Directed by Alison Duke |
Canada, 2000 (documentary, 72 minutes, colour, English) |
Film Description: "A gutsy doc that crackles with energy, Raisin' Kane takes you into the hidden world of independent hip-hop artists. Hip-hop has been embraced by the mainstream, but independents like Juno Award-nominated Citizen Kane still struggle for music industry respect. The public-housing projects where many young Black men come of age offer no economic power and no political voice. In the eyes of the kids who live there, that equals no future. For the band members, music is their only ticket out. [...]" -- National Film Board of Canada (source) |
Film Credits (partial): | |
Produced by: | Karen King-Chigbo, Louise Lore |
Participants: | Jeff Duke, Nelson George, Michie Mee, Rob Paris |
Cinematography: | Stanislaw Barua, Ricardo Diaz, Kim Derko |
Film Editing: | Gordon Thorne |
Music: | The Black Europeans |
Production Company: | National Film Board of Canada / Office national du film du Canada |
"[In Raisin' Kane: A Rapumentary] first-time director Alison Duke puts hip-hop music into its Canadian cultural context with footage shot in subsidized housing projects in Scarborough. There she captures hip-hop's street-level roots by showing kids as young as 10 exchanging rhyming lyrics to gain respect on the concrete playground. Duke moves the story forward and puts it in the context of Canadian music, and culture as a whole, through colourful chats with commentators such as culture critic Nelson George, and recording artist Michie Mee."
-- Peter Zimonjic
(source)