Carmen: A Hip Hopera

Directed by
Robert Townsend

Produced by
Graig Hutchison

Written by
Michael Elliot

Starring
Beyonce Knowles
Mekhi Phifer
Mos Def
Rah Digga
Wyclef Jean
Lil’ Bow Wow
Da Brat
Casey Lee
Jermaine Dupri
Reagan Gomez-Preston

Music by
Kip Collins

Carmen: A Hip Hopera is a 2001 musical film produced for television by MTV and directed by Robert Townsend. The film stars Beyoncé Knowles, Mos Def, Rah Digga, Wyclef Jean, Mekhi Phifer, Da Brat, Joy Bryant, Jermaine Dupri and Lil’ Bow Wow. It is based upon Georges Bizet’s opera, Carmen, set in Philadelphia and Los Angeles in modern times, and features a mostly original hip-hop/R&B score in place of Bizet’s opera.

The movie received mainly negative reviews. To date, it is the second major attempt at an African-American adaptation of the opera, the first being the 1943 Broadway musical Carmen Jones and its 1954 Academy Award nominated and box office hit film adaptation.

Cast

  • Carmen Brown: Beyoncé Knowles
  • Derek Hill: Mekhi Phifer
  • Caela: Reagan Gomez-Preston
  • Lieutenant Miller: Mos Def
  • Cellmate 1: Bow Wow
  • Cellmate 2: Jermaine Dupri
  • Blaze: Casey Lee
  • Rasheeda: Rashia “Rah Digga” Battle
  • Nikki: Joy Bryant
  • Fortune Teller: Wyclef Jean

Plot

Carmen Brown (Beyoncé Knowles) is a seductive, aspiring actress who mistakenly causes trouble everywhere she goes. She gets involved with Derek Hill (Mekhi Phifer), who is engaged to the cocktail waitress, Caela (Reagan Gomez-Preston). At Lou’s Bar, Carmen gets into a fight with a jealous woman. The crooked Lieutenant Miller (Mos Def) orders Hill to bring Carmen to jail. Carmen tries unsuccessfully to seduce Hill, but she convinces him to let her stop at her apartment to change clothes. There, she puts on lingerie and wins him over. He is caught in the morning (with Carmen no where to be found) by Lieutenant Miller, who brings Caela with him as he arrests Hill. Caela slaps Hill and tells him she hates him.

While in jail, Hill cannot stop thinking about Carmen. She writes him a letter, and he shares his obsession with cellmates Bow Wow and Jermaine Dupri. While Hill is in jail, Carmen meets the famous rapper Blaze (Casey Lee) at a nightclub, The Spot. He wants to bring her to Los Angeles, but succeeds only in bringing her best friends. Carmen promises to meet them in LA once Hill is out of jail. Unfortunately, Hill is facing a year of probation once he gets out. However, after he punches the lieutenant in the face during an argument at the bar, he and Carmen flee to Los Angeles.

Things in Los Angeles don’t go well. Carmen can’t find an acting job, and Hill’s fugitive status prevents him from obtaining employment. She runs into her best friends, Rasheeda (Rah Digga) and Nikki (Joy Bryant), who are being treated like royalty by Blaze. The three of them have their tarot cards read by a psychic (Wyclef Jean). Rasheeda and Nikki receive favorable fortunes, but Carmen’s cards read “ruin,” “sorrow” and “death.” She decides that it’s time for a change. She goes to Blaze’s rehearsal and wins an invitation to be his date to his next concert. At the same time, a radio falls into the bathtub which Carmen was just in and electrifies. Carmen wonders if that was meant to be her death.

Shortly afterwards, Carmen breaks up with Hill and moves in with her friends in a house apparently owned by Blaze. She feels that she shouldn’t give up her life for him, even though he did for her. Much like his counterpart in the original opera, Hill is devastated. He also learns from Caela that he is in danger. Since Hill knows how crooked he is, Miller wants to get rid of him. But Hill goes to Carmen to try to win her over and make her leave with him. Carmen doesn’t want to leave and tells Hill that she is staying. While they were arguing, Miller was watching them and then accidentally shoots Carmen in the back twice with a silenced gun while aiming for Hill. The story ends at Blaze’s concert involving the final confrontation between Hill and Miller, Hill’s wrongful arrest and the death of both Miller and Carmen. The film officially ends with the rapping narrator (Da Brat) laying a rose down for Carmen stating “Immortal Beloved…Carmen Brown, There’ll never be another”.

Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmen:_A_Hip_Hopera
Categories: 2000s drama films | 2000s films | 2001 films | 2001 television films | African American films | American films | American television films | Beyoncé Knowles | Drama films | English-language films | Hip hop films | Romance films