If The Harder They Come is Jamaica’s Scarface, then Rockers is its Ocean’s Eleven, if the heist involved a bunch of legendary musicians stealing back their dignity (and a motorbike) from the upper class.
Originally intended to be a documentary, director Ted Bafaloukos realized that the reality of the Kingston reggae scene was already more cinematic than anything he could script. He cast the genre’s actual giants, playing versions of themselves, and let the cameras roll in the streets, the shanties, and the recording studios.
Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace is a drummer living on the edge of poverty, trying to make an honest living by selling records. He buys a shiny red motorbike to get his distribution business off the ground, but it isn’t long before thugs steal it.
By the way, Monica Madgie Craig, who plays his wife here, is his real-life spouse, and those are their children in the movie.
When the police prove to be useless, Horsemouth doesn’t just mope. He rounds up a literal Hall of Fame of reggae icons, including Dirty Harry, Burning Spear and Big Youth, to launch a Robin Hood-style counter-offensive. They aren’t just looking for a bike; they’re looking to redistribute the wealth.
This isn’t a Hollywood sanitized version of Jamaica. It’s raw, it’s loud, and the Patois is so thick and glorious that original US screenings required subtitles. Rockers is a vibrant, sun-soaked middle finger to the establishment. It’s a film where the actors are actually the soul of a nation, and the stakes feel massive because the struggle for the little guy is universal. Whether you’re here for the sociology or just to see Gregory Isaacs look cool in a suit, you can’t lose.
Here’s a wild fact: Ashley Higher Harris is a healer in real life, as well as playing one in Rockers. During production, his herbs healed one of the sound guys from a severe skin allergy.
The MVD release of this film has a 2025 4K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative; select scene commentaries; “Jah No Dead: The Making of Rockers,” a feature length documentary about the making of the film featuring interviews with Eugenie Bafaloukos, Todd Kasow, Kiddus I, Eddie Marritz and many more; archival interviews with director/writer Ted Bafaloukos and producer Patrick Hulsey; music videos; a poster gallery; a trailer; radio ads; a collectible 4K LaserVision mini-poster; reversible cover art and a limited edition 4K LaserVision slipcover. You can order it from MVD.




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