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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CrooklynCrooklyn - Wikipedia

    Crooklyn is a 1994 American semi-autobiographical film produced and directed by Spike Lee, who wrote it with his siblings Joie and Cinqué. Taking place in the Bedford–Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York , during the summer of 1973, [2] the film primarily centers on a young girl named Troy Carmichael (played by Zelda Harris ), and her family.

  2. May 13, 1994 · Crooklyn: Directed by Spike Lee. With Alfre Woodard, Delroy Lindo, David Patrick Kelly, Zelda Harris. Spike Lee's vibrant semi-autobiographical portrait of a school teacher, her stubborn jazz musician husband and their five kids living in Brooklyn in 1973.

    • (11K)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Spike Lee
    • 1994-05-13
  3. Crooklyn. Spike Lee 's new film, "Crooklyn," is a memory of growing up in Brooklyn in the early 1970s, a time that now seems like a golden age before crack, guns and gangs ruled the inner city streets. It tells the story of the Carmichaels, a family with four boys and a girl, who live in a brownstone on a street where everybody knows everybody ...

  4. assistant art director John Merrick ... key construction grip Paul Moore ... scenic artist Ron Norsworthy ... assistant art director (as Ronald L. Norsworthy) Rudy Pelikan ... construction foreman Roberta Polito ... construction grip Louis J. Porzio ... carpenter / set builder Steven Richetts

  5. May 28, 2024 · Despite a muted reception back in May 1994 — certainly compared to Spike Lee ’s previous film “Malcolm X” — “ Crooklyn ” has endured for three decades as one of the director’s most ...

  6. Rent Crooklyn on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video. ... Dave S In what is probably writer/director Spike Lee’s most personal effort, Crooklyn tells the ...

    • (34)
    • Drama
    • PG-13
  7. Aug 5, 1994 · A Family Tree Grows in Spike Lee's "Crooklyn". The saddest thing, Spike Lee thinks, is that in some neighborhoods the children no longer know how to play street games. The streets are so unsafe the kids hide inside, and decades of childhood culture have disappeared in a generation. "They know Nintendo and Sega," Lee said.