Belly (film): Difference between revisions

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*Stan Drayton - Wise
*Stan Drayton - Wise
*James Parris - LaKid
*James Parris - LaKid
*Mike Geselbracht - Stanks


==Reception==
==Reception==

Revision as of 18:48, 9 February 2012

Belly
Theatrical release poster
Directed byHype Williams
Written byHype Williams
Story byNas
Anthony Bodden
Hype Williams
Produced byLarry Meistrich
Ron Rotholz
Robert Salerno
Hype Williams
StarringNas
DMX
Taral Hicks
Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins
Method Man
Hassan Johnson
Louie Rankin
Narrated byNas
CinematographyMalik Hassan Sayeed
Edited byDavid Leonard
Music byStephen Cullo
Production
company
Big Dog Films
Distributed byArtisan Entertainment
Release date
  • November 4, 1998 (1998-11-04)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film US
LanguageEnglish
Box office$9,639,390 (US and Canada)[1]

Belly is a 1998 film, the film directorial debut of music video director Hype Williams. Filmed in New York City as an urban drama, the film stars rappers DMX and Nas, alongside with Taral Hicks, Method Man dancehall artist Louie Rankin, R&B singer T-Boz. Besides starring in the film, Nas also narrates and collaborated with Hype Williams on the screenplay.

Plot

The movie begins when Tommy (DMX) and Sincere (Nas), along with fellow crew members Mark and Black, rob a nightclub. After dropping Black off, the others go to Tommy's house to hide out for a while. Their noise wakes up Keisha (Taral Hicks), Tommy's girlfriend, who is trying to sleep. Sincere says that he too is tired, and he and Mark leave soon after. Sincere returns to his house, where his wife Tionne (Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins) and baby Kenya wait. Back at Tommy's house, Tommy learns of a new, potent form of heroin that is making its way to America.

After a passionate night with their women, Tommy and Sincere meet early in the morning and Tommy tells Sincere about the new drug, and also how much money they could make if they got involved with Tommy's friend Ox, a drug lord who is receiving shipments. Reluctantly, Sincere agrees. At Mark's grandmother's basement, Tommy talks to an associate, Knowledge, over the phone while Sincere confronts Black about the money. Black is beaten up by Tommy, in which Tommy forces him to strip naked in front of everyone while firing at least 4 shots to the ground and sits on the couch crying.

The duo, along with some of their friends from the neighborhood, start transporting drugs (hidden in their car bumpers) from Queens to Omaha, and begin to take over the drug scene there. This is met with jealousy from a local drug dealer named Big Head Rico (Tyrin Turner), who informs the police of their activities. This results in a raid at their stash-house, in which Mark is critically injured and another accomplice, Knowledge is arrested. Knowledge calls back home from the local jail and is told by Keisha that Tommy isn't there, nor should he have called home since the FBI had placed wire taps on their phone. Knowledge gets angry that Tommy won't come to bail him out, and calls up Shameek aka Father Sha (Method Man), to not only infiltrate Rico's gang and to kill Rico, but to handle Tommy. While at a strip club in Ohama, Shameek confronts Rico and informs him that Knowledge sent him here to check him and others. When Rico tries to run, Shameek shoots and kills Rico as well as some members of his crew. While reloading his pistols, the bartender shoots Sha with a shotgun out the club and Sha manages to escape from the cops with injury.

Meanwhile, Tommy goes to Jamaica with Ox, and kills Sosa, the son of a drug lord there, at a stoplight while dressed as a homeless man, as a favor to Ox. Meanwhile back in Tommy's house, Keisha is arrested by police and later bailed out by Tionne. Later when the deceased's family finds out that is was Ox who ordered the hit, Pelpa, the gang's leader and close friend of Sosa, sends a hit squad to kill him in his home, and Ox is able to kill them all before a femme fatale named Chiquita swoops down from his top floor and slits his throat.

While this is going on, Sincere has been trying to get out of the drug game and move his girlfriend and child to Africa, despite Tommy's jokes that he was getting soft for wanting to leave. They make plans to leave on New Years, 2000. However, now Sincere is suspicious of Tommy; since the Omaha incident, Tommy has been on the run and was caught in Atlanta, GA, along with two young dealers from the neighborhood, Wise and LaKid, selling weed. One night at dinner, Tommy instigates an argument between Wise and LaKid, in which causes both men to draw out their guns and LaKid shoots Wise dead. Tommy, who is too drunk and high, gets arrested and later released. Sincere feels that Tommy would give him up to save himself. This was not the case. Tommy was chosen by federal agents to assassinate a black Muslim leader, Rev. Saviour, (Dr. Benjamin Chavis) who had been preaching against the government on New Year's Eve.

Later on, Sincere talks with his friend, Shorty about what is going on lately and getting out the drug game. Tionne later comes home from shopping only to find Shameek and a few other men waiting for her inside and when he asks for Sincere and Tommy, Tionne draws out her gun while they draw out theirs, but decide to spare her life and leave. Later while talking to a friend (AZ) outside a barbershop, Black and an accomplice confront Sincere and shoots him in the leg, which causes Sincere to shoot both Black and his accomplice dead and takes off.

On New Years' Eve, Tommy confronts the leader in his study before he was to make a massive speech of hope and points his gun at him. The leader convinces Tommy not to go through with his mission, even though it was betraying the government and now putting his life at risk.

At the same time, Shameek visits Keisha's home, in the hopes of finding Tommy there. Sha slaps Keisha around, but Keisha is able to grab his gun right before he was going to kill her. Instead, she turns the gun on him.

Sincere, having known everything that was going on, and surviving an attempt on his life too by his old friend Black, takes that moment to get out of New York as his family starts life over in Africa.

Cast

  • Nas - Sincere
  • DMX - Tommy "Buns" Bundy
  • Taral Hicks - Keisha
  • Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins - Tionne
  • Method Man - Shameek aka Father Sha
  • Tyrin Turner - Big Head Rico
  • Hassan Johnson - Mark
  • Oliver "Power" Grant - Knowledge
  • Louie Rankin - Lennox
  • Stan Drayton - Wise
  • James Parris - LaKid
  • Mike Geselbracht - Stanks

Reception

The film was poorly received by critics, scoring 13% on Rotten Tomatoes.[2] Although it was generally praised for its highly stylized "noir-like"[citation needed] visual design and cinematography, it was criticized for what was seen as a weak plot.[1] However, it remains much more popular with hip hop audiences,[citation needed] and also with dancehall reggae fans due to cameos by Jamaican entertainment personalities Mr Vegas, Sean Paul, Skyjuice, Bogle and Louie Rankin playing the part of Ox. It was re-released on DVD in November 2003 in a black package. The scene in which the Jamaican drug lord's house is raided is heavily influenced by the 1983 film, Scarface.[citation needed]

Possible sequel

In 2006, DMX mentioned that a sequel is in the works called Beast. However, a film called Belly 2: Millionaire Boyz Club has already been released, starring rapper The Game. No one has confirmed as to whether or not that this is the true sequel to Belly.

Soundtrack

Year Album Peak chart positions Certifications
U.S. U.S. R&B
1998 Belly
  • Released: November 3, 1998
  • Label: Def Jam
5 2
  • US: Platinum

References

  1. ^ "Belly (1998)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
  2. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/belly/
  1. ^ LaSalle, Mick (Nov. 4, 1998). "A Clumsy Film Debut, Williams' `Belly' Flops". San Francisco Chronicle.
  2. ^ Richberg, Chris and Williams, Houston (Jun. 12, 2006). "DMX Talks 'Beast' Sequel to 'Belly'. AllHipHop.com: Daily Hip-Hop News.

External links