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Thread started 11/07/05 8:12pm

Janfriend

50 Cent Film Offers New Version of Rapper

http://news.yahoo.com/s/a...N5bmNhdA--


By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY, AP Entertainment Writer
Mon Nov 7, 5:12 PM ET



NEW YORK - The story of 50 Cent being shot nine times has been repeated so often it's become pop folklore, told again and again through his hit songs, videos, cameo appearances, recent autobiography — and now, his new movie.

It's the most shocking detail in 50's bullet-ridden bio, which in abbreviated form goes something like this: Crack dealer-turned-rapper gets shot, releases mixtapes on his own, verbally slays competitors with gleeful gangsta bravado and becomes a world-famous superstar, dominating the rap game.

But while the film "Get Rich or Die Tryin'" relies heavily on 50's well-publicized exploits, the rapper says it also showcases overlooked aspects of his life.

"The part that's been pounded on by journalists and other media outlets (is) the shooting part. I think that overshadows my talent to an extent," says 50. "For me, I think when (fans) watch the actual film they get a chance to see more about my experience than I've been able to deliver to the general public through my music."

The film chronicles a character named Marcus, who, like the real-life Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, starts dealing drugs after his mother, also a dealer, is slain. The movie Marcus moves up in the crack organization and finds a mentor in one of the lieutenants. But when Marcus tries to forsake crack for rap to support his newborn son, things get ugly.

"It's kind of like Greek tragedy," says director Jim Sheridan, who received Oscar nominations for past films such as "In America" and "My Left Foot." "Everybody knows the ending but they're sort of horrified that they know."

Elliott Wilson, editor in chief of the hip-hop magazine XXL, says the movie will finally end the glamorization of 50's shooting.

"That was one factor of his life," Wilson says. "But I think it opens up a whole new chapter."

If the shooting chapter has gotten dog-eared due to multiple readings, that's because 50 has recycled it so often. More than just part of his backstory, it's at the forefront of all his work: Sounds of gunshots are almost as prevalent as drumbeats on his records, and when he made his debut, his trademark became his bulletproof vest, highlighting the fact that he considered his life in constant danger. And his beefs with rappers like Ja Rule, whose career 50 largely destroyed with his unrelenting verbal jabs, made him rap's muscular, menacing schoolyard bully.

But buried underneath the thug imagery is what kept 50 on top — his music.

Even those who grow weary of his shtick and dangerously overexposed image can't resist 50's songs, which are driven by catchy choruses, alluring hooks and clever rhymes that rise above run-of-the-mill gangsta raps. And while his lyrics are dangerous and menacing, they don't alienate the way some other raps do because of the cloak of humor that often envelops them.

"He's funny, he doesn't take himself too seriously," says Sheridan. "I think that's one of the secrets of his success, that it's a contradictory image."

Jimmy Iovine, who has released both of 50's multiplatinum albums as chairman of Interscope Records and has shepherded the careers of rap superstars like Tupac Shakur, Dr. Dre and Eminem, called 50 an "exceptional song writer, like 'Pac was."

"He's the Smokey Robinson of the hip-hop era," says Iovine. "People don't realize and always forget that you don't get to where he's gotten without real talent."

50, of course, agrees.

"People say all kinds of things about me ... You know what they don't say? I can't make good music. Because I'm only here based on that," he says. "A lot of rappers, they can put together a punch line ... (but) they can't write a song to save their life."

His talents stretch beyond songwriting. He's a deft self-promoter, from the hood to the suburbs to the international audience. He's definitely gangsta, but has an almost genial personality that sets him apart from the typical brooding rapper. In interviews he's engaging and direct.

"50 is born with something that God gives you called charisma," says Iovine.

His debut album, also called "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," was the top seller of 2003, moving more than eight million copies in the United States alone. "The Massacre," his follow-up, has sold about five million so far and is the top seller of 2005.

50 also has his own sneaker line with Reebok; his own record label, G-Unit, featuring popular rappers like Young Buck, Tony Yayo, Mobb Deep and Ma$e; the G-Unit clothing line; and a video game, "Bulletproof," debuting this month.

Ubiquity has a downside, though. Even before the movie, there were whispers of overexposure. But 50 isn't worried about becoming another Ja Rule — a superstar who got taken out by the hungry newcomer.

