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IMDbPro

Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story

  • Filme para televisão
  • 2001
  • TV-MA
  • 1 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,3/10
371
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story (2001)
BiografiaDrama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThis film is an unbiased look into the rise and fall of late 80's and early 90's rap superstar MC Hammer. It begins showing Hammer as a ball boy for his hometown Oakland Athletics, and ends ... Ler tudoThis film is an unbiased look into the rise and fall of late 80's and early 90's rap superstar MC Hammer. It begins showing Hammer as a ball boy for his hometown Oakland Athletics, and ends with his departure from Death Row Records. It delves deep into the ruthless dirty business... Ler tudoThis film is an unbiased look into the rise and fall of late 80's and early 90's rap superstar MC Hammer. It begins showing Hammer as a ball boy for his hometown Oakland Athletics, and ends with his departure from Death Row Records. It delves deep into the ruthless dirty business of record companies and dirty sanchez's. The most moving scene in the film is when Hammer... Ler tudo

  • Direção
    • Artie Mandelberg
  • Roteiristas
    • Eugene Corr
    • John Wierick
  • Artistas
    • Romany Malco
    • Tangi Miller
    • Royale Watkins
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,3/10
    371
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Artie Mandelberg
    • Roteiristas
      • Eugene Corr
      • John Wierick
    • Artistas
      • Romany Malco
      • Tangi Miller
      • Royale Watkins
    • 17Avaliações de usuários
    • 1Avaliação da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 indicação no total

    Fotos

    Elenco principal55

    Editar
    Romany Malco
    Romany Malco
    • M.C. Hammer
    Tangi Miller
    Tangi Miller
    • Stephanie
    Royale Watkins
    Kareem J. Grimes
    Kareem J. Grimes
    • Freddie
    • (as Kareem Grimes)
    Lamont Bentley
    • Tupac '2Pac' Shakur
    Robert Bailey Jr.
    Robert Bailey Jr.
    • Young MC Hammer
    Dennis Letts
    Dennis Letts
    Lex Blair
    • Young Wesley
    Evan McMillan
    • Young Freddy
    Billy Thomas
    • 'T'
    Stephan Jeanpierre
    • Young 'T'
    Cynthia Dorn
    • Betty
    Olivia Reed
    • Akeiba
    Tony Norris
    Tony Norris
    • Record Promoter
    Constance Jones
    • Joy Bailey
    Darrell Jones
    • Crew Member #3
    Jesse Adams
    • Chris
    Marco Perella
    Marco Perella
    • Reporter
    • Direção
      • Artie Mandelberg
    • Roteiristas
      • Eugene Corr
      • John Wierick
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários17

    5,3371
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    Avaliações em destaque

    dastrike30

    MC Hammer Tupac

    Actually MC Hammer and Tupac were down in 1996 when Hammer signed with Death Row. I have heard the album and it is tight. It is definitely a MC Hammer Death Row album. Hammer and Tupac were really close, like brothers. MC Hammer had spoken to Tupac right before he died and expressed concern, because Tupac got in an incident. MC Hammer believes that he could have did something to stop it, and he blamed the media for hyping up east coast-west coast rivalry. A person posting in 2001 who doesn't know that MC Hammer signed with death row, and was down with Tupac? Where have you been? He even goes back longer with Suge Knight. Suge Knight was there in 1994 at MC Hammer's house for the Funky Headhunter release. Suge Knight was saying that He was down with Hammer, and that Hammer was family, and that other artists were jealous, and trying to destroy him (like Too Short, who Hammer dogs in his death row album.) Hammer is from Oakland. Hammer is real. Do a search on Youtube for MC Hammer Tupac. Hammer talks about his relationship with Tupac, and after hearing that, you'll gain a lot of respect for Tupac. But any body who doesn't know that Tupac and Hammer were down must not have into rap in the 1990s.
    6SwingBatta

    Don't touch this: Hammer biopic falls short of the mark

    As if getting his own episode of VH1's "Behind the Music" four years ago – which was one of the very first episodes produced for the popular series – wasn't enough, it was perhaps only a matter of time before MC Hammer was immortalized in TV-movie infamy as well.

    "Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story," directed by Artie Mandelberg and starring relative unknown Romany Malco as the eponymous rapper and Bay Area native (despite bearing almost completely no resemblance to Hammer whatsoever), never rises above the level of cheesiness, predictability and tepid acting we're so accustomed to in small-screen, celebrity-biopic movies.

    It also falls victim to an array of incredibly bad wigs and wretched outfits that even the Brady Bunch would've rejected.

