SwapaDVD logo
 
 

Search - Style Wars: Revisited on DVD


Style Wars: Revisited
Style Wars Revisited
Genres: Music Video & Concerts, Documentary
NR     2006     1hr 9min

This limited edition of the classic film Style Wars features 30 minutes of "never-before-released" outtakes, new interviews, and "where are they now" footage. Also fetaured in this edition are new commentary tracks, "Dest...  more »

     
1

Larger Image

Movie Details

Genres: Music Video & Concerts, Documentary
Sub-Genres: Pop, Rock & Roll, Documentary
Studio: Mvd Visual
Format: DVD - Color - Closed-captioned
DVD Release Date: 10/10/2006
Release Year: 2006
Run Time: 1hr 9min
Screens: Color
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
Edition: Limited Edition
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Languages: English

Similar Movies

Wild Style
25th Anniversary Edition
2
   NR   2007   2hr 25min
Infamy
Director: Doug Pray
2
   R   2006   1hr 31min
Style Wars
2pc
Directors: Henry Chalfant, Tony Silver
2
   NR   2003   1hr 9min
Freshest Kids - A History of the B-Boy
UMD for PSP
2
   NR   2005   1hr 37min
Bomb It
Director: Jonathan Reiss
1
   NR   2008   1hr 33min
 

Movie Reviews

1 ** star for deceptive advertisement 5 stars for orginal mo
Spider | CALIFORNIA United States | 10/22/2006
(1 out of 5 stars)

"First, let me say that the original PBS documentary is a 5 STAR ***** film and I love the two-disc DVD issue that came out a few years ago, BUT this one??? NO WAY. It's the same as the other DVD even though they claim that the "revisited" one had 34 minutes of extra footage etc. It's the SAME as the other DVD and they say that once you play it. No new old footage in there, except maybe a few small but insignificant clips. If you want the good one, buy the 2-disc DVD that came out in 2004 I think. This is a rip off quite frankly and I am not even sure why they bothered to issue another DVD, simply because they have 4 new interviews and a few minor clips."
A grass roots, street-level documentary pleasing to the eyes
Pork Chop | Lisbon, Portugal | 04/10/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Style Wars (1983) from directors Henry Chalfant and Tony Silver,

is a grass roots, street-level documentary that is easily

digested, as it's pleasing to the eyes.



It offers a glimpse of 10 to 16 year olds, in the inner cities of

Brooklyn, Bronx back in the 1970's and 1980's, who are surrounded

by high rises, who brainstormed for ideas back in the 1970's to

have fun and pass the time.



In this particular instance, it involves dance competitions, art

competitions, music competitions, expressed in various

recreational halls through the break-dance styles, DJ-ing and

rapping, free-styling with rhymes as well as by using up 15 to 20

canisters per subway train in color painting them.



This subculture, comprising the "personal lives" of dozens of

youths (in contrast to school, or professional endeavors) is

specialized to the point that various youths' aliases become

"stars" in their own right, with verbal histories or accounts

being told and passed down to other joining this movement, who

are pigeon holed in this ghetto.



The psych of those taking part, is underpinned by a sense of peer

pressure in the group for the best art, dance moves and ability

to rhyme, coupled with a sense of ego gratification by somehow

having become world-class, as their assigned names or tags are

seen on trains crossing the city. Perhaps a sensitive point for

the undertrodden in the inner cities, housing projects,

accustomed to poverty, yet crossing all background and cultural

lines.



The images taken are numerous, well chosen, and the narrative

well planned, the testimonies frequent, the educational aspects

to the masses very understandable. Underground terminology such

as "bombing" (meaning to deface a train for the first time),

breaking and rocking (meaning, doing a style of dance), are a few

explained.



Some locations are reminiscent of those seen in Escape from the

Bronx, by Enzo Castellari or Warriors by Walter Hill, such as the

manhole entrance, or the underground warehouse, etc.



Inevitably the idea is taken from the ephemeral, to amateur, to

professional, as viewers see graffitists sketching ideas back

home, planning out missions on trains, organizing themselves in

time and space, approprating 15 paint cans at a time, from

stores, in their competition. To the point that 8 year olds are

given an apprenticeship of sorts into become accomplished

graffittists.



All sides of the story are told, with messages from the mayor of

the city, police detectives, concerned parents, outraged public

transit users, keeping in mind that these deeds against property

pale in comparison to behaviors against people also processed in

the justice system (murders. etc) or even, the 3-card-Monte,

pickpockets, shoplifts, etc.



The movie redeems itself, by calling attention to art galleries,

school programs for those with a talent in visual art, by

suggesting that the "big time" is possible into the mass media.

It also underlines sensitivity campaigns against graffiti, by

boxers Hector Camacho and Alex Ramos."