IT CAN BE a letdown for LA Hood Life & Hip-Hop Tours customers, passing the Welcome to Compton sign and seeing an ice cream truck, tidy bungalows and the lot where the new Wal-Mart Supercenter鈥檚 going up.

鈥淭he perception is that Compton is a very decadent, dangerous place where you got guys running around wearing red or blue, with guns and this or that. That鈥檚 what they kind of expect to see,鈥 said Hodari Sababu, who runs the tour company, selling $75 tickets from a Hollywood Boulevard kiosk. 鈥淚t was like that at one time. Now it is a much kinder, gentler place. You can walk through without being accosted, mostly.鈥

The violent Los Angeles suburb the tourists pay to see mellowed in the decades after N.W.A put it on the map in 1988 as the birthplace of gangsta rap. Today Compton is rebranding itself as a center for commerce and affordable housing, braced for the effect of Straight Outta Compton, a movie which was released in the US in August about the rise of N.W.A and its seminal album, whose famous lyrical salvos include 鈥渇-ck tha police.鈥

Mayor Aja Brown鈥檚 attitude is, bring it on. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great opportunity to have a second look,鈥 she said, predicting moviegoers will reconsider her 10 square miles and 100,000 constituents. The mayor, whose grandmother was murdered in Compton four decades ago, said it鈥檚 鈥渁lmost never been safer.鈥

Stephanie Chavez, working behind thick glass at a KFC about a mile from the public skatepark a donation from Tony Hawk helped build, agreed. 鈥淎 lot of people are scared of Compton, they hear Compton and freak out,鈥 she said. But 鈥渋t鈥檚 not even bad anymore.鈥

TAM鈥橲 BURGERS
For Sababu鈥檚 clients, it鈥檚 bygone Compton that sells, the days of warring between Bloods and Crips, the crack-cocaine epidemic, the Rodney King riots. Straight Outta Compton chronicles that era, when N.W.A — for Niggaz With Attitude — popularized West Coast hip-hop with lyrics some denounced as disrespectful to women and the police and exalting lawlessness.

Tour highlights include a drive-through funeral home, where gang members could bid speedy salutes to avoid ambushes, and Tam鈥檚 Burgers, a favorite of Grammy winner Kendrick Lamar. Death Row Records co-founder Marion 鈥淪uge鈥 Knight allegedly ran over and killed a man outside Tam鈥檚 in January when the movie crew was shooting an ad. Knight has been charged with murder.

鈥淐ompton,鈥 Sababu said, 鈥渟till is Compton.鈥

N.W.A broke up in the early 1990s. Eazy-E died of AIDS, MC Ren continued as a rapper and DJ Yella, after becoming a pornographic film director, is a music producer. Dr. Dre went on to a varied career capped by last year鈥檚 sale of Beats Music to Apple, Inc. for $3 billion, and Ice Cube鈥檚 an actor whose films include Ride Along and 21 Jump Street.

MURDER-RATE DROP
The two share producer credits on the movie, some of it shot in their old stomping grounds. Dr. Dre was born in Compton in 1965, the year of the Watts riots in LA; Ice Cube was born in LA in 1969, the year Compton elected its first black city councilman. The city is now about two-thirds Latino.

The poverty rate is around 26%, compared with the California average of 16%. Still, Compton鈥檚 been on an upswing. The murder rate dropped 46% between 2004 and 2014, and tax revenues have increased since the Gateway Towne Center shopping area opened in 2007. Trammell Crow Co. is about to break ground on 1 million square feet of industrial space.

A selling point is its location, just south of downtown LA, east of Los Angeles International Airport and north of the two biggest US ports. Draw a circle around Compton, said Greg Ames, managing director of Trammell Crow鈥檚 local office, and 鈥測ou can touch about 10 million people within a 45-minute to a one-hour drive.鈥

LA鈥橲 BROOKLYN
Housing鈥檚 relatively reasonable too, with 50 homes selling for a median $274,000 in May, compared with the Los Angeles County median of $485,000. That鈥檚 part of the mayor鈥檚 pitch, framing Compton as the affordable alternative to Los Angeles that Brooklyn used to be to Manhattan.

鈥淲e have new companies investing in the city. We have new housing that鈥檚 under development,鈥 said Brown, who grew up in Altadena, about 21 miles to the north. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a much better place to live.鈥

For F. Gary Gray, the director of the Universal Pictures movie, there鈥檚 no question it鈥檒l be a boost to the city.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 depict it in a negative manner. There are no murders, no shootings. We didn鈥檛 go there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think people will walk away feeling inspired.鈥

He called the time chronicled in the film 鈥渁 great chapter in American history.鈥 It still resonates, and Compton鈥檚 still famous. Big Boy, an LA hip-hop radio host with a syndicated show, was reminded when his Japanese business partners visited.

MEXICAN RAPPER
鈥淚鈥檝e had to get them all in my mini-coach and take them to Compton,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey never asked about Disneyland and the Hollywood Wax Museum.鈥

Some locals complain that Dr. Dre and Ice Cube — born Andre Young and O鈥橲hea Jackson — turned their backs on the city. They declined to be interviewed.

