Showing posts with label Taraji P. Henson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taraji P. Henson. Show all posts

Saturday, 6 September 2025

Movie Review: Straw (2025)


Genre: Drama Thriller  
Director: Tyler Perry  
Starring: Taraji P. Henson, Sherri Sheppard, Teyana Taylor  
Running Time: 108 minutes  

Synopsis: Single mom Janiyah (Taraji P. Henson) lives in poverty and struggles to look after her daughter Aria, who has severe health issues. During one bad day, Janiyah is fired from her job, loses her car, and is evicted from her apartment, while Aria is seized by concerned social workers. The desperate Janiyah confronts her ex-boss then instigates a bank robbery stand-off. Bank manager Nicole (Sherri Sheppard) is caught among the hostages, and police detective Kay Raymond (Teyana Taylor) tries to untangle the crisis.

What Works Well: A powerful blend of Dog Day Afternoon, Falling Down, and John Q, here director and writer Tyler Perry explores the depths of despair confronting the working poor. With her daughter's illness stretching finances beyond the breaking point, Janiyah finds every door slamming in her face, until the cascade of catastrophes leads her to the bank with a gun. What follows is an emotional showdown encompassing multiple generations of black women, perspective clashes, instant celebrity culture, and unexpected empathy. Taraji P. Henson's forceful yet poignant performance propels the drama, and Perry surrounds Janiyah with mostly black characters representing the community's spectrum.

What Does Not Work As Well: The emotional dial is always on high, but the energy level in the third act notably sags. A blundering intervention by the FBI is a misstep in the otherwise carefully constructed circle of catalysts surrounding Janiyah. Perry effectively deploys one twist, but offers one too many resolutions.

Key Quote:
Nicole (to Janiyah): It seems like you had a lot to get over today.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Monday, 14 October 2024

Movie Review: The Best Of Enemies (2019)


Genre: Biographical Drama  
Director: Robin Bissell  
Starring: Sam Rockwell, Taraji P. Henson, Anne Heche, Bruce McGill  
Running Time: 133 minutes  


Synopsis: The setting is Durham, North Carolina in 1970, with the schools still segregated. C.P. Ellis (Sam Rockwell) is the local leader of the Ku Klux Klan, while Ann Atwater (Taraji P. Henson) is a black rights organizer. When a black school is damaged by fire, a community debate erupts on whether to allow the black students to attend a white school. Bill Riddick (Babou Ceesay) is recruited to organize a community charette and cajoles C.P. and Ann into the co-chair roles, exposing the two adversaries to opposing perspectives.

What Works Well: Based on actual events, writer and director Robin Bissel crafts a tense but hopeful drama of simmering racial conflict. Under the shadow of a virulent white supremacist culture intent on protecting the status quo, C.P. and Ann co-exist in the realm of economic stress, the search for belonging, and caring for family. The school debate becomes a catalyst to seek commonalities, the community's core evolved enough to gather and argue within a civilized process. C.P.'s journey is more profound, Sam Rockwell's every gesture and glance a study in conflicted complexity.

What Does Not Work As Well: The running time would have benefited from a 15 minute trim, and some of the sermonizing is delivered with straight-to-the-camera bluntness. Ann Atwater is often portrayed as just angry, and her backstory is shortchanged in favour of emphasis on C.P.'s reality.

Key Quote:
Ann (to C.P.): Same God made you, made me.






All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Wednesday, 29 December 2021

Sunday, 19 March 2017

Movie Review: Hidden Figures (2016)


A feel-good drama recognizing the scientific contributions of three black women, Hidden Figures has an inspirational story to tell but is also packed with over-amplified melodrama.

It's 1961, and three black women work as "computers" on the nascent NASA space program in Virginia. Katherine Goble (Taraji P. Henson) is a mathematical genius whose potential has not yet been recognized; Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer) is being held back from a supervisory position she richly deserves, and Mary Jackson (Janelle MonĂ¡e) has ambitions to be an engineer but faces obstacles due to segregation laws. With the Soviet Union comprehensively winning the space race, director of the Space Task Group (STG) Al Harrison (Kevin Costner) and his head engineer Paul Stafford (Jim Parsons) are under increasing pressure to place a man into space.

Katherine is recruited into the STG and starts to prove her worth despite entrenched racist attitudes. Dorothy spots the emergence of computers as a key new technology and takes the initiative to teach herself and her team computer programming. Mary refuses to take no for an answer, and pushes to get accepted into the courses she needs for an engineering degree. As the countdown continues to John Glen's maiden flight, the three women play an increasingly prominent role.

An adaptation of the Margot Lee Shetterly book directed by Theodore Melfi, Hidden Figures shines a light on the previously unheralded contributions of three remarkable women who toiled against both gender and racial discrimination. Their story is irresistibly uplifting, and the film is a celebration of quiet dignity, persistence and strength of character against seemingly impossible odds.

The film does several things well. The challenge of developing the science of safely launching objects and people into orbit is tackled at regular intervals. The language may be simplified, but the hard work of inventing the math of space exploration is captured. And Melfi recreates the cerebral workplaces of the era to good effect. White men in white shirts dominate the hallowed halls of science, a pale background of uniformity against which Katherine, Dorothy and Mary literally stand out as coloured invaders.

But this being Hollywood, Hidden Figures also takes every opportunity to push a quiet story to over-saturated levels. While there is no expectation of documentary-levels of realism, the film ironically cheapens the women's achievements by adding large doses of mediocre mythology. Black women earning respect in a white male dominated world should generate sufficient drama; here the real accomplishments are obscured by superficial incidents of racial discrimination that are either fully made up or over exaggerated.

Melfi, who also co-wrote the film, invests too much time on Katherine running back and forth to the coloured ladies room, a case of first inventing a crisis and then not knowing when to let go. Dorothy's leadership of her team is elevated to a military style, invade-the-computer room heroics. Mary's courtroom highlight scene is another long stretch of the truth. The climax is most egregious, offending the space program with contrived last-minute panics.

The three lead actresses rise above the material and are uniformly excellent, with Taraji P. Henson shining brightest. Kevin Costner is his steady self, while the supporting cast includes telling contributions from Mahershala Ali as Katherine's romantic interest and Kirsten Dunst as a prim supervisor hiding behind passive racist attitudes.

Hidden Figures is stirring story partially compromised by suspect storytelling.






All Ace Black Blog Movie Reviews are here.