
And honestly I’m not sure I want to know. Maybe Curtis Snow is a Julliard grad – maybe we’ve been duped – I’m not sure. That being said, as a work of fiction it’s maybe a bit less enjoyable than when viewed as an original piece of cultural anthropology. To call this a mockumentary wouldn’t be fair, as the film always seems to be trying to show you something that is legitimately real. She mad at these crackers, she mad at these capitalists, mad at these murder. I scrolled through her timeline in these wild times, and I started to read. My IQ is average, theres a young lady out there, she way smarter than me. View Listen Snow Tha Product - Far Alone Lyrics. Verse Niggas be thinkin Im deep, intelligent, fooled by my college degree. mixtape game I dare you to try to take his spot Snow Tha Product Well, I guess this is where the intro is supposed to go But I dont really have much to say, just that if y. I’ve never been so convinced of and involved in a non-documentary’s world. Snow Tha Product - Intro (Run Up Or Shut Up) Lyrics Announcer You are now rocking with the U.K. Snow really (“used to”) rob people and sell drugs, and while the events themselves are cleverly staged and fictionalized, they are generally based on Snow’s life and experiences. What I gathered was this: people used were all non-actors from The Bluff (Snow’s hood), and it was shot on location. But I watched Snow and director Russell polish off a flask of whiskey, a few pabsts and a forty over the course of the screening, so they were a bit too loose to answer many questions with a straight face. “Snow On The Bluff" at times seems so real that many were asking questions to separate fact from fiction during the post screening Q&A.
#Snow on tha bluff baby mama movie
What this movie does do is disclose to you a world that is utterly believable.

It doesn’t contain a moral, there’s no denouement, no closure of any kind. As such, this movie does not hold your hand.

Every aspect of this production is invested in an authentic portrayal of “the much mythologized world of the urban gangsta” (Paul Sbrizzi, Slamdance Programmer). You’ll never be too lost, as the film does a commendable job of bringing you the plot without the dialog’s help. If you’re as square a saltine as I am, you’re going to miss fully 70% of this film’s dialog – Snow and his crew speak loudly, quickly, and all on top of one another in a very difficult to decipher Atlanta ghetto slang. Atlanta gangster Curtis Snow robs some rich city folk of their camera and makes a movie about himself, his crew, and their gangster lifestyle.