"That happens when you don't continue to create quality material. If you leave yourself one dimensional or you don't give them enough of you as an artist, they'll lose interest. You've got to kind of create something new that makes it more exciting."

And he knows that he won't be able to rap from the mind-set of the corner hustler forever: "Eventually, it won't make sense for me to write from the same perspective anymore."

After all, this is a man worth a reported $50 million who resides in tony Farmington, Conn., in a 48,500-square-foot mansion once owned by Mike Tyson.

But 50 insists his wealth hasn't isolated him from his fans — or made him any less hungry.

"When I wake up every morning, I'm reminded that the man who had it before me made $500 million in his career, and doesn't have it anymore."

"This is where my work ethic comes from. I don't think ambition is a learned behavior — I think it's a part of your character. If I was standing on the corner and I was hustling, I would stay there as long as there was money coming in. So I continue to create new products and release them, as long as I'm in a successful space."
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Reply #1 posted 11/07/05 9:32pm

CherrieMoonKis
ses

avatar

I think Im going to say it nod yes, it is decided:

i heart 50 Cent

*right after 2Pac*
peace & wildsign
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Reply #2 posted 11/07/05 10:06pm

twink69

avatar

Janfriend said:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051107/ap_en_mu/film50_cent;_ylt=AlWpfn8S3oo0lovYPn5hUPdxFb8C;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--


By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY, AP Entertainment Writer
Mon Nov 7, 5:12 PM ET



NEW YORK - The story of 50 Cent being shot nine times has been repeated so often it's become pop folklore, told again and again through his hit songs, videos, cameo appearances, recent autobiography — and now, his new movie.

It's the most shocking detail in 50's bullet-ridden bio, which in abbreviated form goes something like this: Crack dealer-turned-rapper gets shot, releases mixtapes on his own, verbally slays competitors with gleeful gangsta bravado and becomes a world-famous superstar, dominating the rap game.

But while the film "Get Rich or Die Tryin'" relies heavily on 50's well-publicized exploits, the rapper says it also showcases overlooked aspects of his life.

"The part that's been pounded on by journalists and other media outlets (is) the shooting part. I think that overshadows my talent to an extent," says 50. "For me, I think when (fans) watch the actual film they get a chance to see more about my experience than I've been able to deliver to the general public through my music."

The film chronicles a character named Marcus, who, like the real-life Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, starts dealing drugs after his mother, also a dealer, is slain. The movie Marcus moves up in the crack organization and finds a mentor in one of the lieutenants. But when Marcus tries to forsake crack for rap to support his newborn son, things get ugly.

"It's kind of like Greek tragedy," says director Jim Sheridan, who received Oscar nominations for past films such as "In America" and "My Left Foot." "Everybody knows the ending but they're sort of horrified that they know."

Elliott Wilson, editor in chief of the hip-hop magazine XXL, says the movie will finally end the glamorization of 50's shooting.

"That was one factor of his life," Wilson says. "But I think it opens up a whole new chapter."

If the shooting chapter has gotten dog-eared due to multiple readings, that's because 50 has recycled it so often. More than just part of his backstory, it's at the forefront of all his work: Sounds of gunshots are almost as prevalent as drumbeats on his records, and when he made his debut, his trademark became his bulletproof vest, highlighting the fact that he considered his life in constant danger. And his beefs with rappers like Ja Rule, whose career 50 largely destroyed with his unrelenting verbal jabs, made him rap's muscular, menacing schoolyard bully.

But buried underneath the thug imagery is what kept 50 on top — his music.

Even those who grow weary of his shtick and dangerously overexposed image can't resist 50's songs, which are driven by catchy choruses, alluring hooks and clever rhymes that rise above run-of-the-mill gangsta raps. And while his lyrics are dangerous and menacing, they don't alienate the way some other raps do because of the cloak of humor that often envelops them.

"He's funny, he doesn't take himself too seriously," says Sheridan. "I think that's one of the secrets of his success, that it's a contradictory image."

Jimmy Iovine, who has released both of 50's multiplatinum albums as chairman of Interscope Records and has shepherded the careers of rap superstars like Tupac Shakur, Dr. Dre and Eminem, called 50 an "exceptional song writer, like 'Pac was."

"He's the Smokey Robinson of the hip-hop era," says Iovine. "People don't realize and always forget that you don't get to where he's gotten without real talent."

50, of course, agrees.

