By TUREKA TURK Mlch" n Cltlan "There i no African American renai ance in film; mo t of tho films are wack. ow they want to make musicals, but we've been ing­ ing and dancing t .> long. We need mething with depth to it. People have to love what they do, not just do i-, for the money," aid filmmaker John Singleton. Emerging from the dark esca­ pad of wack Black whodurmi , Stephen Fetchit mee the , and whitewashed Shaft come the young John Singleton. Coming a long way from being a ktnny kid with coke bottle glasses watching and rewatching Martin Scorce e and Steven Spielburg fltc ,Singleton has incorporated­ the true art of film into his constitu­ tion. 1fI love movies. Period. Cl ic structure. Classic characters," he says emphatically. THE BLACK AUDIENCE has witnessed what happens to Black filmmakers that don't love the cin­ ema. Hey, Mattie Ritch, wer n't you on your way Straight Out of Brook­ lyn with your hour and a half episode of modem day Good Time.t? Blae U.a.D'v� t motive and a reali tic solution. They want a filmmaker to tell their story. 'Singleton, at 23, has let his love of film make history. With two Academy Award nominations, he was the first African American nominated for Best Director and the younge t person ever to be nomi­ nated for the award. Boyz N the Hood was a Black urban common ense tale of growing up in South Central Los Angeles. Perhaps most of its popularity came from the fact that, although it was an obvious peek for young Black men, the tory i elf had never made it to the reen in an almo t pure form. "I'm my harshest critic. Boyz w n't a p rticularty great film, but it had a beginning, a middle and an end. Boyz w ucc ful beca e it had a traight up Afrocentric per- p ctive; it w uncompromi ing and. it had a good story." There i little doubt that Single­ ton' upcoming release Poetic Jus­ tice will have the ame, if not more, of the effect Boyz did. "TH TRONG TW M hav th ofte t id . On of the. rul I live by is write what I know. Some of the most, complex' sexy, diverse, three-dimensional women I've ever seen in my life carne out of my neighborhood. They all had a certain mold of ubstanee," Single­ ton ay . r ult. But all anticipation shouldn't just b how J ckson, who hasn't really acted ince the televi ion eries Fame, nd Maya Angelou' poetry fare� . All ey hould al 0 be on Single- ton' ability to pen tori of African American ' lives and dream. Re­ m mber the Time with Michael Jack­ 'on? What other director/Writer would think to make a mini-film about an afrocentric ancient Egypt starring the fair- kinned dynamo Mi­ chael Jackson (aside from all of the debate, he w born Blackl), Eddie Murphy a pharaoh,. Iman as a queen, aoo Magic Johnson a ser­ vant? THE AM DIRECTOR who took a ri k on trusting the acting tal­ ent of hi former high chool mate, Black audiences want more than to see themselve ufferi The result of his keen observation of women? Poetic Justice. The film has already gained excit­ ing anticipation from reviewers, audiences, and th e in the industry. With Singleton's decision to cast Janet Jackson as the lead character, Ju tice, and to use the poetry of Maya Angelou, the public has every right to hold their breath to ee the Janet Jackson, i the very arne who would take a risk on another Jackson starring in an Eygptian empire. Al­ though they were in the same school, they never really knew each other. Now, 'in 1993, the two have the friendship they missed out on be­ cau e of not being in the same "clique". "I'd just met director Francis Ford Best friend Justice (J. net Jack on) and Ie h (Regina King). togeth r on road trip from South Centr�1 Lo Angele to 0 kland in ·Po tic Ju tic.· Jan t Jackson tar • Ju tice and Tupac Shakur a Lucky in • Poetic Ju tice.· a mod rn day treet romance. Coppola," say Singleton. "I was The cast al 0 includes Tupac coming from his office and then I Shakur, straight from hi debut in met Janet. I was workin on the Ernest Dickerson' Juice, the a- 'Poetic Justice , cript and I was tak- Ion' po tman who wants renew Jus- ing with her. But I decided not to rice' faith in love. A road trip will mention the cript to her at first." change all of their liv for good, . The two developed' a friendship While the alon itself i the mecca over ix months, not di cussing the of Black female humor and sister- idea of working together. Finally, hqod, it is also vi ual evidence of the Singlet n gave the criptt Janet to tandard of Bla k beauty. read, trictly for an opinion. "I repre ent a minority who. ha- "I asked him if h wanted my ven't seen themselves on reen," opinion as a friend, and he aid Tyra Ferrell ay, "and that's Black 'Yeah, just tell me what you think. women wh9100k Black." I read it and told him it was great," Don't mi take Justice for being a Janet aid. J Girlz N the Hood. Incorporating But Janet' approval of the script me footage from the Rodney King wasn't the key factor in.siDgleton' upri ing, the film i a portrait of a casting of her in the tatnng -role. young Black woman who wants more than she' expected to get. "I could alway be working at uper Shuttle," he Igrs, recalling the van-driver job he held in college. "That' what I tell myself when thing get hectic. And thi ngs often do get hectic, pecially on a three month hoot, which includes an on-location s .ot that involved ix day a week of hootin for ix weeks. But Singleton i confident that" Justice will end on a good note, i hi baby. And then he will go on to anoth r project. "I hate people who do one film and talk about it for the next three or four yea "he ay . It may not be Sin lcton who will talk aboutJustice for thr or four years. It will prob­ ably th e wh prai e the film i eir. Me nwhile Singleton will move n justly. A TORY 0 THAT magnitude could take a lot out of any director, even Singleton .. -- -=- --==--=---- - -� -- -- JANET HAD TOLD Singleton a story about a group of girt ap­ pro chi ng her for an autograph at the zoo. While Janet was igning th autographs one pecific girt w to­ tally unimpre ed. "Let' ," th girl aid. "She don't pay my rent. She ain't all that." Singleton, although laughing now, aid when Janet imitated the girt at dinner on night, he knew that Janet could handle the role. The role that Janet w taking on was one that definitely had a differ­ ent background from the Jackson ibling. But Janet aid sh could feel Justice' pain. Justice i a young woman, up­ porting herself through hairdres ing, and living through her poetry. Hav­ ing 10 t everyon he truly lov d, he find that poetry y the things her voice cannot let h r ay. TH FIL I1A bevy of young Bla k women with Tyra Fer­ rell (Boyz In th Hood, White Men Can't Jump) a the alon owner/older i t r Justice nev r h d, Regina King (Boyz televi ion how 227) J tice' around-th -way- i ri, her t fnend I ha.