• Work
  • Contact
  • Instagram
A Word With Aramide
  • Work
  • Contact
  • Instagram

Daveed Diggs' 'Blindspotting' Is Electrifying (Sundance Review)

Screen-Shot-2018-01-23-at-10.06.18-PM.png

It’s not often that films can teeter on that fine line between comedy and drama perfectly. It’s a difficult balance, gaining the audiences' trust through humor and wit only to shift so swiftly to say something profound about life and the experiences of being human. Hamilton alum Daveed Diggs and his writing partner Rafael Casal manage to do this flawlessly, hitting the audience squarely in the gut with the intense and moving Blindspotting. Helmed by the electrifying Carlos López Estrada in his feature film debut, Diggs and Casal star as an unlikely duo, best friends Collin and Miles respectively, who work together at a budget moving company and get into hilarious and dangerous shenanigans during their off time. Set in Oakland, California, the film’s whimsical open showcases the eccentric nuances of the city and the Bay Area where the men have lived their entire lives. And yet, the first few minutes of Blindspotting don’t even begin to prepare the audience for the film’s extraordinary commentary on race, police brutality, and manhood.

Collin played thoughtfully by Diggs is a seemingly mild-mannered ex-con with just three days left on his parole sentence. Desperate to get through his last few days unscathed, Collin tries to avoid trouble at all cost, only to be confronted with it at every turn. Miles, in contrast, is a hardened white boy with the gift of gab and a chip on his shoulder. Oakland born and bred, the grill-wearing hothead finds himself in a polarizing position as other white people, hipsters with their press juices and vegan “burgers,” begin moving in on his territory.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Blindspotting, chocolategirlreviews, Daveed Diggs, Sundance Film Festival
categories: Film/TV
Saturday 01.20.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

What’s The 411?: A Black Cinephile’s Guide To Sundance

Screen-Shot-2018-01-23-at-9.58.14-PM.png

Film Festivals can be quite bougie. Each year, a ton of them are held across the globe including niche fests with films that tackle a certain genre, and massive ones like those held in Toronto, Cannes, Tribeca and of course, Park City's Sundance. If you’re the friend in your group who is constantly pressed to get to the theater before the previews roll, or if you’re always reading entertainment news on sites ours, then chances are — you’re a cinephile. Festivals like Sundance give movie lovers the opportunity to get up close and personal with new flicks before studios acquire them and are distributed to the public. It can be an incredibly lit experience, but with a fest like Sundance which shows thousands of films, and hosts hundreds of panels and events, it can be incredibly overwhelming.  However, if you plan ahead and get organized, Sundance can be a once in a lifetime experience.

Plan Ahead

We know you live to be spontaneous and what not, and we do too, but Sundance is not the time to try and wing it.  The fest which was started by Robert Redford back in 1978 is held in Park City, Utah in mid-January each year. This means you have a full 365 days to get things all lined up. We recommend requesting the time off work and snagging an Airbnb or hotel as early as possible. (By early we mean late summer.) This will also help you decide how long you want to spend at the fest. It runs for a total of ten days but a solid four days should be perfect.

Plane tickets or plans to drive in can wait. However, if you don’t get your lodging nailed down, you’ll find yourself taking a 40-minute trek into Park City from neighboring Salt Lake City every day. After a full day of festival fun and giving $40 to a Lyft driver (pools and lines don’t exist in Utah) you’ll be pleased that you didn't procrastinate.

What Do You Want to See?

If you like Excel, go ahead and pull that joint up. Figure out which films/panels you want to see and make a list of the dates and times. Shadow and Act always publishes a list of diverse films/panels and such for you to peruse as soon as Sundance announces them. You can also head over to Indiewireor Variety to get a comprehensive list of the most anticipated flicks headed to Sundance.  You can’t see everything, so don’t worry, whatever you missed will probably be in theaters within the next year or so.

Make sure you double check your list. Times and locations tend to shift in the weeks leading up to the fest, and you don’t want to be salty when you’ve missed something or showed up the wrong place.

Tickets v. Passes

Just like going to the movies around the corner from your house, attending film festivals cost money. Luckily, Sundance has a ton of options. You can get individual tickets to each screening and event, or a fancy pass that gets you into a ton of stuff. Just know that passes can cost quite a bit of coin. Be realistic about your budget and figure out what works best for you, just be sure you do it as soon as the tickets go sale in October or else you’ll just be chillin' in your plush Airbnb with nowhere to go.

Note: If you can't get the tickets that you want, there is a waitlist, so you can always try and cop a ticket at the very last minute.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Black Film Critics, Sundance Film Festival
categories: Film/TV, Travel
Friday 01.19.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Christina Faith talks 'Single and Anxious,' giving Philadelphia some love & Christianity onscreen (EXCLUSIVE)

sb9FJfjN.jpg

Society often dismisses the problems of millennials as trivial and not worth noting -- as if the trials and tribulations of life only bare down on us in our more advanced year. With her stellar web series Single and Anxious, creator, writer, and director Christina Faith brings the lives of twenty-somethings into the forefront, allowing her characters to grow, expand and be their authentic selves. Single and Anxious follows a group of friends, Karissa (Milaya S. Gregory) and her drug-dealing boyfriend T (Branden Brook). Amaya (Daarinah Saafir) and her cousin Tasha (Fann Sanders), Sebastian (Don Cephas) who is struggling with his Christianity, Santos (Jerrick Medrano) and Je’Kob (Brandon J McLean).

