Trinity (Stakiah Lynn Washington) goes by the name of Lady Bars and has dreamed of being a rapper since she was young. Working with her best friend Dante (Melvin Gray Jr.) as her producer, hype man and cheerleader, she finally gets to play her songs for her hero, Young Reckless (Terayle Hill). Sadly, she gets to perform on stage with him on the night that he dies.
Young Reckless' label, Gold Volt Records, sees her video and watches it, as well as a video of her rapping the song "Sassy", go viral and decide to add her to their artists, seemingly only to upset Ms. Halo (B. Simone), the label's star rapper.
Trinity is living her dream, but it all seems like it could be a nightmare once she starts getting stalked and people around her start dying. Who is the giallo-style killer in the midst of the rap game? And is Trinity all good? Did she steal her songs? Or is she using Young Reckless' lyrics that she found which were also stolen lyrics?
Directed and written by Michael A. Pinckney, this has every stereotype that you might expect, like a record label owner who is making millions but still likes to sell guns, a producer who falls in love with his latest star, an aging star who is mean at first but warms to the heroine and an ending that seemingly sets up a sequel.
That said, "Sassy" is a pretty good song, but I don't know if I'd kill anyone if they stole it from me.
Young Reckless' label, Gold Volt Records, sees her video and watches it, as well as a video of her rapping the song "Sassy", go viral and decide to add her to their artists, seemingly only to upset Ms. Halo (B. Simone), the label's star rapper.
Trinity is living her dream, but it all seems like it could be a nightmare once she starts getting stalked and people around her start dying. Who is the giallo-style killer in the midst of the rap game? And is Trinity all good? Did she steal her songs? Or is she using Young Reckless' lyrics that she found which were also stolen lyrics?
Directed and written by Michael A. Pinckney, this has every stereotype that you might expect, like a record label owner who is making millions but still likes to sell guns, a producer who falls in love with his latest star, an aging star who is mean at first but warms to the heroine and an ending that seemingly sets up a sequel.
That said, "Sassy" is a pretty good song, but I don't know if I'd kill anyone if they stole it from me.