Director John Singleton bailed from the Tupac Shakur biopic, "All Eyez
on Me," because the producers, frankly, didn't listen to him.
Singleton was long attached to the project, which was finally released
last month, but dropped out because of creative and personal
differences. And he's not looking back.
"It had to be done the way I thought it had to be done," Singleton
explained. "I decided not to do it because the people that were involved
were not respecting Tupac's mother Afeni. They weren't really
respectful to her so that's why I decided not to do it."
The movie was eventually helmed by the lesser known director Benny Boom and received generally lousy reviews.
In many ways, Singleton was, and would have been, the perfect director
for the film. He had not only directed the late rapper in his
well-received 1993 film "Poetic Justice," but Singleton and Shakur
covered a lot of the same ground in the early 1990s — at least until the
poet's death in 1996.
They certainly would have re-connected over current events, especially
during a recent spate of police killings, many of them caught on camera,
Singleton suggested.
"I would hope that Black Lives Matter can be sustained as much as
possible," he said. "I don't feel like activism should be a pop culture
event. It should be sustainable. Look at what just happened with
Philando Castile. This is not a time to be passive."
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