Welcome to Pine Hill Page #4

Synopsis: A recently reformed drug dealer, now working as a claims adjuster by day and bouncer by night, receives earth-shattering news, compelling to make peace with his past and search for freedom beyond the concrete jungle of New York City.
Genre: Drama
Director(s): Keith Miller
Production: Oscilloscope Pictures
  6 wins & 2 nominations.
 
IMDB:
6.1
Metacritic:
74
Rotten Tomatoes:
83%
NOT RATED
Year:
2012
81 min
$3,629
Website
15 Views


He Hollywood. That's why.

I seen him with a suit on.

I couldn't even say hello to him.

Can't talk to him.

You know how I rock these wild-ass button-ups.

He had the clean button-up.

You don't look very clean.

One color.

One color.

[ All Chuckling ]

Right to the neck.

Where were you going? I was in the city.

I was working. I was working.

Working in the city?

Mm-hmm.

- The right way.

- [ Chuckles ] The right way.

The right way.

Yeah. The right way.

He all quiet now. He tight.

He tight. The right way?

F*** these motherfuckers.

What's up though, man?

It's what it is. It's good

to see you, man. Same here.

[ Man ] Keepin' the jury

out... Where you been, man?

Good. You guys, you do well,

shining... What's going on?

- [ Laughter ]

- I'm good. I'm good.

I'm just saying, you know,

we gotta parley, man.

We can do that.

Two... Yeah.

What happened? You got something on your mind?

We all boys here.

- Speak your mind, baby.

- Yeah, man. I needed you, man.

That flooring joint.

I couldn't make it, brah.

You couldn't make it?

Yeah.

You couldn't make it.

You told me that before.

I just couldn't make it.

What you talking about? Some

other stuff I had to deal with.

What you have to deal with? Never

would... That's personal business.

Some personal sh*t

I had to deal with.

Same way we tried to make deals before,

and you fell through on it, all right?

I... What?

Yeah, you fell through.

You left us high and

f***ing dry in the air.

What are you talking about?

Yeah.

I mean, what are you talking...

What are you talking about? Ah.

Yo, word on my life, I've never

fallen through for any of y'all.

Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

You know this.

You know this.

What are you talking about?

Remember that uptown sh*t

we had at the end?

Where the f*** was you?

And?

You said, "Yeah, yeah, yeah.

I'll be there. I'll be there.

Man, I got your back.

It's all good. Yeah."

Where the f*** was you? I ain't

see you... Nigga, you know...

[ Man ] That sh*t six years ago?

You know. Nigga, you know...

Nigga, you know they locked

me up the night before.

I told you I was

in there for the weekend.

And you was out

the next f***ing day.

You can feed them the bullshit,

but... Oh, it's bullshit now?

I know what it is. [ Chuckles

] It's bullshit now.

Feed it to them.

Bullshit.

[ Man ] There's gotta be more

to it than just that, man.

It's bullshit, huh?

Those niggas

would've killed me, man.

I needed you.

I needed you.

What you want me to say now?

Apologize, what? I

ain't gonna say sorry.

You ain't gonna say sorry? For what?

I had sh*t to deal with.

You had sh*t... What the

f*** could you deal with?

What the f*** could you

have to deal with, man?

It's me. Nigga, it's me. He said he got

locked up, man. What happened to you?

Nigga, it's Jay.

How the f*** do you got something

to do on the same day...

we gotta leave for work, man?

Four niggas, man?

Them niggas had heat, my nigga.

Can't even f***ing believe you. You

just walk in here like every...

Sh*t is f***ed up, man.

You don't... You don't do that

to your peoples, man.

Where you going right now is gonna be f*** that.

Know what I'm saying?

What are you talking

about "f*** that"?

It's gonna be f*** that

on the real, son.

Coming at me sideways and all that sh*t.

I told you I had sh*t to do.

How many times you said to me,

"I have something to do"?

Tell me when I told you... How many

times I called your phone, son?

I had something to do. How many times I

called your phone, you ain't answer.

I was knee sh*t...

knee-deep in sh*t. Huh?

I had to work my way

out of that sh*t by myself.

By myself.

Where the f*** was you at?

And the one time...

the one time I'm not able to

make it, you're giving me sh*t?

Nigga, 50 g's. Who the

f*** is you, on the real?

Who the f*** am I? Who the

f***... Who the f*** am I?

Think because you got a job

now... Yo, easy... Right, man.

- This is some good sh*t.

- Hey, Miss D, how you doing?

Hey. [ Chuckling ] I was

gonna pick that up.

My name ain't D. My name... No, no.

I take bottles to the store.

My name is Margaret, not no D.

Miss Margaret D.

