Advanced Search >
Help Me Search

DVD

Upcoming Release Calendar
Film Awards & Top 10s By Year
All-Time High Scores
All-Time Low Scores
Best / Worst of the Decade

Recent DVD/Video Releases

sort by namesort by score

68 $9.99
49 2012
56 Adam
37 Amelia
50 Armored
53 Astro Boy
35 Babysitters, The
66 Bandslam
86 Beaches of Agnes, The
19 Bitch Slap
65 Black Dynamite
71 Bliss
24 Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day, The
47 Box, The
51 Breakfast with Scot
44 Brief Interviews with Hideous Men
76 Broken Embraces
71 Bronson
61 Capitalism: A Love Story
57 Chelsea on the Rocks
43 Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant
65 Coco Before Chanel
69 Cold Souls
23 Couples Retreat
75 Crude
81 Damned United, The
54 Dare
61 Dead Snow
27 Did You Hear About the Morgans?
68 End of the Line, The
55 Endgame
47 Everybody's Fine
64 Examined Life
xx Falling for Grace
31 Fix
74 Flame & Citron
xx From Mexico with Love
28 Gentlemen Broncos
64 Gigante
58 Gogol Bordello Non-Stop
72 Good Hair
73 House of the Devil, The
82 Hunger
17 I Hate Valentine's Day
66 Informant!, The
34 Law Abiding Citizen
33 Love Happens
59 More Than a Game
34 Motherhood
49 New York, I Love You
34 Ninja Assassin
19 Old Dogs
47 Ong Bak 2: The Beginning
68 Paris
44 Peter and Vandy
39 Planet 51
86 Ponyo
79 Precious: Based on the Novel by Sapphire
73 Princess & the Frog, The
49 Private Lives of Pippa Lee, The
84 Revanche
69 September Issue, The
79 Serious Man, A
36 Serious Moonlight
70 Shall We Kiss?
24 Sorority Row
40 Spiral
41 Splinterheads
33 Stepfather, The
50 Stoning of Soraya M., The
47 Time Traveler's Wife
44 Twilight Saga: New Moon, The
83 Up in the Air
65 Vicious Kind, The
69 We Live in Public
65 Wedding Song, The
71 Where the Wild Things Are
43 Women in Trouble
48 Wonderful World
73 Zombieland

Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.

Boyz N the Hood

EMAILPRINTColumbia Pictures

Boyz N the Hood reviews
73
9.4 User Score:

Generally favorable reviews

Based on 18 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 17 votes
Read user comments
Rate this movie >

Movie Info

Genre(s): Drama

Written by: John Singleton

Directed by: John Singleton

Release Date:
Theatrical: July 12, 1991
DVD: December 31, 1969

Running Time: 107 minutes, Color

Origin: USA

Summary

RATING: R

Starring Laurence Fishburne, Cuba Gooding Jr., Ice Cube, Morris Chestnut, Nia Long, Desi Arnez Hines II, Kenneth A. Brown, and Lexie Bigham

Tre Styles (Gooding Jr.), is a teen caught between the steady, forceful guidance of his father, Furious (Fishburne) and the inescapable violence of his South Central Los Angeles neighborhood.

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

100

Time Richard Schickel

Remarkable. [22 July 1991]

100

Newsweek David Ansen

Singleton's powerhouse movie has the impact of a stun gun. [15 July 1991]

100

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

Has maturity and emotional depth: There are no cheap shots, nothing is thrown in for effect, realism is placed ahead of easy dramatic payoffs, and the audience grows deeply involved.

Read Full Review >
100

San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle

Flows in a way that seems effortless, following its own path, arriving at its own place. Only after the movie is over are the outlines of its story apparent. I found it impossible to outguess it. [12 July 1991]

100

Empire Lloyd Bradly

The film not only lives up to its "Increase The Peace" subtitle but by refusing to overtly moralise puts its concerns across with astonishing impact.

