Do you guys understand that is how they talked back in the day and some black cops hated on their own people. This happened and Singleton wrote what happened in his neighborhood when he grew up
@@gaaraofthefunk2011or they’re trying to stop crime like the white cops are. Black cops also care about stopping crime…this liberal racism😂😂😂movies can brainwash your mind thinking cops are constantly beating/killing POC
She never talked to Ricky like that ! It was because she hated Doug boys dad whereas Ricky was the prize .. yall need to grow up thinking traumatizing kids is tough 😂
Doughboy was the one that deserved better more than anybody in this movie when you think about it, they failed him since a child, his mother never loved him or cared she only cared about Ricky, his brother Ricky was always stubborn and never listened, Ricky was babied from the beginning and everything was blamed on Doughboy. And although nobody had Doughboy’s back he always had Ricky’s back and got him and them out of every situation Ricky may have caused since a child, Ricky was always naive to his surroundings and didn’t take things as seriously. Doughboy was a true friend as well he could have ignored Tre when he told Dough let him out but he listened because he knew that wasn’t for Tre, he really had everybody’s best interest he just wasn’t loved so he grew up in crime. Doughboy never had a chance, imo he was victimized to be a product of his own environment because that’s where he felt like his love came from, his homies, because he never got it at home, which is way he always stayed in trouble.
The Black cop being racist is 100% a real thing specially back then, I mean you seen it happen with the main characters of the movie Growing up around violence traumatizes you, and the mind looks for coping mechanism to deal with the anger and frustration Specifically, It looks for safety For some kids that safety was found on joining a gang, For others it was becoming a police officer
John Singleton made this movie based on real events that happened in every city in this country. Is it a TRUE story? No. Based on real characters from A -Z? Most likely not. But like NEW JACK CITY...."There is a NINO BROWN in every major city in America."
Fun Fact: On the very last episode of SnowFall,Frank and Leon walked past the set of them filming this movie as a nod to John Singleton(who was a producer on SnowFall)
Fun fact, the actor who played the guy who shot Ricky was actually convicted for murdering 2 or 3 people and then was murdered by a devil worshipping ninja while in a maximum prison
This was a good reaction. This film was NOT based on a true story but was based on personal experience and a COMMON experience among black and brown people of America in the 70s and 80s. On both East and west coast these things occurred - self hating blacks, bodies laying around corners, friends and associates being shot and killed - some innocent and some not so innocent. You two are very young but you’ve heard stories of New York in the 80s and it was the same for sure. Talk to your older family members and they’ll confirm - especially about this film. I’m glad yall watched it. Continue to care about others and support each other. It’s a cold world but if we take care of each other then it’s a little bit of a better place. Again I enjoyed your reaction!😊
We love this comment. Appreciate all the insight and info you gave! I can also tell you watched and paid attention to the video thats tough. Glad you enjoyed it though much more coming.
Exactly. Like Pac's song "Brenda's Got a Baby." When he put it out a lot of people thought he was talking about a real girl but it was more about the type of things that was happening to certain young women in the hood back then...
Great reaction. In the beginning y’all were wondering why Ricky and Doughboy’s mother was so mean to Doughboy. That’s because they had different fathers, she hated Doughboy father so she lashed out at him and that’s why he ended up how he did instead of the straight and narrow like Ricky. If Doughboy was given just a little love from his mother he prolly wouldn’t have turned to the streets
Boyz N The Hood is the quintessential hood classic. Rewatching this as an adult i realize that Ricky wasn’t street smart due to him being coddled by his mother. He laughed at Trey when Trey told him that he was afraid to have sex, he was scared when Furious took them to Compton & he didn’t take Ferris & his crew serious when they coming for him. Brenda’s favoritism towards Ricky did more damage to Doughboy than the hood ever did & Brenda lost both of her sons as a result of her favoritism. Here are some fun facts: Will Smith was offered the role of Trey but declined due to The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, little Ricky was played by Dovonan McCrary. He’s the brother of Darius McCrary (Eddie Winslow from Family Matters) & The girl who Doughboy called a bish was in Ice Cube’s Today Was A Good Day video.
I’m 55. This was a mellow look at how it was then. I’m old enough to remember before it was like this. & old enough to have lived through to here. Many of the boys I grew up with were murdered or went to prison for decades. It’s a pretty accurate depiction though. John Singleton, the director was the director of the series Snowfall. Y’all should react to that. Great way to grow your channel & it shows how all of this came to be.
