One of the great undiscovered gems of 70s exploitation filmmaking, the crime thriller Detroit 9000 (1973) remained under-seen and underappreciated until Quentin Tarantino brought it back to the public in the mid-90s by acquiring the rights and holding some screenings. Named after the then code for "officer down," the film explores race relations in the urban slums of Detroit by following two cops: the white Lt. Danny Bassett (Alex Rocco) and the black Sgt. Jesse Williams (Hari Rhodes), as they try to solve the robbery of a local politician's headquarters. Black Congressman turned gubernatorial candidate Aubrey Hale Clayton (Rudy Challenger) got taken for over 400 grand by some masked thugs, which leads the local black population to assume someone's trying to keep them from taking power and the local white population to assume it was black crooks robbing from one of their own. With the city sharply divided along racial lines about the crime, Detroit PD knows they need to put a black and white cop on the job, which is why they team the racist veteran and the young, former star athlete. As the pair investigate the crime amidst all sorts of racial tension both in the city and their own squad car, they'll uncover a conspiracy that neither race will end up being happy about! All roads lead to Mr. Man taking his pants off since in one scintillating scene, Hari Rhodes looks smoking wearing nothing but his boxers while he enjoys a cool smoke. He's a bit of a short king, but his tight abs are more than enough to let you do your thing! If only he'd shown us that Detroit D! Still, with that one look at his gorgeous black body, Detroit 9000 will turn you into a Motor City masturbator!