“notes on” is a review series written by Najee AR Fareed. The objective is to discover and examine art as we know it, from a lover’s point of view. Hopefully you’ll love art even more after reading.
notes on: Set It Off
notes on: Set It Off
A complete in-depth review and analysis of Set It Off directed by F. Gary Gray
ALWAYS WRITTEN FROM A PLACE OF LOVE AND UNDERSTANDING.
published October 23, 2024
MEDIUM: Film
GENRE: Action/Crime Thriller
STUDIO: New Line Cinema
DIRECTOR: F. Gary Gray
CAST: Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah, Vivica A. Fox, Kimberly Elise, Blair Underwood, Dr. Dre
RELEASE YEAR: 1996
F. Gary Gray’s Set It Off is a hood classic and needs no introduction but I’ll set the stage. Set It Off is Gray’s second feature film and follow-up to the equally classic Friday. The film centers four black women- Frankie played by Vivica A. Fox, Stony played by Jada Pinkett Smith, Cleo played by Queen Latifah, and Tisean played by Kimberly Elise- up against the wind; namely the socioeconomic pressures of growing up in the LA projects as black women. Eventually these women tire of their circumstances and seek escape through a series of high profile bank robberies. What should be a simple high-octane 90s inner city action romp is instead a tender and heartbreaking meditation on black sisterhood, feminism, afropessimism, womanism, localized tragedy, captive maternals, capitalism, and the christological story. Agape meets escape.
The film’s opening scene follows Frankie. She works at a bank and a man she knows from around the way named Darnell is robbing it. Darnell is unassuming at first but Frankie quickly realizes the danger when he threatens her with his loaded gun. Instead of following procedure (pull money clip from right hand drawer, signal with left hand) Frankie begs Darnell to change his mind- an important and lasting example of attempted solidarity. Darnell refutes Frankie’s solidarity and proceeds with the robbery, which turns into a bloody affair. This is the first time in the movie that a black woman is failed by a black man. The robbery is “successful” and Darnell along with his accomplice Lorenz make off with a lot of money. Frankie is questioned by the LAPD’s Detective Stroud and fired because she knew the robbers and didn’t follow the aforementioned procedure. A jaded and increasingly hysterical Frankie laments the bank owners for their disloyalty and even cites her own loyalty (counted 240,000 dollars by hand for them the day before). None of it matters, Frankie is out of a job despite being the victim of a harsh and traumatizing violent crime. On the way out she makes note of more unfulfilled solidarity, this time in the form of the black female police officer, Detective Waller (played by Ella Joyce), neglecting to “bother to ask if I was thirsty sister.”
Frankie broke the procedure out of fear and empathy but also due to an assumed camaraderie between herself and those who came from a similar background. This failure of this assumed camaraderie is a driving force for her character throughout the remainder of the film.
From there we are introduced to the rest of the central characters at Stevie's graduation party. Stevie (played by Chez Lamar Shepherd) is Stony’s little brother but essentially her son as well. They’re orphaned due to a car crash that occurred a few years earlier. The mood is light and everyone is costumed. Cleo and Tisean help Stony ruin her little brother’s groove with the ladies, Stevie is smart and handsome and capable. It’s a good time, she’s a good sister and a good mother- even if it was a role forced on her by circumstance. Immediately we’re shown the personalities and states of our characters: Cleo’s rambunctious, vociferous, and volatile. Stony’s responsible, gritty, and street smart. Tisean is timid, loyal, and a single mother. Frankie’s vengeful, mad at the world, and ready to do something about it. It is also here that we can see Stony’s rearing of Stevie was a communal effort. These women are there for her.
Even at times of celebration there is cause for hesitation. Stevie appears to be stressed out and after some prodding from Stony, he reveals that he did not receive a scholarship from UCLA to become the “college boy” they were so proud of him for becoming. Stevie suggests just getting a job and sticking around the hood but Stony is quick to shut that idea down, stating that she’ll find a way to come up with the money. How Stony is to go about doing this isn't clear. She works a shitty nighttime janitor job for Luther’s Janitorial Service with an overbearing and disrespectful boss (Luther, played by Thomas Jefferson Byrd) along with Tisean, Cleo, and suddenly Frankie too. Essentially, the film has demonstrated that she and everyone she cares for are stuck in a loop of poverty and violence with no escape. Rather than engage in the self-destructive activities that often malign people in the same circumstances as them, they built a community and decided to be there for each other. They’re firm exemplars of “captive maternals.”