Singleton grew up in crip heavy part of south central, which is why his movies features so many of them and their lingo. Where i grew up at, you dont say "cuz" or "cuh" unless you're a crip or crip affiliate. But a lot of people who didnt use it now don't really know its crip lingo
@@grandpu659 Aint nobody feel a way but these old heads hella full of shit. You got the 6ix9ine gummo gay parody in your favorites and called me soft. Got them diddy soft type of vibes over there where you at lil braa😂
17:54 now most people who first see Tre punching the air laugh I did too till I was in a similar situation Tre was in that's when I understood his frustration. It's that hood rage that so many people have in the hood because of everything getting in your way like you'll never be free its what turns people into guys like Doughboy and Doughboy moms were you just stop giving af
Bro, Ricky alive from that backshot?? That would be extremely rare, just like surviving a plane crash. Ricky should have been paying attention like Tre, nonetheless. Likewise, they assumed Ricky was a crip, given that they were bloods and Ricky was wearing a Blue Jacket with a capital “C”, but little did they know that the “C” was for Crenshaw High School.
Among the best things I love about Boyz n The Hood is Doughboy for his character and story development and Ice Cube’s performance in the role. Cube at the time was among the emerging hip-hopers in the 90s with his debut solo album AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted after leaving NWA. The guy may not have had attended drama class in school, never did a film, never did a TV show or a stage show but it was the encouragement from John Singleton due to their friendship that convinced Cube to get the part of Doughboy. John Singleton met Ice Cube when he was a member of backstage crew at the Arsenio Hall Show and even though Cube turned down the offer a couple times, I’m beyond glad he accepted the offer. For an inexperienced actor in a cinematic debut, Ice Cube did an awesome job playing Doughboy. He played the role as if he (Cube himself) never had a dad, is the subject of ridicule and verbal abuse by his mum who favours a brother of his and ends up as as a Rollin 60s Crip. He did it so damn convincingly that he should’ve got an Oscar, a BAFTA, a Golden Globe - all three for “Best Supporting Actor” and MTV Movie Award for “Best Breakthrough Performance”. This was long before Cube did the Friday films (film series he also wrote/produced), Are We There Yet?, xXx 2 and 3, Fist Fight, Ride Along, 21/22 Jump Street, Ghost of Mars, the Barbershop films, Rampart, Tresspass etc If the Marc Webb-directed and Andrew Garfield-starred Amazing Spider-Man films were to conclude with a 3rd film (a 4 hour 3rd film to end the story) and if Ice Cube appeared in it - he would’ve been J Jonah Jameson (Daily Bugle newspaper boss). Imagine Andrew Garfield and Ice Cube in the same room! Wasted/missed opportunity in my opinion.
Regina King was twenty years old when she made her big screen debut as Shalika in this film. She shot stardom afterwards and has been awarded many times for her acting....the most noteworthy being a BSA Academy Award in 2019, four Primetime Emmy Awards, and a Golden Globe for BSA 2019.
You guys notice everything but you miss something in that movie when the cops pulled up who's playing with sneaker when they walked around before he got the football taken from him the boy they saw dead had no sneaker 😊
you guys should watch Higher Learning. It has alot of the same cast as boyz n the hood. Ice cube, regina king, etc. It came out 4 years after this movie. It's really good, perhaps a bit heavier than this one.
Finally i found some guys which made reactions to excellent movies like Boyz n the hood or Straight outta Compton ❤ Thanks for doing so, props and greetings from germany 🤗
Listen to the rapper KRS One's song "Black Cop". Singleton (the director) was not afraid to call out racism at all, but with the cop scene he was discussing a real issue in the black community, at least at the time.
How those Bloods could just go out to eat and talk like they ain't murdered someone is insane. All Ricky did was get upset because he got pushed - anyone would be - natural reaction.
It wasnt right after, it was hours after, but eating after a murder is so common that it may an unconcious reaction to murder. It could also be a way to calm the stomach, nervousness/anxiety one might feel after
That’s the shit about gang banging. Especially with bloods they was outnumbered 9 to 1 so the few who decided to be bloods had to be really aggressive to survive. So any crip or affiliate that even looks wrong, act tough, run they mouth gotta get made an example of.
I raised 5 kids in the hood back in the day, Bloods ran ran shit and had the set locked down. They always looked out for my kids and were respectful, and I'm white. I think many just didn't have fathers growing up and appreciated the fact I worked, came home to my family and spent time with my kids. I never forgot that and when my situation got better I gave back in many different ways. @@blacknationalism1
I’m suprised yall are this damn new to back then. Yall are not even that young wtf😭I can’t tell if yall from the burbs or just don’t know anything. The menace to society reaction was cool but I’m kinda picking up on if yall are 14 or 20s?