Described as Girlfriends meets A Different World with just a hint of The Wire, Single and Anxious which just dropped its second season earlier this fall is Faith's brainchild. “When I think about anxiety, I don't think about anxiety from the perspective of, 'I just want to be in a relationship'," she explained to me. “My thing is, anxiety comes from being in relationships with people that may not be the best fit for us -- or at the wrong time. Single and Anxious came from my singleness when I was single and bothered me all the time. I got tired of writing about singleness from the biblical perspective, and I thought, ‘Let's just make some characters.’ So the book and the show both have the same name, but they approach anxiety from a different perspective. Karissa is anxious to keep the perfect life you see from the first season. Then, in the second season, you see she's anxious from the perspective of, 'I don't want the perfect life. I just want to do what I want to do.' So it's just a play on words."

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Christina Faith, shadow and act, Single and Anxious, Web Series
categories: Film/TV
Saturday 01.06.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
Comments: 1
 

Buicks in Cinema & Austin, Texas with the 2018 Regal Sportback

S5A2369.jpg

Austin, Texas doesn’t get enough credit. The state capital is an energetic cultural hub that sits in one of the biggest states in the country. It’s not just the city itself that has a rich history of music and film; it’s also the hilly landscape and lush bodies of water that I was able to discover on the First Drive in the 2018 Buick Regal Sportback. On country roads built for hiking and biking, my partner Xilla and I traded off throughout the day coasting along in the sleek coupe-like design. The versatile vehicle allowed us to pack in everything from a bike to a delightful unicorn floatation device. Switching from a front wheel to all-wheel drive, as we drove from the Hamilton Pool to the Horseshoe Bay Yacht Club; it became clear why Austin has been the location choice for many films over the years. Movies like 1993's Menace II Society, Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof and 1999’s Office Space are just a few among many that have showcased the splendor and beauty of the city.

Austin itself hasn't been the only center point in cinema, Buick has also had a significant presence in cinema. The car brand is all about attainable luxury while putting a spin on the traditional Films have recognized the innovative car brand as such. One of the biggest films of 2016, La La Land opened with Ryan Gosling's character Sebastian in a 1982 Buick Riviera. The car, just like the characters and the film's songs, became a running theme throughout the film.Buick isn't just making its presence known in live-action films. An animated Buick Regal from the 1980s appeared in the critically acclaimed 2006 Disney film, Cars. The cars have long since lost their boxy, squared-off appearance and gotten a sleek premium look.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Austi, Buick
categories: Film/TV
Saturday 01.06.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

7 dope web series to dive into before the New Year

gallery-1487116647-dsc7041.jpg

We all watched Issa Rae change the game when it came to content creation with Awkward Black Girl, and since her meteoric rise from the internet to HBO, folks have been putting out amazing web series left and right. Though Rae isn't the first writer/director/producer triple threat to get her talent out there, she did help light a spark for Black content creators who were having trouble getting mainstream studios and audiences to pay attention to their stories. Since we live in a time when the world is literally at our fingertips, it seems like everybody and their mama has a show for us to check out. With so many options to choose from here are just seven of our favorite web series currently streaming for your binging pleasure.

Giants

We’re all out here trying to live our best lives, but Malachi (James Bland), Journee (Vanessa Baden), and Ade (Sean Samuels) are determined to do so no matter what it cost them. Raised as a devout Christian, Malachi is questioning everything as he approaches thirty. His soul searching leads him to uproot his life, quit his corporate job, and move to Los Angeles. Malachi’s BFF and roommate Journee struggles to keep a job since her chronic depression makes it difficult for her to get out of bed each day. Then there is Ade; a former engineering grad student turned dancer who has decided to be his true self no matter what anyone thinks.

Giants is captivating because the series tackles topics not often seen on mainstream television including homophobia in the Black community and mental illness.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Brown Girls, Giant, Web Series
categories: Film/TV
Thursday 12.28.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Jess Hilarious on HBO's 'All Def Comedy,' talking that mess and taking it all in (EXCLUSIVE)

Screen-Shot-2018-01-07-at-5.29.26-PM.png

Jess Hilarious (née Jessica Robin Moore) is here for the mess, and we love her for it. The Baltimore native has risen quickly to the top of the comedy world -- a male-dominated sphere with her jokes, roasts and outlandish entertainment commentary. Just a few years ago, she was studying mortuary science. Now, the Wild 'n Out comedian appears in HBO’s Def Comedy Jam reboot, All Def Comedy. Ahead of the series premiere, I chatted with Jess who is currently touring the country and performing her stand-up routines. Comedy has always been a significant part of the 25-year-old's life. “It was just something effortless for me because I've always been a humorous person --just socially humorous, “ she explained. “It started at family reunions and just general conversation with my family, friends, and boyfriend. One day I was just sitting, and I was like let me just start making videos. They went viral. I saw a response from that my following was growing. I started doing stand-up. I jumped into it, and it was good. It hasn't even been that long. I’ve only been doing stand-up for like 18 months. The comedy all-together, like two and half years."

