Shaft (2000) Shaft

Shaft ★★★ Shaft Returns 2000 (R) Singleton's updated the 1971 blaxploitation flick with Jackson starring as the nephew of the coolest private dick ever (Roundtree has a cameo in his original role). But Jackson can more than hold his own in the cool department as he tracks down richkid murderer Walter Wade Jr. (Bale), who's after the only witness to his crime, a scared waitress (Collette). Wade hires a Latino drug dealer (Wright, in a standout performance almost equal to Jackson's) and a couple of bad cops to find the girl and kill Shaft, setting off much gunfire and snappy dialoque. Jackson has charisma to burn, but other characters, as well as potentially interesting plot points, get short shrift. This is most likely a result of Wright's part being (deservedly) beefed up from the original screenplay (about which Singleton and Jackson were said to be not entirely happy). 98m/C VHS, DVD. Samuel L. Jackson, Christian Bale, Vanessa L(ynne) Williams, Jeffrey Wright, Philip Bosco, Toni Collette, Angela Pietropinto, Dan Hedaya, Josef Sommer, Richard Roundtree, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Lynne Thigpen, Pat Hingle, Busta Rhymes, Mekhi Phifer, Zach Grenier, Catherine Kellner, Isaac Hayes, Lee Tergesen, Gloria Reuben, Gordon Parks, Daniel von Bargen; Director: John Singleton; Writer: Richard Price; Writer: Stuart Dryburgh; Cameo: Isaac Hayes, David Arnold.

At-a-glance
Year Released 2000
Rating R
Length (in minutes) 98
Display Color
Formats VHS, DVD
National Film Registry
Credits
Role Name
Actor Philip Bosco
Actor Toni Collette
Actor Josef Sommer
Actor Pat Hingle
Actor Isaac Hayes
Actor Richard Roundtree
Actor Dan Hedaya
Actor Samuel L. Jackson
Actor Jeffrey Wright
Actor Christian Bale
Actor Ruben Santiago-Hudson
Actor Lynne Thigpen
Actor Gloria Reuben
Actor Lee Tergesen
Actor Daniel von Bargen
Actor Mekhi Phifer
Actor Vanessa L(ynne) Williams
Actor Zach Grenier
Actor Catherine Kellner
Actor Busta Rhymes
Actor Angela Pietropinto
Actor Gordon Parks
Cameo Isaac Hayes
Cameo David Arnold
Cinematographer Stuart Dryburgh
Director John Singleton
Writer Richard Price