A new episode of the Black Sheep video series has just been released, and in this one we’re taking a look at a movie you might expect to be really popular, since it’s a sci-fi action thriller that pits Denzel Washington against Russell Crowe. It’s not popular… but maybe it should be. The movie is Virtuosity (watch it Here), and you can hear all about its virtues by checking out the video embedded above.
Directed by Brett Leonard from a screenplay written by Eric Bernt, Virtuosity has the following synopsis: A former cop who has been imprisoned for murdering the psychopath who killed his family, Parker Barnes is recruited to test out a new virtual-reality program where the goal is to apprehend a computer-generated being called Sid 6.7, who has been modeled on hundreds of deranged criminals. When Sid manages to escape into the real world, Barnes must...
Directed by Brett Leonard from a screenplay written by Eric Bernt, Virtuosity has the following synopsis: A former cop who has been imprisoned for murdering the psychopath who killed his family, Parker Barnes is recruited to test out a new virtual-reality program where the goal is to apprehend a computer-generated being called Sid 6.7, who has been modeled on hundreds of deranged criminals. When Sid manages to escape into the real world, Barnes must...
- 9/7/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Wendy Raquel Robinson attending Bet's "The Game" and "Let's Stay Together" premiere afterparty.Photo copyright by Koi Sojer / PR Photos. Joyful Drake, Nadine Ellis and Wendy Raquel Robinson attending Bet's "The Game" and "Let's Stay Together" premiere afterparty.Photo copyright by Koi Sojer / PR Photos. Mari Morrow, Kym whitley, Norwood Young and Claudia Jordan attending Bet's "The Game" and "Let's Stay Together" premiere afterparty.Photo copyright by Koi Sojer / PR Photos. Bert Belasco III attending Bet's "The Game" and "Let's Stay Together" premiere afterparty.Photo copyright by Koi Sojer / PR Photos. Angela Gibbs and Marla Gibbs attending Bet's "The Game" and "Let's Stay Together" premiere afterparty.Photo copyright by Koi Sojer / PR Photos. 01/06/2011 -...
- 1/10/2011
- by James Wray
- Monsters and Critics
The "booty is marinating" for a busy playboy who avoids disaster with his girlfriend while maintaining a half-dozen steamy affairs and looking for more women "who want to be played."
Starring MTV veejay Bill Bellamy ("love jones"), a number of players in HBO's "Def Comedy Jam" and Robert Townsend's "B.A.P.S". and many topless women, Gramercy Pictures' "Def Jam's How to Be a Player" is largely unsavory summer fodder destined to rouse only mild interest.
A crude, exploitative sex comedy about one man who pursues happiness with controllable women who crave his body, "Player" is surprisingly flat in terms of both filmmaking and the elementary screenplay.
Whereas movies as diverse as "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery" and "Shampoo" have covered this territory with crowd-pleasing and critical success, "Player" caters to adolescents with fantasies about potent sex lives that have no dire consequences.
There's no doubt that self-nicknamed "Mandingo" Dray (Bellamy) is a charismatic scoundrel, but his victims are willing and use him with care. Undermined by the physical raunchiness and such foul shtick as Gilbert Gottfried's perverted nerd doorman character, the satire is narrated after a fashion by the supremely confident lead.
Under the lackluster guidance of first-time director Lionel C. Martin, a veteran of music videos, "Player" feels like a sitcom pilot for the Nudity Channel. Perfectly dressed himself and prepared for action, with a potent rap, Dray makes the rounds one day with his hapless but aggressively rude pals -- David (Pierre), Kilo (Jermaine "Big Hugg" Hopkins) and Spootie (A.J. Johnson).
Going steady with unsuspecting Lisa (Lark Voorhies), Dray lets his nosy sister (Natalie Desselle) and her flirtatious friend (Mari Morrow) examine his apartment for a college anthropology project. The feisty sister, who has been in love and been hurt, goes on the warpath when Morrow's character falls for Dray.
We're introduced to the hero's lovers in a phone-message sequence that sets the naughty tone, but more extended visits with Beverly Johnson, Stacii Jae Johnson, Amber Smith and Gillian Iliana Waters lead to a climactic party where Dray is set up to lose all his girlfriends and "repent."
The film's nominal high point comes when Max Julien -- star of the 1973 film "The Mack", a poster of which Dray has in his apartment -- puts in a cameo appearance as the inspiration for Dray's prodigious appetite for females. As a jealous husband, Bernie Mac joins the rest of the cast in using manic energy to no avail. Still, Bellamy and everyone else emerge unscathed.