Joy James defines a captive maternal in In Pursuit of Revolutionary Love: Precarity, Power, Communities as such:
an ungendered function that cares for children and elders to keep them stable and protected. Often its labor is used to stabilize the very structures that prey on Black lives and honor in schools, hospitals, jobs, and prisons. Generative powers stolen and repurposed by the state and capital for accumulation can also be stolen back for rebellions.
James also states that captive maternals are “central to the reproduction of the world. Without this form of caretaking, without this form of sacrifice, without this kind of glue to social order- which is tied to the economic order and the political order, and the very notion of what is familial and the familiar in the world- we see that things do not function” (page 118). From here, we can recall the people in our own lives that were forced by circumstance into motherlike roles and how important they are to any continued success we may have. Stony and Tisean are captive maternals in the most literal sense but even Cleo and Frankie assume responsibility for Stevie and Jajuan (Tisean’s son) as well as for each other.
Stony resolves to call Nate Andrews, a wealthier man in the neighborhood who’s sweet on her, and ask him for a job. He only wants one thing in return and refuses to give Stony an advance on her first check unless she has sex with him. Nate Andrews demonstrates a similar lack of solidarity that Darnell showed to Frankie and the entire exchange is unsavory. Stony relents with her brother’s education in mind and sells her body with no pleasure, tearfully. She couldn’t scrub hard enough in the shower. To make matters worse, Stevie was lying about getting into UCLA and the money was no help. He storms out of the house after he gets into a big fight with his sister. Stevie’s asylum is Lorenz’s apartment in the Acorn housing projects.
We immediately recognize Lorenz as a rambunctious, violent, reckless, knucklehead. He has “AP” cut into the back of his head, something that made him easy to identify in the bank robbery footage. Stevie seems quite taken with Lorenz though, uneasy in his presence and seeking his approval. This dynamic makes it easy for Lorenz to pressure Stevie into getting the same haircut. The visit was friendly enough however, Stevie even leaves with a congratulatory bottle of champagne. However, unbeknownst to Stevie, the police have the apartment staked out and they surround him upon departure. Stevie needs to take the champagne from his inside jacket pocket in order to lie down flat on his stomach as they’re demanding but the pigs (police, twelve, five-oh) mistake the bottle for a weapon and open fire, killing him. Innocent, eighteen, and unarmed.
Unarmed Black Americans are no stranger to police violence. Many Black victims of police brutality and state incompetence have been murdered by “accident” before and after the release of the film. Eleanor Bumpurs, 66-year old disabled Black woman, was shot and killed by the NYPD in 1984 while they were trying to evict her from her home. Amadou Diallo, 23-year old Guinean student, was fired upon 41 times (hit 19 times) by four NYPD officers in 1999 while reaching for his wallet. Tamir Rice, a 12-year old boy, was shot and killed by a Cleveland police officer within seconds of arriving on the scene while playing in the park in 2014. Breonna Taylor, 26-year old woman, shot and killed in her sleep after Louisville Metro Police Officers forced entry into her home and opened fire in 2020. In 1992, the city of Los Angeles burned in a series of riots after a gang of police officers got off for viciously beating Rodney King on video.
I invoke these real life tragedies to illustrate the familiarity of the struggle and pain felt by Stony as she arrived and saw her brother’s hot blood and cold corpse lie shiftless among the glass bottle shards. This movie was made in the wake of ongoing tragedy and it is important to recognize that because Stevie’s death marked a severance of responsibility for Stevie. Nothing mattered anymore but the means of her escape from a similar fate, which seemed not just likely but promised.
