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Clockers (film)

Clockers
Clockers film poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Spike Lee
Produced by Martin Scorsese
Spike Lee
Jon Kilik
Screenplay by Richard Price
Spike Lee
Based on Clockers
by Richard Price
Starring
Music by Terence Blanchard
Cinematography Malik Hassan Sayeed
Edited by Sam Pollard
Production
company
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date
September 13, 1995
Running time
128 minutes
Language English
Budget $25,000,000
Box office $13,071,518

Clockers is a 1995 American crime drama film directed by Spike Lee. It is an adaptation of the 1992 novel of the same name by Richard Price, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Lee. The film stars Harvey Keitel, John Turturro, Delroy Lindo, and Mekhi Phifer in his debut film role. Set in New York City, Clockers tells the story of Strike (Phifer), a street-level drug dealer who becomes entangled in a murder investigation.

In a Brooklyn housing project, a group of clockers — street-level drug dealers — sell drugs for Rodney Little (Delroy Lindo), a local drug lord. Rodney tells Ronald "Strike" Dunham (Mekhi Phifer), one of his lead clockers, that another dealer, Darryl Adams (Steve White), is stealing from him and "got to be got", implying that he wants Strike to kill Darryl. Strike then meets with his brother, Victor Dunham (Isaiah Washington) and tries to persuade Victor to kill Darryl Adams.

Rocco Klein (Harvey Keitel) and Larry Mazilli (John Turturro), homicide detectives, ride to the scene of Darryl Adams' murder. Larry and Rocco receive a phone call from another detective who says a man has confessed at a local church that he killed Darryl. The police meet Strike's older brother Victor at the church and take him in for questioning. In the interrogation room, Victor tells Rocco that he shot Darryl Adams in self-defense. Rocco finds holes in this story and starts looking into Victor's background which includes two jobs, a wife, two children, no criminal record, and aspirations to move out of the projects; Rocco comes to the conclusion that Victor is covering for his younger brother.

Rodney accosts Strike for not committing the murder himself, with Errol, Rodney's enforcer, chastising Strike for getting his brother to do the hit. Later, Rodney tells Strike a story of a younger Rodney and an younger Errol (which goes to a flashback), where Errol threatened Rodney at gunpoint to kill a rival dealer, going as far as Errol holding a shotgun to Rodney's head. Rodney ends up killing the dealer, and (back to Rodney and Strike) Rodney tells Strike the reason Errol, his best friend, forced Rodney at gunpoint to do that was so that Errol could hold something over Rodney, if Rodney ever decided to tell on Errol, which was why Rodney told Strike to kill Darryl Adams himself.


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