"People say all kinds of things about me ... You know what they don't say? I can't make good music. Because I'm only here based on that," he says. "A lot of rappers, they can put together a punch line ... (but) they can't write a song to save their life."

His talents stretch beyond songwriting. He's a deft self-promoter, from the hood to the suburbs to the international audience. He's definitely gangsta, but has an almost genial personality that sets him apart from the typical brooding rapper. In interviews he's engaging and direct.

"50 is born with something that God gives you called charisma," says Iovine.

His debut album, also called "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," was the top seller of 2003, moving more than eight million copies in the United States alone. "The Massacre," his follow-up, has sold about five million so far and is the top seller of 2005.

50 also has his own sneaker line with Reebok; his own record label, G-Unit, featuring popular rappers like Young Buck, Tony Yayo, Mobb Deep and Ma$e; the G-Unit clothing line; and a video game, "Bulletproof," debuting this month.

Ubiquity has a downside, though. Even before the movie, there were whispers of overexposure. But 50 isn't worried about becoming another Ja Rule — a superstar who got taken out by the hungry newcomer.

"That happens when you don't continue to create quality material. If you leave yourself one dimensional or you don't give them enough of you as an artist, they'll lose interest. You've got to kind of create something new that makes it more exciting."

And he knows that he won't be able to rap from the mind-set of the corner hustler forever: "Eventually, it won't make sense for me to write from the same perspective anymore."

After all, this is a man worth a reported $50 million who resides in tony Farmington, Conn., in a 48,500-square-foot mansion once owned by Mike Tyson.

But 50 insists his wealth hasn't isolated him from his fans — or made him any less hungry.

"When I wake up every morning, I'm reminded that the man who had it before me made $500 million in his career, and doesn't have it anymore."

"This is where my work ethic comes from. I don't think ambition is a learned behavior — I think it's a part of your character. If I was standing on the corner and I was hustling, I would stay there as long as there was money coming in. So I continue to create new products and release them, as long as I'm in a successful space."



How much did this writer get paid to write this? Is this an official statement release from his label?
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Reply #3 posted 11/08/05 2:37am

prettymansson

CherrieMoonKisses said:

I think Im going to say it nod yes, it is decided:

i heart 50 Cent

*right after 2Pac*




rolleyes
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Reply #4 posted 11/08/05 5:43am

TheRealFiness

1. he sounds like he's half sleep his slurred narcoleptic ass
2. he has no flow
3.rap shit today is Garbage
[Edited 11/8/05 5:43am]
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Reply #5 posted 11/08/05 6:03am

pippet

avatar

wishin' for the ol' days


gawd....I am startin to sound like my folks rolleyes

rose
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Reply #6 posted 11/08/05 6:11am

prettymansson

pippet said:

wishin' for the ol' days


gawd....I am startin to sound like my folks rolleyes

rose


me too razz
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Reply #7 posted 11/08/05 6:18am

DavidEye

yawn


50 Cent is such a bore.A shit rapper with a predictable,thug lifestyle "story".We've seen and heard it all before.
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Reply #8 posted 11/08/05 6:33am

pkidwell

bitches, money, cars.....gee, what more is there to life than that?
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Reply #9 posted 11/08/05 7:19am

Shapeshifter

avatar

CherrieMoonKisses said:

I think Im going to say it nod yes, it is decided:

i heart 50 Cent

*right after 2Pac*


falloff
There are three sides to every story. My side, your side, and the truth. And no one is lying. Memories shared serve each one differently
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Reply #10 posted 11/08/05 7:32am

Zelaira

Listen,he was on LETTERMAN LAST NIGHT and he was VERY SWEET and PERSONABLE. I Like 50 Cent's Music and I THINK he's SEXY and puts on a GREAT PERFORMANCE. Alot of these Rap Guys are PUSSYCATS in REAL LIFE.... It's just the IMAGE.
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Reply #11 posted 11/08/05 8:15am

FunkMistress

avatar

Janfriend said:


"He's the Smokey Robinson of the hip-hop era," says Iovine. "People don't realize and always forget that you don't get to where he's gotten without real talent."




What-what-WHAAAT??
[Edited 11/8/05 8:15am]
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #12 posted 11/08/05 8:17am

TheRealFiness

FunkMistress said:

Janfriend said:


"He's the Smokey Robinson of the hip-hop era," says Iovine. "People don't realize and always forget that you don't get to where he's gotten without real talent."




