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Gridlock'd

Gridlock'd

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Endearing double act enlivens familiar crime comedy.
Review: Imagine 'While You Were Sleeping' set in a milieu of junkies, gangstas and cops. While their friend Cookie lies in emergency after a New Year's Eve overdose, musicians Spoon and Stretch decide to finally kick their habit. However, they quickly get lost in a Kafkaesque urban labyrinth of bureaucracy, its servants blocking their good intentions with rules, paperwork and (admittedly justified) resentment; they also get caught in the fire of gang warfare, as two lethally relentless hitmen (one dubbed portentously 'the Reaper') try to retrieve 3 oz of heroine the scallies found on a murdered friend.

The air of unreality produced by cramming a fantastic amount of life-changing and -threatening incident into one (holi)day is underlined by the generally comic tone, in which events seem more frustrating than genuinely dangerous. The situation of two wannabe-streetwise petty criminals forced to deal with the inanities of the welfare service is in itself funny. But the possibility of their friend dying is an urgent one, as is their desire to change, reinforced by the flashbacks revealing a trio of musicians on the brink of a big time they are now close to throwing away (it is important, however, to note the idealising function of these flashbacks, a kind of lost golden age against which the nightmare present is compared). The rapport between Tupac Shakur and Tim Roth is genuinely charming, not because they're super-funny or hyper-articulate like Tarantino characters, but because they're ordinary, likable blokes like most of us, down on their luck, with a poignant gap between their dreams and debilities, and an admirable, unexpected resourcefulness.

Comedy is one thing, though; it seems a bit of a cheat when the climax dissipates into cartoon, undoing the goodwill that helped the viewer overlook the lacklustre script and sometimes irritating visual tics.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: pac's realest performance
Review: in most of pacs movies hes just one of the great actors in the movie. he never really had to carry a movie, until gridlock'd. he is one of the main two characters. i think he gives his most memorable performance in this movie. the movie is kinda sad if u look at it, about to heroin actics tryin to kick. its a dope fiends "friday" the storyline isnt very compelling. its just a feel good about fellin bad movie. tim roth also gives a very good performance. i cant say enough about this movie. for some reason this s** was very funny. there is alot of humor and fun things about this movie. get this to see pac bein a real down to earth touchable person.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: pac's realest performance
Review: in most of pacs movies hes just one of the great actors in the movie. he never really had to carry a movie, until gridlock'd. he is one of the main two characters. i think he gives his most memorable performance in this movie. the movie is kinda sad if u look at it, about to heroin actics tryin to kick. its a dope fiends "friday" the storyline isnt very compelling. its just a feel good about fellin bad movie. tim roth also gives a very good performance. i cant say enough about this movie. for some reason this s** was very funny. there is alot of humor and fun things about this movie. get this to see pac bein a real down to earth touchable person.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: gridlocked
Review: JUST AN AMAZING MOVIE. pac down playes his lifestyle in every scene. one of my fav.'s because of how simple it is. this flick show's the pain and drama that faces some of us alive today. pac knew that. cause life goes on.....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very funny movie
Review: Of course this movie has to be good because Tupac is in it. Again he gives us an outstanding performance. Also Tim Roth and Thandie Newton played well. There should be more Tupac-movies available on DVD.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: great performance by 2Pac
Review: one of 2pac's best performances. this movie is mad funnie. recommended!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A sadly-overlooked urban masterpiece
Review: There's definitely an abundant amount of film buffs who watch this movie and simply look at it as a poor cousin of 'Trainspotting' and that is really a shame, because this is a great piece of work that truly stands on its own. For one thing, I think the comparison to 'Trainspotting' is slightly unfair, because while the two films are dealing with similar subject matters, they approach it in completely different manners, and, while I enjoy both movies, I prefer 'Gridlock'd' hands-down. The performances are all outstanding, particularly the late Tupac Shakur (who happens to be my favorite rapper, but that's neither here nor there). This is a lost little gem of a film that, after five years, has sadly STILL yet to find its audience.

The movie plays like a black comedy. It centers around two heroin addicts, Spoon, played by Shakur, and Stretch, played by Tim Roth. Both of them are burgeoning musicians who have a jazz trio with their other friend Cookie, played by Thandie Newton. These three share an apartment together somewhere in the broken-down inner-city and spend most of their time playing nightclubs, and shuffling around town, partying. However, one fateful New Year's Eve, after playing a gig Cookie overdoses, and Spoon and Stretch desperately rush her to a hospital. While she lies in a coma, and on life support, Spoon decides that its time for he and Stretch to kick their drug habit. Thus begins a very LONG day in which the two try everything in their power to find a rehab program for themselves. But in a cruel and unfeeling bureacracy, it seems like all the cards are against them. They circle endlessly through a series of social-welfare agencies that almost seem to be deliberately plotting to keep them away from help: They find they can't get medicards without being on welfare, can't get into detox without filling out forms and waiting 10 days, can't get into a rehab center because it's only for alcoholics, can't get the right forms because an office has moved, can't turn in the forms because an office is about to close. And if that wasn't enough to drive them crazy, they've also been mistaken for the murderers in a drug-related double homicide, putting their faces on the 6 o'clock news as fugitives on the run. So with local cops closely on their tail, as well as the real killers after them to reclaim 3 ounces of heroin that the two stole from the crime scene, Stretch and Spoon are finding it harder and harder to get clean.

The two leads, Shakur and Roth, are the heart of the movie. Their chemistry together is terrific, and their closer-than-two-brothers act is incredibly convincing. Their dialogue together, whether they're cool and relaxed, or frustrated and angry, or filled with remorse and regret over how they've lived their lives up until then, is always interesting. They are real people caught up in the absurdity and unfairness of life, which adds something I feel 'Trainspotting' sometimes lacked: humanity and compassion. Writer-director Vondie-Curtis Hall wrote the screenplay and makes his directorial debut here. He does a fine job, and seems to have a good handle on keeping the audience involved, without shutting them out by being overly-cynical in his depiction of streetlife and drug addicts.

I'd highly reccommend this film to anyone who hasn't seen it. If you are turned off by the grim-sounding material, believe me, you will be surprised at how human and fun it is. There are several scenes in this movie that are absolutely hilarious, in which the resentful social workers blow up at the two from across the counter. An ER nurse lets loose all her frustration and anger at Spoon while making him fill out forms before they can admit Cookie into the hospital, and, in probably my favorite scene, a desk clerk at the department of welfare completely snaps: "Yeah, we all been waiting for the day you come through that door and tell us you're ready not to be a drug addict. After five, ten years, you decide this is the day, and the whole f---in' world is supposed to stop!?" Life is hard, the film tells us, and getting through it with all your marbles is the hardest part. Abstract as it is, I think this movie gets the message across perfectly.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Nice acting
Review: This is a great movie with fabolues actor

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Some good stuff here....
Review: This is a pretty good movie, not as good as Juice, but good. Any Pac fan needs to get this movie. You won't regret it. Seriously.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unexpectedly funny
Review: this is dark comedy at its finest... rapper Shakur and Pulp Fiction's Roth are great together... the dialog is very funny. This is definitely worth adding to your collection.


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