Cube made Friday because he was lookin at getting type cast as a gangster in everything coming his way, and most movies depicting black neighborhoods during this time made it seem like 100% war zone 24/7 but funny characters and situations also happened so Cube wanted to show the other side of the same coin.
I grew up in San Bernardino, CA which was the murder capital of the US not long ago. Predominately Mexican, and black. And surprisingly everyone got along. In my experience, us Mexicans fought more Mexican hoods than anything else. If y'all are open to it, yall should watch Blood in Blood out. Loosely based off how the Mexican mafia formed. Would be cool asf to see how y'all view chicanos from SoCal. 🤣 y'all would defo laugh, but even I laugh tbh lmao. but its a good movie regardless.
Lived thru all this 💩born in '77 with family in Harlem and South Central LA. No red or blue when my brother and I flew out there for the summer. First time we went we got surrounded My brother in a red LeTigre short set and mine blue. Surviving the 🐂💩was a major accomplishment 🙏🏾
I feel like John Singleton intentionally made the creative decision to not mention Crips and Bloods directly even though they are Clearly at odds in this movie. I think that makes it more universal but at the same time if you don't look at it from that Lens it just feels like the Blood niggas was just bullying them for no reason😂
I grew up in the 90s in California it was a very dangerous time in LA I lived in a city called San Bernardino 45 mins from downtown LA .. you could not even walk down the street with someone asking you where you are from ..
You all should watch the backstory on the guy that pulled the gun out in the back of the car/shot ricky. Life imitating art. His story is crazy. Also, the one with the pacifier. Both actors are deceased. Again, life imitating art.
I think buddy doesn't like Dark Skinned Sisters because he said that Ricky's Girlfriend looks funny Google Alysia Rodgers and she was really beautiful in the Kid N Play - Class Act movie.. Yoooo She was saying they always on the block drinking smoking and dude at the corner store she said something about that's how they are I was getting some real Colonizer vibes from these two yall gotta be Dominican...
She’s looks weird in the film! But if that’s ya type to each its own lol neither of us is Dominican jae (me) half black and half pr raised by a black mother so you chatten😂 we was both raised in Harlem where that block life is a normal btw
“tHe fAcT iTS bASeD oN a tRUe sToRy mAKeS iT eVEn cRazIEr” Lmao Of course this is based on a true story because it happens everyday in people’s lives in the hood, that was John Singleton vision the maker of the film. Y’all should watch “Do The Right Thing” Next or “Higher Learning”
Pacifiers were part of the drug rave culture back then. Helps with the chattering teeth all amped up. Maybe that character began using pacifier after hanging out with the college friends at parties
You should check out the 70s film Cornbread, Earl and Me. It was one of the 1st black teens and cops movies I saw as a pre-teen. I believe it was Laurence Fishburn's 1st film.
Not a true story....but very true elements of street life was embodied in the story from director John Singleton, who also wrote the movie. R.I.P John Singleton.
not a true story per say, but the true reality of what happens to a lot of inner city youth with no outlet for anything else. even when trying to do the wrong thing. you can get caught up. i grew up in brownsville, bedsty, and south jamaica during the 80s and 90s. things DEFINITLY got wild. idk how me and my brother made it out good...
I’m glad that yall are taking the comment section into accountability when it comes to this subject. A lot of other channels don’t have that same open mind Ps in a lot of 90s movies they villainized bloods a lot, so you’ll see a lot of guys in red play the villains.
Finding Forrester is a great one! It’s not as iconic as this but it’s a great story and uplifts. And ya’ll should check out Higher Learning its another classic by the same director as Boyz In The Hood. Its very intense, poignant and will work your mind.
17:15 WHY DOES THE COP HAVE TO "KNOW HIM" LOL. EVENTHOUGH THE OFFICER IS COMPLETELY WRONG. I ALWAYS WONDER WHY PEOPLE MAKE THAT STATEMENT AS IF IT'S A REQUIREMENT FOR ARREST.
They was from a gang ,doughboy and his crew was Crips and the other dude's were Bloods. And the reason he trun his light off so no can see them or the license plate.
This is why it's important to have a Father in ya'll life. This movie should teach you young youth today to keep your relationship & marriage together for you're Kids . Too the both of the parents. Stop being selfish and put your kids first 💯 not your feelings. Be a stand-up citizen and show an example to your children, break the cycle, and make the community come back together ❤️ 👍👌🙏
If y'all haven't seen "Menace to society" y'all gotta do that everyone who watches boyz n the hood get the Menace to society request. Also this is my first time to y'alls channel.
