Slam is an independent movie that was directed by Marc Levin in 1998. The movie is about a young African American man passion for poetry is interfered with his social background. The motion picture stars Saul Williams, a viable performing artist, as Raymond Joshua, a youthful dark man who is halted by police who discover four ounces of weed. This movie shows the audience what many young African Americans go through and what their experience is like in the correctional system. It shows how poetry can be used as a way towards liberation through community building.
As the movie begins, you see scenes of life in Washington, D.C. and what there is to do around the area. We then proceed to see a man, who is later identified as Raymond, who is seen interacting with a bunch of kids. While interacting with kids, Raymond reads them his poetry and one of the kids were inspired and read something he came out with. He is then seen dealing weed which was referred to as “medicine”. There are issues hiding simply beyond anyone’s ability to see here.
Those issues as such as the lack of qualified guys and the hesitance of expert ladies to date underneath their economic level, yet the motion picture doesn’t generally draw in them. Lauren has a few addresses that allude to what she’s reasoning, yet then the film moves away as though everything were only a question of the heart. To give the motion picture its due, there is an open consummation, which is presumably the correct one; nothing is settled in Raymond’s life. In jail, Raymond’s life is changed when he begins composing verse, and presents it one day in the jail yard, where other prisoners are transfixed. He goes to a jail composing class, where Lauren, the educator declares it’s her last day. She is inspired by his composition and empowers him, and after he gets back in the city he discovers her once more, and enters her universe of poetry slams.
At one of them, she presents him from the stage, and his poetry got a good reaction from people. While to numerous the idea of prison suggests a significant lot of weariness, we can see that jail rather fills in as a sort of mystic weight cooker, drawing out all the extraordinary character attributes in an individual. Here, the hero is compelled to reexamine the significance of his verse. His first night in jail he raps together with a man he later becomes friends with, and we get the inclination this is the main thing shielding this delicate man from snapping. He starts to address his verse as an approach to get by, as when he is pressured to pick sides in the unfriendly patio, he rather discusses an energetic verbally expressed word piece.
The imagery in this film is unobtrusive however unavoidable. The companion who got shot was shot in the eyes and was blinded. At the point when the hero escapes jail, the main thing he says to his currently visually impaired companion is that he can ‘see’. Subjects of abuse and servitude move toward becoming implanted with topics of implosion, about enabling others to remove your opportunities. In this sense the film was confident, hopeful even. Pick your jail shrewdly, it appears to state. The jails you pick can assemble your street to opportunity. Another lesson that this film teaches is that freedom is prison. Raymond must acknowledge discipline, and be reclaimed by it. Above all I think this was a film about affection. Self esteem, love for your sibling and sister, even sexual love wasn’t viewed as a sort of savage excited mating yet a genuine association with another person. On the off chance that verse is compassion and sympathy is love, this film is about adoration, and figuring out how to cherish.