I'm Gonna Git You Sucka
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Keenen Ivory Wayans
Keenen Ivory Wayans
Jim Brown
Bernie Casey
J W Alexander
Dana Mackey
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
After his brother dies of a gold chain overdose, Jack Spade attempts to avenge his death.
Director
Keenen Ivory Wayans
Cast
Keenen Ivory Wayans
Jim Brown
Bernie Casey
J W Alexander
Dana Mackey
Nancy Cheryll Davis
Kadeem Hardison
Clu Gulager
John Vernon
Marc Figueroa
Chris Dowd
Ariana Richards
Finis Henderson Iii
Michael Conn
Kim Wayans
Bobby Mardis
Gerald Walker
Maria Diaz
Richard Mcgregor
Vickilyn Reynolds
Kendall Jones
Marilyn Coleman
Bobby Mcgee
Barry Craig
Marlon Wayans
Kojo Lewis
Robin Harris
Bentley Kyle Evans
Homeselle Joy
A. Dorian Reed
Ben Ryan Ganger
Dawnn Lewis
Brian Maguire
Yvonne Doggett
Cullen Chambers
Joya Thorner
Steve James
Michael Goldfinger
Bee-be Smith
David Alan Grier
Terri Bivalacqua
Peter Mccarthy
Carl Craig
John Witherspoon
D Nice
Eugene Robert Glazer
Tom Wright
Wren T Brown
Chris Rock
Tony Cox
Damon Wayans
Robert Colbert
Charles Cozart
David Dyson
Paul Motley
Eve Plumb
King Cotton
Jester Hairston
Terry Christiano
Walter A Kibby
Gary Owens
Tommy Morgan
Roy Fegan
Shawn Wayans
Howard Allen
George James
John Boudreaux
Danny Raghunath
Hawthorne James
Nadia Wayans
Jim Daniels
Bob Gibson
John Norwood Fisher
Liza Cruzat
Gene Serdena
Isaac Hayes
Ms Melodie
Antonio Fargas
Suzie Sparks
Ludie Washington
Anne-marie Johnson
Angelo Moore
Clarence Williams Iii
Peter Graves
Scotty Morris
Crew
Michael Craig Adams
Wes Adams
Taharga Aleem
Tunda-ra Aleem
Mello Alexandria
Harry J Alston
Ted Andreadis
Teri Appel
Ismael Araujo
Martha Atwell
Eric Barrett
Eric Barrett
Brian Bellamy
Bruce Bellamy
Carolina Beroza
Susan L Bertram
Ray Bickel
Edwin Birdsong
Brian Bond
Martin Bosworth
Alex Brown
G W Brown
Jaki Brown-karman
Jeanette Browning
Tony Brubaker
William Bryant
Gary Burritt
Beverly Callison
Jason Cardwell
Ruth Carter
Todd Cerney
Jeff Charbonneau
Carolyn Chen
Lloyd Chiate
Russell Clark
Simon Climie
Michelle Colbert
Eugene Collier
Gil Combs
Bryan Constans
Anthony C Cornelius
Tom Cortese
Carl Craig
Fred J Cramer
Mark Crawford
Gregg Dandridge
Dane A. Davis
Hal Davis
Frank De Vol
Ray Dewey
Sharie Doolittle
Carl Douglas
Carl Douglas
Kimo Easterwood
Carol Eaton
Kirk Elam
Belinda Ellis
Kenny Endoso
Bobby Ervin
Bentley Kyle Evans
Darrell Evers
David Falicki
David Falicki
Melba Katzman Farquhar
Ron Field
Mark Fite
Elizabeth Flaherty
Patricia Forrest
David Michael Frank
Aretha Franklin
Florence Franklin
Kirk Gardner
Jimmy Georgantones
Gordon Germaine
Cathy Gesualdo
Glen Gibbs
Darrell Giddens
Andy Given
Preston Glass
Eric L. Gold
Stephanie E Golden
Cesar Gonzalez
Barbara Gotschall
Steve Grass
Paul Gurvitz
Amy Halpern
James Halty
Ed Hamilton
Tom Hammond
Kimberly Hardin
Catherine Hardwicke
Isaac Hayes
Isaac Hayes
Wayne Heitman
Suzanne Hines
Jennifer Holliday
Chris Hopkins
Norman Howell
Scott Hubacek
Matthew Iadarola
Arthur Jackson
Darlene Jackson
Jermaine Jackson
Gregory Jacobs
Tim James
Steve Jezewski
Doug Johnson
Melvin Jones
Stephanie L Jones
David Kahne
Raymond Katz
Gary King
Wayne A King
Jerry Knight
Marsha Koff
Matthew Kroyer
Allen Kupetsky
John Kwiatkowski
Mark Larry
John Lawson
Al Lee
Lindsey Lee
Irving Lewis
Kojo Lewis
Fritz Lieber
Cheng-sim Lim
Carole Little
Teressa Longo
Thom Lynch
V Lynch Jr.