11:00 What you mean? Life didn't just start doing your generation. Anything being done today has already been done in some form or fashion, it's just being done in a more updated modern way.
Do you guys understand that is how they talked back in the day and some black cops hated on their own people. This happened and Singleton wrote what happened in his neighborhood when he grew up
🎶 cause they'll slam ya down to street top. Black police showin out for the white cop 🎶
I was just finna comment this it was really like that with black cops back in the day
80s/90s black cops was just as bad if not worse than a white cop , they felt like they had someone to please
@@gaaraofthefunk2011or they’re trying to stop crime like the white cops are. Black cops also care about stopping crime…this liberal racism😂😂😂movies can brainwash your mind thinking cops are constantly beating/killing POC
they're too young. they dont realize that 5 bucks was a treat back in the gap. not watching this channel no more.
That is how people talked back then. They kept it real instead of sugar coating things like we have to do now. Before y'all time. We are soft now
She never talked to Ricky like that ! It was because she hated Doug boys dad whereas Ricky was the prize .. yall need to grow up thinking traumatizing kids is tough 😂
Doughboy was the one that deserved better more than anybody in this movie when you think about it, they failed him since a child, his mother never loved him or cared she only cared about Ricky, his brother Ricky was always stubborn and never listened, Ricky was babied from the beginning and everything was blamed on Doughboy. And although nobody had Doughboy’s back he always had Ricky’s back and got him and them out of every situation Ricky may have caused since a child, Ricky was always naive to his surroundings and didn’t take things as seriously. Doughboy was a true friend as well he could have ignored Tre when he told Dough let him out but he listened because he knew that wasn’t for Tre, he really had everybody’s best interest he just wasn’t loved so he grew up in crime. Doughboy never had a chance, imo he was victimized to be a product of his own environment because that’s where he felt like his love came from, his homies, because he never got it at home, which is way he always stayed in trouble.
He said, "They must be new around here" I was crying
Fishburne was not Candy Man, that was Tony Todd
Right lmao. I was dyin when they said that
The Black cop being racist is 100% a real thing specially back then, I mean you seen it happen with the main characters of the movie
Growing up around violence traumatizes you, and the mind looks for coping mechanism to deal with the anger and frustration
Specifically, It looks for safety
For some kids that safety was found on joining a gang, For others it was becoming a police officer
Boyz in Da Hood wasn’t a true story but by a great legendary director. That touch on gun violence in California at the time.
John Singleton made this movie based on real events that happened in every city in this country. Is it a TRUE story? No. Based on real characters from A -Z? Most likely not. But like NEW JACK CITY...."There is a NINO BROWN in every major city in America."
@@jamesgreenhow108 yes that’s what I said lol.
@@Rid Apologeez. I was just co-signing. LOL
@@jamesgreenhow108 all good 😂
More true than you think!
When this movie dropped, Cube and Eazy E were beefing. Beating up the dude in the "We want Eazy" shirt on was a jab at Eazy.
Ahhhh that’s ode 😂
Cube was beefing with all of NWA at this time not jus Eazy
@@ErickWebster-mc2yg knew that, but the sweatshirt was a jab at Eazy, not NWA.
@@just_damari8038 oh ok great
Yup, even look at ferris,notice his style?? Based off eazy
Fun Fact: On the very last episode of SnowFall,Frank and Leon walked past the set of them filming this movie as a nod to John Singleton(who was a producer on SnowFall)
Fun fact, the actor who played the guy who shot Ricky was actually convicted for murdering 2 or 3 people and then was murdered by a devil worshipping ninja while in a maximum prison
Dookie got shot with a 50ae
This is true 💯
@@maniac50ae14Dookie got stabbed not shot
ninja? he was white
@@MalcolmLittle-pw9dz nope, in real life he died from a gunshot
This was a good reaction. This film was NOT based on a true story but was based on personal experience and a COMMON experience among black and brown people of America in the 70s and 80s. On both East and west coast these things occurred - self hating blacks, bodies laying around corners, friends and associates being shot and killed - some innocent and some not so innocent. You two are very young but you’ve heard stories of New York in the 80s and it was the same for sure. Talk to your older family members and they’ll confirm - especially about this film. I’m glad yall watched it. Continue to care about others and support each other. It’s a cold world but if we take care of each other then it’s a little bit of a better place. Again I enjoyed your reaction!😊
We love this comment. Appreciate all the insight and info you gave!
I can also tell you watched and paid attention to the video thats tough. Glad you enjoyed it though much more coming.
The characters aren’t based on anyone in particular but this happens daily
Fasho!
