The soundtrack album was released by Warner Bros. Records. You ever notice? "So, what happened to your life?" The first one, "Richard Pryor Live in Concert," was made before he set himself on fire while free-basing cocaine. Seven years they killed muthaf*ckers. : With Richard Pryor, Paul Mooney. : Mr. Pryor appears able to incorporate any subject into his uniquely animated conversation. Because the people. (1983). Now, we be f*ckin' with people in El Salvador and sh*t. How we gonna lose? Technical Specs. It features a bit of introductory commentary, occasionally careless camerawork, more audience reaction shots that his other films have had and a return to the strong language that his last concert film toned down, language that might sound gratuitous from a lesser performer but amounts to an integral part of Mr. Pryor's comic vision. At the end of the movie we have been wrung out with laughter -- and with a few other things, too, because Pryor is more than a comedian in this film: He's a social commentator, and a man talking honestly about himself. Like here. Part live stand-up performance, part documentary, this film is one of comedian Richard Pryor's later stand-up performances. Like, not even a hard on. Pryor goes through his usual battalion of jokes set pieces and stories, showing the mocking side to himself first glimpsed in Live at the Sunset strip, while letting the usual anger, that comes with comedy to seep out. Showing all 26 items Jump to: Quotes (26) Quotes . Maybe next time you see black people trouble - you'll help. The stories are as funny, for instance his telling of meeting President Ronald Reagan in 1983 : "I went to the White House, well i was invited anyway because i made this movie Superman III, and everyone was in line to meet him, and when he came to me, he looked at me liked i'd just walked in off the street and totally blanked me. At Loews State, Broadway and 45th Street; Orpheum, 86th Street at Third Avenue; 34th Street Showplace, near Second Avenue. In Chicago and the Midwest, boy, it is cooooold! You know, I'm just here for this movie. To preserve these articles as they originally appeared, The Times does not alter, edit or update them. Was this review helpful to you? I've been married about - four, eh, fine, eh, four times. It's possible that a dozen more Pryor performance films will leave the format feeling tired, but that doesn't seem very likely. I haven't done any drugs now, it's been, seven months. It has to do with the work. His story could have gone either way. He is also as deadly-funny as he has ever been, yet has matured. Richard Pryor's classic 1979 concert film has him discussing a wide range of topics, including race, the police and his favorite target -- himself. The routine is as similar as before.