With her hands in improv, stand-up and her Instagram segment, Jess with the Mess -- the comedy phenom feels most at home on the stage. “Honestly, I like stand-up better, “ she reflected, “I'm not a big fan of improv. I'm not a big fan of acting on the spot. I can on the spot roast somebody like on the Wild 'n Out shows and that type of stuff. But unless it's a person that I have to roast, it's not going down.

Jess' knack for roasting is what has helped propel her to the center of social media comedy. With spats with the likes of Azealia Banks, Hazel E and a major controversy surrounding an innocent photo with her son, Jess has remained unphased by it all. “I don’t regret anything. Not ever,” she said adamantly. “The problems I choose, I choose them wisely. I don't regret anything that I've done. I don't regret picking on anybody. It's a difference between bullying and roasting and if you need to be roasted you gonna get roasted. That's just how it is. That's just who I am. That's how I was brought up. I have an older brother -- all he did was crack on me. He made me real tough and got me together for the world. He just prepared me to be quick on my feet for when somebody comes at me. It's all fun and games until people get serious. Then when they get serious, I still be playing.”

The spot-on impressionist has obtained a massive following that topples over 2.5 million on Instagram alone by being engaging and talking directly to her fans. “I just talk about my everyday life,” she explained. “You know, relatable situations that people go through every day. I find a way to make it funny. It's gonna make you laugh not only because it's funny, but because you can relate to it. So that's what makes me likable. That's how I keep my audience’s attention -- that's how I build my set. That's how I build my material.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: All Def Comedy, chocolategirlinterviews, HBO, Jess Hilarious
categories: Film/TV
Thursday 12.28.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Netflix's 'Bright' refuses to take any real risks (Review)

bright_unit_10265_r3.jpg

Fans of Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings have probably all wished at some point that they could arise one morning and walk amongst magical creatures. These mystical beings might make our world more enticing and adventurous or at the very least break up the daily monotony that seems to bog us all down. With his new film Bright, Suicide Squad director David Ayer unveils a futuristic graffiti laced Los Angeles where Orcs, Fairies, Elves, and Centaurs live and thrive amongst human beings. Will Smith and Joel Edgerton star as LAPD Officers Daryl Ward and a Deputy Nick Jakoby-- a human and diversity hire Orc respectively, who are reluctantly bound together as partners on the force. With just five years until he receives his pension, a weary Ward is clinging to his job and his life so that he might be able to provide a future for his family. However, retiring unscathed might be more difficult than he expected. In this world, racism looks different. Humans rank well below the glamorous Elves who have taken over the posh districts of the city. In contrast to Ward, Jakoby adores his position on the force, though he’s ostracized by other Orcs who turn their nose down at him for betraying their race. Things are also difficult for him on the job where officers berate, abuse, and distrust him. With glimpses of vicious Fairies, magic wands and the upper echelon of the Elf communities, Bright sets the scene for a nuanced and detailed LA that should be right out of a fairy tale. However, things don’t stay quite so magical.

Out on the beat one day, Ward and Jakoby stumble across Tikka (Lucy Fry), a young Elf with powers (called a Bright) in possession of a coveted magic wand. On their quest to get Tikka and the wand to safety, Ward and Jakoby must evade a diabolical Elf named Leilah, a witch who seeks the power of the wand for herself. The men are also up against their fellow police officers, Orcs, and LA gangsters who are also desperate for the potent artifact. This is where the storyline stops being riveting and fresh. Ayer who wrote the screenplay for the phenomenal Denzel Washington led Training Day, takes a significant trope from the older film --one so easily recognizable that it was almost comical to watch again, sixteen years later in Bright.

Continue reading on Shadow and Act.

tags: Bright, chocolategirlreviews, netflix, shadow and act, Will Smith
categories: Film/TV
Thursday 12.21.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Roland Buck III on 'Chicago Med,' 'The Long Road Home' & his upcoming Netflix comedy, 'The Week Of' (EXCLUSIVE)

RolandSelects-13.jpg

Roland Buck III exudes charm. The Chicago Med actor has been capturing hearts on the NBC medical drama as Dr. Noah Sexton, and now with a whirlwind year under his belt and an exciting 2018 just around the corner, Buck is ready to show the world how versatile he is. The 29-year-old is no stranger to the grind. “This year's been pretty busy, and I'm glad, it's changed a lot," he reflected. “I just think anything worth having doesn't come easy. I think everything is hard or should be in anything that you love to do -- if you could just have it, then it loses its luster.” When he thinks about his acting career, the Chicago native relates it to his time on the football field. “I think football and sports taught me a great work ethic," Buck revealed. “I've been through some practices that physically felt and mentally felt like I was about to die. But I didn't. So when you push your body and your mind to a certain limit you know you're not going to die. It's okay, you can just keep pushing forward. The pain, the struggle won't last forever. I use that toward acting as well. You figure out what works for you and what doesn't, but the preparation and the focus -- what you put in on the downtime is what people don't see. Acting gives me that same immediate satisfaction, the thrill of losing yourself in something, and getting that immediate response from people evoking some kind of emotion. That's the only thing that gave me that rush and that chill, so I knew that's what I wanted to do.”

