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out of all the rappers in the mocie Tha Rza had the best lines and role wihich is a trip u'd think it would be common ti just made me laffthis was a dope movie though i'm glad the rappers didn't spoil itanyone catch the american gangster episode on BET with the real Frank Lucas... dude is still alive and talking shit
Quote from: .:TimeLock:. on November 05, 2007, 09:14:34 AMout of all the rappers in the mocie Tha Rza had the best lines and role wihich is a trip u'd think it would be common ti just made me laffthis was a dope movie though i'm glad the rappers didn't spoil itanyone catch the american gangster episode on BET with the real Frank Lucas... dude is still alive and talking shit yo to be honest with you guys... i acctually thought TI handled his role really well... i was skepticle at first but homie did his thing
His character was stupid, though. Turning down an opportunity to play with the Yankees.
Quote from: They call me Ted on November 05, 2007, 12:57:02 PMHis character was stupid, though. Turning down an opportunity to play with the Yankees. I think that's kinda the point, and it's ironic they get a rapper to play the role in order to make it...the way that the glorification of the gangster lifestyle fucks up a nigga's ambitions and shit. Stupid country boy sees his uncle living large, and he's so fuckin starstruck that nothing else matters. You can almost see the shame and regret on Frank Lucas' face when he realizes what a bad influence he's been to his nephew.
"American Gangster" Makes $46 Mil Debut, Real Life Characters Say Movie Based On LiesIt's billed as being based on a true story, but real life cops close to American Gangster drug lord Frank Lucas say the movie is more of a fairy tale than true life. "They claim it's based on a true story," New York-based Drug Enforcement Administration agent Joseph Sullivan told the New York Post. The officer was at a raid on Lucas' Teaneck, N.J., home after two members of the Mafia ratted the drug lord out. "His name is Frank Lucas and he was a drug dealer - that's where the truth in this movie ends." Lucas, whose character is played by Denzel Washington, admitted to sources that "only 20 percent of the film is true." Hollywood's version of true stories are expected to have some elements of creative license, but one cop close to the action said it's the studio's depiction of Lucas as being a family man of moral character, that he takes the biggest issue with. "The parts in the movie that depict Frank as a family man are ludicrous," the real-life Richie Roberts told The Post. Roberts' character is played by Russel Crowe in the film. "They did it for dramatic purposes, you know, to make him look good and me look bad." According to Roberts, who prosecuted a New Jersey case against Lucas, the dealer wasn't the modest dresser and straight-dealing business man that the movie shows viewers. Roberts called the scene showing Lucas holding hands with his family in a Thanksgiving prayer "sickening." Sources said Lucas manipulated his family members, moving them from North Carolina to work for him and even putting a hit out on his own brother. Cops and prosecutors who worked the case said the flick distorts Lucas' role in Harlem's drug scene, and is riddled with untruths, like the involvement of rogue cops and the shipping of heroin in Vietnam caskets. Lucas was sentenced to 40 years in a 1975 federal case, but only served seven. He claims to have made hundreds of millions of dollars off the drug game and stands to make more money off his story. American Gangster, crushed the competition at the box office this weekend, bringing in $46.3 million - the highest ever for a modern crime movie. - and further lining Lucas' pockets. Because he was convicted before the "Son of Sam Law" was enacted, Lucas can make money from his stories of drug exploits. With a feature film under his belt, the former drug lord plans to merchandise his story with a video game a clothing line and he's in talks for a sequel to the film.