Rap Movie Reviews

Movie Review – “Notorious” (2009)

Release Date: January 16, 2009

Production Companies: Fox Searchlight Pictures (Later known as Searchlight Pictures after Disney acquisition)/Bad Boy Films/By Storm Films/State Street Pictures/Voletta Wallace Films

Wow. It had been quite some time since I had last seen this. I recall seeing this on opening weekend at the start of 2009. So it’s been a little more than 14 and a half years since I had last watched. Not to say I didn’t have chances of revisiting it, but after doing my re-review on “All Eyez on Me” (the film), it was a given that I would revisit this.

Back in the late-2000s, I remember hearing that a movie on Biggie Smalls (or The Notorious B.I.G.) was in production. I know that as a longtime hip-hop head that I would see it because up to that point, aside from an MC Hammer movie done for VH1 (which was in 2001, the early-2000s), there had not been any biopics done on rappers. I knew I was going to see it anyway, especially since my younger cousin, who was about 12 at the time, wanted to see it.

It’s crazy to think that Biggie had quite an impact and legacy after his untimely demise. He had only recorded two albums (though for the second one, he died weeks before its release). He had a crew of his own, Junior M.A.F.I.A. (it stood for “Masters at finding intelligent attitudes”) whom had released an album of their own. He also was known for getting the East Coast back on the map in the rap world as up to that point (the 1990s), the West Coast was getting big with the likes of Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Tha Dogg Pound, Too $hort, E-40, etc. I can go on, but the point I am making is that even though the East Coast originated hip-hop, during the time of Biggie’s rise, the West Coast was at the top of the rap game but Biggie helped bring it back to the East as well.

So it was no surprise that a biopic about him was made. Plus, this was the first one to get a theatrical release.

Before I get into my review, let me just say this – I can’t say that I was the biggest Biggie fan out there. Now don’t get me wrong. The man ripped the mic well. He was good at rapping and had different topics he rapped about. He was popular. I have listened to his albums, “Ready to Die” and “Life After Death,” and his two posthumous albums, “Born Again” and “Duets: The Final Chapter.” But what has always gotten in all my years of listening to hip-hop, when looking at Top 10 or 20 lists, you often see Biggie and Tupac at the top of the lists. Again, Biggie was popular and sure knew how to spit, and he does earn the respect he was given as an artist, and I say this as someone who lived to see his career up to his untimely death, it just feels like when it comes to rap legends, it’s always either Tupac or Biggie at the top over everyone when there are other artists to consider legends. Hell, I remember an old coworker (who was much younger than me) asking me who I chose between Biggie or Tupac, but I had to school him on other artists, many of whom he had never heard of. Part of me wonders if it’s because they’re deceased, but I never ever denied that Biggie had a good flow and storytelling. So a biopic on him was in order back in those days. I still wouldn’t consider him to be one of my top favorite artists, but I did like his music even when he was alive.

With all that being said, it’s time to talk about the film.

The story starts with a young Christopher Wallace (Biggie’s real name, by the way) at school with his friend talking about rapping and stuff. I also found out recently that young Biggie was played by Christopher Wallace Jr., who was Biggie’s real-life son with Faith Evans. I found that interesting that his son played his father as a child. Anyway, so it showed bits of him in childhood then into his teen years when he was pushing crack up until he started rapping and then his rise to fame and then everything that led to his untimely demise.

Biggie was portrayed by Jamal Woolard, who is a rapper himself and he captured the essence of the late rapper. He not only had the look but his voice was similar enough, but what really stood out was that it seemed he did his own rapping for the recreations of some songs or the scenes when he would freestyle. It didn’t sound like he was lip-synching over the real Biggie’s vocals.

So it was good to see that Woolard did his own rapping for this film. He was a rapper before he got cast, after all.

As for any other performances, I can’t complain when Angela Bassett is on screen as she did fine as Voletta Wallace, Biggie’s mother. However, I can’t say the same thing about Anthony Mackie as Tupac Shakur.