Wearing Dr. Noah’s scrubs has been a ton of fun for Buck. The reluctant doctor is always cracking jokes and trying to find the silver lining in every situation. Noah’s humanity is what spoke to Buck when he first read for the part. “I think sometimes you look at someone in a uniform, or in a specific position, (and) you don't see them as a brother or father or a son anymore," he explained. “You just look at them as a doctor or a police officer or a soldier. They're just like us; they can mess up. That's what I liked about Noah. I think this is a different story of a doctor that you haven't heard yet. There's a lot of people that are first-generation Americans, and their families moved from different countries to make a better life for themselves. The medical field is a steady job profession. I think Noah makes mistakes. He's genuine and he's growing, he's learning. I like that he has redemption, I like that he's flawed, I like that he's a doctor of color in Chicago. He's charismatic with the ladies, so he's not a square, by any means. He shows that it's cool to be a doctor. You don't have to perfect either. You can be a lot more than what's been shown on TV. And I think that's good. I'm grateful and humbled that I got that opportunity to portray that.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Chicago Med, Roland Buck III, The Long Road Home
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 12.20.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

How Marti Hines & Jasmin Greene are taking on the entertainment industry, their way (EXCLUSIVE)

Screen-Shot-2018-01-07-at-5.07.10-PM.png

Black women are done waiting for opportunities. Instead, they are paving their own way in the entertainment industry. If we look ahead into 2018 at all of the women of color slated to play leading ladies -- it's clear that it's our time to shine. After working for years as an event producer for Sundance Film Festival and Hyatt Hotels, producer and entrepreneur Marti Hines, decided it was time to make a name for herself. Hines and her partner Jasmin Greene launched D Pique Productions (DPP), a company that focuses on high-quality film and television for women of color. Now, the pair is gearing up for festival season with their first feature film, die Expats. “I think it’s very important that we support each other, and we stick together," Greene explained. “Marti and I really try to work with people who are in line with our mission -- work with other women. So our film, all of the people in the key departments, they were women. I think it’s just important if we can open a door, open it to another woman and keep the party going that way.” Hines realized that fulfilling her dreams was about recognizing the talent that was right in front of her. “I think that we have to really use each other," she proclaimed. “I was listening to an interview that Issa Rae did, and I just love how she was talking about working laterally instead of networking up. I think that we have such a community of talent and so much intelligence just right around us. Jasmin and I, we went to college together and have been friends for almost two decades. It took so long for us to realize, ‘Hey, why don’t we actually work together on something?’ We were kind of just parallel, working side by side, and, of course, cheering each other on. Then, about five years ago, it dawned on us that if we decided to work together, we could really be unstoppable.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: chocolategirlinterviews, die Expats, Jasmin Greene, Marti Hines, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Tuesday 12.19.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Keesha Sharp on 'Marshall,' playing strong women and her NAACP Image Award nomination (EXCLUSIVE)

gettyimages-854243276-2.jpg

Black women aren’t often recognized or remembered for their extensive contributions in history. However, with her roles in film and on television Keesha Sharp is making sure that some of these women are getting the recognition that they deserve. Last year, the Girlfriends alum starred in the critically acclaimed FX series, American Crime Story: The People v. O.J .Simpson as Dale Cochran, the wife of the infamous attorney Johnnie Cochran. Her most recent role as Buster Marshall – the wife of Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall in the legal thrill Marshall proved that Sharp is ready to give more unsung women the spotlight. When Sharp heard a film about Thurgood Marshall's life was in development, she jumped at the chance to be involved. "I said, ‘Oh my god, they're doing something on Thurgood Marshall!,’” Sharp told me just a few days after she’d been nominated for an NAACP Image Award for her role in the film. “I was so excited even to be able to audition for it, to be honest, because is someone in this country I don't think we know enough about. We know the two major things, but a lot of us don't know the struggles and the fights. I think it's important for us to see and to know that we can do that too. It gives us inspiration that this man started someplace where we all can start. We can all be advocates for things that we believe in. It was exciting to be a part of it, and I was so really blessed when I got the role.”

Since she was such a private woman, there is little known about Vivian “Buster” Marshall, but we do know how much she sacrificed for her husband and for Black people's education in this country. “She had cancer while was fighting , but she did not tell him," Sharp explained. “She didn't want him to be distracted in any way. It tells you so much about her just knowing that information. We know Thurgood Marshall, we know what an activist he was, but what we don't know is how important Vivian was in the shadows. She was holding him up and being the strength for him and encouraging him to continue the fight. Even knowing that she had cancer wouldn't tell him because Brown vs. the Board of Education was more important to her than her personal fight."

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

 

tags: chocolategirlinterviews, Keesha Sharp, Lethal Weapon, Marshall, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Thursday 12.14.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Mario Van Peebles, Jasmine Guy & Joel Anderson Thompson examine 'Superstition' (EXCLUSIVE)

superstition_gallery_105recap_01.jpg

Black horror narratives that encompass the supernatural and the paranormal haven’t yet found solid footing on television. With his new series Superstition, celebrated filmmaker Mario Van Peebles is changing the landscape. In the show, Van Peebles turns his lens on the Hastings family. Residents of the fictional town of La Rochelle, Georgia, they live amongst graveyards, strange townsfolk, and rich history of odd phenomena. Van Peebles' Issac and Robinne Lee’s Bea run a funeral home during the day, but their nighttime activities involve battling the evil the constantly infiltrates the town. With the New Jack City auteur at the helm as the writer/director and House M.D’s Joel Anderson Thompson as showrunner, Superstition's impressive cast also includes Brad James, Demetria McKinney and the legendary Jasmine Guy as Aunt Nancy. Recently, I sat down to speak with Van Peebles, Anderson and Guy about the series, why they were inspired to dive into the genre, and why it was so important to tell these types of stories.

