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Tupac: Resurrection (2003)
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Reviews Counted:31
Fresh:25
Rotten:6
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: There's no question where the director's loyalty lies in this one-sided tribute; however, Tupac's charisma makes this doc an engaging sit.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong language and images of drugs, violence and sex
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
Theatrical Release:Nov 14, 2003 Wide
Box Office: $7,646,264
Synopsis: "This is my story, a story about ambition, violence, redemption and love." --Tupac Shakur Celebrating the life of Tupac Shakur, one of the top-selling hip-hop artists of all time, "Tupac:... "This is my story, a story about ambition, violence, redemption and love." --Tupac Shakur Celebrating the life of Tupac Shakur, one of the top-selling hip-hop artists of all time, "Tupac: Resurrection" explores Shakur’s life viscerally and dramatically through his own words and music, as well as through vivid images of the world as he experienced it. The film carefully mines video archives to expose the brilliant storyteller that Shakur was during interviews and in personal conversations throughout his life. In his own words, Shakur powerfully takes viewers with him throughout the happiness and the sadness of his childhood, through the ups and downs of his professional career, through his romances and his life-altering mistakes, and finally, through the lessons he has learned. Not merely a commemoration of his life and artistry, "Tupac: Resurrection" explores honestly and openly Shakur’s many complexities. It examines the artist’s gifts, passions and conflicts, and unravels the mystique of his life by looking at those who influenced him early on. An intimate portrait of a young man who rose from a life of adversity into a global icon who touched millions of lives, "Tupac: Resurrection" is the only film made in collaboration with Shakur’s mother, former Black Panther Afeni Shakur. It is also the only film told entirely in his own words. Visually stunning, this inspirational life story features never-before-seen concert footage, private home movies and excerpts from Tupac’s poetry and journals, all of which serve to create a very personal portrayal of a sensitive, passionate and often provocative artist who died before his time. In addition, the film features a soundtrack of Shakur’s best-selling music, as well as all new music by Biggie Smalls, Eminem, 50 Cent and Shakur himself, who currently ranks among the top 40 best-selling artists of all time, with more than 33.5 million records sold to date. [More]
Starring: Tupac Shakur
Starring: Tupac Shakur
Director: Lauren Lazin
Director: Lauren Lazin
Producer: Preston L. Holmes, Karolyn Ali, Lauren Lazin
Studio: Paramount Pictures
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Reviews for Tupac: Resurrection
It never addresses the problem that the more Tupac opens his mouth to explain what his music is or isn't about, and what role in society it is or isn't supposed to serve, the more obvious it becomes that his views aren't reflected in the actual music.
It's great to hear a person no longer with us captured so bountifully in interviews, talking and even bubbling about his friends, his legacy and his scrapes.
Fans, of course, will devour this film, but there's plenty to chew on for the uninitiated as well.
A strong film, with some genuinely revealing insights into the life of its charismatic and paradoxical subject.
The movie is like an extra-strength episode of MTV's Diary, which is like A&E Biography in the first person.
By the time you've heard the gunshot that signals his 1996 death, you will feel that this world lost a very important voice.
Tupac: Resurrection gives us a little bit of both but, more than that, leaves us with the impression that Tupac Shakur had a lot more left to say.
Earns its place as one piece of a pop-culture puzzle, a genuine reflection of a period that still echoes throughout the culture.
Let's assume you are a person who never intends to see a doc about rap music, but might have it in you to see one. This is the one.
While Resurrection provides a few precious moments of personal and social insight, it's basically just another product line in the endless marketing of Shakur as an urban martyr.
It's unfortunate that his cinematic life is told with a collage of such static, uninvolving devices as scrapbook photos, journal entries, stock footage and oft-seen MTV interviews.
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