I must say this. When I went to go watch this in theaters and I saw who was supposed to be Tupac, I was like “Huh? Him?!” Okay, yes, while he may be known for portraying Falcon in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but because it was 2009 when this came out, I mostly remembered him as Poppa Doc in “8 Mile,” who got roasted to bits by Eminem in the climactic rap battle scene. Even when he was in 2013’s “Pain & Gain” I still saw him as Poppa Doc. It doesn’t help that he didn’t feel like Pac in the scenes he was in.

But aside from that, I like how the storytelling also paints Biggie as a not-so-good person. While he may have been beloved as a rapper, he was definitely no saint. He not only sold drugs but also treated women badly, especially the women in his life like Faith Evans and Lil’ Kim. Did I also mention that he wasn’t very faithful to both women? I guess what I said is evident of such behavior.

Many of the characters felt shallow and if you think about it, there was a lot to be told in this story that there wasn’t enough focus on the others because it had to touch on some events that had occurred. Yes, this film was full of clichés, but a lot of films are like that.

After this long since the first time I saw it, I have to say that it holds up for what it is, but when compared to other biopics, at least those released in cinemas, “Straight Outta Compton” still felt superior. I know I need to revisit that one because it has been a long time since I last saw it, but regarding “Notorious,” it’s miles better than “All Eyez on Me.” I won’t pretend that this film didn’t have flaws. I already mentioned Anthony Mackie’s performance as Tupac (which in a lot of ways is kind of funny in hindsight) but there were some parts that felt a little unnecessary. For example, one scene with Biggie and Lil’ Kim having a moment. I am sure it wasn’t meant to turn anybody on, but still, it was kind of disturbing. Oh, and I forgot to mention that Lil’ Kim was portrayed by Naturi Naughton, who was a member of the girl group 3LW (3 Little Women) back in the early-2000s. I just thought that was an interesting casting choice. I wonder if she did her own rapping in those scenes.

Overall, I would call this film average, if better than average. Despite some clichés and some cheesy performances, I did like the concert scenes and the studio scenes. The film had a good soundtrack by The Notorious B.I.G. himself. I mean if the movie was about him, would you expect anything else? I would say I didn’t mind it, if liked it enough, but I didn’t love it.

3.25/5

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Movie Soundtrack: Original Gangstas

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Year: 1996

Label: Noo Trybe Records

Track Listing:

  1. Inner City Blues – Ideal
  2. The World is a Ghetto – Geto Boys feat. Flaj
  3. X.O. – Luniz
  4. On The Grind – The Click
  5. White Chalk Part II – Junior M.A.F.I.A.
  6. How Many – N.O. Joe feat. 3rd Degree
  7. Flowamatic 9 – 3x Krazy
  8. Ain’t No Fun – Dino of H-Town feat. Teddy
  9. Rivals – Facemob feat. Scarface
  10. War’s On – The Almighty RSO feat. Mobb Deep
  11. Who Wanna Be The Villain – MC Ren
  12. Slugs – Spice 1
  13. How Does It Feel – Ice-T
  14. Good Stuff – Smooth

Another soundtrack album I am reviewing, and it’s from the same year as the album I previously reviewed. Detect a pattern? That’s not important. What’s important is this review. This is the soundtrack to the 1996 film “Original Gangstas,” which starred a lot of veterans in those Blaxploitation films from the 1970s, particularly the likes of Fred Williamson, Jim Brown and Pam Grier, along with supporting roles from Richard Roundtree and Ron O’Neal and they basically played original gangsters battling against a new gang that took over their old neighborhood. Hence the title. The thing about this film is no matter how cheesy it was, it still had some good music in the soundtrack (Of course, there are worse movies out there that still have good soundtracks, and I WILL touch on those later).

