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Music video: "Pootie Tangin' " by 702; original theatrical trailer
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Scene Selection
1. Sine Your Pitty on the Runny Kine [8:09]
2. Sepatown [4:48]
3. Sa Da Tay [:12]
4. Wadatah [10:16]
5. Tipi Tai [1:02]
6. Main Damie [10:28]
7. Capatown [1:58]
8. Cole Me Down on the Panny Sty [9:00]
Unlike so many Saturday Night Live spin-offs, the underrated Pootie Tang was built out of a TV skit -- from the defunct Chris Rock Show -- that deserved a fuller treatment. Mining the line between gibberish and jive -- and between hip-hop and hype -- Rock Show director Louis C.K. has written and directed a movie that aims for cult status and mostly earns it. Pootie (played by Lance Crouther) is a ghetto superstar par excellence -- corny-cool right down to his cheap tinted shades and wide-open short-sleeve shirts. And while he may look like a wannabe Commodore trying to get backstage at a Teena Marie-Rick James concert, he's really a superhero whose powers lie in a magic belt bequeathed to Pootie by his late father (one of many roles played by Rock). When he's not recording wordless hit songs, he's out doing public service announcements to keep the kids of America (by way of Brooklyn) sober, off drugs, and as far away from cheeseburgers and chicken as possible. His PSAs have driven a super-conglomerate's profits into the ground. Eventually the CEO (played by Robert Vaughn in a hilariously tragic dye job) dispatches his temptress (Jennifer Coolidge) to weaken Pootie so he can steal the belt and make Pootie do malt liquor ads. You get the picture: Pootie Tang mocks the place where hip-hop and blaxplotiation meet. As it turns out, the movie's low-budget sheen is its own best critique of the retro-fabulousness being laughed at. With the peerless Wanda Sykes (dressed as a middle-aged Lil' Kim) providing plenty of laughs, Pootie is hellbent on keepin' it surreal. Barnes & Noble
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