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State Property (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:12
Fresh:0
Rotten:12
Average Rating:2/10
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Rapper Memphis Bleek and his Roc-A-Fella crew star in this gritty urban crime drama based on actual events. Determined to make big cash, local Philly thug Beans (Beanie Siegel) forms a gang he dubs... Rapper Memphis Bleek and his Roc-A-Fella crew star in this gritty urban crime drama based on actual events. Determined to make big cash, local Philly thug Beans (Beanie Siegel) forms a gang he dubs the A.B.M. (All 'Bout Money) and declares that all his rivals better "get down or lay down." Bleek, Jay-Z, Omillio Sparks, Freeway, and Damon Dash are some of his friends and enemies along the way. Beans earns plenty of cash, and a nice home in the suburbs for his family, but like all movie gangsters he doesn't know when to quit. The body count rises, his old lady (Sundy Carter) gets kidnapped, and incarceration threatens when a surviving victim decides to rat Beans out to the cops. First-time director Abdul Malik Abbot smartly eschews any morality, romance or phony glamour in favor of a practical, no-nonsense, sex-and-violence approach. The film's real strength, however, is the naturalistic performances of the actors and their ease with the quotable, expletive-rich dialogue. STATE PROPERTY should delight viewers schooled in rap music and gangster films, but others may find themselves needing subtitles to decipher the thick slang. It's filmed on digital video, blown up to 35mm for theatrical release. [More]
Starring: Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek, Damon Dash, Sundy Carter
Starring: Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek, Damon Dash, Sundy Carter, Jay-Z, Dee Lee, Chris Eric Williams, Omillio Sparks, Freeway
Director: Abdul Malik Abbott
Director: Abdul Malik Abbott
Screenwriter: Ernest Anderson
Producer: Ron Rotholz
Composer: Jay-Z, Memphis Bleek
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Reviews for State Property
A dull, simple-minded and stereotypical tale of drugs, death and mind-numbing indifference on the inner-city streets.
A shoddy male hip hop fantasy filled with guns, expensive cars, lots of naked women and Rocawear clothing.
A film of empty, fetishistic violence in which murder is casual and fun.
No one involved, save Dash, shows the slightest aptitude for acting, and the script, credited to director Abdul Malik Abbott and Ernest 'Tron' Anderson, seems entirely improvised.
Basically a static series of semi-improvised (and semi-coherent) raps between the stars.
Lacks the visual flair and bouncing bravado that characterizes better hip-hop clips and is content to recycle images and characters that were already tired 10 years ago.
... for all its social and political potential, State Property doesn't end up being very inspiring or insightful.
The acting is amateurish, the cinematography is atrocious, the direction is clumsy, the writing is insipid and the violence is at once luridly graphic and laughably unconvincing.
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