The opening song, “Inner City Blues,” actually started a minute into the track, because there was actually dialogue from the movie right before the song started. Anyway, the song is from Ideal, an R&B group mostly known for songs that came out a few years after this one like “Get Gone” and “Whatever.” I will say that when Ideal came out with those songs, I thought to myself “Could this be the same group that did the song from the ‘Original Gangstas’ soundtrack?” and I am certain that nobody else around me knew of this song as I remember seeing a video for this song on TV back in 1996. I also must note that this song is a cover to Marvin Gaye’s song of the same name. The song itself had a good then-up-to-date sound to it. It did not sound like the original version, but it did not need to. Plus, it went well with the movie’s theme. This is actually one of my top favorite songs. 5/5

Right after one cover comes another as the Geto Boys covered War’s “The World is a Ghetto.” Okay, so it’s not a direct cover as the verses are completely different, but the chorus and the beat have similar vibes to the original version, however, with a hip-hop twist. This song is more socially-conscious, by the way. Scarface started the song with a good verse, but the second verse stood out more as Bushwick Bill delivered some of the hardest hitting lyrics in the whole song. Check this out:

Five hundred niggas died in guerrilla warfare
In a village in Africa, but didn’t nobody care
They just called up the goddamn gravedigga
And said come get these muthafuckin niggas
Just like they do in the 5th Ward
In the South Park and The Bronx and the Watts
You know they got crooked cops
Working for the system
Makin’ po muthafuckas out of victims
Don’t nobody give a fuck about the po
It’s double jeopardy if your black or Latino
They got muthafuckin drugs in the slums
Got us killing one another over crumbs
Think I’m lying? Well muthafucka I got proof
Name a section in your city where minorities group
And I’ma show you prostitutes, dope and hard times
And a murder rate that never declines
And little babies sittin on the porch smellin’ smelly
Cryin cause they ain’t got no food in they bellies
They call my neighbourhood a jungle
And me an animal, like they do the people in Rwanda
Fools fleeing their countries to come here black
But see the same bullshit and head right back
They find out what others already know
The world is a ghetto
Willie D also delivered some hard rhymes right after Bill’s verse, but in my personal opinion, Bushwick Bill killed it in his verse. Another one of my top favorite tracks. 5/5
After two covers of classic songs, we now get an original track,”X.O.” from Luniz. The one thing that stands out the most about the song is the beat. It has a smooth, yet intense feel to it. The song’s subject matter was mostly about alcohol and getting drunk. It’s kind of basic, but the beat’s nice. 3.5/5
“On The Grind” from The Click was decent, but there were some parts that could have made the song better. Maybe it was the chorus, because the verses from Suga-T and D-Shot at the beginning were decent, but B-Legit and E-40’s verses in the second act were better, and then all four had back-to-back verses in the third act of the song. The beat wasn’t bad either. It still could have been better. 3.5/5
Junior M.A.F.I.A. kicked this album into a higher gear with “White Chalk Part II.” I am a little unfamiliar with this group other than the fact that The Notorious B.I.G. was a part of it, as well as Lil’ Kim, neither of whom had verses on this song. However, the beat was nice as were the verses, but the beat stood out more, in my opinion. 3.5/5
Still in that same gear comes “How Many” from N.O. Joe. Did I mention that this is actually one of three songs that he contributed to on this compilation? Well, it’s true, as he produced “The World is a Ghetto” and “X.O.” but here is a song that he produced and has his name as the main credit. I am not sure if he rapped on this song, because there was another guy on here. The beat is sick, though. The subject matter is sort of basic as the lyrics are rather violent. On the beat side, I rate this a 5/5 and the lyrics part probably gets 4. Overall: 4/5
It’s about to get crazy up in here. Three times crazy, that is. Okay, that sucked. Anyway, “Flowamatic 9” from 3x Krazy is one of my other favorite songs from this album. Sick beat, ill rhymes, and not a bad chorus from Suga-T of The Click. What I find weird is that 3x Krazy had named one of their compilations “Flowamatic 9” and did not include this song. Seriously, this should have been included. 5/5