鈥淲hat are these people that are millionaires doing other than getting more millions by using Compton as a prop?鈥 said Benjamin Holifield, president of the Compton Business Chamber of Commerce. 鈥淭hey went straight out of Compton and didn鈥檛 do anything for us.鈥

But Kiki Smooth, an extra in Straight Outta Compton who describes himself as the city鈥檚 first Mexican rapper, said the famous former N.W.A members should be credited for leaving behind a flourishing rap culture. 鈥淭hey created a person like me, a person like YG, a person like Kendrick, a person like The Game,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 there to save the world.鈥 — Bloomberg


Straight time

Movie Review
Straight Outta Compton
Directed by F. Gary Gray
By Noel Vera

F. GARY GRAY鈥橲 Straight Outta Compton starts out strong, with Eazy-E (Jason Mitchell) attempting a transaction in a horror-show crackhouse complete with shotgun-wielding gang moll and a police tank (captured by helicopter-mounted camera flying overhead in a tremendous WTF moment) literally crashing the party. It later settles down to the familiar rhythms of the standard-issue musical artist biopic, introducing the rest of the group (Corey Hawkins as Dr. Dre; O鈥橲hea Jackson Jr. [looking remarkably like his father] as Ice Cube; Neil Brown, Jr. and Aldis Hodge in supporting roles as DJ Yella and MC Ren respectively) and chronicling the moment when they cut their first significant single, 鈥淏oyz N鈥 Tha Hood.鈥 Gray does manage to capture the understated thrill of people unwittingly acting out a historic moment: the scene is played with little fuss, a lot of textural realism, a funny minor detail (the original rappers leave because of a dispute over the lyrics and Eazy-E, drafted into doing the vocals, has to be schooled on attitude). So far so fairly well-made.

The film even has its required Mephistopheles: Paul Giamatti as Jerry Heller* approaches Eazy-E and talks him into founding Ruthless Records. Giamatti and Mitchell are consistently terrific in their scenes together as one plays best friend, father figure, and seducer and the other plays innocent waif and collaborating dupe — yes we鈥檝e seen this story more than once before, but done well and skillfully acted it can still retain a dramatic punch.

Mephisto wields his magic, sort of (you might also say the group鈥檚 drive and talent forged a record, and Heller rode on their coattails): their first album under the Ruthless label, the eponymous Straight Outta Compton, is a hit, and driving the album鈥檚 success is the single 鈥淔uck Tha Police,鈥 inspired by a harassment incident.

The middle I鈥檇 call the film鈥檚 high point: the Rodney King video surfaces, the police responsible for his beating are summarily acquitted, and much of metropolitan Los Angeles is rocked by the rioting that followed. Suddenly the musicians looked like journalists who鈥檝e submitted an early report (鈥淔uck Tha Police鈥) on the violence in their corner of the city; suddenly the seismic upheavals in the rest of the world (LA being the media epicenter) seem in synch with the group鈥檚 anger and nihilism; suddenly the film itself is a furious reminder that things haven鈥檛 really changed, only hopped from city to city (Ferguson, Baltimore, New York). Gray doesn鈥檛 push the connections too hard, just enough to raise the hairs on the back of one鈥檚 neck as they unfold onscreen. Your reaction is more visceral than intellectual, but you react nevertheless.

The latter half of the film falls into another familiar narrative, The Band Falling Apart. Around a year after N.W.A was formed Ice Cube leaves the group over disputes on royalties Heller owe him and pursues a solo career; Dr. Dre leaves as well, and signs up with the equally shady Suge Knight (R. Marcos Taylor) to form Death Row Records (the subplot outlining Dre and Knight鈥檚 relationship is more than a little sketchily told). We have the requisite scenes of band members brooding, being threatened (and worse) by thugs if they don鈥檛 sign up, of experiencing money troubles, of living the high life complete with drugs, alcohol and gyrating women.

On those gyrating women — arguably the film鈥檚 biggest problem is its failure to address the implicit misogyny in the group鈥檚 lyrics and lives (Dr. Dre was charged with the severe beating of a female TV host and settled out of court). Arrests and lawsuits are of course a part of being a celebrity which the film openly if loosely acknowledges; arrests and lawsuits involving the assault of women is a somewhat different other creature, on which the film is unfortunately silent.

The film鈥檚 also silent on the group鈥檚 sister act, Ruthless Records鈥 female rap group J.J. Fad, whose hit single 鈥淪upersonic鈥 (released months before Straight) helped established Ruthless鈥 reputation. Not that everyone or every group involved has to be given equal time onscreen, but the boys in N.W.A actively collaborated with the girls in J.J. Fad on their music — as Dania 鈥淏aby D鈥 Birks put it: 鈥淭hey were our family. They were like brothers.鈥 Telling even a few minutes of their story could have helped counteract the accusations.

Then the final trope, The Dying Artist — Eazy-E is told that he has HIV. His wife Tomica confronts him with documentary evidence that Heller has been cheating him (probably the only moment in the film of a woman actually fulfilling a function other than background ornamentation). Mitchell is strong in these scenes — his bewilderment at learning the virus is not exclusive to homosexuals (good point nicely quietly made), his anger and bitterness and despair, his eventual acceptance of his end. Again nothing really new, told well enough that it鈥檚 difficult to really object.

*(This just after playing Dr. Eugene Landy, Brian Wilson鈥檚 abusive therapist, in Love and Mercy — apparently when Giamatti pops up in your biopic you should immediately head the opposite direction. He鈥檚 good in both, he even manages to make them distinguishable characters, but performing the same essential function in two films is pushing it.)

MTRCB Rating: R-16