Belly
Belly is fat. Not phat, as in funky, fresh, and cool, but fat as in a waste of
time. First-time feature director Hype Williams, famous for his moody videos
for Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac, has created a film with a tenuous storyline,
almost no character development, and bad acting. It could have been saved by a
pounding soundtrack and plenty of gratuitous violence -- but though the film
has some of today's best rappers, it doesn't have nearly enough music by them.
And though the violence is frequent, it never seems very real. Williams would
benefit from checking out Sam Peckinpah or at least the Hughes Brothers.
Tommy (DMX) is a bad-ass hustler from Queens looking for dosh. He and his
sensitive partner Sincere (Nas), who finds Islam but has a hard time losing his
drug-dealing lifestyle, set up an interstate heroin ring. The feds bust in and
then the fun begins. Problem is the plot and pacing feel as if they'd been
worked out by someone who was blunted. The rich background colors and weird
camera angles are appealing, but only Orson Welles can carry a film with camera
angles.
-- Nicholas Patterson
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