The Wood review

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The days of playing maids and houseboys may be long gone, but it's never been easy being black in Hollywood. After the initial creative surge of Do The Right Thing and Boyz N The Hood, black actors and directors had a tough few years trying to avoid the pitfalls of racial stereotyping. Post-Will Smith, though, this MTV-produced comedy drama is a bold and enjoyable attempt to make a mainstream African-American movie that doesn't trot out the usual cliches.

Based on the childhood experiences of first-time helmer Famuyiwa, who penned the screenplay while working at Niketown, The Wood takes its name from Inglewood, a normal middle-class suburb. In the first flashback, 14-year-old residents Roland and Slim try to scare new boy Mike, fresh in from North Carolina, with tales of gang shootings, but Famuyiwa makes a point of avoiding major drama. The first gang members the boys encounter are laughably inept and terrified at the thought of ending up in chokey. Nobody gets addicted to crack and nobody dies in a drive-by.

Deliberately short on thrills, this study of friendship and nostalgia bobs along nicely, with plenty of comic moments. With echoes of Dazed And Confused and Swingers, it's a feelgood flick for twentysomething blokes who are soft at heart.

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