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Film (Remix ft. Future, Boosie, G.O.D.) - Juicy J



     
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Film (Remix ft. Future, Boosie, G.O.D.) Lyrics


You wanna make a film, film, film
It is what it is, is, is
We wanna make a film, film, film
Any haters we can't see em, see em, see emI been looking at ya
Behind my hater blockas
Louis Vuitton when I spot ya
Bodies drop when I drop ya
Turn a club into a opera
We keep bottles next to em choppas
Ain't no time to talk about record deals cuz I'm not signing you niggas
And all the haters like, Juicy J got the whole section
And all these bitches they ain't looking my direction
Thats right my nigga middle finger to the undercover over there wearing that sweater
Our phone snapping pictures
Yo wife and your daughter in the club drinking
My goons don't care bout nothing
Turn cameras on for the money to land on something
Nigga I run this, Memphis, Tennessee from the gutta

Diamonds all in my chain
Baddest bitch give me brain
VIP, high as fuck you need binoculars to see us
Shes yo wife when she get home, get it to my crib now shes my actress
Get her on the jet watch her throw that ass backwards
Hit it from the back and she love it that I slap it
Lights camera action watch it get nasty
Freaky like Aliyah [?]
Camcorder on put the shit on Netflix
Bring on the next chick need more hoes to cast it
Face like Halle berry, monster ball sequel
We finna try more thangs
That pussy so good, it keep Juicy J coming back like a time machine
I give it to her til she tap out
Watch her leg shake, blow the back out
And when I'm done with the pussy I mash out
To the strip club, throw the cash out
I'm taking girls home then I penetrate em
Tell her bring some friends, I'll eliminate 'em
And I ain't even fucking these chicks raw
I keep it wrapped up like Christmas paper
This Louis V is alligator
Rolex in the refrigerator
You ain't no nigga that's ice cold nigga
Got yo ho nigga and she wanna make a film
Who ya know blow cash like me
Who ya know got swag like me
Who ya know get trippy like me
Who ya know fucking bitches like me
Song Discussions is protected by U.S. Patent 9401941. Other patents pending.

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Juicy J (born Jordan Michael Houston in 1975) is one of the producers of Memphis rap group Three 6 Mafia and collective Hypnotize Minds. Both he and DJ Paul rap and produce music for the group. He is the younger brother of rapper Project Pat. Juicy J and DJ Paul won an Oscar for Best Song "It's Hard Out Here For A Pimp" in Craig Brewer's Hustle & Flow. He says his name came from a Juicy Fruit wrapper in his room while trying to think of a name.

Together with production partner DJ Paul, Juicy J played an important role in the South's rise to prominence within the once East and West Coast dominated rap industry. Behind the duo's leadership, Three 6 Mafia rose from an underground phenomenon in Memphis to a nationally recognized rap empire, spinning off numerous solo albums for the collective's many members in the mid- to late '90s. Like his production partner, Juicy J specialized in dark, eerie tracks driven by bass-heavy beats and haunting sounds. He also raps as a member of Three 6 Mafia. Moreover, Three 6 Mafia ventured into filmmaking with Choices: The Movie and Choices II: The Set-Up, a straight-to-video film starring most of the Three 6 Mafia's collective, Hypnotize Minds. Juicy J (born Jordan Houston) and DJ Paul (Paul Beauregard) first came together at the dawn of the '90s, when they worked as DJs in the Memphis area. The two soon began producing their own tracks and invited numerous Memphis rappers to rap over the beats. They released the resulting tracks locally as Three 6 Mafia; years later these recordings would resurface as re-releases. In 1995, the loose collective Three 6 Mafia began to form and self-released its debut album, Mystic Stylez. The album became an underground success, and Three 6 Mafia, in turn, signed a distribution deal with Relativity for its Hypnotized Minds imprint. Throughout the late '90s, DJ Paul and Juicy J produced numerous albums a year for Hypnotized Minds and capitalized on the lucrative distribution deal. By the end of the decade, the two producers were at the helm of an empire, having extended their brand to alarming lengths, culminating with their commercial breakthrough album, When the Smoke Clears (2000), which debuted at number six on Billboard's album chart.

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Juicy J