IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,4/10
8964
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe two worst barbers in Harlem become cops while a real estate developer forces people out of Harlem.The two worst barbers in Harlem become cops while a real estate developer forces people out of Harlem.The two worst barbers in Harlem become cops while a real estate developer forces people out of Harlem.
Vincent Pastore
- Tony 'Clams' Como
- (as Vinny Pastore)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
What a fantastic movie! Wow! I loved, loved, loved this movie!
If there was ever a movie that was built for the dollar theater back in the day, this was it!
What an incredible concept and amazing, pretty much flawless execution on film.
The late director Ted Demme. His touch on this is masterful.
It's dang near an action film. Very similar, a close relative to New Jack City, which is from this same glorious era in movies and I also adore much the same.
I remember seeing the videocassette box of this in the video store and just thinking it was some silly urban comedy, because that is how they literally packaged it, but it is so much more than that.
Yes, it is funny, but make no mistake, this sucker is gritty too.
I love it.
Funny and gritty.
Old school New York.
Rappers playing normal roles of normal people. Unannounced cameos.
It's so great.
Most of today's youth wouldn't even realize these dudes are rappers.
And Denis Leary and Colin Quinn.
Bernie Mac too?
This movie rules!
And all from the director of Beautiful Girls?
Who knew?
Not me!
But I definitely know now.
Who the Man is!
If there was ever a movie that was built for the dollar theater back in the day, this was it!
What an incredible concept and amazing, pretty much flawless execution on film.
The late director Ted Demme. His touch on this is masterful.
It's dang near an action film. Very similar, a close relative to New Jack City, which is from this same glorious era in movies and I also adore much the same.
I remember seeing the videocassette box of this in the video store and just thinking it was some silly urban comedy, because that is how they literally packaged it, but it is so much more than that.
Yes, it is funny, but make no mistake, this sucker is gritty too.
I love it.
Funny and gritty.
Old school New York.
Rappers playing normal roles of normal people. Unannounced cameos.
It's so great.
Most of today's youth wouldn't even realize these dudes are rappers.
And Denis Leary and Colin Quinn.
Bernie Mac too?
This movie rules!
And all from the director of Beautiful Girls?
Who knew?
Not me!
But I definitely know now.
Who the Man is!
This film was so funny back in the day. In their first film, Ed Lover & Dr. Dre are hilarous as bumbling cops trying to slove a murder. The film is full of hip hop cameo's and is a semi classic when it comes to hip hop themed films mainly for the cameo's.
This movie was basically a poor excuse to put a lot of rap stars on screen. It was the biggest compilation of hip hop artists in a movie since Krush Groove or House Party. I guess they figured if they had enough big, well known names they wouldn't need to have a good story nor would they have to worry about anyone's acting ability.
There were legitimate actors thrown in there as well: Dennis Leary was one but he was horrible as the exaggerated police sergeant. Bernie Mac and Bill Belamy were also in it but they were there strictly for one-liners and coordinated zingers that I'm sure they hoped would catch on to become pop buzz-phrases like, "You got knocked out!" and other such phrases.
It was cool to see all of the various artists I know and loved when I was a teenager. A few of the iconic artists are now dead (Heavy D, Guru, Jam Master Jay, one of the Chrises from Kriss Kross, Bernie Mac, and maybe others). But gone are the days when I could be simply awed by my favorite artists and consider their movie good. I need substance, content, or at least quality laughs. This had none of that.
There were legitimate actors thrown in there as well: Dennis Leary was one but he was horrible as the exaggerated police sergeant. Bernie Mac and Bill Belamy were also in it but they were there strictly for one-liners and coordinated zingers that I'm sure they hoped would catch on to become pop buzz-phrases like, "You got knocked out!" and other such phrases.
It was cool to see all of the various artists I know and loved when I was a teenager. A few of the iconic artists are now dead (Heavy D, Guru, Jam Master Jay, one of the Chrises from Kriss Kross, Bernie Mac, and maybe others). But gone are the days when I could be simply awed by my favorite artists and consider their movie good. I need substance, content, or at least quality laughs. This had none of that.
10wargo802
Anyone who is a fan of Dr.Dre and Ed Lover would have certain expectations for any film from the duo. "Who's the Man?" far exceeds those expectations.
