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Def by Temptation is a particularly silly and not very good film. The basic idea plays likes a torrid Black Gospel nightmare young church-going Black guy has crisis of faith, comes to the big city where he is tempted by a Devil in the form of a woman who specializes in seduction and hangs around singles bars. The film is never more sophisticated than that in fact when one considers it, is really quite misogynistic. It all comes couched in a very repetitive plot and is rather amateurishly made. Most of Bonds special effects appear to be conveyed by garish lighting. As an actor the surprisingly young Bond appears gawkish and camera shy. A scene where he and Hardison sit around reminiscing gives the impression of having been improvised under the influence of marijuana. James Bond III had made a number of minor acting appearances as a youth actor. Def by Temptation was his one and only directorial outing and he has since not even made a single acting appearance. Among his cast the most professional-seeming is Kadeem Hardison who has since gone onto roles in films like White Men Cant Jump (1992), Panther (1995), Renaissance Man (1995) and Vampire in Brooklyn (1995). People may also notice Samuel L. Jackson, since gone onto superstardom in Jurassic Park (1993), Pulp Fiction (1994) and Shaft (2000), in flashback scenes as Bonds minister father. Bill Nunn has gone onto play small parts usually as cops in various thrillers and action films. Photographer Ernest Dickerson shot a number of films for Spike Lee and then went onto direct the human hunting action film Surviving the Game (1994), Tales from the Crypt Presents Demon Knight (1995) and the interesting Blaxploitation revival Bones (2001).
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