Next Friday
Next Friday | |
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File:Next Friday Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Steve Carr |
Produced by | Ice Cube |
Written by | Ice Cube |
Based on | Characters by Ice Cube and DJ Pooh |
Starring | Ice Cube Mike Epps Justin Pierce Tamala Jones Don "D.C." Curry John Witherspoon Tommy "Tiny" Lister Jr. |
Narrated by | Ice Cube |
Music by | Terence Blanchard |
Cinematography | Christopher J. Baffa |
Edited by | Elena Maganini |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release dates
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Running time
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98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $11 million[1] |
Box office | $59.8 million[1] |
Next Friday is a 2000 American stoner comedy film, and the sequel to the 1995 film Friday. This is the first film to be produced by producer Ice Cube's film production company Cubevision.
Directed by Steve Carr, and starring Ice Cube, Mike Epps, Don "D.C." Curry, John Witherspoon, and Tommy "Tiny" Lister Jr, the film was theatrically released on January 12, 2000 to commercial success[1] but it received the most negative reviews of the franchise.
A third film, Friday After Next was released in November 2002, with a fourth film, Last Friday, in development.[2]
Contents
Plot
After a fight between Craig (Ice Cube) and the neighborhood bully Deebo (Tommy "Tiny" Lister Jr.), rumor spreads that Deebo will be breaking out of jail soon and will come looking for Craig. As a result, Craig's father, Willie (Witherspoon), decides to have him stay with his uncle Elroy (Don Curry), and cousin Day-Day (Mike Epps) in Rancho Cucamonga.
Initially, life with his uncle and cousin seems to be ideal, but trouble soon arises. In spite of his family winning the lottery, Day-Day informs Craig that his family is not rich anymore. After taxes were deducted from their winnings, all they were left with was their house and Day-Day's BMW. Because of this situation, Day-Day still has a job at Pinky's, a local record store.
Day-Day's pregnant ex-girlfriend D'Wana (Tamala Jones) is angry about their breakup. She vandalizes his car, pepper sprays him and threatens to return with her sister, Baby D (Lady of Rage).
A family of Chicano thugs, the Jokers, live next door and Day-Day and Craig learn about their drug dealing activities from Mrs. Ho-Kym (Amy Hill). Craig notices their sister, Karla, but Day-Day warns him to stay away from her. The mailman gives Craig a notice for the house being auctioned, and he goes to the record store to inform Day-Day.
Shortly after, record store owner, Pinky (Clifton Powell), returns and mistakes Craig for a thief attempting to rob his store. After fighting Craig, Pinky fires both Day-Day and Roach (Justin Pierce) on the spot.
Having previously received a notice of unpaid taxes, Day-Day is extremely upset with Craig for getting him fired. As they think of a solution and Roach attempts to leave, he slips on his skateboard which is then intentionally run over by the Joker brothers. As they watch, they see the eldest Joker removing a suspicious hydraulic pump from the trunk. They decide to find out what is inside the pump.
They manage to break into the Jokers’ house and Craig discovers the hydraulic pump contains a large amount of drug money, and takes some of it. He soon goes into Karla's room which impresses her. She tells Craig that the neighborhood was peaceful until her brothers got out of jail. Karla and her parents tried to avoid her brothers by saving money and moving away, but it only encouraged her brothers to follow them.
Day-Day and Roach grow nervous about Craig's prolonged absence and attempt to find him. They knock at the door and are greeted by the three brothers armed with pistols and automatic rifles ,who take them hostage after discovering their money has been taken. When Craig realizes that Day-Day has not returned home, he, Willie, and Elroy plan a rescue mission.
A fight ensues between Craig and Joker, while Day-Day and Roach are freed by Elroy. After a scuffle in which Joker aims an automatic rifle at Craig, Day-Day and Roach, he gets knocked out from behind by Deebo, whom, along with Tyrone, snuck into Willie's truck.
Tyrone takes one of Joker's rifle gun from the unconscious Joker and gives it to Deebo so he can enact revenge on Craig. Unfortunately, Chico, Joker's dog, attacks Deebo and Tyrone. The police arrive soon after and arrest Deebo, Tyrone, and the Joker brothers. However they are unaware of the hydraulic pump and its contents. Craig, Day-Day and Elroy split the cash and keep the house and Craig returns to South Central. As Craig leaves, he spots D'wana pulling up to Day-Day's BMW, and having Baby D get out and toss a brick through the rear window, and the two speed off laughing.
Cast
- Ice Cube as Craig Jones
- Mike Epps as Daymond "Day-Day" Jones
- Justin Pierce as Roach
- John Witherspoon as Mr. Jones
- Don "D.C." Curry as Uncle Elroy
- Jacob Vargas as Joker
- Amy Hill as Mrs. Ho-Kym
- Clifton Powell as Pinky
- Kym Whitley as Auntie Suga
- Tamala Jones as D'Wana
- Robyn "Lady of Rage" Allen as Baby D
- Lisa Rodríguez as Karla
- Tommy Lister Jr. as Deebo
- Sticky Fingaz as Tyrone
- Lobo Sebastian as Lil' Joker
- Jacob Vargas as Baby Joker
- Michael Blackson as Angry African Man Customer
- Nicole Lydy as Ashley Nicole
Soundtrack
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The film's soundtrack, which featured appearances from Aaliyah, Eminem, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Ice Cube, N.W.A., Snoop Dogg, Wu-Tang Clan, and Wyclef Jean, peaked at number five on the R&B/Hip-Hop charts, and nineteen on the Billboard 200 in 2000.
Reception
Next Friday received negative reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 20% "rotten" rating, based on 64 reviews, with an average rating of 4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Next Friday lacks the fun of the original Friday. The movie is messy and plotless and relies on unfunny vulgar gags".[3] On Metacritic, the film has received a score of 41, based on 25 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". However, the film was a box office success, grossing $14,465,156 on its opening weekend in 1,103 theaters, averaging $13,114 per theater. The film has grossed $57,328,603 in North America and $2,498,725 in the foreign box office to earn a total $59,827,328 worldwide.
Awards
- Best Comedic Performance — Ice Cube (nominated)
Home video release
Next Friday was released on DVD June 6, 2000. The single disc DVD contains a theatrical trailer, music videos, a "making of..." featurette, behind the scenes footage, and an alternate ending as well as cast and crew information.
References
External links
- Use mdy dates from December 2015
- Pages with broken file links
- 2000 films
- English-language films
- Sequel films
- 2000s comedy films
- American comedy films
- American films
- Films about cannabis
- Directorial debut films
- Hood films
- Hip hop films
- Screenplays by Ice Cube
- Films directed by Steve Carr
- New Line Cinema films
- Cube Vision films
- Film scores by Terence Blanchard