Video/DVD Reviews

Video/DVD Reviews -
Tupac: Resurrection: Navigation

Tupac: Resurrection - R

Rate It!
Pause 16+
4 stars

Gripping documentary, not for young kids. See it with your teens.

Rating: R for strong language and images of drugs, violence and sex Studio: Paramount Pictures Directed By: Lauren Lazin Cast: Tupac Shakur Running Time: 111 minutes Release Date: 11/13/2003 Genre: Drama

It's quick and easy to pass on
this great info!

Common Sense Note

This movie challenges the audience. Teens are going to want to see it because they like the music and the images of Tupac's "gangsta" lifestyle. This movie shows it like it is and you see how conflicted Tupac was. Arrested 12 times but also very caring about his community, he is not an easy person as a role model. Just know there is graphic everything here -- sex, violence, language, drugs, lifestyle and of course he dies at the end. But there's no getting around his influence and importance in the teenaged cultural world. As parents you can either go with the R rating and not let your kids see it. But if you do, please consider going with them and taking the opportunity to talk with them about what your kids think Tupac's importance is both to them and the broader culture. What kind of role model is he? What do they think about how he behaves toward women, authority, his community? Why do they think he did what he did and expressed himself the way he did? Why do they think his music is so good? There is fertile ground here to really address a huge part of pop culture and learn how your kids are absorbing its messages. Finally, you might ask them if they think the documentary is historically accurate and find out how they interpret what they see and whether or not they question powerful images such as the ones presented in this film.

Rate It!

Common Sense Review

Reviewed By: Nell Minow

This mesmerizing documentary about the late rap star Tupac Shakur makes clear what a talented performer and vibrant presence he was, even for audiences who don't listen to rap music and aren't quite sure which rap star/convicted felon/murder victim he was.

But it does more than that. It tells a deeply moving story of a gifted, thoughtful, and intelligent young man who has to cope with the challenges of poverty and then has to manage the even more complex challenges of success. And it deals forthrightly with the problems of race and class in America, from racism and police brutality to black on black crime, absent fathers, and the uneasy relationship between showbiz "thug life" and the real thing. At one point, he says, "I really did believe that no black person would ever shoot me."

The movie was produced by Shakur's mother and MTV, which provided access to broadcast footage, interviews, and outtakes. That allows Shakur, eerily, to tell the story himself, even predicting his own violent death. He warns us that this will be a story of "violence, redemption, and love," and that proves to be true.

Shakur's mother was one of the few women leaders of the Black Panthers. She went to prison when she was pregnant with him. He was deeply aware that he served time in prison before he was born. He also respected his mother's activism but felt that he did not get enough of her attention. "I always felt she cared more about 'the people' than her people." He missed having a strong male role model. "You need a man to teach you to be a man."

He cared for his community but hated being poor. He briefly dealt drugs, but even the local dealers urged him to follow his dream. He loved performing and was accepted at a school for the arts. By the time he was a teenager, he was working professionally. By the time he was 20, he was a successful recording artist.

He understood the irony when it was only after he became famous that he was picked up by the cops. A citation for jaywalking led to a confrontation that became a beating.

Meanwhile, he is stunned and humbled to find that his visibility has young people looking to him for leadership. He takes it seriously, and gives a lot of thought to what he wants to tell them. He helps develop a code of behavior for "thugs" that covers things like keeping civilians out of the line of fire in gang warfare and taking responsibility for children.

Shakur is clearly and refreshingly as free from any form of prejudice as it is possible to be, at least in his own relationships. He uses racist and sexist language in the songs he writes, but also writes about respecting women. He has enormous charm but is also a thoughtful young man who wants to understand the world better and he wants to make an important contribution. He admits his mistakes freely and he learns from them and moves on. Anyone who watches this movie will feel his loss and want to carry forward his dreams.

Parents should know that this movie includes a great deal of very bad language, including racist terms (with some discussion of when they are and are not racist). Characters use drugs, drink, and smoke, and the ravages of drug addiction are frankly described. Characters engage in violent behavior and sexual abuse, including assault and shooting, and some go to jail. Shakur and other characters are shot and murdered. There are candid discussions of police brutality and racism. All of these issues and the consequences are presented in a realistic way that parents may find more suitable for teenagers than the usual shoot-out and explosion movie.

Families who see this movie could talk about the way that Shakur changed and grew and what he learned. They should talk about his question, "How can you love like an angel when you are surrounded by devils?" and his statement that "I did not create thug life; I diagnosed it." Did he also promote it? What did he mean that "a studio is cheaper than a therapist?" They should also look at Shakur's code of ethics for thugs on this site.

Families who appreciate this movie may also appreciate Hurricane and Malcolm X. They may also appreciate another documentary about tragic musical figures, The Filth and the Fury, about the Sex Pistols.

Rate It! Send to a Friend

It's quick and easy to pass on
this great info!

Content
CS adults kids

Sexual Content

Explicit sexual references and situations, including sexual assault.

Violence

Beating, shooting, sexual assault, murder. Shakur and other characters are shot and murdered. There are candid discussions of police brutality.

Language

Constant bad language.

Message

 

Social Behavior

This movie has both strong and negative portrayals-it's very conflicted.

 

Commercialism

Brand name alcohol.

 

Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco

Characters use drugs, drink, and smoke, and the ravages of drug addiction are frankly described.

Rate It Now

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

OR

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

It only takes a minute to get great benefits! Sign up now and get a FREE Internet Survival Guide!