American History X
Tony Kaye made his feature directorial debut with this dramatic exploration into the roots of race hatred in America. In a shocking opening scene, teen Danny Vinyard (Edward Furlong) races to tell his older brother, neo-Nazi Derek (Edward Norton), about the young blacks breaking into his car in front of the house, whereupon Derek gets his gun and with no forethought shoots the youths in their tracks. Tried and convicted, Derek is sent away for three years in prison, where he acquires a different outlook as he contrasts white-power prisoners with black Lamont (Guy Torry), his prison laundry co-worker and eventual pal. Meanwhile, Danny, with a shaved head and a rebellious attitude, seems destined to follow in his big brother's footsteps. After Danny writes a favorable review of Hitler's Mein Kampf, black high-school principal Sweeney (Avery Brooks) puts Danny in his private "American History X" course and assigns him to do a paper about his older brother, who was a former student of Sweeney's. This serves to introduce flashbacks, with the film backtracking to illustrate Danny's account of Derek's life prior to the night of the shooting. Monochrome sequences of Derek leading a Venice, California gang are intercut with color footage of the mature Derek ending his past neo-Nazi associations and attempting to detour Danny away from the group led by white supremacist, Cameron (Stacy Keach), who once influenced Derek. Director Tony Kaye, with a background in TV commercials and music videos, filmed in L.A. beach communities. Rated R "for graphic brutal violence including rape, pervasive language, strong sexuality and nudity." more..
Director: Tony Kaye
Starring: Edward Norton, Avery Brooks, Edward Furlong, Fairuza Balk, Stacy Keach
A shockingly powerful screed against racism that also manages to be so well performed and directed that it is entertaining as well.
This is the sort of incendiary role a lot of actors would kill for, yet the shock of Norton's performance isn't its showboat flamboyance. It's that he makes this sadistic junior sociopath rueful and intelligent.
An inflated yet gut-slugging film.
A series of well-drawn sketches and powerful scenes, in search of an organizing principle.
While this movie is sometimes overbaked, it is the first major studio release in a while to engross wall-to-wall.
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Academy Awards (1999)
Best Actor
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (1999)
Best Actor
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (1999)
Best Actor
Chlotrudis Awards (1999)
Best Sound Editing - Music (Foreign & Domestic)
Motion Picture Sound Editors (1999)
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