He can get there and make it happen pretty quickly. So he didn’t spend as much time rehearsing this, but he’s a pro. So physicality is still pretty second nature to him. Michael isn’t trained as far as I know, but he’s a dancer. And he was there a week ahead of time doing the work and getting the choreography down. Trevor actually has been doing capoeira for maybe 10 years, so he’s really excited and really capable to do these kinds of things. And then when you get closer, obviously it’s them. On a couple levels, you know Scatter is Priest’s mentor in the drug game and also his teacher in martial arts and jujitsu. “I want to up our supply.” This scene is Trevor and Michael as Priest and Scatter, the student and mentor. Transcript How Drug Deals Meet Jiu-Jitsu in ‘Superfly’ Director X narrates a sequence from the film featuring Trevor Jackson and Michael Kenneth Williams. Priest plays good guy by handing the victim’s friends a wad of cash and giving them the name of the best local trauma center. That peace starts fragmenting early in the picture, outside a nightclub, where an indolently truculent Snow Patrol member, Juju (Kaalan Rashad Walker), takes a shot at Priest and instead hits a bystander. He’s got a beautiful house and a beautiful car, commands respect, and presides over an uneasy peace with Snow Patrol, a competing drug gang that wears all white.
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He has two live-in girlfriends, the quietly sophisticated Georgia (Lex Scott Davis) and the younger, flintier Cynthia (Andrea Londo). He’s a major drug supplier in bling-driven Atlanta. Within those cynically defined contemporary parameters, Youngblood Priest (Trevor Jackson, dressed to the nines and sporting what one character derides as “Morris Day hair”) is doing well. There’s no spiritual dimension, no sense of genuine civic aspiration. It’s all about the accumulation of wealth and a sybaritic lifestyle. These days, it seems, the phrase is often used ironically. Several scenes of drug use involving cocaine and/or marijuana (some in a trafficking context).The American Dream is invoked several times in “Superfly.” The mentions come from the movie’s lead character, and from a song on the soundtrack. Frequent use of vulgar expressions and sexual slurs. Frequent use of expletives, profanity and coarse language. Frequent use of the sexual expletive and variations, sometimes in a sexual context. Frequent breast and buttock nudity in a non-sexual context.Īpproximately 320 instances of coarse and/or sexual language, including: Infrequent portrayals of sexual activity, with breast nudity and detail. Several depictions of physical assault, weapons and injury. Frequent portrayals of hand-to-hand, weapons, and gun violence, with blood and detail. Violent acts shown in realistic detail with blood and tissue damage. Brief, visually explicit portrayals of violence. Why is Superfly rated R? Superfly is rated R by the MPAA for violence and language throughout, strong sexuality, nudity, and drug content. The information below is a summary based on data gathered from government and industry sponsored film classification agencies in various global regions.
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Please Note: We have not viewed this movie.