What-what-WHAAAT??
[Edited 11/8/05 8:15am]



Jimmy Iovine is a deaf fuck,LOL Interscope shoulda been flushed down the toilet yearrrrrs ago
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Reply #13 posted 11/08/05 8:21am

FunkMistress

avatar

TheRealFiness said:



Jimmy Iovine is a deaf fuck,LOL Interscope shoulda been flushed down the toilet yearrrrrs ago


He's worse than deaf, I think. Deafness can be excused. He's an evil racist fuck who happens to be basically the gatekeeper of the mainstream hip-hop industry and only puts on stereotypical, gun-toting/thuggish rappers. End rant.
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #14 posted 11/08/05 8:22am

TheRealFiness

FunkMistress said:

TheRealFiness said:



Jimmy Iovine is a deaf fuck,LOL Interscope shoulda been flushed down the toilet yearrrrrs ago


He's worse than deaf, I think. Deafness can be excused. He's an evil racist fuck who happens to be basically the gatekeeper of the mainstream hip-hop industry and only puts on stereotypical, gun-toting/thuggish rappers. End rant.



Lets open up a Label, and show em all what its about smile
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Reply #15 posted 11/08/05 8:24am

FunkMistress

avatar

TheRealFiness said:

FunkMistress said:



He's worse than deaf, I think. Deafness can be excused. He's an evil racist fuck who happens to be basically the gatekeeper of the mainstream hip-hop industry and only puts on stereotypical, gun-toting/thuggish rappers. End rant.



Lets open up a Label, and show em all what its about smile


Can it be a front for a crime syndicate/porn ring? whip

Otherwise I'm not in. hmph!
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #16 posted 11/08/05 8:25am

TheRealFiness

FunkMistress said:

TheRealFiness said:




Lets open up a Label, and show em all what its about smile


Can it be a front for a crime syndicate/porn ring? whip

Otherwise I'm not in. hmph!



oh ,most definately smile
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Reply #17 posted 11/08/05 8:26am

FunkMistress

avatar

TheRealFiness said:

FunkMistress said:



Can it be a front for a crime syndicate/porn ring? whip

Otherwise I'm not in. hmph!



oh ,most definately smile


woot!

and the revolution begins!
CHICKENS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO DO COCAINE, SILKY HEN.
The Normal Whores Club
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Reply #18 posted 11/08/05 8:39am

CherrieMoonKis
ses

avatar

prettymansson said:

CherrieMoonKisses said:

I think Im going to say it nod yes, it is decided:

i heart 50 Cent

*right after 2Pac*




rolleyes

Something in your eye? I have some eye drops in my purse! comfort Damn contacts get me all the time.
[Edited 11/8/05 8:39am]
(Eye Gunk EDIT)
[Edited 11/8/05 8:40am]
peace & wildsign
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Reply #19 posted 11/08/05 8:41am

TheRealFiness

FunkMistress said:

TheRealFiness said:




oh ,most definately smile


woot!

and the revolution begins!



we'll take Hip hop back to the days when cats actually worked,had routines
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Reply #20 posted 11/08/05 9:00am

Ottensen

Zelaira said:

Listen,he was on LETTERMAN LAST NIGHT and he was VERY SWEET and PERSONABLE. I Like 50 Cent's Music and I THINK he's SEXY and puts on a GREAT PERFORMANCE. Alot of these Rap Guys are PUSSYCATS in REAL LIFE.... It's just the IMAGE.


Ya think so, Z? I would say try watching the pornos from these rappers that they put out here in Europe with the exclusive interviews and behind the scenes footage, and you'll see just how nice they really are (!). Great performer or not, I guess I just don't like him; too misogynistic for me.
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Reply #21 posted 11/08/05 2:06pm

Janfriend

Here's a short critique I saw

Rapper 50 Cent's so-called life is nickeled and dimed to death by Hollywood aspirations in the bloody, half-baked "Get Rich or Die Tryin.
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Reply #22 posted 11/08/05 2:56pm

shygirl

avatar

Ebert and Roepert gave it thumbs up, so it must be good. Right? Anyone? Bueller? lol
On a sad note, I wonder how many shootings will take place at theaters across the country tomorrow.
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Reply #23 posted 11/08/05 3:17pm

prettymansson

shygirl said:

