When Set It Off hit theaters in 1996, it shattered expectations. A gritty heist film centered on four Black women was already a radical proposition for Hollywood—but what gave the movie its lasting power wasn’t just its action or social critique. It was the raw, lived-in pain behind one performance. For Queen Latifah, playing Cleo was not simply a role. It was survival.
At the time of filming, Latifah was still reeling from the death of her older brother, Lance Owens Jr., who was killed in a motorcycle accident in 1992. The tragedy carried a devastating weight: Latifah had bought him the motorcycle as a gift just months earlier. That grief never left her—and during Set It Off, it collided head-on with a story steeped in loss, injustice, and fatal confrontations with police.
“I put my life into this movie,” Latifah later said. “I cried behind this movie.” Her words weren’t metaphorical. Throughout filming, she wore the actual key to her brother’s motorcycle on a chain around her neck. It was not a prop or a symbol for the camera, but a private anchor—something she carried to remain emotionally grounded while portraying a character spiraling toward a violent end.
Cleo, directed by F. Gary Gray, is fearless, volatile, loyal, and doomed. The film’s climax—Cleo’s final stand against a police barricade—is one of the most unforgettable scenes in 1990s cinema. Latifah later revealed that preparing for that moment took weeks, not because of choreography, but because she had to mentally separate Cleo’s death from her own unresolved grief. The scene demanded rage, defiance, and acceptance—all emotions Latifah was still processing in real life.
Adding to the strain, Latifah insisted on performing many of her own high-speed driving stunts. The adrenaline of the chase sequences became a strange refuge, allowing her to push through depression and emotional exhaustion. She has said that mastering the heist scenes while carrying such grief felt nearly impossible—but also necessary. Action became her release valve.
The result was a performance critics couldn’t dismiss. Reviews from outlets like the Los Angeles Times noted that Latifah refused caricature, delivering a portrayal that was funny, terrifying, tender, and painfully human. She earned an NAACP Image Award nomination, marking a turning point in her transition from rap icon to serious dramatic actor.
Commercially, the film was a triumph. Made on a modest budget, it became one of the year’s biggest hits and a cultural landmark. The soundtrack—led by the elegiac “Missing You”—topped charts, echoing the film’s central theme: how people survive loss when the system offers them nothing.
Years later, Latifah revealed she eventually had her brother’s motorcycle key coated in liquid gold and placed in a safe—a way of honoring the pain while finally allowing herself to move forward. Set It Off remains lightning in a bottle: a moment when personal tragedy, artistic courage, and cultural urgency collided.
For Queen Latifah, Cleo was not just a character. She was a vessel—for grief, love, and the strength it takes to keep going when everything has already been taken from you.