Tisean, the other mother in the group, also deals with the loss of her son. She cannot afford a sitter and is forced to take him to work with her but she is negligent and ingests some cleaning products. They rush him to the emergency room and manage to save his life but child protective services steps in and takes custody of Jajuan until she can secure a better financial situation. This is the final domino to drop and lays out the desires and motivations of the main characters out plainly. Frankie is angry and wants revenge on the banking industry, feeling as though her hard work and loyalty has gone unrewarded. Stony wants to escape her life and needs money to do so. Tisean needs more money to retain custody of her son. And Cleo is a thrill-seeker, angry about her lack of funds.
They stake out several banks but at the biggest one, Stony meets Keith (played by Blair Underwood). He’s immediately infatuated with her and insists on getting her number, she declines but she takes his. He’s a debonair, well-off Black man and about as far from Stony’s lifestyle that she can imagine. Keith represents an alternate avenue of escape for Stony, one without personal agency. He is also the first positive example of Black male solidarity to appear in the movie.
The second example is Black Sam (played by Dr.Dre). Dre’s portrayal is pretty wooden but he’s a roughneck hood nigga with a soft spot for Cleo, who talks him into loaning them the weapons necessary to pull off a bank robbery. It isn't completely altruistic, they promise him a cut of the loot.
Cleo appears to be a professional even on the first bank robbery. They steal a getaway car and Cleo disposes of the music selection, beginning a fun if not childish and dangerous tradition. They wear wigs and sunglasses to disguise their appearance and it goes without a hitch. Well, almost. Tisean gets cold feet and abandons them at the last second. They steal 12,000 dollars and split it four ways despite reservations (mainly from Cleo) about Tisean going awol. Giving Tisean the money despite her not partaking in the robbery is a display of Black sisterhood and further displaying the understanding that comes from shared experience.
The money secured from the first robbery was not enough for them to really change their lives. Stony goes on a date with Keith and upon seeing his apartment, she outright divulges that she feels trapped. She sort of begins a double life or a dual identity. Stony is provided temporary exposure to escape while with Keith and he wants her to join him for good but she doesn’t truly consider him as an option. Even without Stevie, she has an obligation to Cleo, Tisean, and Frankie. The new influx of money and the dangers of being caught also challenge their allegiances and threaten to fracture their connection. Stony and Cleo argue and point weapons at each other and curse each other out but it’s all love.
The conflict between the two is not just about money, it’s a battle between two opposing dispositions. Stony’s entire being is dedicated to escaping the life she’s been given in the projects while Cleo does not know escape at all. She doesn't know any future and doesn’t care. As she says, “I’m just trying to make it through today.” This defeatist and pessimistic outlook is rooted in her experience of immense loss. Her erasure as a Black homosexual femme living in the hood is out of her control and she understands that there is no way to escape what is coming for her. Joy James defines afropessimism as follows:
lens of interpretation that accounts for civil society’s dependence on anti-black violence: a regime of violence that positions Black people as internal enemies of civil society, and which cannot be analogized with the regimes of violence that discipline non-Black workers, women, natives, queers, immigrants, etc. Afropessimism argues that the Black (or slave) is an unspoken and/or unthought sentience for whom the transformative powers of discursive capacity are foreclosed from the beginning.
I’d be lying if I were to say I thought Cleo’s character is familiar with this term but she lives it in her everyday actions. She oscillates between hedonistic and nihilistic actions with a real madness but she’s arguably the most caring and tender of the group as well. Cleo is a woman without a future and is painted against Stony, a woman who wants one so damned bad.
Futures aren’t cheap, so they rob another bank, this time they get a lot more even if things do not go as smoothly. Cleo needs to steal an additional getaway car after some mess with the first one. Tisean doesn’t bail this time around, she even has a pretty cool crowd control moment from the ground. Oh yeah, they drive through a wall on the way out before stealing 300,000 dollars- 75,000 a piece. They formulate a plan to skip town because things are getting hot for them. LAPD, namely Detective Stroud, suspects them being urged to leave them alone (he’s partially responsible for Stevie’s murder). They hide the money in the ventilation shafts of the building they clean for Luther’s Janitorial service to be picked up at a later date.