[ Chattering ]

I'm still full. It will

always be Miss D to us.

Always be Miss D.

Thank you.

Yo, when you gonna smoke...

quit smoking, man?

I got one more,

Miss Margaret. You good?

[ Chattering ] Got a bottle.

Yeah, 'cause the recycling come on

Mondays around here. [ Chuckles ]

Monday there ain't no f***in'

maid... Y'all pick up your own sh*t.

[ Chattering ]

[ Man ] Come on, D.

You got a shot.

God knows...

I told you I got it. All right?

[ Chattering ]

Why you hounding me

like this, man?

[ Chattering ]

What do you mean

I'm trying to avoid you?

How many times... Look. I got the money.

I got the money.

I'm gonna get the money to you.

[ Man ]

Yo, f*** y'all niggas, man.

You know, look... Don't even worry

about that, man. That's nothing.

Don't even worry about that.

That has nothing to do with you.

Don't even worry about it. Look. I said I have

the money to you. I have the money to you.

Okay?

All right?

Is every... Everything's good?

All right. All right.

I don't know, man.

Brother said, "I'm leaving too."

Yeah, he like, "I don't know. I

see two dudes leaving, I'm out."

For real.

[ Chattering ]

We got sh*t to do.

Yo, whose is this, man?

[ Chattering ] Whose is this?

Oh, a'ight, my man.

Yeah, don't drive, man.

Don't let this motherf***er

charge you gas.

[ Man ] I'm saying, can a guy hit it though?

Can a guy hit it? Oh!

What's going on, playa? Peace.

What up? How you doing, man?

A'ight. My fault if they made

too much noise out there, D.

[ Margaret ] No, no. Don't worry about it.

We good. Let's go, baby.

You chillin'? Yeah, I'm chillin'.

I'm chillin'.

I got everything.

Tell Vanessa to call me.

Stop saying that sh*t, man. Yo,

I'm gonna tell... I'm gonna...

[ Chattering ] That's what I'm talking about.

Leave her alone, man.

This nigga's still on Vanessa.

[ Chattering ]

[ Chattering ]

[ Hands Clapping ]

[ Man ] Hey, excuse me, my brother.

Can I say something to y'all?

[ Man #2 ] Yes, sir.

[ Man #1 ] All my life I've

been getting into trouble,

you know, selling my little

drugs here and there.

I did it more times

than making money...

I just maxed out June 11

of this year right here.

The last bid I just did

was a two and a half to flat.

Every time I put my hand

on a bundle...

or anything,

I'm always in jail.

I'm always here calling

my people to help me out.

I can't do that no more.

I'm getting too old for that.

So I chose to stay home

and get my own money.

You know, I'm getting ready

to get a lot of sh*t, man.

All you gotta do is just get out there and do it.

And you gotta do the footwork.

The footwork ain't gonna do you.

You gotta do the footwork.

See what I'm saying? Y'all

can spend money to get that.

Y'all can spend money

and go and look for a job, man.

See what I'm saying?

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Keith Miller

Keith Ross Miller, (28 November 1919 – 11 October 2004) was an Australian test cricketer and a Royal Australian Air Force pilot during World War II. Miller is widely regarded as Australia's greatest ever all-rounder. Because of his ability, irreverent manner and good looks he was a crowd favourite. English journalist Ian Wooldridge called Miller "the golden boy" of cricket, leading to his being nicknamed "Nugget". He "was more than a cricketer ... he embodied the idea that there was more to life than cricket".A member of the record-breaking Invincibles, at the time of his retirement from Test cricket in 1956, Miller had the best statistics of any all-rounder in cricket history. He often batted high in the order, sometimes as high as number three. He was a powerful striker of the ball, and one straight six that he hit at the Sydney Cricket Ground was still rising when it hit the upper deck of the grandstand. Miller was famous for varying his bowling to bemuse batsmen: he made sparing use of slower deliveries and would often adjust his run-up, surprisingly bowling his fastest deliveries from a short run. He was also a fine fielder and an especially acrobatic catcher in the slips.Away from cricket, Miller was also a successful Australian rules footballer. He played for St Kilda and was selected to represent the Victorian state team. He played 50 games for St Kilda, for whom he kicked eight goals in one game against North Melbourne, during 1941.Miller's personality – love of the contest, rather than victory, and his larger-than-life rebelliousness and carousing – helped both shape and limit his cricketing career, as he espoused the opposite of the more puritanical values of Donald Bradman, his captain and later national selector. Neville Cardus referred to Miller as "the Australian in excelsis"; Daily Mail sportswriter Ian Wooldridge's response was "By God he was right". This status was reflected when Miller was made one of the ten inaugural members of the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame. more…

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