    It begins in 1974 with an eleven-year-old Hammer, then known as Stan Burrell (who was born in 1963; that's right, he'll hit the big 4-0 in less than two years) ditching church and running to the Oakland Coliseum, where he earns money by dancing to James Brown music in the parking lot. After being spotted by then-Athletics owner Charlie Finley, he's made an honorary batboy. He's soon nicknamed "Hammer" due to his resemblance to Hank Aaron. Scenes of bespectacled, wide-eyed Li'l Hammer in the dugout are spliced in with actual game footage. (And, he can apparently travel back in time as well; the ballgame shown is from 1972.)

    They could have titled this "Behind The Music: The Movie" and nobody would have noticed, because that's what "Too Legit" comes across as. It's practically clockwork with the 1997 documentary; it includes scenes of Hammer failing to make the A's roster, meeting future wife Stephanie (played by Tangi Miller), plus Hammer selling records from the trunk of his car, then being discovered by Capitol Records…you get the idea. Meanwhile, he's accompanied in practically every scene by his stone-faced brother, Wesley (portrayed by once-promising actor Royale Watkins, who probably still wishes to this very day that he'd turned down "Speed 2").

    Despite all the aforementioned activity, everything moves so painfully slow up to the point when his career takes off and eventually comes crashing down, which – let's be honest – is what we're really interested in watching.

    But when that time comes, the whole film then becomes a mess of a convoluted plot, a muddled script and positively abominable editing.

    For example, we're shown a barrage of abrupt jump cuts of pre-1990s-fame Hammer cutting a record in a studio to choreographing dance moves on a basketball court to selling albums out of his car. Then, out of nowhere, everything instantly cuts to a tour bus parked in an inner-city neighborhood, accompanied by Hammer along with his outrageous haircut and huge entourage. Just like that.

    And the violence factor is surprisingly high; there are numerous subplots in which a different character gets shot what seems every five minutes due to botched drug deals, band feuds and the like, and there is plenty of blood to boot. So many unimportant characters come and go quickly; I couldn't keep up with all of Hammer's friends and foes.

    Much of the second half of the film is devoted to Hammer performing in concert and doing silly promotional TV spots for his 1990 album "Please Hammer Don't Hurt ‘Em," that, as a result, everything else that follows is badly rushed. Some of his other accomplishments – and shortcomings – are ignored altogether (with the most notable being the ignominious absence of the smash hit "Pray").

    Besides the inevitable scenes of Hammer staring dumbfounded at tax lawyers upon being informed that he's suddenly gone bankrupt, the film also portrays him as a blowhard egomaniac; he barks orders to and berates his backup dancers like a sergeant drilling a group of privates in between more lengthy concert scenes (which look like they were shot on a tiny soundstage) while engaging in occasional spats with his wife that anyone could see coming from a country mile away. Stop me if you've traveled this road before.

    By the time the film focuses on Hammer's embarrassing foray into gangsta rap, his 1994 album "The Funky Headhunter," Mandelberg apparently forgot that he was making a movie about Hammer and not Tupac Shakur, for the latter inexplicably dominates the film's last 45 minutes. A gratuitous interpretation of Tupac's fatal shooting and subsequent lengthy shots of Hammer looming over his bedridden, comatose form arrive in full force, right before jump-cutting to one copout of an ending.

    As is with Hammer, the actor portraying Tupac (who is not identified in the closing credits) looks nor sounds nothing like the real thing, either.

    It must have been one hell of a well-kept secret that Hammer ever negotiated with Death Row Records, because I sure wasn't aware of it. Washed-up, has-been ex-wrestler Tony Norris (remember Ahmed Johnson, anyone?) is utterly laughable as – gasp – Suge Knight, who probably can't remember the last time his greatest hits didn't get him arrested.

    Oh, and despite playing the most notorious figure of the 1990s rap scene, Norris is listed in the closing credits as merely the "Record Promoter." Huh?

    Little mistakes pop up during the course of the film that hamper an already spotty effort. Hammer and Stephanie were married in 1985, not 1984. During Hammer's gangsta rap segment, Tupac is seen wearing a big red "FUBU 05" football jersey, which didn't even exist back in 1994. Contrary to what the film says, Hammer never signed with Death Row; "The Funky Headhunter" was released on the Giant label.

    MC Hammer himself is actually given an executive producer credit, but I doubt he had much input in this flimsy movie to begin with. This is on the same level as "The Right Connections" (1997), in which he starred.

    It definitely bears mentioning, however, that the charismatic Malco gives his all in this film. He handles the dancing scenes surprisingly well while lip-synching all of Hammer's songs, though I wonder if he could see a thing out of his glasses; those lenses were as big as the windshield of a '68 Cadillac.