Stony continues her temporary escapes with Keith, who invites her for a night out at a swanky banker event. She shows up in an ugly outfit that isn't right for the occasion because she doesn’t have any fancy evening gowns. Keith takes her and buys her a really nice black evening gown. At the party she mingles with the white people and gets a taste of traditional white femininity, not captive. She is able to be delicate and be tended to and unwind and relax and just be taking care of. She’s Stony, tough as stone (lol) and nails and Keith makes her butter. It’s nice to see, but Stony knows it is temporary. “I feel free now,” she says, “But it’s not my life. I’m just borrowing pieces of yours.” They go home after the event and have hot oily soul-shaking sex as Deborah Cox’s “What’s It Gonna Be” plays. In the morning, Stony tearfully returns to her real life with her new black dress in hand. Her life from the night before with Keith will never be forever and she knew that to be true, even if he didn’t.
Concurrently to Stony’s escape, the others realize the hidden money had disappeared. They put two and two together and come to the conclusion that Luther stole it. After consulting Black Sam, they find him at a motel with a hooker: drugs and jewelry and new car keys on the nightstand. Cleo beats Luther and demands he tell her where their money is but he plays stupid. Cleo loses her focus and Luther gets the drop on her, pulling a gun from underneath his pillow. His gun is trained on Cleo but he forgets Tisean, who shoots and kills him, to her own astonishment. Tisean is simply protecting her sister but she drops the weapon and is almost as hysterical as the prostitute, who Cleo blackmails into silence (takes her ID card with her address on it). Cleo’s picked up by Detective Stroud the following day while walking around with her girlfriend Ursula (quiet sexy shawty, played by Samantha MacLachlan) and put in a lineup of suspects for the prostitute. The hooker remembers Cleo’s threat and does not divulge any information to the police but even still, Stony is incredulous back at the apartment as they give her the rundown. “You said we weren’t going to hurt anybody Frankie!” she cries.
When Cleo gets back to her apartment, she displays the same toughness and urgency we’ve come to expect from her. She makes it clear that the two things they need to do is rob a third bank and “get the fuck outta here.” They make plans to rob the bank Keith works for and when Stony voices hesitation, Cleo challenges her and questions her solidarity and if she’d play them “over that buppie at the bank.” Stony, once again, chooses her obligations over her personal freedom and happiness.
In what’s possibly the funniest scene in the movie, they dine and dash before the third bank robbery, realizing that they didn’t have enough to pay the check. Why miss heaven by two inches?
They go through the usual motions: stolen getaway car, discarded music, disguises. But Stony calls Keith to tell him to leave the bank and their timing couldn’t have been worse. Detective Stroud and Detective Waller are showing tapes of their previous robberies to the staff. Keith does leave though, suspicious of Stony but deciding to trust her. The detectives leave too but they return after the robbery is called in on the radio. They stop our heroes just as they are about to leave. They see through the disguises and call them by their names, imploring them to surrender at gunpoint. It’s a standoff and our heroes do almost surrender but when the bank security guard shoots Tisean the moment she lowers her weapon. It’s a completely jarring moment and Stony and Cleo shift into survival mode. They carry Tisean to the getaway car and try to rush to a hospital but they’re not quick enough.
Tisean dies in Stony’s arms in the backseat while Frankie and Cleo try to secure the new car, the first of a series of heartbreaking deaths. Tisean is saying “I’m okay, I’m okay” over and over again and when she stops speaking it’s like a heavy rock gets stacked on your chest. She was the innocent one, the kind-hearted one, the shy one, the one who was about to get custody of her back. I remember crying profusely even as a child (too young to be watching the movie) during this scene. The acting from everyone involved in the scene is superb, they all convey resignation and pain to the highest degree. I can’t say enough.
The rest of the movie is very difficult for me and probably many other Black people. It’s painful, heartfelt, and well-made but no fun at all. I feel as though “trauma porn” is an overused term but perhaps it is a correct descriptor of what we’re given in the final act. At the same time, perhaps it ends on an optimistic note, if not a tad unrealistic.