Exactly. Like Pac's song "Brenda's Got a Baby." When he put it out a lot of people thought he was talking about a real girl but it was more about the type of things that was happening to certain young women in the hood back then...
Great reaction. In the beginning y’all were wondering why Ricky and Doughboy’s mother was so mean to Doughboy. That’s because they had different fathers, she hated Doughboy father so she lashed out at him and that’s why he ended up how he did instead of the straight and narrow like Ricky. If Doughboy was given just a little love from his mother he prolly wouldn’t have turned to the streets
Boyz N The Hood is the quintessential hood classic. Rewatching this as an adult i realize that Ricky wasn’t street smart due to him being coddled by his mother. He laughed at Trey when Trey told him that he was afraid to have sex, he was scared when Furious took them to Compton & he didn’t take Ferris & his crew serious when they coming for him. Brenda’s favoritism towards Ricky did more damage to Doughboy than the hood ever did & Brenda lost both of her sons as a result of her favoritism. Here are some fun facts: Will Smith was offered the role of Trey but declined due to The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, little Ricky was played by Dovonan McCrary. He’s the brother of Darius McCrary (Eddie Winslow from Family Matters) & The girl who Doughboy called a bish was in Ice Cube’s Today Was A Good Day video.
I’m 55. This was a mellow look at how it was then. I’m old enough to remember before it was like this. & old enough to have lived through to here. Many of the boys I grew up with were murdered or went to prison for decades. It’s a pretty accurate depiction though. John Singleton, the director was the director of the series Snowfall. Y’all should react to that. Great way to grow your channel & it shows how all of this came to be.
Was not based on a true story
Just based on how L.A. was. Situations like this unfortunately happen often
Was also based on situation John Singleton witnessed during his youth
HE WASNT THE CANDY MAN LOL. i am only at 4:10 i hope they realize it lol
We didn’t but someone mentioned it in the comments I don’t know how we got that mixed 😂
I was scratching my head on that one too like, “red pill, blue pill”?
Born in 85, growing up in the 90s was a wild time. That's why a lot of us say that this new generation is soft. Good reaction tho
I was born in 79 and this new generation has no idea how wild it was growing up back then. Straight savages.
Facts.. today's generation when survived this generation here in this movie
Super facts was born in 87 and I definitely agree with you
Dookie was a real crip! I believe he was with the rolling 20’s crips
Which one was dookie?
@@Asia-xd8kb the one with the pacifier. His beenie has his name on it, so does Monster's.
Singleton grew up in crip heavy part of south central, which is why his movies features so many of them and their lingo. Where i grew up at, you dont say "cuz" or "cuh" unless you're a crip or crip affiliate. But a lot of people who didnt use it now don't really know its crip lingo
Rollin 90s
@@KasanovaKee325 ahh ok 👌🏾
This generation would never survive this
Gtfoh😂 old ass was inside the house hiding under the bed back in the day. Thats why you still here😭
Noway
@@glo4l902 Took that comment to heart did you? Seems like he was right about you being soft. Funny you just did that to yourself....
@@grandpu659 Aint nobody feel a way but these old heads hella full of shit. You got the 6ix9ine gummo gay parody in your favorites and called me soft. Got them diddy soft type of vibes over there where you at lil braa😂
You think that people don't live like this today? Tell me you are sheltered without telling me you are sheltered.
Notice how in this Ice Cube movie the dope head was wearing a We Want Eazy shirt. This was around the time when Ice Cube was mad at Eazy E
Everyone grew up with chores
The 80s and 90s were absolutely insane.
I can't believe I'm old enough to be saving this, but, I'm glad the younger generation doesn't understand.
17:54 now most people who first see Tre punching the air laugh I did too till I was in a similar situation Tre was in that's when I understood his frustration. It's that hood rage that so many people have in the hood because of everything getting in your way like you'll never be free its what turns people into guys like Doughboy and Doughboy moms were you just stop giving af
I can’t take the scene where Trey is punching the air serious anymore because of Don’t Be A Menace😂
Bro, Ricky alive from that backshot?? That would be extremely rare, just like surviving a plane crash. Ricky should have been paying attention like Tre, nonetheless. Likewise, they assumed Ricky was a crip, given that they were bloods and Ricky was wearing a Blue Jacket with a capital “C”, but little did they know that the “C” was for Crenshaw High School.
Among the best things I love about Boyz n The Hood is Doughboy for his character and story development and Ice Cube’s performance in the role.
Cube at the time was among the emerging hip-hopers in the 90s with his debut solo album AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted after leaving NWA.