The TV stand-up comedy roots of the creative talent are all too evident, from uninspired production design to awkward pacing, and even the Def Jam soundtrack is not playable enough.
DEF JAM'S HOW TO BE A PLAYER
Gramercy Pictures
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment presents
An Island Pictures production
in association with Outlaw Prods.
Director Lionel C. Martin
Screenwriters Mark Brown, Demetria Johnson
Producers Mark Burg, Todd Baker,
Russell Simons, Preston Holmes
Executive producers Robert Newmyer,
Jeffrey Silver, Stan Lathan
Production designer Bruce Curtis
Costume designer Mimi Melgaard
Editor William Young
Music Darren Floyd
Casting Jaki Brown-Karman,
Robyn M. Mitchell
Color/stereo
Cast:
Drayton Jackson Bill Bellamy
Jenny Jackson Natalie Desselle
Lisa Lark Voorhies
Katrina Mari Morrow
David Pierre
Robin Beverly Johnson
Kilo Jermaine Hopkins
Spootie A.J. Johnson
Uncle Fred Max Julien
Running time -- 93 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
Starring MTV veejay Bill Bellamy ("love jones"), a number of players in HBO's "Def Comedy Jam" and Robert Townsend's "B.A.P.S". and many topless women, Gramercy Pictures' "Def Jam's How to Be a Player" is largely unsavory summer fodder destined to rouse only mild interest.
A crude, exploitative sex comedy about one man who pursues happiness with controllable women who crave his body, "Player" is surprisingly flat in terms of both filmmaking and the elementary screenplay.
Whereas movies as diverse as "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery" and "Shampoo" have covered this territory with crowd-pleasing and critical success, "Player" caters to adolescents with fantasies about potent sex lives that have no dire consequences.
There's no doubt that self-nicknamed "Mandingo" Dray (Bellamy) is a charismatic scoundrel, but his victims are willing and use him with care. Undermined by the physical raunchiness and such foul shtick as Gilbert Gottfried's perverted nerd doorman character, the satire is narrated after a fashion by the supremely confident lead.
Under the lackluster guidance of first-time director Lionel C. Martin, a veteran of music videos, "Player" feels like a sitcom pilot for the Nudity Channel. Perfectly dressed himself and prepared for action, with a potent rap, Dray makes the rounds one day with his hapless but aggressively rude pals -- David (Pierre), Kilo (Jermaine "Big Hugg" Hopkins) and Spootie (A.J. Johnson).
Going steady with unsuspecting Lisa (Lark Voorhies), Dray lets his nosy sister (Natalie Desselle) and her flirtatious friend (Mari Morrow) examine his apartment for a college anthropology project. The feisty sister, who has been in love and been hurt, goes on the warpath when Morrow's character falls for Dray.
We're introduced to the hero's lovers in a phone-message sequence that sets the naughty tone, but more extended visits with Beverly Johnson, Stacii Jae Johnson, Amber Smith and Gillian Iliana Waters lead to a climactic party where Dray is set up to lose all his girlfriends and "repent."
The film's nominal high point comes when Max Julien -- star of the 1973 film "The Mack", a poster of which Dray has in his apartment -- puts in a cameo appearance as the inspiration for Dray's prodigious appetite for females. As a jealous husband, Bernie Mac joins the rest of the cast in using manic energy to no avail. Still, Bellamy and everyone else emerge unscathed.
The TV stand-up comedy roots of the creative talent are all too evident, from uninspired production design to awkward pacing, and even the Def Jam soundtrack is not playable enough.
DEF JAM'S HOW TO BE A PLAYER
Gramercy Pictures
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment presents
An Island Pictures production
in association with Outlaw Prods.
Director Lionel C. Martin
Screenwriters Mark Brown, Demetria Johnson
Producers Mark Burg, Todd Baker,
Russell Simons, Preston Holmes
Executive producers Robert Newmyer,
Jeffrey Silver, Stan Lathan
Production designer Bruce Curtis
Costume designer Mimi Melgaard
Editor William Young
Music Darren Floyd
Casting Jaki Brown-Karman,
Robyn M. Mitchell
Color/stereo
Cast:
Drayton Jackson Bill Bellamy
Jenny Jackson Natalie Desselle
Lisa Lark Voorhies
Katrina Mari Morrow
David Pierre
Robin Beverly Johnson
Kilo Jermaine Hopkins
Spootie A.J. Johnson
Uncle Fred Max Julien
Running time -- 93 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.