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State Property 2
This film explores powerful gangster adventures as three gangs, Baines, Dam and Loco, vie for control of the streets of Philadelphia. These sixty streets seem to be very bad when alliances are forged and broken and lifelong friendships end as each crime boss plans to get what he wants.


















15 July 1976, Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA

2 April 1973, San Juan, Puerto Rico

27 March 1970, Huntington, New York, USA





20 June 1975, Harlem, New York, USA



April 13, 2005
You may call the film blingsploitation but its fun-loving hoodlums know who's fooling whom.
April 13, 2005
Slicker, funnier and more professional than its predecessor.
April 14, 2005
Seeing two truly rich characters battling for supremacy can have the power of a symphony. Seeing two posses of dull thugs blasting away at each other has all the appeal of a CD single with a skip.
April 13, 2005
Those interested in annoying things like plot or plausibility are best off steering clear of this inane celebration of all things thug.
April 14, 2005
Dash's film is less the stuff cults are made of than fantasies.
April 12, 2005
The plot is strictly subservient to repetitive shootouts, the dialogue consisting of enough "f" and "n" words to be considered by Guinness.
April 13, 2005
No more three-dimensional than your average brand-name-laden hip-hop video.
April 09, 2005
State Property 2's daisy wheel of violence represents a reckless glorification of thug life.
April 14, 2005
You mean there was a State Property 1?
April 13, 2005
This brutal chronicle of heavily armed drug dealers is best appreciated (or disdained) as a raw, bracing expression of the spirit of capitalism.
April 15, 2005
Less a sequel to a film than a brand extension.
April 14, 2005
Dash can't decide whether he's making New Jack City or Friday.