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Mark Banning Movies

2005  
 
Michael Ealy (Barbershop) stars as a young bipolar Brooklynite in Jellysmoke, the first feature from writer/director Mark Banning. When Jacob (Ealy) is found throwing rocks at the side of a building in Times Square, he is remanded to a psychiatric facility for treatment. Returning to his Brooklyn home following a successful stay, Jacob has clearly stabilized, but only with the help of a prescribed regimen of anti-depressants. At home, Jacob is met with varying degrees of denial by his mother (Angela Nirvana) and brother (Harvey Moore) -- the former handling him with kid gloves, the latter wanting to shake him. Jacob's devoted childhood friend Paul (Andre Royo) is his one true champion willing to stick by him despite his unpredictable nature. Jacob finds his new anesthetized routine more palatable when he meets Cindy (Opal Alladin), a single mother of a young boy, Joshua (Joshua Asante). Although Cindy is immediately attracted to Jacob, on their first date she comments that he seems sluggish. Having kept his diagnosis a secret, Jacob can't explain his behavior, so he stops taking his pills in the hopes that he'll become more alert and social. However, when he shows up in the middle of the night bearing gifts for Joshua, Cindy starts to sense that there's something not quite right about her new love interest. Jellysmoke received the Target Filmmaker Award for Best Narrative Feature at the 2005 Los Angeles Film Festival, and was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for best feature made for under 500,000 dollars. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi

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Starring:
Michael EalyOpal Alladin, (more)
 
2004  
 
Add Planet Brooklyn to Queue Add Planet Brooklyn to top of Queue  
Mad Matthewz makes his feature debut as a writer/director with Men Without Jobs. Ish (Ishmael Butler, formerly of the jazz-influenced rap group Digable Planets) and Oz (Bonz Malone of Slam) are roommates scrounging by in Brooklyn, barely scraping the rent together each month, and ignoring their bills. They spend their days hanging out, smoking, drinking, and playing video games. Ish wants to make it in the music biz, while Oz watches daytime cooking shows and puts his culinary skills to work impressing the grandmother of his young daughter, in hopes that his little girl will eventually come to live with him. Occasionally they visit their favorite record store, where Ish plans to buy rare R&B records when he gets some money, and peppers the proprietor with potential band names. Their pal Junie (Andre Royo of HBO's The Wire) frequently pops by, begging to be in their as yet unformed band, bragging about his beats, and lying about meetings with famous producers. Ish makes regular visits to his parents' house, but only when they aren't home. He raids the fridge and borrows his dad's (Reg E. Cathey) old records. One day, Ish meets Veronica (Anita Kopacz), a pretty young woman who shares his interest in graffiti and music. Veronica encourages Ish's creative ambitions, but his reluctance to take the next step -- to actually follow through on his dreams -- threatens their relationship. Oz, meanwhile, gambles his way into trouble with some local thugs. When he goes on the run, Ish and Veronica decide to go with him. Men Without Jobs had its world premiere at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ishmael ButlerBonz Malone, (more)