Rap star and actor Ice Cube produces, co-writes, and stars in this comic crime thriller that reunites him with his Next Friday (1999) co-star Mike Epps in the 48 Hrs. (1982) mold. Cube plays Bucum Jackson, a Miami bounty hunter for Martinez Bail Bonds who's tired of his dangerous, unprofitable profession and wants to start his own private investigation firm. Lacking stake money, Bucum is forced to hunt down a small-time grafter named Reggie Wright (Epps), a fast-talking confidence man who's crossed his path before. Except that this time, Wright tries to avoid his pursuer by hiding in a van being driven by a pair of murderous diamond thieves who've just made off with 20 million dollars worth of stones. They're in the employ of lethal crime lord and yacht broker Williamson (Tommy Flanagan), someone that neither Reggie nor Bucum is anxious to cross, but it seems that Reggie left his wallet in the van, a wallet containing a winning lottery ticket worth 60 million dollars. The hunt is on for big money as the mismatched duo tries to outfox a wily syndicate for both the ticket and the precious gems. The directorial debut of music video director Kevin Bray, All About the Benjamins (2002) co-stars Eva Mendes, Carmen Chaplin, Valarie Rae Miller, Jeff Chase, Roger Guenveur Smith, Anthony Michael Hall, and Lil' Bow Wow. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
Review
With its engaging central duo caught in an underworld of bounty hunters and diamond thieves, All About the Benjamins at best resembles a good modern blaxploitation flick -- the kind that brings guilty pleasure, not discomfort. At its worst, though, it's a ludicrous, outsized caper story revolving around two different booties of 20-plus million dollars. Forget about Benjamin Franklin, who's on the thousand? Also forget about the Puff Daddy song of the same name, and the fact that the title sounds so 1998; Benjamins looks like a 2002 movie, especially during some crackling action sequences that have the kinetic energy and bouncy camera of Ridley Scott's later work. That's a pretty high compliment to pay video director Kevin Bray, but he only reaches that level in flashes. The rest of the time he's forgetting that it should all make narrative sense, that two thugs can't be tossed off the side of the boat and then disappear from the story, that a guy with a missile launcher can't pop up and vanish without explanation. Still, the inclination is to forgive Benjamins some of these faults, because Ice Cube and Mike Epps deliver the goods more often than not, achieving mindless popcorn entertainment with crossover potential. Cube is a known commodity by this point, but Epps gets his best showcase to prove he can sling high-speed, streetwise bull that's different enough from his contemporaries to be distinctive. Even when the plot points are patently fake, these two manage to keep it real. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi
Valarie Rae Miller - Pam; Roger Guenveur Smith - Ramose; Lil' Bow Wow - Kelly; Anthony Giaimo - Martinez; Jeff Chase - Mango; Gino Salvano - Mickey; Evelyn Brooks - Ms. Steinberg; Joan Turner - Ms. Scharfenberg
Credit
Ronald G. Muhammad - Associate Producer, Felicia Fasano - Casting, Mary Vernieu - Casting, Anne McCarthy - Casting, Douglas Curtis - Co-producer, Sophie de Rakoff Carbonell - Costume Designer, John Nelson - First Assistant Director, Kevin Bray - Director, Suzanne Hines - Editor, Claire Rudnick Polstein - Executive Producer, Mike Epps - Executive Producer, Toby Emmerich - Executive Producer, Ron Lang - Executive Producer, Matt Moore - Executive Producer, John Murphy - Composer (Music Score), Spring Aspers - Musical Direction/Supervision, J. Mark Harrington - Production Designer, Glen MacPherson - Cinematographer, Ice Cube - Producer, Matt Alvarez - Producer, Barbara Peterson - Set Designer, Mark Weber - Sound/Sound Designer, Ice Cube - Screenwriter, Ron Lang - Screenwriter, Artie Malesci - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Terry Wilson - Music Editor, James Roberts - Special Effects Coordinator, Robert C. Jackson - Supervising Sound Editor, Barbara Peterson - Set Decorator
All About the Benjamins is a 2002 American action comedy film directed by Kevin Bray, and starring Ice Cube and Mike Epps as a bounty hunter and repeat offender who join forces to find a group of diamond thieves, the former for glory, and the latter to retrieve a winning lottery ticket.
Ice Cube as Bucum, a maverick bounty hunter trying to acquire the funds to start a private investigation firm. Initially interested only in finding a group of diamond thieves who shot at him, he later decides to solve the heist case in order to generate publicity for his would-be firm.
Mike Epps as Reggie, a two-time hustler previously apprehended by Bucum three times, who regularly skips out on bail. Narrowly escaping death after hiding the diamond thieves' getaway van, he sets out after them in order to recover his wallet containing a winning lottery ticket.
Eva Mendes as Gina, Reggie's trusting live-in girlfriend, who picked the winning lottery numbers, and helps him look for the wallet containing the winning ticket following a break-in at their apartment.
Critical reception
All About the Benjamins scored poorly on Rotten Tomatoes with 30% on the Tomatometer. Some of the critics said it was, "A sloppy, poorly directed action-comedy, All About the Benjamins is too derivative and gratuitously violent." [2]
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