And if you are a fan of music or rap in general it is still brilliant. If you are not a fan of any of these things then its brilliance is lost on you so go and watch Gone in 60 Seconds you ignorant fool.
"Who's the Man?" funny, silly, creative, relevant, full of cameos, and includes an impeccable soundtrack (including a complete performance of Naughty By Nature's "Hip-Hop Hooray"). I give credit to Ted Demme, it takes balls to direct a spoof with a straight face, but that's just what he did; and, for the most part, he succeeded (although some jokes do fall flat). An no film has ever gotten so much out of cameos. Everyone who was on MTV in the early 90's was included in this film (except for the disappointing exclusion of Jon Stewart). Over 50 hip-hop stars, and Colin Quinn, Dennis Leary, Kurt Loder, Bill Bellamy... This is movie belongs in the same company of A Hard Day's Night, Purple Rain, Gimme Shelter, High Fidelity, and The Commitments as a movie that perfectly blends film and music. A true cinematic achievement.
And if you are a fan of music or rap in general it is still brilliant. If you are not a fan of any of these things then its brilliance is lost on you so go and watch Gone in 60 Seconds you ignorant fool.
"Who's the Man?" funny, silly, creative, relevant, full of cameos, and includes an impeccable soundtrack (including a complete performance of Naughty By Nature's "Hip-Hop Hooray"). I give credit to Ted Demme, it takes balls to direct a spoof with a straight face, but that's just what he did; and, for the most part, he succeeded (although some jokes do fall flat). An no film has ever gotten so much out of cameos. Everyone who was on MTV in the early 90's was included in this film (except for the disappointing exclusion of Jon Stewart). Over 50 hip-hop stars, and Colin Quinn, Dennis Leary, Kurt Loder, Bill Bellamy... This is movie belongs in the same company of A Hard Day's Night, Purple Rain, Gimme Shelter, High Fidelity, and The Commitments as a movie that perfectly blends film and music. A true cinematic achievement.
I recently rewatched Who's the Man (1993) on Tubi. The storyline follows two best friends in New York who are struggling financially and lack direction in life. When the local police department becomes desperate for recruits, they decide to try out-assuming they have no chance of getting selected... until they do.
Directed by Ted Demme (Blow), the film stars Ed Lover (Undisputed), Doctor Dré (Juice), Ice-T (New Jack City), Bernie Mac (Bad Santa), Denis Leary (Suicide Kings), and Bill Bellamy (Fled).
As a teenager, I loved this movie as a companion piece to Yo! MTV Raps. It boasts an impressive lineup of rapper cameos and a fun soundtrack (which I definitely had as a kid). While the story and acting are rough, Bernie Mac and Denis Leary deliver hilarious performances that make it worthwhile. The premise has a Police Academy-style vibe with a street-smart spin, though it leans into the ridiculous.
In conclusion, Who's the Man is a nostalgic rap movie with a few redeeming elements, but it's still pretty bad. I'd score it a 4/10.
Directed by Ted Demme (Blow), the film stars Ed Lover (Undisputed), Doctor Dré (Juice), Ice-T (New Jack City), Bernie Mac (Bad Santa), Denis Leary (Suicide Kings), and Bill Bellamy (Fled).
As a teenager, I loved this movie as a companion piece to Yo! MTV Raps. It boasts an impressive lineup of rapper cameos and a fun soundtrack (which I definitely had as a kid). While the story and acting are rough, Bernie Mac and Denis Leary deliver hilarious performances that make it worthwhile. The premise has a Police Academy-style vibe with a street-smart spin, though it leans into the ridiculous.
In conclusion, Who's the Man is a nostalgic rap movie with a few redeeming elements, but it's still pretty bad. I'd score it a 4/10.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesTerrence Howard's film debut.
- PatzerDemetrius makes mention of a bible scripture "Every man's sword will be against his brother". He says this is from the book of Daniel. It is actually from Ezekiel 38:21.
- Zitate
Sgt. Cooper: You fucked me! You fucked me! You might as well kiss me 'cause you're fucking me!
- SoundtracksPrecious Lord, Take My Hand
Vocal by Bowlegged Lou (Courtesy of Capitol Records)
Written by Thomas A. Dorsey
Produced by Full Force
Published by Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 11.299.730 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 4.533.392 $
- 25. Apr. 1993
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 11.299.730 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 25 Min.(85 min)
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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