Ninth Street

Ninth Street

95 mins | Drama | Jan. 10, 1999

The inhabitants of a deteriorating section of 1968 Junction City, Kansas known as "Junk City" bemoan their existence and revel at the history of their neighborhood during its 1940's heydays when legendary jazz musicians regularly played its clubs. In 1968, the area has diminished to strip clubs and juke joints inhabited by Vietnam War draftees that pass through from nearby Fort Riley. Heads of the group include a wino who lost a leg in WWII, a taxi dispatcher, a saloon owner, and a crazed bag lady. The younger generation is represented by a young prostitute who is trying to get off the streets, but is forced to continue to work by a no-good boy friend and the need to feed her baby. Martin Sheen also appears as a white minister who prefers the people in the area over his own congregation.

Ninth Street

95 mins | Drama | Jan. 10, 1999

Ninth Street
The inhabitants of a deteriorating section of 1968 Junction City, Kansas known as "Junk City" bemoan their existence and revel at the history of their neighborhood during its 1940's heydays when legendary jazz musicians regularly played its clubs. In 1968, the area has diminished to strip clubs and juke joints inhabited by Vietnam War draftees that pass through from nearby Fort Riley. Heads of the group include a wino who lost a leg in WWII, a taxi dispatcher, a saloon owner, and a crazed bag lady. The younger generation is represented by a young prostitute who is trying to get off the streets, but is forced to continue to work by a no-good boy friend and the need to feed her baby. Martin Sheen also appears as a white minister who prefers the people in the area over his own congregation.
IMDb rating 6.8
Producers Hodcarrier Films
Original title Ninth Street
Directors Tim Rebman, Kevin Willmott
Writers Kevin Willmott

Cast

Don Washington

as Bebo

Kevin Willmott

as Huddie

Nadine Griffith

as Carrie Mae

Byron Myrick

as Love

Isaac Hayes

as TippyToe

Queen Bey

as Mama Butler

Kaycee Moore

as Pop-Bottle Ruby

Martin Sheen

as Father Frank