Review of Hustle & Flow (2005) by Amy S — 07 Jun 2013
A pimp tries to make it as a rap star with the help of his hookers and an old friend from the neighborhood.
Terrence Howard turns in a fantastic performance, utterly convincing as Djay, a pimp with musical aspirations. His character seems real, fleshed out, and interesting, and Howard's work carries the film.
The story is fairly basic, but I think the biggest problem is its misogyny. The filmmakers have to be aware of the ridiculous irony inherent in having a prostitute sing "Whoop that trick!" or "It's hard out here from a pimp." It's too ironic to be unintentional, yet I can't figure out what the intention is. After all, the film identifies with Djay's journey to such a degree that I have a hard time thinking of this film as satire, and trying to prove that prostitutes become agents in their own denigration isn't a productive insight.
Overall, this film is worth seeing if only for Terrence Howard.
This review of Hustle & Flow (2005) was written by Amy S on 07 June 2013.
Hustle & Flow has generally received very positive reviews.
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