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Preston A. Whitmore II Movies

Like Carl Franklin (Devil in a Blue Dress) and Bryan Barber (Idlewild), one of African-American writer/director Preston A. Whitmore II's first career moves involved carrying mainstream black cinema in an unusual direction. The native Detroiter's 1995 debut, The Walking Dead, marked a cinematic first -- the premiere "black Vietnam film" -- and would have entailed an auspicious bow. Unfortunately, Whitmore's grade-A casting choices (Joe Morton and Eddie Griffin fill two of the key roles) and the ingenuity of his central concept failed to mesh with the dispiriting critical and public response. The San Francisco Chronicle's Peter Stack lamented, "There is a potentially great movie to be made about African-American military men fighting in Vietnam for an America tainted by racial unrest and oppression -- but The Walking Dead is not that film." And The Washington Post's Desson Howe remarked, "Walking Dead...distills its reservoir of dramatic potential into a series of clichéd eddies."
Perhaps taking this as a cue, Whitmore spun around and carried off in a different direction. He cut his teeth on the small screen, as one of the scripters of the sitcom Malcolm and Eddie. With The Cosby Show's Malcolm-Jamal Warner and Walking Dead mainstay Griffin in central roles, and Joel Madison as the series creator,UPN landed a four-season home run. Scripting duties on a first-run theatrical feature followed, summer 1996's criminal-on-the-run actioner Fled, with Laurence Fishburne and Stephen Baldwin. The response proved equally dispiriting. If critics found the previous year's Walking Dead unsuccessful, they were particularly harsh on Fled; many zeroed in concertedly on Whitmore's script, which they dismissed as pedestrian and cliché-ridden.

Four years sans credits followed for Whitmore, until he scripted a trio of features just after the turn of the millennium. He authored director John Luessenhop's 2000 prison picture Lockdown, which stars African-American character actors Bill Nunn, Anna Maria Horsford, and others. It received extremely limited distribution; those who did catch it espoused mixed emotions. Whitmore broke free of black cinema to pen the teleplay of William A. Graham's 2002 psychological thriller Blood Crime (with Johnathon Schaech and James Caan), and adapted the same year's social conscience drama Civil Brand from his own story.
In 2004, Whitmore harkened back to the big screen and reclaimed the director's chair, for the straight-to-video crime thriller Doing Hard Time, which he also scripted. A kind of African-American spin on In the Bedroom, crossed with the filmmaker's own Lockdown, the picture tells the story of a father denied justice in the wake of his son's murder, who seeks deliberate incarceration to execute the men who snuffed out his boy's life. Whitmore also wrote and directed a follow-up, 2006's first-run big screen effort Crossover. That picture stars Anthony Mackie and Wesley Jonathan in its tale of an all-black underground basketball team, who play in a converted train station, and was realeased by Sony Pictures in September 2006. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
2002  
NR  
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At first, the made-for-cable melodrama Blood Crime seems determined to emulate the classic Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode "Revenge" -- but there's far, far more to it than that. Vacationing in the forest outside his native Seattle, city detective Daniel Pruitt (Johnathon Schaech) is stunned when his wife Jessica (Elizabeth Lackey) is sexually assaulted. While driving her to the hospital, Daniel collides with a semi, whereupon Jessica insists that the driver was her assailant. Blinded by his rage, Daniel jumps out of his car and pummels the other driver into unconsciousness. Upon arriving at the E.R., however, the hysterical Jessica changes her story, claiming that she was attacked by the male nurse taking care of her. Already distraught over the possibility that he has beaten up the wrong man, Daniel is in no mood to discover that his victim has died -- and that the dead man is the son of local sheriff Morgan McKenna (James Caan), who has his own peculiar ideas about justice and retribution. Keeping mum about his involvement in the case, Daniel is placed in the awkward position of investigating the death of McKenna's son. And then, evidence is unearthed suggesting that Daniel may not be a murderer after all. Filmed in New Zealand under the title The Wrong Man, Blood Crime premiered over the USA Network on September 13, 2002. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
James CaanJohnathon Schaech, (more)
 
2002  
R  
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Television director Neema Barnette directs the forceful drama Civil Brand, based on a story by Preston A. Whitmore II. Shot with a micro-budget of 500,000 dollars, the film stars confrontational rap and hip-hop artists Mos Def, MC Lyte, and Da Brat. The story concerns a women's prison that exploits its largely African-American inmate population as cheap labor to manufacture products for a corporation. Mostly incarcerated due to domestic violence situations, the inmates also face sexual abuse as the hands of the prison staff, headed by Captain Deese (Clifton Powell) and Warden Nelson (Reed McCants). Accused of murder, Frances Shepard (Lisa Rae) joins forces with inmates Little Momma (Lark Voorhies), Wet (Monica Calhoun), and Nikki Barnes (N'Bushe Wright), as well as law student Michael (Mos Def), in order to start an uprising. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi

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Starring:
LisaRayeMos Def, (more)
 