Read Full Review >
90

The New York Times Elvis Mitchell

The film's strength is that it sustains an intimate and realistic tone. Mr. Fishburne, who is called upon to deliver several lectures, manages to do so with enormous dignity and grace, and makes Furious a compelling role model, someone on whom the whole film easily pivots.

Read Full Review >
88

USA Today Mike Clark

In a watershed year for black filmmakers, Singleton has made the punchiest feature debut in recent memory. Those who complain that Lee's characters tangle up his plots will savor Singleton's flawlessly crafted edges. [12 July 1991]

80

Variety Staff (Not Credited)

Ultra socially responsible, sometimes to the point of playing like a laundry list of difficulties faced specifically by the urban black community.

Read Full Review >
80

TV Guide Staff (Not Credited)

Positive figures--Furious, Tre, Brandi--are rendered perhaps too virtuous, and Singleton becomes a bit preachy in the closing scenes, but an overt "message" movie may be the only appropriate response to the ongoing social crisis addressed.

Read Full Review >
78

Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov

All of the major players turn in powerhouse performances, and Fishburne nails his best role yet as Furious.

Read Full Review >
70

Wall Street Journal Julie Salamon

Mr. Singleton is a very good storyteller, but every once in a while he stops his story cold with speeches. You can feel the audience lost interest, as though a commercial has suddenly popped on screen. [18 July 1991, p.A9(E)]

70

Washington Post Rita Kempley

With its energetic cast and insistent street score, it still manages to be poignant without becoming bathetic, and violent without being exploitative.

Read Full Review >
70

Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan

Yes, the denouement is disturbing, but it is rather too calculatedly so, and too insistently underlined by an overly sentimental Stanley Clarke score. [12 July 1991]

70

Washington Post Desson Thomson

It will often tear at the heart too -- at least, when it doesn't feel like the rap equivalent of a classroom lecture.

Read Full Review >
60

Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum

Singleton shows some genuine talent in handling character and action, and equal amounts of confusion and attitude when it comes to matters of gender and ghetto politics.

Read Full Review >
50

Chicago Tribune Dave Kehr

Boys N the Hood wants to be “The Learning Tree'' and “Super Fly'' at once, an ambition that doesn't seem quite honest. [12 July 1991]

50

The New Republic Stanley Kauffmann

Formally, Boyz is just one more old-time bad-neighborhood picture. Instead of, say, Manhattan's Lower East Side in Prohibition days, it's an LA lower-middle-class black neighborhood afflicted with drugs. And Singleton's control of his picture's flow is much less firm than was the other directors'. [2 Sept 1991]

50

The New Yorker Terrence Rafferty

Singleton's plot is disappointingly conventional; it obeys screenwriting-class rules. The experience he's dealing with here deserves something more than the tidy dramatic structure that he has imposed on it.

Read Full Review >

What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 9.4 (out of 10) based on 17 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Ed R. gave it a10:
A great movie. One question though: is South Central LA still like this? I remember in Michael Moore's film "Bowling for Columbine" how he and another white man (a professor I think) basically pour scorn on the idea that Compton is some kind of war zone. I wonder what a modern day African American kid would say?

Shane gave it a9:
This movie shows a good way of how life is in the hood! Good actors.

Susan C. gave it a10:
Very realistic to what goes on in other areas of real peoples lives that people take for grated and do not believe things like this really existent. "but it does" Very positive message!!!! Great film!!!

Savanah L. gave it a9:
I think this movie was a great depiction of a ghetto drama like what goes on in my neighborhood sheepshead bay.

Anthony V. gave it a10:
Best Movie Ever!!!

Daniel T. gave it a 9:
Very very realistic.

Fernando G. gave it a 10:
Increase the peace. Watch this film.

Read more user comments >

Popular on CBS sites: College Signing Day | March Madness | TV | iPhone | Cell Phones | Video Game Reviews | Free Music

About CBS Interactive | Jobs | Advertise

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy (UPDATED) | Terms of Use