3 Strikes

3 Strikes is a 2000 American comedy film written and directed by DJ Pooh, and starring Brian Hooks, N'Bushe Wright, Faizon Love and David Alan Grier. Despite some commercial success, it was universally panned by critics. The title refers to California's habitual offender law, whereby three convictions confer an automatic life sentence.

Plot
Rob Douglas has just been released from jail for the second time. Fearing a third conviction, which will result in a life sentence, he decides to go straight and leave the street life. His friend J.J. picks him up. However, the police show up and he learns that J.J. was driving a stolen car. When his friend J.J. is wounded from a shot to the buttocks and is taken into custody, Douglas learns he has been implicated in the shooting. He reaches out to his probation officer for help in proving his innocence, but is told that his best option is to simply turn himself in. J.J. is planning to have Douglas take the fall for the crime.

Douglas' mother informs him that a woman named Dahlia has information that will prove his innocence. Dahlia, who has been infatuated with Douglas ever since they were in high school, agrees to cooperate if he will have sex with her. Robert accepts her proposal. The police finds out that J.J. was behind the theft and also learn that J.J. was going to frame Douglas for it. As Douglas sneaks out of Dahlia's home, the police show up and send a dog after him. Douglas manages to get to his car and a high-speed chase ensues.

At his trial, the judge dismisses the felony charges. However, since Douglas failed to check in with his probation officer after leaving prison, he is sentenced to 30 days in jail for violating his parole. His family tells Douglas that they'll pick him up when he gets release this time. An epilogue states that Douglas was eventually released from prison early due to overcrowding.

Why It Has Less Than 3 Strikes

 * 1) The humor in this movie is unfunny, very awkward, and/or cringe-worthy.
 * 2) It's filled to the brim with gross-out jokes and other forms of toilet humor, racist jokes, and sex jokes.
 * 3) It's incredibly racist, and it was written by white people.
 * 4) Awful and questionable script-writing and writing in general that comes off being nonsensical.
 * 5) There's many uses of the N word, even for Rated R standards.
 * 6) Very unlikeable characters.
 * 7) Bland and generic acting.
 * 8) This movie is mean-spirited and offensive more than anything.

The Only Redeeming Quality

 * 1) Decent soundtrack as usual.

Box office
The film opened at #12 at the North American box office making $3,684,704 USD in its opening weekend.

Critical response
The film received overwhelmingly negative reviews. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, with 29 reviews, the film has a rare approval rating of 0% – meaning no favorable reviews whatsoever – receiving an average rating of 2.31/10 and the consensus that it "lacks direction and its low-brow humor isn't even that funny". Metacritic rated it 11/100 based on 16 reviews, indicating "Overwhelming dislike". Joe Leydon of Variety called it "exuberantly rude and crude, but generally more frantic than genuinely funny".