Ebert and Roepert gave it thumbs up, so it must be good. Right? Anyone? Bueller? lol
On a sad note, I wonder how many shootings will take place at theaters across the country tomorrow.

i wonder the same...
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Reply #24 posted 11/08/05 3:55pm

namepeace

Mr. Jackson is trying to create a new mythology for his life through a movie, cast as the lead in a role that is virtually indistinguishable from the one he portrays in real life. He's hoping that in so doing, he can enhance and prolong his successful career . . . what kind of person would be so gullible as to become a fan of someone's music after such an exhibition?



zipped oops!!!!!
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #25 posted 11/09/05 1:35am

CalhounSq

avatar

You know what's funny? The article speaks of a "new version" of him, yet uses a picture of him pointing a gun @ somebody lol Is it me or is that the same old shit? hammer
heart prince I never met you, but I LOVE you & I will forever!! Thank you for being YOU - my little Princey, the best to EVER do it prince heart
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Reply #26 posted 11/09/05 1:39am

Zelaira

Well, the Rappers are ALWAYS NICE to ME ..So I LOVE THEM.. I ALWAYs get GREAT SEATS and Have a GREAT Time at Their Concerts. ESPECIALLY SNOOP DOGG! biggrin
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Reply #27 posted 11/09/05 5:09am

prettymansson

Zelaira said:

Well, the Rappers are ALWAYS NICE to ME ..So I LOVE THEM.. I ALWAYs get GREAT SEATS and Have a GREAT Time at Their Concerts. ESPECIALLY SNOOP DOGG! biggrin



oral
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Reply #28 posted 11/09/05 8:57am

meltwithu

avatar

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'Get Rich': Don't die tryin' to see this one
By Claudia Puig, USA TODAY
Here's an unlikely marriage of cultural sensibilities: Curtis Jackson, known to hip-hop fans as 50 Cent, and Irish filmmaker Jim Sheridan, who has thoughtfully probed the lives of the downtrodden in films ranging from My Left Foot to In America.

Survival on the streets: Curtis (“50 Cent”) Jackson, with Tory Kittles, left, and Terrence Howard.
By Michael Gibson, Paramount Pictures

Get Rich or Die Tryin' (* * out of four), also the title of 50 Cent's best-selling CD, is a largely unsurprising rags-to-riches saga about an aspiring rapper. Get Rich suggests that if people want to star in semi-autobiographical movies, they shouldn't live such clichéd lives.

Certainly, 50 Cent's story is more dark and violent than those of most pop stars, but the general trajectory seems drearily evergreen. The rapper stars as Marcus, who after his mother's death drifts into her career of choice: drug dealing. The upside is, he's hard-working, an early riser and a self-starter. The downside is those pesky turf battles, which erupt again and again.

His propensity for violence — though it seems to serve him well in his chosen profession — gets him tossed into prison, where he is stabbed. After getting out of prison, Marcus is gunned down by a rival thug. (In real life, the rapper was shot nine times.) After a stint in the hospital and some stewing in self-pity, Marcus comes back to the land of the living. Thanks to the love of a good woman (Joy Bryant), he finds the wherewithal to become the MC he always dreamed of being.

Transforming a pop star into a film presence has always been fraught with peril: Everyone from Elvis to Madonna has underwhelmed on the big screen. It can work: Eminem (who helped discover 50 Cent) carried 8 Mile on the strength of his charisma. But 50 Cent's winning smile isn't enough to carry a film, particularly one in which he's usually called upon to glower. Even an accomplished actor would have trouble delivering lines like "I'm a gangsta, Granddad, and proud of it!" And in an ostensibly romantic scene, all he does is grunt.
Terrence Howard enlivens the film briefly as a loyal if hot-headed member of Marcus's posse. Earlier this year, Howard starred in the far-superior, similarly themed Hustle and Flow, and he was a lot more convincing as a rapper than the genuine article here.

Even 50 Cent's fans, no doubt expecting guns-blazing spectacle, probably will be disappointed by the gloomy tone Sheridan brings to the proceedings.

Movie stardom is seductive, but 50 Cent and his fans will be best served if he sticks to to his day job. (Rated R for strong violence, pervasive language, drug content, sexuality and nudity. Running time: 1 hour, 52 minutes.)
you look better on your facebook page than you do in person hmph!
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