Development Curtis-Hall drew from some of his own experiences growing up in
Detroit to make the film. During his teenage years, he was a guitarist and vocalist in Detroit's
punk rock scene. During this time, he and his peers began using
heroin, with Curtis-Hall recounting the drug "was really a competitive thing we did, to be accepted. In order to compete, we thought, we figured we needed the tools to compete with others that were pushing the edge, to play faster, write better songs and sing better. That meant using smack". Curtis-Hall had kicked the drug by the time he graduated high school in 1974,
Casting and financing Curtis-Hall said it was not easy to get the film financed because of its taboo subject of
heroin, "and people were expecting it to be a real depressing movie about a couple of dope fiends." He took the project to
Live Entertainment,
PolyGram Films and Def Pictures, a subsidiary of PolyGram. At the time, PolyGram had just released
Trainspotting and told Curtis-Hall, "'We can't do two movies about heroin'...Then
Tupac's record company came up with the money and PolyGram turned around and said, 'Hey, we always liked this movie' [laughs]." Roth requested to be in the film upon reading the script after starring in
Rob Roy. Tupac was cast after
Laurence Fishburne, the director's first choice, was not available. The rapper was recommended to Curtis-Hall by Preston Holmes, the president of Def Pictures. Said Curtis-Hall, "Pac had just gotten out of jail [after a 1995 sexual abuse conviction in New York] and no one wanted to touch him. But Preston, who had known Tupac since he was a child, said that he was a professional, and nothing like the perception Hollywood had of him. I met him, liked him, hooked him up with Tim, and there was immediate chemistry." == Soundtrack ==