Five years later, Def Jam stepped up to the plate and signed DMX, launching what would become a stellar career. With a fearsome bark and insightful lyrics that largely focused on the internal struggles between good and evil rather than the standard money, cars and "ho's", DMX made 1998 his year, with two multi-platinum albums released (both debuting at Number One on Billboard's charts). That year he also made his feature debut in the hip-hop organized crime drama "Belly", playing "ghetto president" Tommy Brown, a thug about town who grows apart from his aptly named, more intellectual childhood friend and conspirator Sincere (fellow rapper NAS). Unfortunately, great record sales and a strong performance in the film wasn't what kept DMX in headlines, it was his numerous run-ins with the law. An rape charge that was squashed due to his voluntary DNA evidence, gun raps, allegations of stabbings and moving violations followed the musician around. Though nearly every charge was subsequently dropped, retractions don't make headlines the way allegations do. One of his only convictions, which led to a fine and a two-day sentence in a Trinidadian jail, was for using obscenities in his concert performance, a laughable charge to be brought against a rapper.
DMX released the successful "...And Then There Was X", an album that spawned the musician's first Top 40 hit, the remarkably catchy "Party Up (Up in Here)". The multi-platinum album debuted at Number One in December of 1999. A featured role in the Jet Li gangland vehicle "Romeo Must Die" (2000) didn't showcase DMX to his full ability, but it did at least establish that "Belly" wasn't a fluke. The well-made hip-hop tour documentary "Backstage" put the rapper on the big screen again in 2000. While he made headlines for his soap opera-like dealings with a Cheektowaga, New York court and a 15 day jail sentence, DMX's co-starring role in "Exit Wounds" (2001) hit theaters. Playing a street smart crime lord who joins up with Steven Seagal's burnt-out cop to battle police corruption, DMX would prove his star status with a far bigger role than he had in previous efforts. DMX's fourth album, "The Great Depression", which dropped in the summer of 2001, was the rapper's most introspective work yet and showed a definite progression in his development as an artist.
2003 found DMX back working in film, co-starring alongside Jet Li in "Cradle 2 the Grave."