'Boyz N the Hood' Celebrates 25th Anniversary

A look back at the film about friends growing up in South Central L.A.

— -- On July 12, 1991, John Singleton's movie "Boyz N the Hood" was released in the United States. Twenty-five years later, the movie is considered one of the finest movies about urban life ever produced.

"Boyz N the Hood" also shed light on parts of California rarely illuminated in mainstream culture at the time -- life in South Central Los Angeles, as noted by Vibe Editor-at-Large Keith Murphy.

"I don't think people really understood what life was like growing up for black people in Los Angeles, from certain parts of Los Angeles. It definitely brought out West Coast culture and hip-hop culture to the masses," Murphy told ABC News.

"'Boyz N the Hood' humanized the gangsters," he said, "and humanized the people in the hood."

"Boyz N the Hood" was nominated for two Academy Awards, one for Best Director and the other for Best Original Screenplay, in 1992. It won a New York Film Critics Circle Award in 1991 for Best New Director and was added to the National Film Registry by the National Film Preservation Board in 2002.