Pootie Tang I Done Did It Again

2001 American comedy film by Louis C.K.

Pootie Tang
A man holds a belt while another man stands next to him. On the far left, a man and a woman are shown. Above and Below them displays the film's title and production notes.

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Louis C.K.
Written past
  • Louis C.One thousand.
  • Bruno Cavecchi
Produced by
  • Caldecot Chubb
  • David Gale
  • Ali LeRoi
  • Chris Rock
Starring
  • Lance Crouther
  • Jennifer Coolidge
  • Wanda Sykes
  • Robert Vaughn
  • Chris Rock
Cinematography Willy Kurant
Edited by Doug Abel
David Lewis Smith
Music by
  • QD3
  • Prince Paul

Production
companies

  • Alphaville Films[i]
  • iii Arts[1]
  • HBO Downtown Productions[1]
Distributed by
  • Paramount Pictures[1]
  • MTV Films[ane]
  • Chris Stone Productions[1]

Release date

  • June 29, 2001 (2001-06-29)

Running time

81 minutes[2]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $7 1000000[3]
Box part $3.3 one thousand thousand[3]

Pootie Tang is a 2001 American comedy film written and directed by Louis C.K. Adapted from a comedy sketch that first appeared on The Chris Rock Show,[iv] the character Pootie Tang is a satire of the stereotyped action heroes who appeared in old blaxploitation films. The title character'southward speech, which vaguely resembles pidgin, is more often than not unintelligible to the audience, merely the other characters in the pic have no problem understanding him. It has acquired a cult following.

Plot [edit]

Pootie Tang, born in "a small town outside Gary, Indiana", is portrayed as a ladies' human who is "as well cool for words", even as a young child. His life is marked by the deaths of his mother "Momma Dee", and soon thereafter his male parent "Daddy Tang", who dies later on beingness mauled past a gorilla during his shift at the steel mill (the third fourth dimension someone had suffered that item fate). Just before Daddy Tang'due south death, Pootie inherits his father's belt and is told that (every bit long as he has right on his side) he tin can "whoop anyone's donkey with simply that chugalug." And uses his dying breath to warn his son to not let the ladies get between him and the belt.

As a young adult, Pootie Tang rises to fame and becomes well known for a variety of reasons. He sings in nightclubs, stars in public service announcements for children, produces top-of-the-charts music hits, and generally defeats wrongdoers with the ability of his belt. Dick Lecter, the principal operating officer of multi-industrial conglomerate LecterCorp, learns of Pootie Tang'south positive influence on society — and his negative influence on LecterCorp'due south bottom line. After his henchmen and a villain named Dirty Dee are sent away by Pootie's friends, Lecter encourages his right-hand lady, Ireenie, to seduce Pootie Tang into signing an agreement with LecterCorp that would stop Pootie Tang's influence on America's children.

Pootie Tang falls for Ireenie's tricks and afterwards falls apart. His status as pop culture icon is destroyed, and he engages on a quest to "find [him]cocky". This journey is encouraged past his friend Biggie Shorty, who promises to await for Pootie to return to her and to the remainder of social club. Pootie moves to a subcontract where the local sheriff decides Pootie should start dating his daughter. After his single corn stalk dies, he has a vision of Daddy Tang and Momma Dee. Daddy Tang reveals that there is nothing special about Pootie's belt; instead, Pootie must fight evil with the goodness that is inside him. After dealing with Dirty Dee and his henchman Froggy (besides every bit getting his belt back), Pootie realizes he must move back to the city and fight crime once more.

Pootie Tang returns to the urban center but as Dick Lecter is unveiling the get-go of his new restaurant chain, Pootie'south Bad Time Burgers. At a small news conference, Pootie confronts Lecter only to notice that Lecter has amassed dozens of "Pootie-alikes" who volition spread the message of LecterCorp around the nation. Pootie Tang, with the help of Biggie Shorty, defeats all of these henchmen and Lecter himself. Skillful triumphs over evil again, and Biggie Shorty finally gets her man: she and Pootie Tang program to get married now that Pootie is back. Elsewhere, Dick Lecter leaves corporate life and becomes an histrion, Ireenie leaves him and becomes a counselor helping at-take chances teenage prostitutes, and Muddied Dee is notwithstanding dingy.