There is a high-speed car chase and they realize they cannot make it together. They’re trapped in a tunnel and Cleo hatches a plan to split up. She promises that they’ll meet up down the road and for them to just hold onto the money. Cleo knows this to be untrue, Stony and Frankie do as well. They embrace, tears aplenty, and disperse never to see each other again. Stony and Frankie are on foot. Cleo lights a cigarette and drives her car into a police barricade. She projects macho bravado, confidence, peace, pain, and resolute focus. She knows she has no tomorrow. And then she makes the ultimate christological sacrifice. “Up Against The Wind” plays, the perfect encapsulation of everything she’d been through up until that point. She dies indignant. This is arguably the most iconic scene of the movie and for good reason. Despite the tragedy of their deaths happening in such close succession, both losses of Cleo and Tisean resonate emotionally.
Stony finds her way onto a tourist bus on its way to Mexico but Frankie gets caught by the same cops that murdered two of her best friends and showed no remorse as she was robbed at the beginning of the film. Detective Stroud is determined to avoid any further loss of life as the “good cop” (oh brother) but Frankie doesn’t want to hear any of that shit. She chooses death over captivity and is gunned down trying to run away after pressing her gun against Detective Stroud’s neck. Her final words were a callback to Stroud’s strict insistence on her following “procedure” during a bank robbery. Stroud sees Stony on the tourist bus but remains tight-lipped. I’m uncertain if the movie thinks we’re supposed to applaud him for that, he’d just orchestrated the murder of literally everyone she cares about.
Stony cuts her hair in a Mexican hotel and thinks about the lost times with her sisters. She cries, it’s a mixture of happy tears and pain. “Missing You” by Brandy, Tamia, Gladys Knight, and Chaka Khan plays. It is a moment of rebirth, freedom, and finally: escape. The black dress that Keith bought her lies on the bed beside the money from the final bank robbery. She calls him and says “I am.” We understand this to mean she’s free and he does too. No other words are needed. She rides off alone into the wilderness, unbound from obligation and firmly away from captivity.
Alice Walker has four definitions of womanist in her text, In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens. Perhaps the second one is the most apt description of our Set It Off heroes:
A woman who loves other women, sexually and/or nonsexually. Appreciates and prefers women’s culture, women’s emotional flexibility (values tears as natural counterbalance of laughter). And women’s strength. Sometimes loves individual men, sexually and/or nonsexually. Committed to survival, except periodically, for health.
Set It Off is about a lot of things but at its core it's about the love felt between four Black women and how they navigate it together. These women are complex, emotional, strong, vulnerable, capable, and powerful together. They’re failed by everyone in their lives to an infuriating degree. Time and time again, they’re shown to be able to rely on no one but themselves. Solidarity, even from Black men, is understood to be a dangerous expectation. This depresses me greatly, mainly because it’s not inconsistent with reality.
I often associate Set It Off with two other movies that do not appear to have much in common with it at first glance: Waiting To Exhale (1994) and Eve’s Bayou (1997). All three of these films have Black directors and all three are about the love shared by Black women. Waiting To Exhale is about the romantic strivings of four Black women while Eve’s Bayou is about love between two sisters, their mother, and their aunt (that’s four!). A lasting impression of all three films is that Black women have nothing but themselves. It’s a sobering idea, possibly an undeniable truth. I think about who failed Stony, Cleo, Frankie, and Tisean and real life examples of black femicide come to mind. They were left to fend for themselves by the black men in their community. Even still, I have to wonder if their loss was a failure or if their marginalization is by design. I know the answer. As a Black man, I feel like I owe it to the Black women to show up for them. We carry so much experience that has welded us together along with the camaraderie of common origin. I can’t fail them.
The final questions I have pertains to the lyric intensity and epic depth present in everyday living of a people (particularly the working class [queer] Black woman) trapped under socioeconomic pressures. Once you escape as Stony did, what is being mourned? Can you truly get away? What’s free?
“I am.”
notes on: YEAR IN REVIEW [film]
notes on: YEAR IN REVIEW [film], looking at (some) of the movies I loved that was released in 2022.
ALWAYS WRITTEN FROM A PLACE OF LOVE AND UNDERSTANDING.
published January 7, 2023
MEDIUM: Film
MOVIES: 12
YEAR: 2022
At the beginning of 2022 I pledged to watch 365 movies. It was a formidable task and an intimidating number but at the same time I thought, a movie a day? That’s so easy. I was wrong as hell. Life got in the way, I fell in love with some TV shows, some books, with music, and writing and there all of a sudden just wasn’t enough hours in the day. It wasn’t easy at all but I made it to my goal just at the finish, with 64 movies in December, 4 of them coming on New Year’s Eve. Of the 365 different films I watched in 2022, 52 of them were released in 2022. Here are a few moments in those movies that I wanted to share with you.