“Some of the folks at Syfy had identified that there was big unserved demographic of folks that were interested in seeing more multicultural reflections of Americana in these horrors/thriller spaces,” Van Peebles explained about the series conception. “They talked to Barry and myself and brother Joel, and it just continued to grow and evolve. Early on, while I was still filming Roots, I started going over to explore funeral homes. One of the funeral homes that I was looking at in New Orleans was a little mom and pop funeral home owned by folks of color, and they were doing specialty services. There was a couple of cases where they actually buried people -- if you could call it burying them -- standing up. So some of those stories made their way into what became our show. This is a family run business and are still trying to make it work as a business. Then Joel kept bringing in all the dope folklore and gothic Americana that is so rich."

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Jasmine Guy, Joel Anderson Thompson, Mario Van Peebles, Superstition, Syfy
categories: Film/TV
Friday 12.08.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Nefertite Nguvu talks AT&T Hello Lab and 'The Last Two Lovers At The End of The World' (EXCLUSIVE trailer)

Nefertite-Nguvu-2-Recovered.jpg

We all have stories to tell -- anecdotes about our experiences, what we hope for in the future, and the words that have moved us throughout our lives. However, the structure of the entertainment industry makes it so that only certain voices are given platforms, but things are changing. In recent years, mentorship programs like AT&T’s Hello Lab have helped minorities and women push through the red tape. AT&T’s Hello Lab specifically, is empowering up-and-coming filmmakers and writers while giving them the opportunity to bring their stories and views to the forefront of the industry. Nefertite Nguvu is one of those voices. Nguvu’s debut self-funded film In the Morning was her love letter to Black women and focused the intricacies and changes in relationships. Now, with her filmThe Last Two Lovers At The End of The World which will debut on DIRECTV NOW on Dec. 1. Nguvu was able to step back and lean into her creative flow. “With self-fund projects, there are so many things that you have to think about outside of the creative that are exhausting,” she explained. “Not having to think about, ‘How am I going to get the money, whom am I going to get?’ All of those things take a huge load off your shoulders as a creative person. Sometimes in situations like that, the creative things are the last things that you get to think about at the end of the day because you're so busy trying to put out fires and figure out logistics. So that was really lovely, just to have the opportunity to focus on the creative aspect of making the film and not worry about those things.”

AT&T’s Hello Lab Mentorship Program connects filmmakers with industry leaders. This year’s mentors included Octavia Spencer, Common, and Rick Famuyiwa who provided support to the filmmakers as they crafted signature short films. Nguvu’s mentor was Academy Award Winner Common whom she’d worked with previously. “From the first project that we did together which was theLove Star mini-documentary, it's just been really wonderful, “ she reflected. “He’s everything that he appears to be. He's just an incredibly generous, smart, collaborative person. So it really was wonderful working with him and I'm thankful to have the opportunity to make this film.“

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: AT&T’s Hello Lab, Common, Nefertite Nguvu, Shdaow and Act
categories: Film/TV
Friday 12.01.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Denzel Washington's magnetism keeps 'Roman J. Israel, Esq.' afloat (Review)

denzel-washington-roman-j-israel-esq.jpg

There are actors, and then there are chameleons. Never before in our contemporary times has there been a pillar of the entertainment industry like Denzel Washington. On the heels of the 25th anniversary of his astounding performance in Malcolm X, Washington has transformed himself into Roman J. Israel, Esq. Like the many many roles that have come before this one, Washington wraps himself in his character as if he’s wearing a second skin. His incredible performance as a man with a computer-brain and a determination to aid the helpless is what keeps Roman J. Israel, Esq. moving forward -- even during the moments it seems to lean off track. From the mind of writer/director, Dan Gilroy, Washington stands at the center of the legal drama as its titular character. In shoes that are two sizes too big (literally), an oversized blazer, and some haphazardly shaped bell bottoms, Roman is a fossil – a relic of the 1970’s locked away in a law office and dragged into the light when his partner, William Henry Jackson aka The Bulldog has a heart attack. In an instant, the man who has always stayed in the shadows becomes the face of the two-person firm. He also inadvertently captures the attention of hotshot attorney George Pierce (Collin Farrell) who is intrigued by Roman’s wealth of knowledge and encyclopedic brain.

Over the course of just three weeks, Roman’s life changes forever. A man who is obviously on the autistic spectrum and has never practiced in a courtroom, Roman finds himself both enraged at the greed and ignorance of others while simultaneously seduced by it. As he tries to find a place for himself at Pierce’s lush and massive law firm, Roman becomes enamored with Civil Rights attorney Maya Alston (play stellarly by Carman Ejogo). As Roman finds himself increasingly adrift from his beliefs, Maya -- inspired by his legacy -- desperately tries to hold on to the reigns of activism despite all that she’s had to sacrifice for it.