The guy may not have had attended drama class in school, never did a film, never did a TV show or a stage show but it was the encouragement from John Singleton due to their friendship that convinced Cube to get the part of Doughboy.
John Singleton met Ice Cube when he was a member of backstage crew at the Arsenio Hall Show and even though Cube turned down the offer a couple times, I’m beyond glad he accepted the offer.
For an inexperienced actor in a cinematic debut, Ice Cube did an awesome job playing Doughboy. He played the role as if he (Cube himself) never had a dad, is the subject of ridicule and verbal abuse by his mum who favours a brother of his and ends up as as a Rollin 60s Crip. He did it so damn convincingly that he should’ve got an Oscar, a BAFTA, a Golden Globe - all three for “Best Supporting Actor” and MTV Movie Award for “Best Breakthrough Performance”.
This was long before Cube did the Friday films (film series he also wrote/produced), Are We There Yet?, xXx 2 and 3, Fist Fight, Ride Along, 21/22 Jump Street, Ghost of Mars, the Barbershop films, Rampart, Tresspass etc
If the Marc Webb-directed and Andrew Garfield-starred Amazing Spider-Man films were to conclude with a 3rd film (a 4 hour 3rd film to end the story) and if Ice Cube appeared in it - he would’ve been J Jonah Jameson (Daily Bugle newspaper boss). Imagine Andrew Garfield and Ice Cube in the same room! Wasted/missed opportunity in my opinion.
Black police showing out for the white cop
Doughboys crew was crips and the otha guys was bloods
Regina King was twenty years old when she made her big screen debut as Shalika in this film. She shot stardom afterwards and has been awarded many times for her acting....the most noteworthy being a BSA Academy Award in 2019, four Primetime Emmy Awards, and a Golden Globe for BSA 2019.
The Rizz was and still is like that here. It’s nothing to talk in double entendre. The movie depict exactly how we grew up. 90s LA.
Man these movie did good job about scaring people about the hood. Also another good movie is dont be a menace to society.
It ain't " don't be a menace 2 society " it's " menace 2 society " " don't be a menace while drinking your juice " is another movie
You guys notice everything but you miss something in that movie when the cops pulled up who's playing with sneaker when they walked around before he got the football taken from him the boy they saw dead had no sneaker 😊
I remember watching this as a kid in the 90’s
you guys should watch Higher Learning. It has alot of the same cast as boyz n the hood. Ice cube, regina king, etc. It came out 4 years after this movie. It's really good, perhaps a bit heavier than this one.
Finally i found some guys which made reactions to excellent movies like Boyz n the hood or Straight outta Compton ❤ Thanks for doing so, props and greetings from germany 🤗
Listen to the rapper KRS One's song "Black Cop". Singleton (the director) was not afraid to call out racism at all, but with the cop scene he was discussing a real issue in the black community, at least at the time.
💯
How those Bloods could just go out to eat and talk like they ain't murdered someone is insane. All Ricky did was get upset because he got pushed - anyone would be - natural reaction.
It wasnt right after, it was hours after, but eating after a murder is so common that it may an unconcious reaction to murder. It could also be a way to calm the stomach, nervousness/anxiety one might feel after
That’s the shit about gang banging. Especially with bloods they was outnumbered 9 to 1 so the few who decided to be bloods had to be really aggressive to survive. So any crip or affiliate that even looks wrong, act tough, run they mouth gotta get made an example of.
Your stomach don’t stop needing food because you killed someone
I raised 5 kids in the hood back in the day, Bloods ran ran shit and had the set locked down. They always looked out for my kids and were respectful, and I'm white. I think many just didn't have fathers growing up and appreciated the fact I worked, came home to my family and spent time with my kids. I never forgot that and when my situation got better I gave back in many different ways. @@blacknationalism1
I can tell by the way you all react to this you young as hell. Anybody older knew times were really like this, people really talked like this. No love
I’m suprised yall are this damn new to back then. Yall are not even that young wtf😭I can’t tell if yall from the burbs or just don’t know anything. The menace to society reaction was cool but I’m kinda picking up on if yall are 14 or 20s?
so i went to the movies to see this (yes, im that old!) when cube got homeboy for popping ricky the WHOLE THEATER WENT WILD!!!!
23:25 the gun being only a 2 shot gun saved Trey’s life
The folks in the red was bloods. Everybody else was crips
Check these movies out if you haven’t seen them: Class Act(1992), Friday(1995), Next Friday(2000), and Bad Boys(1995).
