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8 Mile ( Eminem )


 

Directed by
Curtis Hanson

Writing credits ( WGA)
Scott Silver (written by)

 


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Authentic U.S. Region 1
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Genre: Drama / Music

Tagline: Go back to where it all started.

Plot Outline: A young rapper (Eminem) in Detroit struggles with his anger and social status through music. A rap version of "Saturday Night Fever." B-Rabbit, a wannabe rapper from the wrong side of Detroit's 8 Mile, has problems: he dumps his girlfriend when she tells him she's pregnant; to save money to make a demo tape, he moves into his alcoholic mom's trailer; his job's a dead end, and he's just choked at the local head-to-head rap contest. Things improve when he meets Alex - an aspiring model headed for New York - and a fast-talking pal promises to set up the demo. Then new setbacks: Alex isn't faithful, mom rejects him, rifts surface with his friends, and he's mugged by rivals. Everything hinges on the next rap showdown at the club. Can B-Rabbit pull truth out of his cap?

User Rating: 6.7/10 (25,477 votes)

Cast overview, first billed only:
  Eminem Jimmy 'B-Rabbit' Smith, Jr.
  Kim Basinger Stephanie Smith
  Mekhi Phifer David 'Future' Porter
  Brittany Murphy Alex
  Evan Jones Cheddar Bob
  Omar Benson Miller Sol George
  De'Angelo Wilson DJ Iz
  Eugene Byrd Wink
  Taryn Manning Janeane
  Larry Hudson Bouncer
  Proof Lil' Tic
  Mike Bell Shorty Mike
  DJ Head Battle DJ
  Michael Shannon Greg Buehl
  Chloe Greenfield Lily Smith

Also Known As:
8 Mile (Germany)
Fight Music (USA) (working title)
Fight Song (USA) (working title)
Untitled Detroit Project (USA) (working title)
MPAA: Rated R for strong language, sexuality, some violence and drug use.
Runtime: 110 min
Country: USA / Germany
Language: English
Color: Color
Sound Mix: DTS / Dolby Digital / SDDS
Certification: Taiwan:R-18 / USA:R (certificate #39361) / Canada:AA (Ontario) / Canada:18A (Alberta/British Columbia/Manitoba) / Switzerland:12 (canton of Zurich) / Canada:14 (Nova Scotia) / Argentina:16 / Australia:M / Brazil:16 / Canada:13+ (Quebec) / Chile:14 / Finland:K-15 / France:U / Germany:12 / Hong Kong:IIB / Iceland:14 / Ireland:18 / Italy:VM14 / Japan:PG-12 / Netherlands:12 / New Zealand:R13 (re-rating) / New Zealand:R16 (original rating) / Norway:15 / Peru:14 / Philippines:R-13 / Portugal:M/12 / Singapore:NC-16 (edited for re-rating) / Singapore:R(A) (original rating) / South Korea:18 / Spain:18 / Sweden:11 / Switzerland:12 (canton of Geneva) / Switzerland:12 (canton of Vaud) / Switzerland:12 (canton of the Grisons) / UK:15 / Singapore:M18 (DVD rating)

Trivia: Quentin Tarantino was asked to the movie but had to reluctantly decline as he was in the middle of production for Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) and Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004).

Goofs: Crew or equipment visible: When Jimmy Smith Jr. is talking outside the factory, the crew (holding the boom mike) are reflected in the window behind him

Quotes: B. Rabbit: Ward, I think you were a little hard on the beaver. So was Eddie Haskell, Wally, and Mrs. Cleaver.

Awards: Won Oscar. Another 8 wins & 17 nominations  

User Comments:
Good, but nowhere near perfect, 26 November 2002
7/10
Author: Tyson Redmond from Santa Monica, Ca 

8 Mile tells the story of a white kid on the wrong side of the tracks living in Detroit with a dead end job and a trailer park mom. Deep inside, he aspires to break free from the chains of the reality of his life through the poetry and passion and rawness of rap; the one place he can possibly gain a feeling of purpose and hear his own voice. Obviously, it's no big secret that this storyline runs very parallel to that of of Eminem's own roots and his own aspirations. Where fiction and reality collide is blurred and that works for the picture. First off, I think Curtis Hanson did a great job rebuilding that world and protecting his novice lead. He understood the material and I was drawn in to the world that he recreated. Also, the cinematography widely lends itself towards upping the ante of the picture and making you feel the authenticity of a world and a place where many of us have never traveled nor never will. As for Eminem himself, at first I found him a little stoic, but given the fact that this guy has never acted before, regardless of how 'autobiographical' the material may be, I thought he did a decent job in front of the camera. Hanson was wise to protect his lead with awesome supporting work from Mekhi Phifer and pretty much everyone else that portrays his friends and peers in the film. Eminem obviously was a little green and surrounding him with these actors gave the movie and Eminem's journey more credence. Brittany Murphy was also very good, but I found her character to be a bit expedient. She definitely was not used to her full potential and I felt that if they had used her relationship with Rabbit to a larger or deeper extent, it only would have lent more to the film. One of the scenes I was most impressed with was the sex scene between Murphy and Eminem. Gone were the Hollywood antics of glossing it up or ghetto fabulous and I felt that Hanson captured something that was fascinating, uncomfortable and realistic that I haven't seen in a Hollywood film before.

Now for what I feel made this movie not rise to the top... First off, when Kim Basinger first came on the screen and opened her mouth, I thought the rest of the film was going to be destined for failure. Not only was she weak in the role, she was grossly miscast. There are so many actresses in that age range that I find it mind boggling that Basinger was used for something in which she stood out like a fish out of water. The film also almost lost me in the beginning due to the length of the first scene in the bathroom when Eminem is psyching himself up. The placement of the scene wasn't a problem but it went on way too long - I would have prepared an edited down version. If you're watching Robert DeNiro for that long looking in a mirror, yes, it'll probably work, but to put that type of pressure on a first timer with no training, especially since it's shortly followed by Basinger's first scene was a risky move and one that I think they could have found a better choice for. The other thing that kept this film from being a totally strong film for me was the screenplay itself. I kept finding myself asking why the hell Scott Silver had some of these extraneous scenes in the story. There was a good story to be told here and a whole world to be explored by the general public that doesn't know that much of it, and the script and film could have and should have been a good 25 minutes shorter and tighter.

Anyway, still an intriguing film. And interesting insight into a different side of life and I commend Eminem for taking the risk. It's a lot to bite off and half the country is just dying for a chance to decimate him. If for nothing else, this film is worth the last 5 minutes. When he was up there battling, I actually started clapping and cheering out loud in the theater - no matter where he stands as an actor, when he's in his domain, he is fantastic, whether you like what he's saying or not.

A 7 out of 10 for a movie that was actually worth spending a budget on. Not perfect, but definitely it's own thing with some good moments. And when they're good, they're really good.


UPC 025192198120