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Black Cast Horror Flick Turns Fright Formula Upside-Down
Holla
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Fans
of horror fare are undoubtedly familiar with certain fright flick
conventions such as the notion that the black guy is generally afraid of
his shadow and is also the first person to die in the picture. As one
might suspect, these familiar traditions could easily be turned
upside-down when you have a movie made by a black director.
Case in point:
Holla, a film directed by H.M. Coakley and featuring a cast
comprised mostly of African-American actors, but with a few token
Caucasians aboard to play uncharacteristic roles in a production which
flips the traditional script. So, don’t be surprised to find a white
person perishing first, singing “we Shall Overcome,” calling a sister by
the B-word or looking spooked and scared as if he’s about to jump out of
his skin.
The basic plotline of this high attrition-rate screamer is
straightforward enough, as it revolves around a bunch of attractive
twenty-somethings who find a way to end up stuck in a cabin in the
forest for a weekend during a driving thunderstorm. Besides the
aforementioned fraidy cat, the crew contains your typical mix of readily
identifiable archetypes.
This gathering, referred to as “a bunch of bourgie-ass N-words on a
camping trip,” is being hosted by Monica (Shelli Boone), a TV sitcom
star, and her boyfriend, Dwayne (Charles Porter). It’s not long before
the first victim is stabbed to death and all eyes focus on the obvious
suspect, the only uninvited guest, Dwayne’s recently-paroled cousin,
Troy (Young Sir).
That obvious red-herring has the seasoned cinematic sleuth looking at
everyone else closely, but this well-conceived mystery cleverly conceals
which person is behind the series of slashings which threatens to take
all of their lives. Look for lots of the genre’s staples such as the
erotically-charged sight of cute, curvy coeds cavorting about in fear in
their underwear.
A serial killer with jungle fever.
  
Rated R for violence, profanity and ethnic slurs.
Running time: 85 minutes
Studio: Lions Gate Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Commentary with director H.M. Coakley, screenwriter Camillle
Irons Coakley and co-star Shelli Boone, “The Making of” featurette, plus
trailers.
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