Cube made Friday because he was lookin at getting type cast as a gangster in everything coming his way, and most movies depicting black neighborhoods during this time made it seem like 100% war zone 24/7 but funny characters and situations also happened so Cube wanted to show the other side of the same coin.
John Singleton wanted The entire group NWA to play in the movie but Ice Cube was the only who took him seriously.
If you ever do shows y'all have to start with "The Wire". The best TV show ever.
Agreed.
I grew up in San Bernardino, CA which was the murder capital of the US not long ago. Predominately Mexican, and black. And surprisingly everyone got along. In my experience, us Mexicans fought more Mexican hoods than anything else. If y'all are open to it, yall should watch Blood in Blood out. Loosely based off how the Mexican mafia formed. Would be cool asf to see how y'all view chicanos from SoCal. 🤣 y'all would defo laugh, but even I laugh tbh lmao. but its a good movie regardless.
I found Blood in Blood out corny. I think American Me was a better movie.
Born in 84. Chicago was like this in the 90s, but with snow.
Lived thru all this 💩born in '77 with family in Harlem and South Central LA. No red or blue when my brother and I flew out there for the summer. First time we went we got surrounded My brother in a red LeTigre short set and mine blue. Surviving the 🐂💩was a major accomplishment 🙏🏾
I been watching you guys for a min I even subscribed I love your reactions.
Appreciate u a ton! 🖤🙌🏽
I feel like John Singleton intentionally made the creative decision to not mention Crips and Bloods directly even though they are Clearly at odds in this movie. I think that makes it more universal but at the same time if you don't look at it from that Lens it just feels like the Blood niggas was just bullying them for no reason😂
Lawrence Fishburne isn’t Candyman, that’s someone completely different, who resembles him, and he’s darker
I’m trippin you’re right!
They don’t resemble at all. Tony Todd is the mortician from the Final Destination movies that played Candy Man
@@MalcolmLittle-pw9dzhe also played in night of the living dead
the death of ricky is one of the saddest deaths in movie history. i was 12 when i saw this movie the first time, it still makes my heart sink.
Please watch "Dont be a Menace", that cop scene reminded me about it. 🤣😂
Y’all must’ve jus started YT cause all y’all videos recent weeks nd days old 🔥🔥dats fire
This is not a true story. It’s millions of true stories put into a movie.
I grew up in the 90s in California it was a very dangerous time in LA I lived in a city called San Bernardino 45 mins from downtown LA .. you could not even walk down the street with someone asking you where you are from ..
I just subbed came across some reactions videos. Ur girl bro be on point knowing what’s gonna happen next in the movie. Keep up the good videos guys!!
Welcome in we appreciate that!! And facts she do, good to watch movies wit someone like that.
Just for context the convo with Furious and Tre wasn't enough but its based on how he raised him
You all should watch the backstory on the guy that pulled the gun out in the back of the car/shot ricky. Life imitating art. His story is crazy. Also, the one with the pacifier. Both actors are deceased. Again, life imitating art.
Sound interesting, gonna check k that out good looking out!
Y’all reaction was awesome and I love your reaction. Y’all are awesome. I’m happy y’all reacted to one of my favorite movies of all time.🔥❤️
20:02 that’s the director (John Singeton) as the mailman
Juice next !
It wasn't just that conversation that made Tre get out the car. It was all the years of his father's influence which Doughboy and Ricky didn't have.
I think buddy doesn't like Dark Skinned Sisters because he said that Ricky's Girlfriend looks funny Google Alysia Rodgers and she was really beautiful in the Kid N Play - Class Act movie.. Yoooo She was saying they always on the block drinking smoking and dude at the corner store she said something about that's how they are I was getting some real Colonizer vibes from these two yall gotta be Dominican...
She’s looks weird in the film! But if that’s ya type to each its own lol
neither of us is Dominican jae (me) half black and half pr raised by a black mother so you chatten😂
we was both raised in Harlem where that block life is a normal btw
It wasnt a true story persay, john singleton based it off his life growing up in south central
Boys n the hood wasn't a true story.
“tHe fAcT iTS bASeD oN a tRUe sToRy mAKeS iT eVEn cRazIEr” Lmao Of course this is based on a true story because it happens everyday in people’s lives in the hood, that was John Singleton vision the maker of the film. Y’all should watch “Do The Right Thing” Next or “Higher Learning”
😂😂😂
do “don’t be a menace” next it’s a parody mostly of boyz in the hood and menace to society but a lot of black classics tbh
that sounds interesting. We’ve always heard of those never checked them out though
@@BingeTies it’s refreshing to watch because it’s basically the funny version of all the sad hood movies😂
Tony Todd was candy man. Never Lawrence Fishburne
Please react to another classic movie called house party and the wood
Pacifiers were part of the drug rave culture back then. Helps with the chattering teeth all amped up. Maybe that character began using pacifier after hanging out with the college friends at parties
college? 😂 no such thing in the hood. Ricky was as close as it got. and look what happened to him.