2006  
PG13  
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Director Preston A. Whitmore II brings the thrill of the street to the big screen with a fast-moving tale of underground basketball that proves no matter what team you play for, in the end it's all about how much game you've got. The stroke of midnight has sounded and the crowd has gathered; it's time for some basketball. Forget about the rules of the NBA, though, and throw those college credentials out the window because they don't mean a thing in this court. In a converted rail station, the only players who gain respect are the ones left standing when the clock hits zero, and the current champions have been standing way too tall for far too long. Now a new generation is ready to take over the top spot, and young hopefuls Tech (Anthony Mackie) and Cruise (Wesley Jonathan) are leading the charge. With everything on the line and the challenge of a lifetime before them, these too young street-ballers will be forced to out-dribble, out-shoot, and out-run their more experienced competitors in order to win the game and pave the way for the next crop of street smart shooters. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Anthony MackieWesley Jonathan, (more)
 
2004  
R  
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A man turns to crime in the name of justice in this hard-hitting drama. Michael (Boris Kodjoe) was a good father and a law-abiding citizen until the day his seven-year-old son was accidentally killed in an exchange of gunfire between two gangs of drug dealers. Michael became obsessed with seeing the gunmen brought to justice, but when the murder charges were dropped and the shooters were given a short sentence for drug possession, Michael decided to take matters into his own hands. Michael commits a crime so that he will be placed in the same prison as the men who took his son's life; once there, he can take their lives in exchange for the life they took. But Michael seriously underestimates the ruthlessness of the prison population and must fight for his own survival before he can carry out his plan. Doing Hard Time also stars Giancarlo Esposito, Steven Bauer, and Sticky Fingaz. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2009  
 
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Four friends bite off more than they can chew while hustling on the street in hopes of hitting the big time in this crime drama starring Wood Harris and Sticky Fingaz. Their loyalty tested as they struggle just to stay alive, they soon discover that the very rules they once lived by could be the same rules they will soon die by. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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1996  
R  
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Though serving a prison sentence for using his computer to embezzle from an international corporation, Dodge (Stephen Baldwin) still thinks of himself as an ordinary criminal. His fellow convict, Piper (Lawrence Fishburne), whose basic decency leads him to protect Dodge from an assault by another prisoner, thinks the same. Neither Piper nor Dodge particularly like each other; matters are not improved when they are chained together. When a prison riot transforms into a break-out opportunity, they get to know one another better on the run, and neither is any too thrilled about it. The action soon grows fast and furious when they realize that they are not only on the run from the usual police authorities, but from several different kinds of police and a gang of mobsters, whom Dodge has unknowingly endangered. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Laurence FishburneStephen Baldwin, (more)
 
2000  
R  
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A prison drama centering on the travails of three friends unjustly imprisoned for a crime they didn't commit, Lockdown opens with Avery (Richard T. Jones), a talented young swimmer who desperately wants to free himself, his wife Krista (Melissa De Sousa), and their infant son from life in the projects of Albuquerque, NM. Avery's future seems bright when, after winning a regional swimming competition, he is approached by Charles Pierce (Bill Nunn), a talent scout who takes an interest in the young man's athletic promise. Unfortunately, Avery's dreams quickly disintegrate when he and his pals Cashmere (Gabriel Casseus) and Dre (De'Aundre Bonds) are pulled over by cops one night and framed for a robbery/murder they didn't commit. Faster than you can say "blatant miscarriage of justice," Avery, Cashmere, and Dre land in the slammer, where they are separated and forced to fend for themselves. Avery ends by getting a valuable prison education from his Ralph Ellison-quoting cellmate Malachi (Clifton Powell), while Cashmere quickly becomes part of the African-American gang network operating under the leadership of Clean Up (rapper Master P, whose No Limit Films produced the film). Dre, meanwhile, meets the worst fate of the three, resorting to heroin after he's gang-raped by a group of Nazi thugs. On the outside, Krista and Pierce work tirelessly to free the trio from prison. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

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Starring:
Richard T. JonesGabriel Casseus, (more)
 
1995  
R  
Using relatively unknown actors, first-time screenwriter-director Preston A. Whitmore II examines the effects of the Vietnam War on four black Marines sent on a doomed prisoner-of-war rescue mission. The four men are what's left of a platoon that's been decimated after landing behind enemy lines. In charge is Sergeant Barkley (Joe Morton), a no-nonsense, Bible-quoting preacher who is leading three privates to find a POW camp in an abandoned temple. Cole Evans (Allen Payne) is an intellectual who is highly political, racially proud, and a devoted family man. Joe Brooks (Vonte Sweet) is a cheerful, naïve, and brave young soldier. Hoover Branche (Eddie Griffin) is a dope-smoking, foul-mouthed rebel who hates the war and fights the sergeant constantly. They eventually are joined by a crazy, bloodthirsty white soldier, Pippins (Roger Floyd). Flashbacks reveal why each character joined the Marines. Pippins entered the recruiting office to escape rival gang members who were trying to kill him. Brooks enlisted to impress his girlfriend. Branche signed up after being fired from a meat-packing plant for stealing a ham that he used as admission to a party where he wanted to woo a girl. Evans enlisted because bigoted real estate agents prevented him from buying a decent home for his family in L.A. -- he intended to become a Marine officer so that he can get free housing. ~ Michael Betzold, Rovi

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Starring:
Allen PayneEddie Griffin, (more)
 
2007  
PG13  
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Upon gathering together under one roof for the first time in seven years, an estranged family celebrating Christmas rediscovers long-forgotten bonds in this holiday family reuniondrama starring Delroy Lindo, Regina King, and Mekhi Phifer. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Delroy LindoIdris Elba, (more)