Black (cert. 15) will be released on DVD (£15.99) and Blu-ray (£19.99) by Anchor Bay Entertainment on 14th February 2011.

As well as being a prime slice of high-octane French Crime movie with a streak of eccentricity that stops it being an exercise in generic action cinema, it also features an incredibly well chosen soundtrack that mixes classic Blaxploitation Funk, Afro Beat, Jazz and Hip-Hop. You can listen to selections from the soundtrack on our MYSPACE but first, here’s a little more info on the artists used that I particularly admire…

BRASS CONSTRUCTION

Classic 70s funk band whose best known hit, ‘Movin” features in the movie. Sampled in the 90s by The Bucketheads for their hit “Got Myself Together”. Check out the a clip of the band performing ‘Movin” HERE. Picture quality could be better but this is the best clip for showing the band in their satin-clad seventies pomp.

EUMIR DEODATO

Deodato’s nine minute Jazz-Funk take on Richard Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra opens Black as the camera sweeps over urban Paris and it’s huge housing projects. Listen to the track HERE, which takes the classic piece famously featured in 2001 in a bold, trippy and downright funky new direction. It’s a classic and constantly sampled track that helps set the scene for the rest of the movie.

JACKIE MITTOO

Mittoo is one of the architects of Reggae music. As a founding member of the Skatalites, the keyboard players influence on the sound of early JA pop music can’t be underestimated. Due to the incestous nature of the JA music scene, many ‘rhythms’ that Mittoo recorded became the base for more famous songs, like “Duppy Conqueror” by The Wailers. Listen to ‘Hang ‘Em High’ HERE

MAGMA

The boundless imagination of Magma, the French Prog band whose ‘Theusz Hamtaahk’ features in Black, put many so called experimental 70s bands to shame. Epic multi-album story arcs of Science-Fiction and Ecology mixed with musical influences from around the globe place this band in a different dimension of space and time to regular musicians. Listen to the track on the CULT LABS MYSPACE

FELA KUTI

The “African James Brown” revolutionized music by mixing traditional African Music with Jazz and the hard, rhythmic Funk laid down by the Godfather of Soul to create endless and ever more complex grooves that still astonish today. Fela music continues to influence new artists with Afro rhythms being immediately apparent in the hipster grooves of bands like Vampire Weekend and Yeasayer.

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BLACK

FROM THE CESAR AND BAFTA AWARD WINNING PRODUCER OF ‘A PROPHET’.

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The spirit of Blaxploitation classics such as ‘Super Fly’, ‘Shaft’ and ‘Truck Turner’ is given a modern day makeover in the action-thriller, Black, the directorial debut feature from Pierre Laffargue.

Produced by Marco Cherqui (A Prophet) and starring French hip-hop artist MC Jean Gab’1 (the District 13 movies), Carole Karemera (Sometimes In April), Francois Levantal (A Very Long Engagement; D’Artagnan’s Daughter) and Anton Yakovlev (The Beat That My Heart Skipped), Black is “a slick, fun, French heist flick” (Eye Weekly) with a supernatural sting in the tail that sees its eponymous protagonist and anti-hero travelling from Paris to West Africa and the Senegalese capital of Dakar in order to pull off the biggest score of his criminal career.

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When an armed raid on a security van in Paris goes horribly wrong, one of the gunmen, Black (MC Jean Gab’1), decides to lie low until the dust settles. That is until he receives a call from his cousin in Senegal supplying information about a stash of uncut diamonds being stored in a poorly guarded bank in Dakar. Eyeing the opportunity to make one final score that would set him up for life, Black travels to Africa and hooks up with a small group of fellow thieves who can help him pull off the heist.


Unfortunately, news of the diamonds and their insecure location travels fast and Black and his crew aren’t the only ones with their eyes on the prize. Also looking to get their hands on the jewels are a crazed, mercenary Russian general (Yakovlev), a ruthless, reptilian arms dealer (Levantal) and his African voodoo sorceress mistress (Mata Gabin), and a corrupt, female Interpol agent called Pamela (Karemera). As his team rapidly begins to fall apart in the ensuing melee to claim the diamonds first, Black once again finds himself alone, running and fighting for his life against seemingly unbeatable odds.

Described by Eye For Film as a “popcorn movie with oodles of French cool”, Black is a affectionate and worthy tribute to the Blaxploitation genre right down to its energetic soundtrack of funk, jazz and soul by artists such as the film’s star MC Jean Gab’1, Eumir Deodato, Fela Kuti, Brass Construction, Don Cherry and Roy Ayers.

Black (cert. 15) will be released on DVD (£15.99) and Blu-ray (£19.99) by Anchor Bay Entertainment on 14th February 2011.

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