Dennis Madalone
Shaun Madigan
Brian Maguire
Eric Mansker
David Mansley
Curtis Mayfield
Curtis Mayfield
Kevin Mccarthy
Peter Mccarthy
Rusty Mcclennon
Bufort Mcclerkins
Tom Mccormick
Dwayne Mcgee
S J Mcgee
Tara Mckinley
Greg Mcmickle
Sandra Mcneil
Tyann Means
John C. Meier
Michael R Miller
Richard C Miller
Robert L Minor
Andrew Kinsley Moore
Bennie Moore
Mark Moore
Dennis Morgan
Oliver L Moss
Rhonda Munzinger
Perry Nichols
Pamela Phillips Oland
Alan Oliney
Boyd Olson
Ernie Orsatti
Gary Owens
Annice Parker
Weldon Dean Parkes
Keith Parrish
Kathryn Peters
Arnold Peterson
Jim Petti
George Posedel
Linda Powell
Paul Power
Gary Price
Carol Raikes
Tamara Rawitt
Robi Reed-humes
Russ Regan
Robyn Reicheck
Tom Richmond
Robby Robinson
Alexander Rogers
Sharon Rosenberg
Elliot Lewis Rosenblatt
Joan Rowe
Ina Russell
Rafael Sanudo
Sharon Schaffer
Sherwood Schwartz
Tom Segal
Stephen Semel
Jan Sessler
Edna M Sheen
Guy Smith
Edwin Starr
Brian Steagall
Nancy Steiner
Adam Stern
Karen Steward
Roger Stewart
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
I'm Gonna Git You Sucka
Not surprisingly, Wayans had some difficulty pitching his idea to studios and financiers. In a promotional interview for People, he recalled, "Prior to going to United Artists, which released the movie, I went to this one company where they had this most bizarre let's-mix-it-up mentality. One of their suggestions was, 'Why don't we get Anthony Michael Hall, and he'll play your little brother, and he can act black throughout the whole movie.' Then they said, 'We can get Charles Bronson to be one of your older brothers.'" A former engineering student at Alabama's Tuskegee University, Wayans was inspired to go into show business after watching Richard Pryor and decided to go to Hollywood where he met up with Townsend and became a regular standup comedian on The Tonight Show. "I wanted to do something that was true to its ethnicity but not restricted to it," he said in that same interview. "That's important to me as a black filmmaker because I feel that our society is painted to be more racist than it is. I think black exploitation movies occurred because blacks didn't have control of the images they were portraying. My film doesn't have the star value of an Eddie Murphy movie, but it has the same kind of approach in that everybody can relate to it."
Wayans went to great lengths to round up vintage Blaxploitation stars including Jim Brown, Bernie Casey, Isaac Hayes and a scene-stealing Antonio Fargas. Shaft's ( 1971) Richard Roundtree and Superfly's (1972) Ron O'Neal also appear as the film's more significant holdouts. The film was shot over a 32-day period with a budget just under $3 million. It made its money back with over $6 million at the box office, and opened regionally in 135 theaters on December 14, 1988, taking in just over $653,000 with another 40 cities added by the end of the month.
It was originally titled I Mo it U Sucka and deliberately downplayed its on-screen violence, specifically avoiding any bloodshed on camera. Even the current revised title caused some grammatical confusion, with one New York City theater listing it as I'm Going to Get You Sucker. Legendary costume designer Ruth E. Carter, who worked on numerous Spike Lee films as well as Black Panther (2018), had a particular challenge finding vintage '70s clothes before they came back into vogue, so she had to sit down with vintage catalogs and have the threads made from scratch. The incredible six-inch, goldfish-filled platform shoes worn by Fargas were based on ones worn by former footballer John "Frenchy" Fuqua, who insisted on $2,500 a week to rent them out. Instead Carter had her own shoes made, and the result is movie costume history. She was thrilled with the results, telling LA Weekly, "I knew it was right when he put that costume on and immediately turned into Starsky and Hutch's Huggy Bear.'"
One aspect of the film heavily promoted at the time was the soundtrack, featuring the Four Tops' and with Aretha Franklin's "If Ever a Love There Was" pushed as the first single. Other songs included the Gap Band's title track, K-9 Posse's "This Beat Is Military" and "He's a Flyguy" by Curtis Mayfield with Fishbone. One eager patron who wanted to see the film was Prince, who was off touring in Japan and asked for a videocassette to be specially sent over for viewing. The film was popular enough for a potential TV spin-off called Hammer and Slammer to be announced in the trades, featuring the two main characters from the film, with Wayans executive producing and writing a one-hour pilot for MGM. Isaac Hayes, Jim Brown, Steve James and Ja'net DuBois were set to star with Bernie Casey and Eriq La Salle, and the unsold pilot eventually turned up in syndication in 1991 under the title Hammer, Slammer & Slade, featuring no story connection to the film in its finished form. Particularly popular via TV airings and DVD availability, the film proved to be a big stepping stone for Wayans, who would go on to direct the first two films in the Scary Movie series and, most significantly to pop culture, would go on to join his brother, Damon, in creating the groundbreaking multicultural sketch comedy series, In Living Color.
By Nathaniel Thompson
I'm Gonna Git You Sucka
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter December 14, 1988
Released in United States January 13, 1989
Released in United States February 17, 1989
Released in United States on Video June 27, 1989
Released in United States February 1989
Released in United States 1990
Released in United States November 2006
Shown at Berlin Film Festival (Panorama) February 17, 18 & 19, 1989.
Directorial debut for Keenen Ivory Wayans.
Broadcast in USA over Sundance Channel as part of month-long series "Representing Soul" August 8, 1999.
Began shooting June 8, 1988.
Completed shooting July 22, 1988.
Ultra-Stereo
Released in United States Winter December 14, 1988
Released in United States January 13, 1989 (New York City)
Released in United States February 17, 1989 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video June 27, 1989
Released in United States February 1989 (Shown at Berlin Film Festival (Panorama) February 17, 18 & 19, 1989.)
Released in United States November 2006 (Shown at AFI/Los Angeles Film Festival (20 Years of AFI Fest) November 1-12, 2006.)
Released in United States 1990 (Shown at AFI/Los Angeles International Film Festival (Black Independent Cinema Now) April 19 - May 3, 1990.)