Now we slow things down with another R&B song on this album. “Ain’t No Fun” from the late Dino from the group H-Town has a sexual type of feel to it that could probably get people in the mood, but the song’s subject matter left more to be desired. It’s not much different than Snoop Dogg’s “Ain’t No Fun (If The Homies Can’t Have None),” except it’s R&B, not rap. The beat and the vocals weren’t bad at all, as it does set the mood, but the subject matter made the song lose some points. 2.5/5
Now we’re back to that hardcore gangsta shit. “Rivals” is a song from a short-lived super-group called Facemob, that has Scarface as one of the top members, along with somewhat-known artists like DMG and Devin The Dude. Now I am familiar with Devin The Dude to some degree, but in hindsight it seemed that he was out of his element trying to be a gangsta rapper. The worst part of this song is probably the female rapper 350, but I could go on about this more on their album, “The Other Side of the Law,” which I also own and may review in the future. I have to hand it to Devin for trying and DMG had a good verse on this song. Scarface mainly had the chorus to work with, so it was mainly just to have the rest of the group shine. One of my least favorite songs on this album, but not terrible. 2.5/5
“War’s On” is from a little-known group called The Almighty RSO, and better-known group called Mobb Deep. Now I will say that I am familiar with ONE of the members of RSO, and that is Raydog aka Benzino, who was mainly known for initiating a beef with Eminem back in the early-2000s, but that’s neither here nor there. Back to the song. One thing to know is that the credit may say Mobb Deep as part of the song, it’s mainly Prodigy who has a verse. However, Havoc produced this song, so it’s still a song that involved both members. Now as for the verses in this song, the only one that stood out the most was Prodigy’s verse. Benzino (I am mainly calling him this as he was mostly known by this name) was never a great rapper and he didn’t really have a great verse either, but it was not horrible. The other RSO members were okay at best. 3/5, mainly for Mobb Deep’s contribution.
Former N.W.A. member MC Ren dropped his contribution to the soundtrack with “Who Wanna Be The Villain.” The beat is a little different from what has been heard here so far, as it has more of a scary/creepy vibe to it. Ren had always been the most underrated members of the legendary group, and he should have gotten more exposure. This song shows that he was lyrically gifted. 4/5
Now for one of my other top favorite songs on here. Spice 1 kicks dope verses in his song “Slugs,” which doesn’t have anything to do with a certain creature I will tell you that. One of the parts that I like in this song is when it pays homage to “Slippin’ Into Darkness” from War. This song reminds me of a few songs from his album “1990-Sick” which came out months before this soundtrack did. 5/5
Second to the last song and we get one from a legend in the game, the one and only Ice-T. However, “How Does It Feel” is not one of his strongest songs. That does not mean it was bad. It could have been better. I see that it’s one of those “dirty raps” so it has sexual lyrics. It has a smooth beat, and Ice delivered on the lyrics a bit, but part of it still feels weak in some areas. 3/5
The soundtrack closed out with “Good Stuff” from Smooth. This is an R&B song, by the way. The song is sort of typical with Smooth singing and talking about she needs passion and a man’s touch and all that stuff. I liked the beat, and Smooth didn’t have bad verses, but the talking parts were a weak point in the song and it overshadowed everything else. It could have been a lot better. 2/5
Does this album still hold up? I will say that this was not a top-to-bottom great album, but there were hits than misses on here. I will say that out of the R&B tracks on here, only one was actually good, another could have been better even though it had some moments, while the last one just was not great at all. As for the rap tracks, a lot of them were good, even some of the lower-rated ones had some shining moments. I like the soundtrack, but it was not a great soundtrack by any means. I recommend it, though.
3.5/5 overall

Top Five Tracks:

  1. Inner City Blues
  2. The World Is A Ghetto
  3. Slugs
  4. Flowamatic 9
  5. Who Wanna Be The Villain
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