Plot Details: This opinion reveals major details about the movie's plot.
You don't have to be into rap music to appreciate the raw, visceral authenticity of Eminem's fictionalized biography.
Named after a road that serves as a physical and psychological boundary between black inner-city Detroit and its white suburbs, "8 Mile" is set in 1995, when Jimmy Smith Jr. (Eminem), a trailer park kid known as Rabbit, first tries to perform at a local club called The Shelter.
His is the only white face among the black throng, and he chokes, freezing in fear. The plot then delves into how he transcends that terror by confronting his demons: a tortured relationship with his alcoholic mother (Kim Basinger) and her live-in lover (Michael Shannon), protective love for his kid sister (Chloe Greenfield), betrayal by friends, frustration with his boss at the metal-stamping factory where he works, and a tenuous relationship with his ambitious-to-be-a-famous-model-in-New-York girl-friend (Brittany Murphy).
The concept behind Scott Silver's ("The Mod Squad") script, Curtis Hanson's ("LA Confidential") director and Rodrigo Prieto's ("Amores Perros") camera-work is to show how the hot-tempered rapper finds his identity, not by discarding his trash-talking environment but by embracing it - and they strike a naturalistic chord of emotional truth.
Eminem/Marshall Mather elicits sympathy as the observant, quick-witted by emotionally conflicted Rabbit with Mekhi Phifer as Future, his cool "big brother," who pushes him into impromptu, fast-paced, abusive, free-style verbal sparring "battles." Meanwhile, Wink (Eugene Boyd) lures rabbit into thinking about record "deals." And they're headed for a rap showdown with the charismatic Papa Doc (Anthony Mackie).
Other notable members of Rabbit's supportive "crew" called Three-One-Three (Detroit's area code) include the huge Sol (Omar Benson Miller), bespectacled DJ Iz (De'Angelo Wilson) and the terminally stupid Cheddar Bob (Evan Jones). Their most pivotal scene with Rabbit takes place when they decide to torch an abandoned, derelict house where a little girl has been raped on "Devil's Night" before Halloween.
Kim Basinger, who won an Oscar working with Curtis Hanson in "LA Confidential," is not only believable but vulnerable in a part that could have been merely stereotypical.
On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "8 Mile" is an angry, explosive 8, capturing the frustration and determination it takes to "Lose Yourself," which is the name of the final anthem.
Recommended:
Yes
Suitability For Children: Not suitable for Children of any age
Eminem wins by a knockout! raves Rolling Stone, as the Grammy Award-winning phenomenon makes his feature film debut in this gripping story about the b...More at Buy.com Marketplaces
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