Product Description
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In the movie School Daze, Spike Lee staged a dance number in
which two bands of African-American college students debated the
merits of 'Straight and Nappy' hair in song, and now comedian
Chris Rock and filmmaker Jeff Stilson have extended the
conversation to a full-length film in this witty documentary with
serious undertones. Rock says he was inspired to make the film
when his young daughter asked him, 'Daddy, how come I don't have
good hair?' and he and Stilson examine black America's obsession
with their hair. They visit the Bronner Brothers International
Hair Show, an annual trade show for the African-American hair
care industry which includes fierce competitions among stylists
from around the country and demonstrations of new hair products
and techniques. Along the way, Rock also talks to a number of
African-American luminaries about their hair issues (including
Maya Angelou, Reverend Al Sharpton, Nia Long, Raven Symone,
Ice-T, and Paul Mooney), researches the dangers of many common
hair-straightening s, reveals the surprising expense of
regular hair 'relaxing' and weaves, and ponders what the pursuit
of straight hair says about African-American cultural identity.
.com
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When one of Chris Rock's young daughters asked him an innocent
question about having "good hair," the comedian probably had no
idea just how complicated the answer would be. Fortunately for
us, he decided to find out, and the result is this funny,
informative, and highly entertaining documentary of the same
name. Turns out that for a great many African-American women (and
quite a few men, too), "good hair" means "white hair"--i.e.,
straight and lanky--while the natural or "nappy" look is bad. And
oh, the lengths and expense women will go to in order to get
"good hair"! In the course of the film, which was directed by
Jeff Stilson and cowritten by Rock and several others, Rock first
travels to Atlanta, home of the Bronner Brothers Hair Show, where
thousands of folks buy and learn how to use new products (the
show is also the site of the outrageous and climactic Hair Battle
Royale, in which four stylists compete for money and fame). It's
there that he learns about sodium hydroxide, better known as hair
"relaxer," the "nap antidote," or the "creamy crack" (as
effective as the substance is for straightening hair, it
can also be highly dangerous). In Harlem and Los Angeles, he
investigates the extraordinary popularity of hair weaves, which
can cost tens of thousands of dollars annually to create and
maintain; Rock even goes to Madras, India, source of most of the
hair used in weaves (for Indian women, tonsure, or shaving their
heads, is a ritual act of self-sacrifice). Along the way, Rock
interviews a great many young women with fabulous hair (including
actresses Nia Long, Raven-Symoné, and Kerry Washington, and
rappers Salt-N-Pepa), but he also talks to the esteemed poet Maya
Angelou, as well as men like rapper-actor Ice-T and the Reverend
Al Sharpton. Sharpton, who is very amusing (he's referred to as
"the Dalai Lama of relaxed hair"), is about the only celeb who
touches on racial issues, pointing out that while it's African
Americans who use the overwhelming majority of these hair
products, the companies who sell them tend to be owned by Asians.
Some viewers may object to the film's lack of a strong
socio-political stance, but others will no doubt prefer the
lighter touch, including a hilarious discussion at a barber shop
about dating women with hair weaves (basically, it's "hands off
the hair, pal"). --Sam Graham