TV Schedule for ScreenPix: Voices
Saturday, July 11th TV listings for ScreenPix: Voices
Hurricane Streets (1997)
A young woman encourages a New York City teen (Brendan Sexton III) to reconsider gang values and pursue his dreams.
Beat Street (1984)
A student composer (Rae Dawn Chong) inspires South Bronx residents to new heights in break dancing, rap music and graffiti.
Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo (1984)
Kelly (Lucinda Dickey) quits her job dancing in a chorus line in Los Angeles and goes home. Ignoring her father's wishes, Kelly teams up with her friends for a break-dancing benefit show to save an endangered community center.
Rappin' (1985)
An ex-convict (Mario Van Peebles) shows residents of his Pittsburgh ghetto how to drive out riffraff with rap music.
Cooley High (1975)
Two high-school pals (Glynn Turman, Lawrence-Hilton Jacobs) hang out, face a teacher and flee the police in 1964 urban Chicago.
Hurricane Streets (1997)
A young woman encourages a New York City teen (Brendan Sexton III) to reconsider gang values and pursue his dreams.
Friday Foster (1975)
Photographer Friday Foster travels to an airport to capture a few shots of the richest black man in the United States. As she takes pictures, she witnesses an assassination attempt on her subject and becomes a target of the assassins.
Drum (1976)
A slaver (Warren Oates) buys Drum (Ken Norton), a bordello queen's (Silvia Pinal) son, in the 1860s New Orleans.
Across 110th Street (1972)
Mobsters and crooked police (Anthony Quinn, Yaphet Kotto) hunt three hoods who have robbed a mob operation in Harlem.
Truck Turner (1974)
A skip tracer (Isaac Hayes) pursuing a dangerous criminal becomes a target of the black underworld.
The Monkey Hustle (1976)
A rip-off artist (Yaphet Kotto), a racketeer (Rudy Ray Moore) and other street hustlers oppose a freeway in their Chicago ghetto.
Friday Foster (1975)
Photographer Friday Foster travels to an airport to capture a few shots of the richest black man in the United States. As she takes pictures, she witnesses an assassination attempt on her subject and becomes a target of the assassins.
Drum (1976)
A slaver (Warren Oates) buys Drum (Ken Norton), a bordello queen's (Silvia Pinal) son, in the 1860s New Orleans.
Across 110th Street (1972)
Mobsters and crooked police (Anthony Quinn, Yaphet Kotto) hunt three hoods who have robbed a mob operation in Harlem.
Truck Turner (1974)
A skip tracer (Isaac Hayes) pursuing a dangerous criminal becomes a target of the black underworld.