Comtinue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: chocolategirlreviews, Denzel Washington, Roman J- Israel Esq, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Friday 11.24.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Netflix's 'She's Gotta Have It' is bold, brilliant & black as hell (Review)

sghi_104_unit_00503r-jpeg-1500x1002.jpg

From the moment the Prince/ Notorious B.I.G. opening track rings out from the television screen, Spike Lee’s electric new Netflix joint She’s Gotta Have It springs to life. After much critique about his "woman problem" in some of his past work — Lee has gotten with the program. Tracy Camilla Johns’ 1986 Nola Darling, which was set against a crisp black and white Brooklyn background will always remain glued in my memory, but the film was ruined for me when our protagonist was viscously raped by her suitor Jamie Overstreet (Tommy Redmond Hicks). I haven’t gotten over it, and neither has Lee.In a 2014 interview with Deadline, he said, “It was just totally…stupid. I was immature.” We are in an age where women – especially Black women are laying themselves bare, and unapologetically demanding to be heard. With guidance from his wife, Tonya Lewis Lee who also serves as an executive producer on the Netflix TV adaptation of She’s Gotta Have It — Lee presents an image of a Black woman who is as refreshing as she is enticing. Shots Fired and Underground alum DeWanda Wise is center stage this time, delivering a brown-skinned Nola Darling whose the homegirl you love, envy, and are sometimes exasperated with. Netflix’s She’s Gotta Have It is a complicated and multi-angled portrait of a millennial Black woman trying to make in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Nola’s got her men — Greer Childs (Cleo Anthony), Jaime Overstreet (Lyriq Bent), and Mars Blackmon (Anthony Ramos) all return in vibrant color with new layers and subtle personality changes. However, she’s also got her girlfriends Shemekka Epps (Chayna Lane) and Clorinda Bradford (Margot Bingham), a lady lover (Ilfenesh Hadera) and a bomb ass therapist (Heather Headley). Gentrification is rampant, money is tight, but Nola is living — and how she lives, who she makes love with, and the art that she creates is going to be on her terms.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Anthony Ramos, chocolategirlreviews, Cleo Anthony, DeWanda Wise, Lyriq Bent, netflix, shadow and act, She's Gotta Have It, spike lee, Tonya Lewis Lee
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 11.22.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Carmen Ejogo on 'Roman J. Israel, Esq,' working with Denzel Washington & playing badass women (EXCLUSIVE)

Screen-Shot-2017-12-06-at-11.17.41-AM.png

For a long while, especially in the entertainment industry, there was this archaic notion that women could not be complicated and messy, that we could not have angles and layers and been seen in various lights. Thankfully, in the recent years, various stories and characters are shifting the tide. For Carmen Ejogo — ho has been dazzling recently in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, and It Comes at Night —these are the roles that speak to her soul.

For Ejogo, starring alongside Denzel Washington as Civil Rights attorney/activist Maya Alston — a woman who is both burdened and enchanted by activism — in Roman J. Israel, Esq. was a no-brainer. “What I find most frustrating is when people operate from a place of clear delineations that you're either good or bad,” Ejogo explained to me over the phone a few weeks before the film was set to premiere. “I really don't like people that think in that way. I think it's very destructive because I've not yet met a human being that operates in one of those zones to a degree of perfection. It means we are all going to be losers if that is somehow the definition of what is to be a valuable human being in the world. So I'm excited to bring to the screen people that are messy, that are weak as well as strong, that are nuanced, that are complex, that have complexity about them because that's when you see yourself on screen.”

Set in Los Angeles, Roman J. Israel, Esq follows an idealistic lawyer (Washington) whose life is shifted drastically when his law partner dies and he's thrust into the courtroom. Earning the attention of a hotshot attorney (Collin Farell) and a Civil Rights activist (Ejogo), Roman tries to cling to his morals while getting seduced by the trophies of greed. “I've never seen Denzel in a role like this," Ejogo explained. "And I've never actually seen a film like this. There's something about it that is super-mesmerizing and idiosyncratic and it really had its own signature. And that's a testament to Dan as a really interesting filmmaker. He's a dream to work with.”

Written and directed by Gilroy, the film is a massive tale driven by character. It's a story that came together in a way Ejogo never expected. “I've gotten used to the idea that you can hope that a film is going to reach its potential," she reflected. "What's really gonna make me sign on is believing that this film has that potential, but most importantly, 'What can I then bring to it individually?' 'Who am I gonna get to play with?' 'Will the components in place allow me to rise to the challenge at hand?' If it then emerges that we've got a much bigger piece of art that starts to emerge, because you realize that all of the components that you'd hoped might be in place actually are in place, then it becomes like the golden goose. That's when it becomes quite special. There are so many things that can happen during the making of a movie that people end up wavering from that vision. But you've got to know that what you can contribute individually is gonna be worth the time and the effort and the process. I just got very lucky on this that it all came together in a way that makes for a really timeless and relevant movie.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Carmen Ejogo, chocolategirlinterviews, Roman J- Israel Esq, shadow and act, The Girlfriend Experience
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 11.22.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Spotlight On: Sundance Institute Directors & Screenwriters Labs 2017 fellows (EXCLUSIVE)