Watching movies has been a communal action since the inception of cinema so I wanted to bring in an additional voice on what movies looked and felt like in 2022. Nicky is a film aficionado and enthusiast (especially not a critic) with a strong taste palette. She runs a movie page on Instagram (@nickycinema) that seeks to express her love for film and expand her interests throughout her found community online. Nicky introduced me to one of my favorite movies, The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), nearly a decade ago so it means a lot to me that she’s sharing some of her experiences with the big screen with an audience largely curated by me.
No further ado, here’s 2022 in film:
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Everything, Everywhere, All At Once by Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert (2022)
I first saw the trailer for Everything, Everywhere, All At Once when I went to go see The Coen brothers’ Tragedy of Macbeth in December 2021. It immediately became my most anticipated film of 2022 and I was not disappointed. I saw it for the first time on IMAX at Lincoln Center on opening night and after the showing, the directors emerged from the crowd and answered a few questions from the audience. I can’t remember a single word they said, my mind was still blown and elsewhere. Holy shit, this may be my favorite movie of all time. The dialogue, story, acting, plot, comedy, direction, choreography, cinematography, special effects, and action were all being executed to the highest degree. This movie, about an aging Asian mother trying to save her laundromat from the IRS and her daughter from the nihilism of everything spoke to me more than any other movie I have ever seen. I cried three different times every time I saw this movie. It’s a special moment and changed my life forever. I’ve looked at life a lot differently since I watched it for the first time. Michelle Yeoh was fantastic, Ke Huy Quan was fantastic, Stephanie Hsu was fantastic. This movie had some legs on it too, as the weeks passed I saw how the brilliance of the film was passed on through word of mouth. It touched a lot of people in a real way, something that’s uncommon in cinema today. I’m running out of superlatives but this movie felt like me in the best possible way. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: So, even though you have broken my heart yet again, I wanted to say… in another life, I would have really liked doing laundry and taxes with you.
Banshees of Inisherin by Martin McDonagh (2022)
Martin McDonagh, writer and director of Banshees of Inisherin, rose to prominence as a playwright and his penchant for dialogue and grounded yet groundbreaking narratives is on full display here. And even then, the film lacks no scale. It’s beautiful and takes full advantage of the beautiful backdrop that his story is told against. Two men are lifelong friends and one day, one friend wakes up and no longer wants to be friends with the other. At first the premise seems silly. The film’s story begins immediately but as these very human characters examine their very human relationships and face even more human consequences, you’ll find yourself looking inwardly very soon. I didn’t cry but I didn’t not want to. I felt heavy after a while watching this, immobilized by something. I didn’t move for a few minutes. Amazing acting from all of the leads and the writing is beyond top notch. I promise you have no idea where this film is going from beginning to end. There’s no slowburn, just everything then nothing. Some relationships are like that, forever or flames. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: Or did you never used to be? Oh god, maybe you never used to be.
Decision to Leave by Park Chan-Wook (2022)
Decision to Leave is a psychological thriller from Park Chan-Wook of Korea about Hae-Joon, an insomniac veteran detective who was tasked with investigating the death of a man who fell from a mountaintop. The main suspect is the man’s younger wife, Seo-rae, who admits to having married him for his wealth rather than her love for him. The death appears to be a suicidal accident but some of Hae-Joon’s coworkers are not as certain as him. By the middle of his investigation, Hae-Joon isn't sure what he thinks and leads with his heart, not good for a detective. Hae-Joon falls in love with the Seo-rae and winds up following her down a road with unforeseen consequences. [Najee]
FAVORITE SCENE: I don’t necessarily have a favorite line but I love the scene when Seo-rae lures Hae-Joon to the top of the mountain. I don’t want to spoil anything, but it has haunted me for quite some time.
