ONEFOUR: Against All Odds | Official Trailer | Netflix



This documentary traces the meteoric rise of Australia’s first drill rap stars, defiant in the face of police’s efforts to stop them from performing.

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ONEFOUR: Against All Odds | Official Trailer | Netflix
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37 thoughts on “ONEFOUR: Against All Odds | Official Trailer | Netflix”

  1. Poor and poorly educated people motivating poor and poorly educated people to be violent. Yeah. I hate that too. I do like hip hop though. And I love Australia.

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  2. Why in the hell does netflix put my new movies i add to my watxh list in random messed up order. It should show newest to oldest. Then if you can even find your movie list. It should be your continue watching list first then your recently added list and in order not just all thrown around like shit. God finding any movies i just added just pisses me off. Fix the crap christ

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  3. Yawn 🥱. Tryna frame it as racist police don’t want to see them win. Kev is an idiot, of course the police have the power to decide what’s too far in regards to crime. Maybe don’t do crime and you’ll be sweet

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  4. The difference between violence in art forms in general and violence in drill music is that the whole point of drill is that you rap about what you’ve actually done, as if to brag.
    There’s a difference between fictional violence in various other mediums and retelling true stories with a smile on your face.

    I think there should be a platform to talk about this, and a method to escape from this cyclical life through music, I don’t think police should be shutting anybody down when they’re trying to get out, but we can’t act oblivious as to why they’re doing it and compare it to violence in movies or other forms of music which is purely fictional.

    People who are committing violent crimes using those violent crimes as rep points in their music cannot be compared to a metal band writing lyrics about dismembering people when that is purely for entertainment, we can’t compare it to a violent movie.

    This isn’t a nothing issue, and we can’t deny that drill has given rise to a new generation who look up to this.
    An argument can be made that they will look up to criminals in films and tv etc. anyway because they will, but this is a very nuanced topic to discuss and playing dumb about why the police have a problem with it gets us nowhere.

    If there are arguments to be made about platforming crimes we can certainly point to movies like Goodfellas, but these are few and far between, most violent crime movies are not glamorising the violence and they’re usually not made by the people who were actually involved.

    To be clear, I wanna see Onefour rise, I think drill rappers should absolutely have a platform to speak and to perform and if kids are looking up to them, that is hardly their responsibility, but let’s stop playing dumb about this.

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