
Review by RĂșairĂ Conneely
Directed by: F Gary Gray
Starring: O'Shea Jackson Jr., Corey Hawkins, Jason Mitchell, Paul Giamatti
"Straight Outta Compton isn’t a great movie, but it has some fine moments, strong character work and performances, and I think it’s going to cement a new layer of cultural awareness for people who may have been out of the loop."

Wow, this is a tricky one. Straight Outta Compton is Universal’s biopic of epochal rap group NWA, and the '90s West Coast hip-hop explosion they helped trigger. It’s been getting great word of mouth, and has been chewing up Instagram with a witty and very memeable viral marketing campaign (memeable is a word now, you heard it here first).

As such, I sat through the first 40 or so minutes of Straight Outta Compton with a furrowed brow, increasingly certain that I was going to get the sanitised version of a very complex and adult set of interlocking stories. This is a long film however and most of what I was squirming against was just first-act scene-setting.

Other notable performances include Jason Mitchell as Eazy-E and, my favourite, R. Marcus Taylor as the infamous Suge Knight. Anyone who is familiar with the story of Death Row Records will get a cold little thrill from Suge’s first, very brief introduction to the band, knowing full well what it foreshadows. The film actually spares the audience a full presentation of some of Knight’s greatest excesses, although we get the picture.
I have strong feelings this movie has crossover hit written all over it. Youngsters will sit their elders down to watch this, to explain gangsta rap and why anyone should put up with that swearing, violent imagery, misogyny and homophobia, not to mention all the other markers of distastefully unapologetic Otherness that put some people off Hip Hop as a whole. Their loss.

