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Writer-director Christopher Scott Cherot (Hav Plenty) based his second feature, G, on F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel, The Great Gatsby. Tre (Andre Royo), a writer for a music magazine, goes out to the Hamptons to interview a wealthy and mysterious rap mogul, Summer G (Richard T. Jones), who's recently bought a home there. Tre first stops in on his cousin, Sky (Chenoa Maxwell, who also starred in Hav Plenty) and her control freak millionaire husband, Chip (Blair Underwood). Tre soon learns that Chip is brazenly cheating on Sky, and he even witnesses Chip smack his girlfriend around. Tre doesn't have much luck getting close to Summer G, until the music impresario finds out that Tre is related to Sky, whom he dated in college. Summer G asks Tre to arrange a meeting with Sky, and Tre, apparently upset with the way Chip has been treating Sky, helps Summer G connect with his old flame. Summer G tells Sky that he still loves her, and she begins an affair with him. The snobby old money Chip, already predisposed to dislike Summer G because of his hip-hop lifestyle, suspects that there's something going on, and plots to have Summer G chased from their exclusive Hamptons neighborhood. G was produced by Andrew Lauren, fashion designer Ralph Lauren's son, who also appears in the film as Adam Gordon, Summer G's manager. G was shown at the 2002 Tribeca Film Festival and at the 2002 Urbanworld Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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"It is a widely known prejudice of liberal Hollywood that general (read: white) audiences are not interested in dramas involving black people, except when the are feel good stories about the civil rights movement to appease white guilt. There is no doubt that Hollywood executives feel this way, but I am not sure if this is an accurate presumption. Why? Because on the exceedingly rare occasions that the industry green lights non-political dramas about African Americans, it usually chickens out " [More]
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All Movie Guide
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G is an ambitious but deeply flawed melodrama. Writer-director Christopher Scott Cherot brings the basic plot of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby into the Hamptons of the 21st century, where a hip-hop producer, Summer G (a character more clearly inspired by Sean "P. Diddy" Combs than by Jay Gatsby) played by Richard T. Jones shakes up the effete locals with his loud, lavish parties. The main problem with G is that the key characters, Summer G and Sky Hightower (the unnaturally cheekboned Chenoa Maxwell), aren't as interesting as the supporting players. Despite all the schmaltzy music laid over it, their romantic dialogue is uninspired. Blair Underwood, as Sky's bullying husband, Chip, plays it with the right mixture of snootiness and brutality, but his character is a bit too broadly drawn. Andre Royo, as the Nick Carraway-like Tre, and Sonja Sohn, as Shelly, the sister of Chip's Brooklyn girlfriend, are excellent, but their roles are disappointingly small. Cherot illustrates the Hamptons social clash in a very funny scene in which three of Summer G's artists, Daizy Duke (Jillian Lindsey), B. Mo Smoov (Nicoye Banks), and Craig Lewis (Laz Alonzo) ask an officious buppie for directions to the nearest McDonald's. G has a great, swanky look, and it's fairly entertaining, but the characters are thin, and the story, which doesn't follow Fitzgerald's original blueprint too closely, ends up bypassing profundity for soap opera melodramatics. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

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