NOPE by Jordan Peele (2022)
NOPE was a lot of fun and it was beautiful. Peele is a master of suspense, like a modern-day Alfred Hitchcock (maybe a bit too early to say this but I don’t care). All of the performances were great but KeKe Palmer stole the show. Peele’s usual mix of sci-fi and horror elements with social commentary hits on some of the same levels as his previous two offerings but he also brings some of his points into new arenas. What are we supposed to see? What forces can we control? How far are we willing to go to capture spectacle? Can we tame nature? Shit goes absolutely bonkers in the third act in the best possible way. Come to mystery and chimpanzees, stay for KeKe Palmer doing an Akira slide. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: What’s a bad miracle?
BARDO, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths by Alejandro González Iñárritu (2022):
The moment my little sister finished this movie she called me to tell me about it. She didn't want to provide too much context, only that it was the perfect movie for me and that I'd love it. It didn't take more than 10 minutes into the movie for me to realize she was right. The movie follows a renowned Mexican journalist and filmmaker who returns to Mexico before accepting a prestigious award in the states. Throughout the film, he has several existential crises and interpersonal battles dealing with family, death, loss, and as IMDb describes, "a folly of his memories". This movie is directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu who is also famously known for Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) and The Revenant. As we watched the movie, my friends and I wondered whether or not the film was autobiographical and representative of his own life and hardships. Alejandro was also born and raised in Mexico, where the film takes place. Regardless of whether or not it was taken from his own life, the film altogether felt very personal. It's extremely meta and intricately layered with Mexican culture and history. It kind of reminded me of "Everything Everywhere All At Once", mainly because it left me with that full "all-encompassing" feeling. The word "bardo" apparently originated from Buddhist teachings and describes an intermediate state between death and rebirth and the way they capture this in-between is so beautiful! Absolutely in my top 10 for the year and definitely deserves at least 2 watches - the first watch is enough, but 2nd for good measure. [Nicky]
Glass Onion by Rian Johnson (2022)
Rian Johnson’s much-anticipated followup to Knives Out lived up to expectations and was a helluva lot of fun. Johnson has a knack for upending troupes within any genre he engages with, something that enraged a lot of fans when he tackled Star Wars: The Last Jedi, but it’s completely at home in the mystery genre. The cast of characters and archetypes are once again fully fleshed out and Daniel Craig’s performance at Benoit Blanc remains captivating. In a year of long-awaited original screenplay sequels, Avatar: The Way of The Water and Top Gun: Maverick, I think Glass Onion was the best one. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: It’s a dangerous thing to mistake speaking without thought with speaking the truth.
Wakanda Forever by Ryan Coogler (2022)
Wakanda Forever was the best superhero movie of 2022 and this was done despite all odds. After losing Chadwick Boseman, who portrayed the titular character in the Black Panther franchise, Coogler was tasked with finding where the world he built in 2018 would go next. He went with what felt real, the grief. He showed it on screen in many ways that broke me in the theater. The action was great, the story was great, and the movie has the best acting in Marvel movie history. Angela Bassett truly deserves an Oscar for her performance as Queen Ramonda. Tenoch Huerta’s portrayal of Namor is brilliant as well. Leticia Wright rose to the occasion in the most difficult circumstances. Everything in this movie felt earned. Healing isn't linear. This movie helped me find that clarity. RIP Chadwick Boseman. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: I am queen of the most powerful nation in the world and my entire family is gone! Have I not given everything!?
Pearl & X by Ti West (2022)
2022 was a strong year for horror films: Scream, Barbarian, Bones and All, Werewolf by Night, Fresh, Smile, etc. but I think these are arguably the two best.
A24, Mia Goth, and Ti West teamed up to put out two different sexual horror thrillers in 2022 with the third installment coming soon. X follows 70s porn stars trying to make a film on a remote farm while dealing with elderly serial killers while Pearl tells the origin of one of those serial killers. X seems to be more about the spectacle of murder and sex while Pearl is more of a character study. Mia Goth really shines in Pearl as Pearl, both in Pearl’s long monologue towards the end of the film and the painful tearful smile during the closing credits. I am most grateful that X didn’t film a sex scene between Kid Cudi and Jenna Ortega. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: No, I’m a star!
