Turn It Up Movie Review
Turn It Up Review

"Turn It Up" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert AdetuyiProducer : Gary Oseary,Happy Walters
Screenwiter : Robert Adetuyi
Starring : Pras,Vondie Curtis-Hall,Ja Rule,Tamala Jones,Jason Stratham
How would you like to be elected king for a day? The enormously talented Ice
Cube paved the way for chart-topping rap stars to become media moguls, running
his own music and film production company. His explosive talent and shrewd
business sense made his success look easy. Wow! Anyone can do this! The
market soon became flooded with rap artists vying for movie stardom, not to
mention creative control. Most of the stories revolve around familiar "urban
gangsta" elements such as tough-talking badasses with flashy threads, fast
cars, nickel-plated revolvers and beautiful hoochie-mamas. In sum,
well-photographed vanity projects that make the stars feel cool.
Case in point: international sensation Pras co-produced and stars in Turn It
Up. It's about, what else, a young man’s struggle to escape his life of
crime. Redemption is the order of the day. Diamond (Pras) is a talented
hip-hop performer who harbors big dreams of cutting his own record, but can’t
afford the inflated costs of studio time. His mercurial loose cannon of a best
friend, Gage (Billboard chart-topper Ja Rule), wants to lend a helping hand,
stealing $10,000 from an ill-fated drug runner. Unfortunately, the money
financing Diamond’s career belongs to a vicious British gangster (Jason
Stratham, Snatch, good even when he's coasting) who suddenly takes an interest
in stealing the rights to Diamond’s record. Things sure are heating up around
here.
Just in case we get bored with itemized record deal negotiations, there are a
few back alley drug deals that go sour. Ha! Are there any other kind?
Messrs. Pras and Rule are given ample opportunity to pop off several rounds of
ammo in dramatic slow motion. John Woo's "two-guns-at-once" are combined with
Quentin Tarantino's "point-the-gun-diagonally," since those techniques seemed
to work well in other, better films. There’s plenty of shattering glass --
can’t have a shootout without some shattering glass! The rhythm and pacing
resemble a lazy and inconsiderate lover, unimaginatively going through the
motions.
Lest all this gunplay reinforce a negative image of the black community, there’
s an after-school special subplot involving Diamond’s girlfriend (Tamala
Jones). She’s pregnant. Will Diamond accept the responsibility of being a
father, or choose to pursue his music career? On cue, his long-lost pop
(Vondie Curtis-Hall, Eve’s Bayou) shows up with sage advice: Do the right
thing, son.
During the dramatic “brother’s keeper” scenes between Pras and Ja Rule,
Manhattan’s skyline looms in the distance. It’s all about having a spectacular
background, no? The two leads carry on with self-conscious intensity,
performing as expected. They can’t act, but they have charisma to burn with
obligatory thousand yard stares and solemn affirmations of loyalty and
respect. These rap sensations only come alive during their one live
performance midway through Turn It Up, finally living up to the title as they
bust their moves in a club (or is it an abandoned aircraft hangar -- all the
better for a tie-in music video).
Turn It Up isn’t a bad film, content to be merely sluggish and generic.
Projects like this don’t feel scripted -- they’re packaged, complete with a hot
soundtrack. I'll bet it made for a swell looking deal memo. If anything is to
be learned from Ice Cube’s success, it is not that rap stars make bankable
pictures. Cube brought his own distinct, original voice to Friday and The
Players Club, stories only indirectly related to the hood. He has an ear for
vivid dialogue and seems carefully selective of his cast and crew. To date, he’
s been the only filmmaker smart enough to place the explosive comic Bernie Mac
(The Original Kings of Comedy) in a lead role.
Audiences have responded to Ice Cube’s material over his contemporaries because
he takes calculated risks. The result is something fresh and new, and the
masses thrive on fresh and new when the studios quake in fear at the thought of
pushing the envelope. (Even when those films make tons of money -- I cite The
Matrix and The Silence of the Lambs as world heavyweight champions of this
theory.) Turn It Up never aspires to be more than an excuse for Pras and Ja
Rule to flash their ultra-sleek MTV fashions for 90 minutes. With trends
seemingly changing every week, the public is fickle. It’s a safe bet there’s
another urban hip-hop drama being hustled through production even as you read
this review. Watch out, Pras - your 15 minutes are almost up.
Or turn it off.
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp



