Anthony Mackie Movies
A Big Easy-born actor who honed his skills at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts before completing his education at Juillard,
Anthony Mackie portrayed ill-fated rapper
Tupac Shakur in a stage production of Up Against the Wind before taunting Detroit-based rapper
Eminem as a member of the rival rhyming crew in the box-office hit
8 Mile. Subsequently appearing onscreen alongside some of the biggest names in the business,
Mackie took the lead as a sperm-donating former biotech executive opposite
Ellen Barkin and
Ossie Davis in
Spike Lee's
She Hate Me, and proved that he could even hold his own against such screen legends as
Clint Eastwood and
Morgan Freeman with a substantial role in the boxing drama
Million Dollar Baby. While it may be on the silver screen that
Mackie has courted the majority of fame, the ascending star also appeared on the Broadway stage in high-profile productions of Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and Drowning Crow.
Few actors could dream of a career that advanced as quickly as
Mackie's did, and the same year he played leading man in
She Hate Me, the then-twenty-five-year-old would earn an Independent Spirit Award nomination for his memorable portrayal of a homeless shelter employee struggling with his cultural and sexual identity in
Brother to Brother. Just when it seemed as if
Mackie's rigorous work schedule couldn't get any more demanding, the actor would appear in no less than six movies in 2006 including the racially charged kidnapping drama
Freedomland, the underground street-ball drama
Crossover, and opposite
Matthew McConaughey and
Matthew Fox in the fact-based football film
We Are Marshall. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 2004
- NR
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The feature-film debut of filmmaker Rodney Evans, who wrote and produced in addition to taking on directing duties, Brother to Brother explores the life and struggles of black, gay artists in the present and past. Anthony Mackie stars as Perry Williams, a young man dealing with the strife involved with being both African-American and a homosexual in contemporary New York. He is shunned by his father for his sexual identity and wary of being viewed as a sell-out by black peers when his work gains a white audience. When Williams meets an aging poet who was involved in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1930s, he suddenly finds himself transported back in time and cavorting with the likes of Langston Hughes (Daniel Sunjata) and Zora Neale Hurston (Aunjanue Ellis). Among such legends, Williams is able to gain perspective about his own life. Also starring Roger Robinson and Larry Gilliard Jr., Brother to Brother screened in competition at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Anthony Mackie, Roger Robinson, (more)