The Menu by Mark Mylod (2022)
I recommended this film for our family outing over Thanksgiving weekend and after we watched it, most of my family absolutely hated it. I on the other hand was completely enthralled by it. I’ve always loved narratives with elements of cooking imbued in it. The pacing is interesting and the plot structure being based on the menu shown in the film wasn’t predictable. The movie was funny and oddly terrifying at points. The drama and scale bubbled with each passing moment and it was gorgeous even in its violence. I didn’t feel like this movie was made by me but for me. [Najee]
FAVORITE LINE: You will eat less than you desire but more than you deserve.
Puss In Boots: The Last Wish by Joel Crawford (2022)
I was a big fan of most of the major animation projects that came out this year: Turning Red, The Bad Guys, Entergalactic, Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, Strange World, Lightyear, Chip N’ Dale Rescue Rangers, The Bob’s Burgers Movie, and Wendell & Wild. But I was absolutely taken by surprise with how much I loved Puss In Boots: The Last Wish. It was hilarious, nostalgic, had great animation, a great art style, interesting characters, and intense action set pieces.
Puss In Boots coming to terms with his own mortality and overcoming fear when he had something to lose rather than nothing at all was an intensely personal story for me. All of the new characters were fun, especially Goldilocks and the Three Bears crime family.
FAVORITE SCENE: When Puss In Boots finally faces Death rather than running away had me ready to jump out of my seat.
Triangle of Sadness by Ruben Östlund: (2022)
This is one of the best movies I've watched this year. It's a harsh social commentary on the wealthy, youth, social media, attention, fashion, clout, aging, etc. The acting here is phenomenal, specifically, a scene with Woody Harrelson and Zlatko going back and forth discussing communism, capitalism, and socialism while reading some of their favorite quotes drunk on a multimillion-dollar boat. This movie is filled with several plot twists and redirects quite a few times, it felt like multiple acts to a play. I absolutely love the chemistry and character interactions throughout this movie. Everything felt extremely intentional yet so casually representative of society and our lives now. In addition to all the relatable shit and content, it's also genuinely hilarious with true LOL moments from start to finish in my opinion. On another, much sadder note, one of the main characters, Charlbi Dean Kirk actually died right before the movie was released. She was a huge highlight of the film for me so it was really sad to see her pass before what would have definitely been her big break. Truly a one-of-one film and worth watching. [Nicky]
Babylon by Damien Chazelle (2022)
Babylon is arguably the second best film made about loving and celebrating films released in 2022 (The Fabelmans by Steven Spielberg) but it was big as hell. And neither audiences nor critics were big fans of the film, it flopped critically and commercially. But I was a huge fan of it. The runtime is over three hours long but we are subjected to the rise and fall (and more falling) of many people as they try to adapt the integration of sound into motion pictures. The way time moves through the film is amazing and holy shit were the ~ 45 minutes of partying before the opening title card both engaging and disorienting.
The biggest issue of Babylon is that if you give over three hours of your life to a single film trying to make a single point, you better feel as though that point changed you in some way at its end. And I’m not sure many viewers got that feeling. As far as myself, I found myself writing in my notebook, Fuck I love movies, about an hour in. And yeah I do. I love movies. [Najee]
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October 2024
- Oct 23, 2024 notes on: Set It Off Oct 23, 2024
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January 2023
- Jan 7, 2023 notes on: YEAR IN REVIEW [film] Jan 7, 2023
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December 2022
- Dec 28, 2022 notes on: YEAR IN REVIEW [music] Dec 28, 2022
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August 2022
- Aug 20, 2022 notes on: Frank Ocean, FYF Fest 2017 Aug 20, 2022
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July 2022
- Jul 15, 2022 notes on: THOR: God of Thunder, "THE GOD BUTCHER" and "GODBOMB" Jul 15, 2022
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June 2022
- Jun 30, 2022 notes on: Atlanta S3 [part three] Jun 30, 2022
- Jun 21, 2022 notes on: Atlanta S3 [part two] Jun 21, 2022
- Jun 13, 2022 notes on: Atlanta S3 [part one] Jun 13, 2022
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May 2019
- May 28, 2019 notes on: Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers May 28, 2019