Friday (Blu-ray) R
A lot can go down between thursday and saturday...
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Friday
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 1 hours, 39 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: September 8, 2009
- Originally Released: 1995
- Label: New Line Home Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Ice Cube & Chris Tucker | |
Performer: | Nia Long, Regina King, Bernie Mac, John Witherspoon, Anna Maria Horsford, Paula Jai Parker, Faizon Love, Angela Means, Vickilyn Reynolds, Tony Cox & Demetrius Navarro | |
Directed by | F. Gary Gray |
Entertainment Reviews:
Cube is amusing, though he's really playing straight man to Tucker's frenetic and energized Smokey.
Full Review
Washington Post
While the character-driven script has a weakness for toilet humor (Mel Brooks would be proud), its inhabitants are given some oddball quirks and tics that keep things percolating when the plot development runs a little thin.
Full Review
Hollywood Reporter
Rating: B --
A new generation of black talent (director Gray, actors Chris Tucker and Ice Cube) bring verve to this much welcome comedic view of street life in South Central, after mostly crime and drug pictures set there.
Full Review
EmanuelLevy.Com
Rating: 4/5 --
The characters are what make this. Deebo is iconic.
Full Review
Medium Popcorn
Rating: 3/4 --
This is a ruder, cruder version of the hip-hop movie House Party, and it offers a fascinating glimpse at the way street life enters pop culture.
New York Times
Crapping jokes and cussing jokes and look at that lady in her skimpy clothes jokes. I enjoyed this badly, stupidly, as it was meant to be enjoyed.
Full Review
Patheos
Rating: 4/5 --
Really funny, filmed great, with a lot of heart to it.
Full Review
Medium Popcorn
Product Description:
Thoroughly charming and totally hilarious day-in-the-life comedy in which co-writer Ice Cube plays the stoic Craig opposite Chris Tucker's Smokey, a brilliantly rendered hyperactive marijuana enthusiast. The two twentysomethings, Craig recently wrongly fired and Smokey terminally slacking and scamming, barely make it through one highly eventful day. Eloquent commentary on themes like community, family, friendship, and violence is seamlessly blended with lighter treatments of young romance, bathroom emergencies, nosy neighbors and much more. Casually impeccable performances by the entire cast make this film a standout.