Lloyd Avery II the guy who actually shot Ricky became a Blood in real life
He also was sacrificed by a devil worshipper in prison smh 🤦
I would like to see what y’all think of the movies Dead Presidents and Paid In Full.
You should check out the 70s film Cornbread, Earl and Me. It was one of the 1st black teens and cops movies I saw as a pre-teen. I believe it was Laurence Fishburn's 1st film.
Not a true story....but very true elements of street life was embodied in the story from director John Singleton, who also wrote the movie. R.I.P John Singleton.
" New Jack City" and "Dead Presidents" would be good movies to react to.
Great reaction one of my favorite hood movies 🔥
Chillllll I’ve seen this movie and why Nia long being hysterical almost made me cry smh
Fun fact john singleton the director. this was his story bout his child hood bestfriend he grew up with
_This is how it really was back in the 80s and 90s_
not a true story per say, but the true reality of what happens to a lot of inner city youth with no outlet for anything else. even when trying to do the wrong thing. you can get caught up. i grew up in brownsville, bedsty, and south jamaica during the 80s and 90s. things DEFINITLY got wild. idk how me and my brother made it out good...
I’m glad that yall are taking the comment section into accountability when it comes to this subject. A lot of other channels don’t have that same open mind
Ps in a lot of 90s movies they villainized bloods a lot, so you’ll see a lot of guys in red play the villains.
Finding Forrester is a great one! It’s not as iconic as this but it’s a great story and uplifts. And ya’ll should check out Higher Learning its another classic by the same director as Boyz In The Hood. Its very intense, poignant and will work your mind.
17:15 WHY DOES THE COP HAVE TO "KNOW HIM" LOL. EVENTHOUGH THE OFFICER IS COMPLETELY WRONG. I ALWAYS WONDER WHY PEOPLE MAKE THAT STATEMENT AS IF IT'S A REQUIREMENT FOR ARREST.
Blud was really a yns in the 90s!! 😂😂
Cuba gooding is older than the dad. Thats why they made that joke in the wayans parody.
WHAT! thats wild cuba looked way younger than his dad in this movie.
Not true, Fishburne is several years older than Cuba.
False, now you know damn well Laurence Fishburne is older than Cuba Gooding 😂
This definitely is how it was in the 90s
They was from a gang ,doughboy and his crew was Crips and the other dude's were Bloods. And the reason he trun his light off so no can see them or the license plate.
It was never said either was in bloods or crips, goofy,and they turned the lights off so they wasn't seen by the ppl they was about to shoot moron
This is why it's important to have a Father in ya'll life. This movie should teach you young youth today to keep your relationship & marriage together for you're Kids . Too the both of the parents. Stop being selfish and put your kids first 💯 not your feelings. Be a stand-up citizen and show an example to your children, break the cycle, and make the community come back together ❤️ 👍👌🙏
I used to love going on Crenshaw Friday and Saturday nights
If y'all haven't seen "Menace to society" y'all gotta do that everyone who watches boyz n the hood get the Menace to society request. Also this is my first time to y'alls channel.
That cop came to his father house in the beginning.
The fact that they did not recognize Ice Cube is crazy 😂
🤔 when was that…
@@BingeTies When he was first seen at the cookout scene….. your commentary shows you did not recognize him at first, maybe later in the movie you did
The guy in the wheelchair who played Chris is really paralyzed.
These are actors this is not a true story... yall don't know who icecube is ?
@@dominiquesalley “based off a true story”
You need to watch higher learning ice cube omar epps larry fishbourn and michael rapport good movie
That’s sounds good just off the actors 👀
@@BingeTies Yeah, college movie. It's dope. Has Regina King, Tyra Banks and Busta Rhymes. They all play students too. Fishburne is a professor.
Yall gotta do menace to society now 😁😁
Tomorrows upload 😉 it’s been on our Patreon though
@@BingeTies Sorry i didnt know details of you guys literally first time watching your reactions it showed up in my feed and i subbed
@@PaulSmith-fd2gy no your good just letting you know. But we appreciate u for that!!!
No boyz in the hood wasn't no true story the movie shows you how life was going on in the hood
11:00 What you mean? Life didn't just start doing your generation. Anything being done today has already been done in some form or fashion, it's just being done in a more updated modern way.