Screen-Shot-2017-12-06-at-11.13.47-AM.png

Everybody has a story to tell, but not everyone has the tools needed to get their story out to a mass audience. Sundance Institute Directors & Screenwriters Lab provides a bridge from screenwriters and directors to the public, shining a spotlight on voices that aren't often given the amplification that they deserve. Earlier this year, the Sundance Institute announced thirteen new independent feature projects from Cuba, Chile, Kenya, the UK and the U.S. The Director’s and Screenwriters Lab are part of the Institute's year-round support of emerging independent artists. Feature Film Program Founding Director Michelle Satter said, "Our Lab brings together a community of artists from the U.S. and around the world to learn, discover and take risks in a pure workshop environment. These 13 artist-driven projects will advance through our year-round support system, with the June Lab as a centerpiece of our program. Each artist brings a personal voice, unique worldview, and deep humanity to their work, creating an exchange of ideas and distinctive storytelling that resonates profoundly in today's world.”

Shadow and Act spoke with four of the fellows, Radha Blank, Colman Domingo, Reinaldo Marcus Green and Tayarisha Poe. We discussed their selected projects, influences, and what they took from the Lab.

Netflix's She's Gotta Have It scribe Radha Blank’s The 40-Year Old Version tells the story of a down-on-her-luck New York playwright who decides that the only way to salvage her artistic voice is to become a rapper...at age 40.

The film is Blank’s first feature which she aims to begin filming in 2018. This would be a massive feat in itself, but she's also writing, directing and starring in it as well. She said, “ is loosely based on my life as Playwright in New York. And so yes, I am nuts.” For Blank, the Lab was an opportunity to explore the tone of her screenplay. “I got to experiment with improvisation as well as with storytelling that wasn’t on the page, “ she explained. “I’m coming from working as a playwright where dialogue is the force that propels a story forward, but at the Lab, I was reminded how powerful images and silences are in expanding my storytelling beyond dialogue.”

The daughter of a New York cinephile, Blank was influenced by Sidney Lumet, Hal Ashby, John Cassavetes, Spike Lee and Shmoody Shmallen. “I’ve always wanted to see a New York comedy where the New Yorker at the center of the storytelling looked, felt and sounded like me and my friends, “ she said. “Not sure I've seen it so maybe I make it?"

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Colman Domingo, Radha Blank, Reinaldo Marcus Green, shadow and act, Sundance Institute Directors & Screenwriters Labs 2017, Tayarisha Poe
categories: Film/TV
Tuesday 11.21.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Ashley & Andy Williams talk their new 'Flip or Flop' series, giving back & being a voice for veterans (EXCLUSIVE)

Screen-Shot-2017-12-06-at-11.09.45-AM.png

HGTV is switching things up. The network has gone through some significant changes in the recent months. After a fifth and final season, audiences will say goodbye to Chip and Joanna Gaines’ fan favorite Fixer Upper. Another beloved series Flip or Flop is expanding across the country and will introduce several new spin-offs including the much-anticipated, Flip or Flop Ft. Worth. Starring military veterans Ashley and Andy Williams, this married couple are making a mark on the real estate and design industries while giving back to their community and fellow military veterans. The couple met overseas while stationed in Iraq – Ashley was in the Army while Andy served in the Marines. Once they returned stateside, real estate became a way for them reimmerse themselves back into everyday life. Since Flip or Flop Ft. Worth was announced, life has been a whirlwind for the couple. “Real estate became important to us because, with us being veterans and transitioning out of the military -- there's not really a lot of options where you can control your own destiny," Ashley explained to me as we chatted on the phone a few weeks ago. “We've had a lot of experience in the military. We've had a lot of job experience, but that doesn't always translate into a civilian job. A lot of times, veterans, including us, were getting docked for time spent in the military because no one understood what we did. A lot of things require certificates and training and a lot of times we don't get the paperwork behind it, so it's like it never happened. Real estate was a way that we could control our destiny.”

The Williams’ business Recon Realty, Inc., was born out of the climate of the country and the couple’s desire to invest in their community. “America was going through its own problems between 2005 and 2008," Andy explained. “The entire country was at war, but also economically, the country was rebounding. Initially, I invested in my hometown. We were renting houses because there's a lot of people that needed rental homes, and a lot of homes were dilapidated and needed to be repaired. However, there's no real financing in that market accessible to those people in that community. So, we decided to invest in our town. One house turned into ten, ten houses turned into a ten-unit, a ten-unit turned into a twenty-five house rental portfolio, and we just built it from there. Then we started rehabbing. When we started the rehab to resale, the war was coming to an end, and a lot of veterans were coming back home. We were like, ‘Hey, you know what, we can make a little bit of money, make a little bit of an impact, and solve a little bit of a problem.’ We started our real estate company with the mission of revitalizing communities and bringing our fellow veteran along.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Andy Williams, Ashley Williams, chocolategirlinterviews, Flip or Flop: Ft- Worth, HGTV, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 11.01.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Dee Rees on bringing 'Mudbound' to life & confronting America's gruesome history (EXCLUSIVE)

