Urban Menace
Urban Menace is a 1999 American horror film directed by Albert Pyun and starring Snoop Dogg, Big Pun, Ice-T and Fat Joe.
| Urban Menace | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Directed by | Albert Pyun | 
| Written by | Hannah Blue Andrew Markell Tim Story  | 
| Produced by | Paul Rosenblum Tom Karnowski Mark Allen  | 
| Starring | Snoop Dogg Big Pun Ice-T Fat Joe  | 
| Cinematography | Philip Alan Waters | 
| Edited by | Errin Vasquez | 
| Distributed by | Filmwerks Imperial Entertainment  | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 72 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
Premise
    
After a church burning in which a preacher and his family are killed, the preacher's insane ghost (Snoop Dogg) starts killing off the members of the gang responsible.[1][2][3]
Cast
    
- Snoop Dogg as "Preacher" Caleb
 - Big Pun as "Crow"
 - Ice-T as The Narrator
 - Fat Joe as "Terror"
 - T. J. Storm as King
 - Vincent Klyn as "Shadow"
 - Romany Malco as "Syn"
 - Tahitia Hicks as Holt (Tahitia)
 - Eva La Dare as Jolene (Karen Dyer)
 - Ernie Hudson Jr. as "No Dice"
 - Jahi J.J. Zuri as "Cool D"
 - Rob Ladesich as Harper
 - Michael Walde-Berger as Harper's Boss
 - Michaela Polakovicova as Hooker
 - Ed Satterwhite as Crow's Posse
 - Jason Stapleton as Crow's Posse
 - Lubo Salater as Crow's Posse
 - Robert Ughoro as Caleb's Posse
 
Production
    
Director Pyun shot Urban Menace simultaneously with The Wrecking Crew and Corrupt in a derelict factory in Eastern Europe, originally intending Urban Menace and The Wrecking Crew as sections of a single film; the producers decided to make two films. The budget only permitted two stuntmen, making deaths repetitive. Pyun often superimposed the stars' faces onto stand-ins. Half the finished film was lost in transit, requiring substitution of rough duplicate footage; large parts of Urban Menace are in black and white and the photography is often blurry.[4]
Reception
    
The film was regarded as low-quality; the DVD provides an option of skipping it and simply listening to Ice-T rapping.[3] However, one critic praises the hip-hop and rap soundtrack and crisp sound effects.[4]
References
    
- Urban Menace (1999), Rotten Tomatoes, retrieved July 31, 2017.
 - Urban Menace (1999) (V), Movie Review Query Engine, retrieved July 31, 2017.
 - Robin R. Means Coleman, Horror Noire: Blacks in American Horror Films from the 1890s to Present, New York: Routledge, 2011, ISBN 9780415880190, p. 200.
 - Douglas Pratt, Doug Pratt's DVD: Movies, Television, Music, Art, Adult, and More!, New York: Harbor, 2004, ISBN 9781932916003, p. 1299.
 
