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Get Rich or Die Tryin'
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Directed by Jim Sheridan.
Hip-hop star 50 Cent makes his movie debut in this hard-edged urban drama inspired by the rapper's own life. Marcus (Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, aka 50 Cent) grew up in a tough New York neighborhood and was left to fend for himself after the death of his mother when he was a kid. Marcus fell in with a powerful crime boss (Bill Duke) who gave him an opportunity to make a good living -- by selling drugs. While Marcus has misgivings about his life of crime and has an interest in expressing himself as a rap artist, his success as a dealer makes it hard for him to get away from the life. However, when a heist goes wrong and Marcus is shot several times, he has a change of heart and decides to leave his old life behind. He begins pursuing his dream of making it in music, and with the support of his girlfriend (Joy Bryant) he begins recording a demo tape. Marcus' new songs are inspired by the gritty realities of his old life on the street, but just as it looks like he might be able to land a record deal, he discovers that some of his old business associates aren't too happy about Marcus telling folks about their actions. Get Rich or Die Tryin' was directed by Jim Sheridan, best known for his tough but atmospheric stories of life in Ireland (In The Name of the Father, My Left Foot). ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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leeroy711leeroy711 Re: Top 5 Tear Jerking Scenes
by leeroy711 in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"Allright this may not be the top 5 but I'm surprised Jim Sheridan isn't on the list at all. 1. In The Name Of The Father - When his father dies chokes me every time2. In America - The end, when his dauhgters tell him to "say goodbye, daddy"3. My Left Foot - I can't remember a particular scene but I am sensing a theme here4. The Boxer - Holy crap! Another DD Lewis/Jim Sheridan movie that pulled my heartstrings5. Get Rich Or Die Tryin' - Finding out my one of my favorite directors made this ball of crap had me claiming that there was "something in my eye" (sniffle, sniffle) " [More]
davisfreebergdavisfreeberg More Hugs Less Drugs
by davisfreeberg in Davis Freeberg's DVD AllStars
hasn't rated it.
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"I'm a sucker for any gangster movie and found Get Rich or Die Tryin' to be an overall good film. It's a gritty tale of life on the streets and the impact that it has. Many of the films characters contain great depth and each one offered an interesting insight into human nature. By and large the film's overall message was one of greed and the message I took from the film was that anything is Ok in life if it's for money. The film did try and give glimpses of redemption, but each glimpse seemed forced and shallow. While I felt that the moral message of the movie was off, I did find it to be a fascinating look into the gangster culture. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
"If Eminem can do it, so can I" seems to be the driving creative impulse behind Get Rich or Die Tryin', the semi-fictionalized story of the youth and rise to fame of Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson. 50 had history on his side, as rappers have consistently been the most convincing entertainers to try their hand at acting, and Curtis Hanson's 8 Mile (starring Eminem) was a $116 million hit. But Get Rich died even trying to make back its $40 million budget, and its failure was a factor in the eventual reorganization at MTV Films. Jackson is not a very good actor, and his dialogue is often unintelligible -- a consequence of the swollen tongue he received from his real-life shooting, which is depicted here. But he would have been perfectly passable with better material. And at this point it makes sense to question the choice to direct (and, reportedly, heavily rewrite) this film: Jim Sheridan, known to audiences as the acclaimed Irish-born director behind such Irish epics as My Left Foot and In the Name of the Father. It isn't fair to damn Sheridan on the basis of his totally divergent background, but it's hard to forgive the results: a simplistic view of inner-city slums and the drug dealers they beget, in which harmful stereotypes are the norm and there's no one to root for. Sure, this may have been Jackson's reality. But if you are already fictionalizing some elements, why not inject some positive depictions to counterbalance the negative? Sheridan would at least figure to succeed with his structure, but his use of the Terrence Howard character, for example, is bizarre and pointless. In the red-herring opening sequence, Howard comes off as an unstable time bomb, but the audience never again sees a whiff of those traits. Everyone knows where 50 Cent ended up on the get rich/die tryin' continuum. His movie was not so lucky. ~ All Movie Guide
 



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