The mob wanted Harlem back. They got Shaft... up to here.
Super-cool private eye John Shaft (Richard Roundtree) is heading to work through Greenwich Village when a shoe-shine boy warns him that two hoodlums are lying in wait at his office. Shaft surprises them and coolly throws one to his death through the window. He holds the other until he admits they were sent by Harlem gangster, Bumpy Jonas (Moses Gunn).
At the police precinct, Shaft is interviewed by Victor Androzzi (Charles Cioffi), a long-suffering white cop. Androzzi believes something big is about to erupt in the underworld and gives Shaft 24 hours to investigate, threatening to revoke his license if he doesn't comply.
Bumpy Jonas surprises Shaft by calling to ask for his help in finding his daughter, Marcy (Sherri Brewer), who has disappeared. Jonas claims that Ben Buford (Christopher St John), the leader of a black militant organisation, is behind Marcy's kidnapping.

Special Agent Matti
"Where you going, Shaft?"
"To get laid. Where you goin'?"
Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha!
That's one hell of an attitude. And you know that there's going to be attitude as soon as you hear that fine piece of music coming out o' yo' speakers da-da-dum, da-da-dum, da-da-dum, dum... it's one of the greatest motion picture themes ever written. It's one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. It's Mozart for the modern age, sex for your sense of sound.
Richard Roundtree is truly the king of blaxploitation. He's angry, he's tough, he's sexy, he's rough, he's funny, he's hard, he's horny and he's garbed. And black. Did I mention black? Watch this DVD and you can see the roots of the modern African-American culture: hip hop, gangsta rap, The original kings of comedy, crackheads, the ghetto and more mean mother-fuckers than you can shake your stick at. Shaft revels in the primal heat of its characters: sex, violence, action, honour, sweat, blood. Ain't none of this film taking place in the suburbs.
If you have any sense of cool you have to see this film.
MA 15+ (Low level violence, low level coarse language)
97 minutes (1:37 hours)
DVD retail: 13 June 2001