emma Mae gets the locals together to raise money to hire a lawyer to defend Jesse and Zeke, as they work out a deal to open a carwash on an unused property. Things are going well, so well, in fact that The Man takes notice and shuts them down (some BS zoning laws), to which Emma Mae and a couple of others resort to robbing a bank...they get away, use the money to get Jesse and Zeke out on bail, but then Jesse ends up two-timing Emma Mae (turns out he was only using her the whole time), to which she retaliates by putting her foot square into Jesse's behind, among other places...

I learned a lot of things from this movie, the first being you don't want to disrespect a country girl with nappy hair, because if you do, she'll have no problem in dishing out a country beating (particularly in working over your jewels, if you're a male). I also learned some new terms, like fender benders...this is used to describe pills that, if you take, and then drive a car, they'll make you crash into things causing you to bend your fender. Also, an `ugmug' is an unattractive person (I think the word is actually a combination of two words, ugly and mug). And if you really want to disrespect someone, you can call him or her `armadillo ugly'...another thing, I didn't realize wearing overalls without a shirt was such a predominant fad in the mid 70s...interesting look. All right, as far as the film goes, it was interesting, but one should keep in mind the cast is made up of inexperienced performers, so a lot of the acting really isn't all that good, but the effort, for the most part, was there, and that counts for something with me. The story moves along pretty well, but it does get bogged down occasionally as a character experiences a verbose, moment of drama meant, I think, to appeal to the audience the trials and tribulations of the disenfranchised African American community. Emma Mae has a few of these scenes, along with another character named Big Daddy, played by Carter. Big Daddy was kind of a weird guy in that he wore traditional African attire, a sheik headdress, full gray bread, mumbles to himself, and had a militant attitude. There's one scene where he speaks about a number of things including the evils of whitey, the ironic plight of brothers killing each other over turf which they don't even own, and the need for African Americans to get up off their collective behinds and take what they can from The Man. Some of the sequences didn't seem to be related to the story, but were fun to watch, nonetheless, one in particular being when Jesse and Zeke were eating crab and hitching a ride, finally getting picked up by some acquaintances. That crab looked nasty, and they were eating parts of it I don't think you're supposed to eat. All in all this was an odd, low budget, independent drama with blaxploitation underpinnings, displaying some pretty shabby acting through and through, but it does feature some effort (in my opinion), along with a bit of heart (or soul, if you prefer), and possibly worth checking out if only to watch the last five minutes when the character of Emma Mae performs her rendition of The Nutcracker Suite...

The fullscreen picture (1.33:1) on this Xenon Pictures DVD does show signs of age, but overall, looks relatively decent and certainly watchable. The audio comes through relatively well, but I'm not really sure what format it's presented in...there are chapter stops, and a number of previews for other DVD releases including Bad Attitude (1993), Black Godfather (1974), Dolemite (1975), Penitentiary (1979), Soul Survivor (1995), and Sweetback (1971).

Cookieman108

By the way, someone was asking about the music played during the final credits...the song, titled Theme from Emma Mae (Long to be Back Home), was arranged by HB Barnum (who also did the scoring for the film), and performed by Keisa Brown, and released as a 45 back in 1976 on the Los Angeles label Marsel Records.



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