National Post

Who killed Biggie and Tupac? TV show offers answers.

Who Killed Biggie and Tupac?

- JON CARAMANICA

Some myths are too powerful — too necessary — to ever be fully undone, no matter the facts gathered to address them.

Such is t he case with the still officially unsolved deaths of Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B. I.G., Tupac and Biggie, gunned down six months apart two decades ago, a cruel exterminat­ion of hip-hop’s elite.

They became martyrs, and also — as the years passed and their killers were never brought to justice — symbols of a kind of institutio­nal neglect, failed originally by the genre they loved and, in death, by police.

So the most conspicuou­s aspect of Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and the Notorious B. I. G ., a lightly fictionali­zed 10- part limited series on USA that had its première Tuesday, is its certainty. Here is a show that offers answers, a tick- tock of the various investigat­ions into the killings that have resulted in no arrests but not, if Unsolved is to be believed, in no answers.

The series is inspired by Murder Rap: The Untold Story of the Biggie Smalls & Tupac Shakur Murder Investigat­ions, a book by Greg Kading, who led a task force investigat­ing the shootings in the late 2000s. ( There is an accompanyi­ng documentar­y as well.) In that book, Kading lays out his theories about who pulled the triggers, and why.

Yet somehow, seeing those theories brought to dramatized life — seven episodes were provided for review — gives them more power.

Unsolved is equal parts appealingl­y pulpy and workmanlik­e, sometimes paced like a procedural and sometimes like a prestige drama. It weaves together three storylines — the friendship between Tupac (Mar cc Rose) and Biggie( Wavyy Jonez ), which soured and ultimately collapsed; the original LAPD investigat­ion into Biggie’s murder, steered maniacally by detective Russell Poole ( Jimmi Simpson); and the task force convened a decade after the killings, helmed by Kading ( Josh Duhamel).

The love story here isn’t between Biggie and Tupac, though ample screen time is given over to their early friendship. It’s between the two detectives who never meet: Poole and Kading, who both begin to unravel in the face of a complex investigat­ion, institutio­nal pressure and family problems.

In this telling, Poole is the true detective, wholly and distractin­gly absorbed by the case. Simpson plays him as an impatient savant, forever sternly exhaling and chafing against his superiors. ( It should be noted, though, that in the Murder Rap documentar­y, Kading makes short work of Poole’s theories about the murders.) By contrast, Duhamel’s Kading is blank. Better is his extended team, which includes Daryn Dupree ( a grounded Bokeem Woodbine) and Lee Tucker ( Wendell Pierce, testy as ever).

Jonez captures the gentle grandeur of Biggie ( born Christophe­r Wallace), and Rose has Tupac’s familiar seductive glint in his eye. But this show about murdered rappers is really a cop show. What’s more, Unsolved did not secure licensing rights for either rapper’s music — though some lyrics are sprinkled into conversati­on — making them feel even more distant as subjects.

In capturing the two investigat­ions, though, Unsolved is effective in an unglamorou­s, no- frills way. And yet, as the episodes toggle between the ostentatio­n of the hip-hop world and the greyness of police headquarte­rs, it’s hard to overlook that a story of this historical significan­ce is rendered in such proletaria­n fashion.

Add to that the fact that Kading’s book and documentar­y were self- released, and that Unsolved isn’t on a vanity platform like HBO or Netflix, or delivered with the luxe production values of the American Crime Story series, but rather on USA, a basic cable staple.

You would think that a show that advertises a convincing theory about these killings would be lavished with funding, be loudly publicized not just as art, but also as news. But instead, Unsolved remains in the shadows. Myth has a way of enduring.

 ?? ISABELLA VOSMIKOVA / USA NETWORK ?? Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. premiered Tuesday on USA, stars Marcc Rose as Tupac Shakur, left, and Wavyy Jonez as Biggie.
ISABELLA VOSMIKOVA / USA NETWORK Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. premiered Tuesday on USA, stars Marcc Rose as Tupac Shakur, left, and Wavyy Jonez as Biggie.

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