Cast [edit]

  • Lance Crouther as "Pootie" Tang
  • J. B. Smoove as "Trucky"
  • Jennifer Coolidge as Ireenie
  • Wanda Sykes as "Biggie Shorty"
  • Robert Vaughn as Dick Lecter
  • Chris Rock as J.B. / Radio DJ / Daddy Tang
  • Reg E. Cathey equally "Dirty Dee"
  • J. D. Williams equally "Froggy"
  • Mario Joyner as Lacey
  • Dave Attell as Frank
  • Laura Kightlinger equally Laura Knight
  • Rick Shapiro as "Shakey"
  • Missy Elliott every bit Diva
  • David Cantankerous as Dennis, A Pootie-Alike
  • Cole Hawkins every bit "Niggling Pootie"
  • Andy Richter as Record Executive
  • Kristen Bell equally Record executive's Daughter
  • Jon Glaser as Recording Engineer
  • Keesha Precipitous as Political party Girl
  • Todd Barry equally "Greasy"
  • Bob Costas as Himself

Production [edit]

Originally a Paramount Classics film titled Pootie Tang in Sine Your Pitty on the Runny Kine, the budget was increased and transferred to the main Paramount Pictures division.[5] C.K. has stated that he was all only fired from the film during the editing stage. Co-ordinate to him, Ali LeRoi was hired to extensively re-edit the film.[5] Openly agreeing with Roger Ebert's dismissive criticism that the movie should non take even been released, C.K. has said that the finished production, though containing parts he enjoyed, was far from his own vision.[half-dozen]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception was generally negative, with Rotten Tomatoes giving information technology an approving rating of 27% based on 44 reviews. The site'due south consensus states: "Based as it is on a short skit, Pootie Tang overstays its welcome."[7] Roger Ebert gave it a half-star rating, criticizing it for excessive apply of vulgar language and demeaning portrayal of women, describing information technology equally a "train wreck" and finishing his review by bluntly stating "This film is non in a releasable condition."[8] Nathan Rabin at The A.5. Club said Pootie Tang "borders on audition corruption" and "confuse[southward] idiocy for absurdity and randomness for wit."[9] In 2009, fellow A.V. Club writer Scott Tobias revisited the flick and included it in his New Cult Canon serial, noting that "Pootie Tang repelled mainstream critics and audiences, but information technology holds an exalted status amid alt-comedians and fans of destructive anti-comedy in general."[10]

Kevin Irish potato also praised the film in his volume A Twelvemonth at the Movies:

Pootie Tang crosses all cultural barriers to become the dumbest moving picture I've seen in an entire generation. But it is also funny equally hell ... Pootie Tang strives for the dumbness it achieves, a feat few films can do ... this is a skilful kind of impaired. Like mooning. Like a true cat falling off a table.[11]

Soundtrack [edit]

A soundtrack containing mainstream hip hop, dance, and R&B music was released on June 16, 2001, by Hollywood Records. Information technology peaked at #51 on the Summit R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and #22 on the Peak Soundtracks.

In popular culture [edit]

  • In the 2003 horror film spoof Scary Movie iii, George Carlin's character, The Architect, says he accidentally returned a cursed video tape to Blockbuster, thinking information technology was Pootie Tang. Subsequently, aliens go far on World and merits they watched the video tape that spurred their visits to Earth because they thought information technology was Pootie Tang.
  • On Kanye W'southward song "School Spirit" from his 2004 album The College Dropout, W references the movie when he says: "Come across, that's how dude became the immature Pootie Tang—tippy tow"[12]
  • In the TV evidence The Bernie Mac Evidence, Chris Stone (who appears in Pootie Tang) attends a poker game at Bernie Mac's house. A player remarks that he really enjoyed Pootie Tang, to which Stone replies that "even [my] momma didn't see Pootie Tang."[ episode needed ]
  • In 2018, on her EP Tina Snowfall, Megan Thee Stallion references the movie on the rails titled "Freak Nasty". In the first minute of the song she raps, "telephone call that pussy Pootie Tang, 'cus I got the runny kine", "runny kine" beingness a reference to the title of ane of Pootie's songs in the cult movie.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Pootie Tang". American Movie Constitute . Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  2. ^ "POOTIE TANG (15)". British Lath of Picture show Classification. October 2, 2001. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  3. ^ a b Pootie Tang at Box Office Mojo
  4. ^ Original Appearance in the Chris Rock Prove
  5. ^ a b WTF with Marc Maron - Louis C.1000. part 1
  6. ^ Scott Raab (May 23, 2011). "Louis C.K.: The ESQ+A". Esquire.
  7. ^ Pootie Tang at Rotten Tomatoes
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 29, 2001). "Pootie Tang". Chicago Lord's day-Times. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  9. ^ Rabin, Nathan (March 29, 2002). "Pootie Tang". The A.V. Guild . Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  10. ^ Tobias, Scott (July 23, 2009). "The New Cult Catechism - Pootie Tang". The A.V. Club . Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  11. ^ Murphy, Kevin. A Year at the Movies, HarperCollins, 2002, p.172. ISBN 0-06-093786-vi
  12. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?5=-MOIPnu50O4

External links [edit]

  • Pootie Tang at IMDb
  • Pootie Tang at Box Office Mojo
  • Pootie Tang at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Pootie Tang at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pootie_Tang

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