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50 Cent - The New Breed [w/ Bonus 3-Track CD]

50 Cent - The New Breed [w/ Bonus 3-Track CD]

List Price: $19.98
Your Price: $17.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 50 Cent
Review: This is one of the best DVD's ever made becasue it has my man 50 in it. GGGGGGGGGGG UNIT. Eminem is hot in this DVD. Everyone who is a 50 cnet fan should by this. If you don't have the cd buy it. It is the best cd every made.

Im out
Bye

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Wanksta
Review: This Movie should be great for 50 fans, but i must warn you, this is a "wanksta" dvd. 50 Cent grew up in the hood, he got shot, so what? I was not overwelmed by any of this, IF U ARE A REAL RAP FAN, do not get this DVD. Its Just a young punk trying 2 be funny and show kids how gunshots and weed make you cool. But if your that 50 cent fan, warin a wife beater smokin a joint in yo lowrider kickin it wit tha homies while drinkin a 40, then u are welcome 2 it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Waste of my money
Review: This was a waste of money, all the video was on the 2 disc set that came out and fifty [stinks] live. The 3 tracks were the worst ever. This I can tell you is [bad]. DO NOT BUY THIS ...!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Sadly dissapointing
Review: When I got the DVD, I bought it as a 50 Cent fan. I really didn't know what to expect from it. The actual documentary is about 20 minutes, and the Tony Yayo jail interview is 5-10 minutes. The rest of the stuff is just a live concert in Detroit, music videos (& behind the scenes for two music videos), & 3 sessions @aol. The bonus CD is worthless because all the songs that are on there are on most of his mixtapes. If you really want to see it, rent it (if possible) or borrow it from someone who has it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The New Breed Definitely Worth Buying
Review: Whether he's deserving of it or not, 50 Cent is, at the moment anyway, easily the hottest hip-hop star this side of Slim Shady. Despite a mediocre major label debut in Get Rich Or Die Tryin', it's sold by the bucketloads, and naturally the millions who've bought into the 50 Cent philosophy want more music and information about the former Queens hustler. For those folks, Shady/Aftermath has quickly released 50 Cent's first stand-alone DVD (there was a limited edition DVD with 50's album, but it was in very limited quantities so only a few actually got it, including myself), aptly titled The New Breed. Clocking in at about 2 hours with quite a wide array of content, along with a bonus music CD, it's certainly an ambitious documentary/video collection. 50 fans will eat this up, and even those who didn't much care for his record might like it too, as it's quite interesting material.

Essentially, the DVD is split into 4 different sections. The first one features a pair of documentaries; one tells about the life of 50 Cent, discussing (in light detail) a lot of 50's musical situations, such as his being shot up before shooting a video for "Thug Love" with Destiny's Child for his unreleased Power of the Dollar record, then being dropped. It's rather short, at around 20 minutes long - but it's made up for with a nice widescreen presentation for videophiles, and it's quite interesting to see 50 portrayed as a pretty nice guy despite all his past situations.

The other half is a short interview with G-Unit member Tony Yayo, conducted in prison, where Yayo is serving a gun-possession related sentence. There's a load of "Free Yayo" propaganda thrown around in this segment and to be honest the interview is rather dry and worthless; just a vein of pimping out the G-Unit album coming later this year when Yayo (I keep missing the second Y, so hopefully I haven't been calling him Yao and reenacting the Yo/Yao Visa commercial this whole time!) esca...I mean is released from jail.

From here there's a nice selection of music videos, and naturally, a documentary about the making of the videos. Given that I don't watch music-video stations anymore (not that music video stations play music anymore, or anything), watching the videos for "Wanksta", "In Da Club", and "Heat" were fresh viewings for me. As much as I can't stand the actual song "Wanksta" the video is funny, featuring 50's son playing with a "wanksta" doll (a not so subtle nod to people who refer to Ja Foo...err Rule as an action figure version of 2Pac?). "In Da Club" is quite cool too, presented in widescreen and featuring Eminem and Dr. Dre overseeing the "creation" of 50 Cent; which is disturbing because 50 really does seem like another manufactured creation. Creepy. The final video, "Heat" is split into 2 editions; the "Street Edition" is a bit too intense for TV, apparently. The other version is likely to interest gamers, as it's a blatant takeoff of the Grand Theft Auto games, with an animated world and 50 rapping inside this world, while a couple dimwitted gamers (playing an Xbox, by the way - would it be cynical to ask how much cash Microsoft paid to feature an Xbox playing a GTA takeoff?) try to kill off some notorious thugs. It's a pretty amusing video, actually, though only presented in fullscreen like "Wanksta."

My only complaint about the video section involves edits; while there's a nice fat PA label on the case, the 50 videos are actually censored where they would be on television. I ask, why? It's supposed to be an uncensored/unedited version (a clean version is coming soon, apparently), so why not turn off the edited bits?

The best part of the DVD is easily the concert footage - recorded in February of this year in Eminem's hometown of Detroit. In front of a red-hot crowd of fans, this concert is actually quite cool to watch, though only 7 songs are picked off the concert - and not all of them are 50 Cent - the Obie Trice/50/Eminem track "Love Me" is performed, as well as D12, who perform "Rap Game", both from the 8 Mile soundtrack. The other 5 are off 50's record, though, including "In Da Club" and "Patiently Waiting." The Shady/Aftermath troupe really had fun on this one and it showed in the performances. Sprinkled around the concert footage is some behind-the-scenes stuff, with 50 at the local radio station answering questions from listeners, and a hilarious gag on the bellboy at a local hotel, with some other stuff too. No doubt, this is the strongest section of the disc.

The final DVD section is just some bonus material, featuring 50 and G-Unit, performing "Sessions @ AOL", on an online performance, I take it. The quality isn't really hot, though it's more about watching the guys rap and dance around while they're performing. Definitely, it's "just for die-hard fans" material, so I really didn't pay much attention to it. There's also a trailer for the 8 Mile DVD, if you haven't seen it yet.

As mentioned, The New Breed also comes with a CD of new 50 Cent music. It's only 3 songs, but somehow the 3 songs included are actually pretty decent. 2 of the 3 are actually G-Unit songs - "True Loyalty", discussing thug life, is a worthwhile listen, and "Eight Mile Road (G-Unit Remix) cops off Eminem's version from the 8 Mile soundtrack - though it's produced by Eminem himself, so it's not really a cop off. This song is only decent, saved by the great beats. The final song included is "In Da Hood", produced by Dre and starring Brooklyn who sings the hook and does a bit of rapping herself. 2 out of 3 ain't bad, as this final song on the CD is another decent, listenable cut, with Dre's production work shining through.

The Bottom Line
50 Cent - The New Breed is actually a very good DVD; especially for 50 fans looking for a great collection of 50 Cent material. Even for non-fans though, the great concert footage and 50 documentary is well worth the purchase price, and the bonus CD is solid, featuring some nice 50 Cent/G-Unit tracks. As far as music DVD's go, this is easily one of the better ones out there, whether the subject matter deserves his own DVD or not.


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