XRAY_PART2


Portland Director Seena Haddad is back with Part II of his refreshingly unique Web Series, X-RAY. Starring an all star cast of Portland Hip Hop artists and community members including Fountaine, Wes Guy, Koncept, Mac Smiff of We Out Here Magazine and more. Examining the struggle between urban music and local authorities that many small towns face, Seena has taken matters in his own hands to deliver a creative way to tell the story and shed light upon much need issues. While people may have been skeptical at first of how the series was going to portray Portland and it’s budding hip hop scene, it seems Part II has been welcomed with open arms.

X-Ray follows the main character Marcus, played by Fountaine, as he develops from an aspiring rapper slash drug dealer in Part I, to finding his voice and the community beginning to embrace him fully. Reading like a book, Seena takes the audience chapter by chapter ranging from 4-10 minute episodes breaking down the realities of trying to make it as an artist and the challenges that come with success.

Watch Part II available now with music from Rasheed Jamal, Mic Capes, Vinnie Dewayne, Glenn Waco, Blossom, Brookfield Deuce, The Last Artful, Dodgr, Donte Thomas, Tribe Mars, Fountaine, Maze Koroma plus more, and be on the look out for Part III coming soon with appearances from Cool Nutz and Rasheed Jamal.

WATCH X-Ray Part II:

Chapter 6 https://vimeo.com/164245746
Chapter 7 https://vimeo.com/164253397
Chapter 8 https://vimeo.com/164259174
Chapter 9 https://vimeo.com/164318485
Chapter 10 https://vimeo.com/164319768

More Info On X-Ray:

With X-Ray, his new web series, director Seena Haddad tells one such story—a fictional one, but one he’s strived to have resonate with those in Portland’s hip-hop community. It’s a realistic, ground-level view of what it means to “make it” in the rap game, where success is measured in increments, and the drive to be heard is balanced against everything else going on in an artist’s life: friends, family, romantic relationships, the work that actually puts money in your wallet. The first season, premiering online this week, follows an aspiring young MC whose goal is not to get in the ear of some mogul and score a multimillion-dollar deal: He just wants to get a mixtape out. Empire it is not. It’s an archetypal tale of starting from the bottom, one which looks, feels and, most crucially, sounds like Portland.

Getting those details right were crucial for Haddad. Expectedly, it took some trial and error to get there. After all, Haddad had only just returned to the area two years before he began writing the script. He left Beaverton in 2006, going to New York and then studying film at the American University of Paris, and is currently based in L.A. After completing his first draft, he reached out to Fahiym Acuay, founder of the Pacific Northwest hip-hop blog We Out Here, for an appraisal. “He didn’t capture the issues at hand,” Acuay says. “It could’ve been like any city.”

Acuay became Haddad’s de facto tour guide to Portland hip-hop, taking him to shows and introducing him to MCs. (He’s credited as an associate producer on the show.) One night at Kelly’s Olympian, Haddad witnessed a set by Michael “Fountaine” Stewart. He’d already cast his lead protagonist, a trained actor from Beaverton, but after seeing Stewart perform, he began to rethink his decision.

“The other actor had an idea in his head that he was playing this rapper. He came from the ‘burbs, and it seemed like he was playing into a stereotype that didn’t make sense,” Haddad says. “I wanted the character to be very cerebral. People think about what they say here. In real life, people aren’t trying to make a big show of things, they’re just putting their energy into music.”

In contrast to the bravado found in other rap-themed dramatizations, Stewart brings a quiet vulnerability to the role of Marcus Ray, a creative kid reeling from a personal tragedy who is just trying to get the wheels of his career turning. It helped that, during filming, Stewart was essentially on the same trajectory in his own career, releasing his debut last March. “At first, I didn’t believe in myself because I’m like, ‘I don’t act,'” Stewart says. “[Haddad] just said to be myself. The story he wrote was my up-and-coming story as an artist.” Haddad filled out the cast with other non-actors recognizable to local hip-hop fans, including Epp, Wes Guy and Maze Koroma, and also brought in producers 5th Sequence and Samarei to do the soundtrack.

After a year and a half of stops and restarts—a hard-drive crash in October forced him to re-edit several episodes—Haddad is finally ready to put X-Ray online. It will play out over 10 brief episodes, most under 10 minutes. It sounds modest. But for those who see themselves in Marcus Ray, who’ve scrapped to make hip-hop viable in a city where it’s often appeared to be outlawed, it’s a crucial depiction of just how hard they’ve fought.

“I want people to come away knowing that there is a scene here,” Acuay says. “It hasn’t been easy. It’s on the edge now, pushing into the actual music scene, and I want people to know how we’ve had to struggle.” – Matt Singer (Willamette Week)

Share it: