Set It Off is a groundbreaking film. Here's why.
Today on Hip Hop Movie Club: Set It Off, the 1996 heist movie starring Queen Latifah, Vivica A. Fox, Jada Pinkett, and Kimberly Elise that was groundbreaking β in more ways than one!
Topics discussed:
- This is Queen Latifah's first lead role, and one of the best performances of a rapper turned actor π
- This film is also an ode to Black women friendship and sisterhood, with strong performances from the four leads to match π©πΎ
- We see an early instance of an LGBTQ relationship in a major motion picture, and it's handled well without making it a clumsy plot point π³οΈβπ
- The soundtrack is hip hop heavy and important to the heist sequences π€
- Some of the themes (police brutality, racism, sexism, systemic oppression) are sadly still relevant, which gives the film a poignant quality π
Also check out:
The Film Experience: Gay Best Friend: Cleo (Queen Latifah) in "Set It Off" (1996)
Nerdist: A Brief History of Black Queer Representation in Cinema
Autostraddle: βSet It Offβ Is the Queer Tribute to Black Womenβs Friendship We Need After a Summer of Black Mourning
Credits
Hip Hop Movie Club is produced by your HHMCs JB, BooGie, and DynoWright. Theme music by BooGie. Follow @hiphopmovieclub on Instagram!
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