    "Too Legit" is pretty much only for Hammer diehards (if there are any left); "Behind The Music," although outdated, is far more informative and entertaining. But if there's anything that stands out in this movie, it's when Hammer snaps back at an interviewer who says that his music is not "street enough." It's the best part of the film and worth watching just for that moment alone.

    "Too Legit" is an otherwise valiant effort that ultimately falls apart in the end. When you think about it, that's also pretty much MC Hammer's career in a nutshell. 5.5/10
    mkh357

    Terrible movie..Limp dancing...horrible acting

    I first want to point out that I am a huge MC Hammer fan..I was fan of his when he used to do low budget videos in nightclubs..and was selling his music out of the back of his car. This movie was so glossed over I felt I was watching an afternoon special. The actor playing Hammer didn't look anything like him..the hairpieces that were used to "go back in time" were awful...and look just like toupees'...the dancing was marginal..MC Hammer moved ten times faster and was a lot more electrifying than what was portrayed onscreen..

    Where was 2 Big MC?? Oaktown 357...Ace Juice, Special Generation etc....too many fragments missing from this story..Interesting how the song "Pray" was missing from the movie..yet they show Hammer in church twice...all in all this movie sucked..they would have been better off getting the real deal.
    johnerickrubis

    Could've been better, big things missing in Hollywoodized movie...

    As being co-executive producer of this autobiographical account of his life, MC Hammer could've done better explaining it to a degree where it should've been more specific. Some of what's missing in this movie are: some of his posse (like Oaktown 3-5-7 and 2BigMC), the proof (Billboard-wise) of his songs climbing to the top as history proved it in late '89 to early 90's, the clothes Hammer himself would really wear in his beginnings (I do have to admit some of the clothes he wears before he rises to fame are very too new), more of his children (he only had Akeyba portrayed in the movie), and most importantly, his role in the military which signifies his latest album 'ACTIVE DUTY' (which I'm not sure if it even cracked the Billboard 200 Albums in this day and age). Definitely huge chunks missing in the movie. Regarding the Hollywoodized elements, I didn't know Hammer faced so much of that gun-shooting thing. Or is that too fictional to prove? I was kinda confused by that, honestly .... The actor who portrayed Hammer as a child was a top notcher in his dancing moves but he don't look nothing like Hank Aaron when an athlete says he does. I saw a pic of the real Hammer when he was a kid. Definitely he looks like Hammer! The one who played him as an older Hammer did good on the moves, but still the real Hammer can do better! I do have to give this actor the kudos for putting his best. One thing, though. He doesn't look much of MC Hammer. Good try however ... Rest of the movie's tie-ins to the past is very very mixed. Many of the extras looked too too modern to even be in that timewarp of Hammer's past. There's not much folks with the Box, triangle-fades, Yellow highlights, but some of Hammer's posse had their styles in the movie on-point. The movie's theme shows a good lesson of how to be a rising star and learning from the mistakes we all face in life. I like it's religious inspirations .... Overall, it could've been better. Out of 5, I'd rate this a 2. Being a Hammer fan in the past, I still say Hammer paved the way for the rap music industry today. He let rap be known whether people liked him or not, especially his own.
    6capone666

    The Vidiot Reviews...

    Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story

    The hardest part of being successful is remembering to pay your taxes.

    A lesson learned by the young MC in this biography.

    From an early age Stanley Burrell (Robert Bailey Jr.) would dance outside of Oakland A's games for money.

    Eventually his moves landed him a job as the team's batboy and a nickname that would propel him into stardom.

    Spreading his gospel on Sunday years later and selling his rap singles on the street, Stanley's new pseudonym: MC Hammer (Romany Malco) starts spreading as well.

    It's not until he releases Can't Touch This, however, that Hammer hits hard.

    But his expansive tastes and unending generosity towards his posse soon lands him in hot water with the IRS.

    An exemplary VH1 bio-picture, Too Legit not only has the highs and the lows but also top- notch dancing and unexpected cameos.

    In hindsight, however, Hammer should've named his hit-song Can't Tax This.

    Yellow Light

    vidiotreviews.blogspot.ca

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The name of this movie comes from M.C. Hammer's 4th studio album "Too Legit to Quit," released in 1991. It is also the name of the title track and first single from that same album, although the spelling of that song is "2 Legit 2 Quit".
    • Erros de gravação
      The controversial video for "Pumps and a Bump" was released before MC Hammer signed with Death Row Records and became acquainted with Suge Knight's gang. The song was released by Giant Records in 1994.

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 19 de dezembro de 2001 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • MC Hammer - A Estrela do Rap
    • Locações de filme
      • Chicago, Illinois, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Nightstar Productions
      • Wilshire Court Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 29 min(89 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono

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