bessie-deereesvarietyshoot.jpg

There are films, and then there are masterpieces. Dee Rees’ Mudbound is a masterpiece. It’s difficult to translate words onto film — giving the characters and storylines vibrancy and richness especially when another person birthed those words. And yet, Rees was able to electrify Hillary Jordan’s debut novel into a sweeping cinematic epic. At a time when the country is suffocating under the vilest remnants of our history, Rees has used film to drag our past into the present — laying it at our feet. Considering her debut indie film Pariah and her stellar HBO biopic Bessie, Rees didn’t expect to take on Mudbound. “It's funny, I wasn't aware of the book," she explained to me as we sat in a hotel suite one fall afternoon overlooking New York City’s Columbus Circle. “I read through the script first and thought okay there's a lot there and that prompted me to go back to the book and see what else I could bring forward. I ended up writing a lot more original material because it needed to be a story of two families — not just the Jackson family in service of the McAllans. I wanted to really contextualize our history, and how it's not this separated thing, it's not this disjointed thing. It's all interwoven. I wanted to try and work on this film on a thematic level and conceptual level. It's not just about racism; it's not just Black and white, it's about who we are as people and the stories we tell about ourselves versus what our story actually is and how those things connect.”

Set in Mississippi during the 1940's Mudbound centers around the McAllans — a white family who buy a farm and the Jacksons—a Black family who have been sharecroppers on the land for generations. For Rees, the beauty of this story was found in witnessing the families bang and clash against one another on this muddy cotton farm in the Jim Crow South. “I wanted to have this dark symbiosis of two families who are kind of tied to each other,” Rees explained. “With the two patriarchs Hap (Rob Morgan) and Henry (Jason Clarke), I'm dealing with this idea of disinheritance. Hap literally has bones in this land. He has blood. He has his ancestors there. But he can't take title to it. Whereas Henry buys into the land, but ironically feels like he's been disinherited. Pappy (Jonathan Banks) sold his land, so he is clinging on to this thing that he feels is rightfully his.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: chocolategirlinterviews, Dee Rees, Mudbound, Pariah, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Tuesday 10.31.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Brutally honest and witty, 'A Whole New Irving' gives young Black men room to express themselves

Screen-Shot-2017-12-05-at-5.29.42-PM.png

Millennials have a bad rap. We’ve been called lazy, entitled and so forth – but in reality, I think most of us are exhausted. We’re trying to wade our way through life using rules that rusted over a generation ago, and when we get stuck – which many of us do especially coming right out of college -- things seem hopeless. We get angry, and perhaps we wallow and sink into what we feel is the injustice of it all. After all, it isn’t as if we haven’t done the work. In his brutally honest and witty debut web series, A Whole New Irving, LA-based producer-director Terry Dawson examines the post-grad struggle from the perspective of a Black young man. Irving (Chase Anthony) is a recent grad who is submerged in debt and barely holding on to his job at a local health food store in Venice Beach. He lives every day trying not to let the bitterness and angst that he feels consume him.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: A Whole New Irving, shadow and act, Web Series
categories: Film/TV
Friday 10.27.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Bianca Lawson talks embodying Darla ahead of reunion with parents on 'Queen Sugar' (EXCLUSIVE)

maxresdefault-1.jpg

Bianca Lawson radiates on screen. Becoming Darla on the stunning OWN series Queen Sugar has been an exceptional gift for the actress. A veteran in the television and film industry, Lawson has been delivering stellar performances in everything from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to the ever-popular Pretty Little Liars. On Queen Sugar – where she plays a young recovering addict, Darla who is trying to rebuild a life with her son Blue (Ethan Hutchison) and his father Ralph Angel (Kofi Siriboe) — Lawson has had to expose herself in ways that she hasn’t ever had to previously. Infectiously effervescent, Lawson’s personality is very different from the quiet and anxious Darla. We spoke earlier this week, just a few days before the premiere of Darla’s much-anticipated reunion with her estranged parents. “There is something about this particular character, she's completely unlike anything else I've ever played — you have a really visceral experience with her," Lawson explained to me. “It's analytical for me. I think when I started acting it's something about feeling the security of hiding behind a character — and for her, I've had to actually reveal more of my true self. With Darla, there's something very interesting about her where the things that she's gone through even though I haven't gone through the exact same situations, I've had to process things about myself or confront things about myself or at least expose certain aspects of myself to do her justice. This has probably been the most personal character for me, and definitely, I'd say the most complex and intricately layered. I feel like she's made me a better actress. I feel like she's made me a more empathetic human.”

Accustomed to creating her own back-stories for her characters, Lawson was not aware of the complicated layers that shaped Darla’s past when she first read for the role. Embodying this young woman has brought forth an arresting fierceness not often seen on television – especially in a role that has historically been portrayed stereotypically. “Ava and I had a long call before I officially came on,” Lawson recalled. “She told me a little bit about her thoughts about the character, and why she wanted to write this character. She really wanted to tell the story of a young Black woman getting sober in a way that hadn't been done before — in a way that was more real and true to life. There’s a real loneliness in that journey.”

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Bianca Lawson, Oprah Winfrey, OWN, Queen Sugar, shadow and act
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 10.25.17
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 
Newer / Older

Powered by Aramide Tinubu