Bastards of the Party

2005 "One gang's violent evolution... and a new generation's search for a way out."
8.1| 1h35m| en
Details

Surrounded by death and the brutal lifestyle that feeds it, a Los Angeles gangbanger explores the history of Southern California street gangs from the 1950s through the 1990s in an attempt to fully understand his existence. Bastards of the Party humanizes the staggering casualties of the LA gang wars.

Director

Producted By

Fuqua Films

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Reviews

Lucybespro It is a performances centric movie
Majorthebys Charming and brutal
Beystiman It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
bubsy-3 I really wanted to like this movie and I like Cle Bone Stone a lot. But the movie tended to present something as fact, then drop it, and move on to something else. I'm not naive to gangs: I work with gangs: the bloods, the crips, and a local NYC gang "LB". I really liked Cle and I'm hoping that one day he'll be courageous enough to do an autobiography of himself. That would, no doubt, be an outstanding movie and an Oscar winner. Bastards of the Party is a fine movie.. It's just that I thought it could have been an exceptional movie.However, I applaud Cle Bone Stone for his work on this excellent documentary.
jdanielwilliams As a young man who was born and raised in Los Angeles - "bourgie" but close enough to gang culture to understand the nuances of daily life for gangbangers - I can say with confidence that this was an incredible look into a culture that many people know of but don't really know much about.Gang culture is the result of early, quite innocent militarism for the purposes of self-defense allowed to go completely astray. This film gives an inside look into the history and development of the violence gang culture of Los Angeles, a Roman-style tangle of syndicalism and family ties, full of the good-ole Southern ignorance, self-righteousness and hypocrisy.Some commenters considered the left-wing editorialising that goes on throughout the film to weaken it's credentials as an authentic documentary, but I do not agree. The leftism of the historians used as sources of information in the film are coincidental to the informative value that those historians provide. It can be overlooked, and should be, as director Cle Sloan himself admits that he is not as smitten with the gang culture as he is expected to be.The film also places the seemingly unrelated Black Power Movement in the proper context and providing the inspirational link between this Movement and the gangbanging culture. It is fascinating to ponder, and provides a great lesson on human nature and human frailty, especially the frailty of young men who grow up in communities where the grown men of wisdom are systematically removed.Home video footage of gangster funerals, cruising, and sign language was riveting to watch.The overall product I think is satisfyingly dispassionate and non-judgemental until the very end, I think. Cle Sloan admits that gangs contribute to the destruction of these communities and need to change. That is the true value of this fantastic film, I believe: it humanizes the gang culture and helps the viewer understand the psycho-spiritual conditions that lead to the kind of violence that the Bloods and Crips practice on a regular basis. Cle Sloan believes the gangs can be changed for good, and, as I tend to agree. The Bloods and Crips do not just consist of "niggas with attitudes" - they are lost men who need direction and self-respect.Highly recommended.
cdoelle Bastards of the Party is a new documentary running on HBO that examines the rise of gangs in the Los Angeles area. It starts out a little slow and seems to be making excuses for the members - the same tired ones you have heard over and over - but it quickly turns into a fascinating historical piece.From the early days when Compton was an all-white area, through the civil rights movement and rise of the US Party and Black Panther Party - it is compelling stuff. The real eye-opening stuff involves the actual demise of the BPP and USP orchestrated by Hoover's FBI. The information about the FBI's CoIntelPro and their efforts to undermine these groups is now public record, what surprised me was the details about how the program started these groups fighting each other.The legacy of the FBI's destruction of the black cohesiveness still survives with the black-on-black crime that is still rampant between these gangs nearly 40 years later. The only downside of the film other than the apologetic start is the left-wing politico-speak that summarizes the film. It is a good history that does an excellent job of giving the facts, when it slips into this type of preaching, it loses a lot of credibility.The final point about gang names versus given names is especially poignant. Good stuff.
writeovahere Of all the films I saw at the Hollywood Black Film Festival here in Los Angeles 2006 The Documentary I watched by Director Cle "Bone" Sloan was thee best and MOST relevant. In spite of what he thought; Cle was an eloquent, passionate and articulate speaker in re: to his craft as a filmmaker as well as a "member" - the twist i found responsible and refreshing; was that his intent is not to leave his brothers behind just because he found the light, rather he was trying to figure out away to organize and unite the Bloods and Crips in a organized and purposeful way. By starting at the beginning, Documenting the genesis of why the gangs started in the first place.Cle'Slone is more than just an excellent filmmaker - he has the tools, passion, heart and drive to make a really big dent in the history of our culture as a Leader.~sylvia v. hillman~ ~writer~

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