As the independent hip-hop movement emerged in the late '90s, Grimm cropped back up with a few 12" records, alongside acts like Company Flow, the Juggaknots, and of course, MF Doom, on Bobbito Garcia's Fondle 'Em Records. Inspired by the cohesive concept behind the Wu-Tang Clan's kung-fu motifs, Grimm devised Monster Island Czars (M.I.C.) basing the clique on the monsters from the #Godzilla movies. Members of the group took on aliases like Megalon and Gigan while Grimm and MF Doom adopted the names Superstar Jet Jaguar and King Geedorah, respectively. Once Fondle 'Em folded, Grimm was able to find his own avenue to create music and put out other artists on his Day by Day Entertainment label. In 2000, he recorded his debut album, The Downfall of Ibliys: A Ghetto Opera, with only 24 hours to spare, since he was out on $100,000 bail facing criminal drug charges. He received a four-years-to-life sentence under New York's stringent Rockefeller drug laws, but after some legal wrangling, he only served three years. After he was released from prison, he delivered Digital Tears: Email from Purgatory under his M.I.C. alias in 2004. By that time, Grimm and Doom had a falling-out, and he altered his name to GM Grimm (although he still goes by the MF Grimm moniker also). He vented his frustration with Doom on the track The Book of Daniel, which he added to his 2006 triple-disc album (the first in hip-hop's history) American Hunger. That same summer, DC Comics' adult-oriented imprint Vertigo announced it was going to release in 2007 a graphic novel based on MF Grimm's life story, entitled -Sentences: The Life of MF Grimm. ~ Cyril Cordor, Rovi