|
Director:
Michael Schultz
Cast: Glynn Turman, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Garrett Morris,
Cynthia Davis, Corin Rogers
Country, Year, Length, Format: U.S., 1975, 107 min., 16mm
Presented by: Michael Schultz
Print Source: Private Collector
Screening:
Saturday, April 29, 2:15 PM, Charles 2
Synopsis:
The Maryland Film Festival is proud to present the 25th Anniversary
screening of the oft over-looked classic, Cooley High. The film
burst onto the film scene in 1975 with a hip Motown soundtrack in
the midst of the "blaxpolitation" era of films. But unlike some
of the movies of that era, Cooley High was different. It wasn't
an action film like Shaft, Superfly or the films that made Pam Grier
famous, Cooley High was a movie that was a teen-based comedic drama
with heartfelt emotion starring Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Glynn Turman
and Garrett Morris of Saturday Night Live Fame.
The story centers
around a group of working class friends in 1964 Chicago, including
Preach, a poet loving student, and Cochise, a young man who is a
star athlete. There are extremely funny moments like when Preach,
without a license, gets behind the wheel of a stolen car; or when
they cut school to go to the zoo and Pooter has an encounter with
a gorilla. There is also romance in this film with one of the most
sensitively shot love scenes featuring Preach and Brenda. Cooley
High has influenced generations of African-American filmmakers,
take a close look at Boyz n The Hood and Menace 2 Society. Directed
with a deft hand by Michael Schultz and scripted by Eric Monte,
Cooley High, formed the basis for the television series What's Happening
and Good Times. -Darryl Wharton
Tidbit:
Where the Student Body was a Chick Named Veronica... The Senior
Prom was a "belly rub" and the Class of '64 ran a Permanent crap
game in the Men's Room.
Bio:
Director Michael Schultz has had a film and television career spanning
four decades. As a television director Schultz established himself
as a pioneer early by directing episodes of The Rockford Files and
Starsky and Hutch. As a feature filmmaker he helmed a number of
'70s classics like Cooley High, Car Wash, and Greased Lightning,
starring Richard Pryor. The '80s saw Schultz continuing his stride
between television and films, including Carbon Copy, which features
a young Denzel Washington, as well as one of the first films to
feature hip-hop artists, Krush Groove. In the '90s Mr. Schultz concentrated
on television directing. Some of his credits include, Chicago Hope,
JAG, The Practice, and Ally McBeal. In a year in which diversity
became a battle-cry in the television industry, Mr. Schultz, directed
episodes of the new Steven Bocho show City of Angels which features
a majority African-American cast and crew.
|