AMG AllMovie Guide:

Cornbread, Earl and Me

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Plot

Cornbread (Keith Wilkes) is an African-American youth who strives to escape his ghetto surroundings. He does so by becoming a high school basketball star--and the idol of the other youngsters in his community. On the verge of starting college on a scholarship, Cornbread is mistakenly killed by a police officer. Keith Wilkes, who plays the title role, was in real life an all-American at UCLA. Cornbread, Earl and Me, which was based upon Ronald Fair's novel Hog Butcher, marked the big screen debut of Laurence Fishburne. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Review

American International Pictures cranked out some of the most action-packed and hard-hitting movies of the 1970s blaxploitation era, and after producing a fistful of violent revenge dramas like Slaughter, Black Caesar and Coffy, the company decided to take a chance on a more positive and emotionally resonant African-American picture with Cornbread, Earl and Me. Set in Chicago in the 1970s, the movie doesn't shrink from the facts of life in the ghetto -- crime, drugs, broken homes -- but also affirms that strong and caring families can be found there and people can rise above their circumstances though talent and hard work. Unfortunately, one young man who has the ability to make something of himself is accidentally gunned down by police who are willing to go to almost any lengths to avoid taking responsibility for their mistake, causing a few people in the neighborhood to lose their courage under the threat of corrupt police officials. Cornbread, Earl and Me is certainly a more thoughtful and compassionate film than most of the small-studio projects that emerged from the blaxploitation cycle, so it's a shame that for all its good intentions its not an especially good film. Joe Manduke's direction is a bit sluggish and poorly paced, and his script (adapted from Ronald Fair's novel Hog Butcher) is curiously one-dimensional, painting every cop as a racist thug looking to bury their own mistakes (even the black cops on display are filled with loathing for their own people) and populating the neighborhood with standard-issue stock characters who are one step removed from stock clichés, from the cranky but good-hearted shopkeeper to the pimp-suited numbers runner. Fourteen-year-old Lawrence Fishburne had to carry much of the picture as Wilford Robinson, and he wasn't yet up to the challenge -- it was his first film, and while he's not bad, his inexperience shows at the most awkward times. And while Keith Wilkes (who as Jamaal Wilkes became an NBA star with the Los Angeles Lakers) shows impressive skills on the basketball court, the man was no actor and his performance as Cornbread is pleasant but ultimately amateurish, not giving us much reason to care about a young man who plays a crucial role in the story. Moses Gunn is excellent as an attorney determined to make the police admit their wrongdoing and Rosalind Cash and Madge Sinclair are quite good as women struggling with tragedies, but they don't quite compensate for the film's many flaws. Cornbread, Earl and Me has its heart in the right place, but its virtues are outweighed by its faults, and ultimately this story deserved better treatment than it gets here. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Cast

Tierre Turner - Earl; The Blackyrds - Themselves; Antonio Fargas - One Eye; Laurence Fishburne - Wilford; Stefan Gierasch - Sgt. Danaher; Sarina Grant - Mrs. Parsons; Bill Henderson - Watkins; Charles Lampkin - Jenkins; Stack Pierce - Sam; Logan Ramsey - Deputy Coroner; Thalmus Rasulala - Charlie; Vincent Martorano - Golich; John Zaccaro - Detective Simmons

Credit

David M. Haber - Art Director, Ann McCarthy - Costume Designer, Tony Brand - First Assistant Director, Joseph Manduke - Director, Aaron Stell - Editor, Leonard Lamensdorf - Executive Producer, Donald Byrd - Composer (Music Score), Jules Brenner - Cinematographer, Joseph Manduke - Producer, Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson - Supervisor/Manager, Leonard Lamensdorf - Screenwriter, Ronald Fair - Book Author

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Cornbread, Earl and Me

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Cornbread, Earl and Me

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Cornbread, Earl and Me

Movie cover for Cornbread, Earl and Me
Directed by Joseph Manduke
Produced by Joseph Manduke
Written by Ronald Fair
Leonard Lamensdorf
Starring Tierre Turner
Laurence Fishburne
Jamaal Wilkes
Moses Gunn
Bernie Casey
Rosalind Cash
Antonio Fargas
Thalmus Rasulala
Madge Sinclair
Music by Donald Byrd
Distributed by HBO
Release date(s) May 21, 1975
Running time 95 min.
Language English

Cornbread, Earl and Me is a 1975 American drama film that stars Tierre Turner as Earl Carter, Laurence Fishburne as Wilford Robinson and Jamaal Wilkes as Nathaniel "Cornbread" Hamilton. It was directed and produced by Joseph Manduke. The film is loosely based on the novel Hog Butcher by Ronald Fair.[1]

Contents

Plot

The film focuses on three African-American youths living in an urban neighborhood. Nathaniel Hamilton is a star basketball player from the neighborhood, who also goes by the nickname of "Cornbread." In the movie, he epitomizes the dream of the neighborhood to be successful, as he is about to become the first from the community to enter college on an athletic scholarship. He is also a local hero to friends Earl Carter and Wilford Robinson. The plot thickens after a pick-up basketball game ends because of a heavy rain, and all the kids run to the local store and hang out, waiting for the rain to end. All the kids leave, except for Cornbread, Earl and Wilford. Earl and Wilford get into a playful argument about how fast Cornbread can run home. It is decided that Cornbread should make it home in 25 seconds, so he runs off, after buying another soda for himself. Unbeknownst to all of them, an assault suspect is in the area, and is dressed similarly to Cornbread. The police are hot on the suspect's trail, but lose him in the rain. As the police are coming out of an alleyway, they see Cornbread running by and mistake him for the suspect they're looking for. Subsequently, Cornbread is shot in the back, and dies in the middle of the street. Wilford screams hysterically, and a riot ensues. The coroner's inquest is hampered by severe police intimidation, and no one knows anything about anything, except for Wilford, who becomes a man on the witness stand by telling exactly what he saw, in graphic detail.

Release on DVD & HD

  • In 2001 it was released on DVD.
  • In 2010 it was digitized in High Definition (1080i) and broadcasted on MGM HD.

References

  1. ^ MTV Movies: Cornbread, Earl and Me

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Mentioned in

Cornbread, Earl and Me (1975 Drama Film)
LoveByrds: Soft & Easy (2007 Album by The Blackbyrds)
Cornbread, Earl and Me (1975 Album by The Blackbyrds)
At the Movies (2001 Album by The Blackbyrds/Charles Earland)
The Dynamite Brothers (1973 Album by Charles Earland)