"You keep dancing with the Devil, one day he's gonna follow you home."
I don’t want to be hyperbolic, but this is my best movie of the decade so far. To the point where I looked up and went through lists of movies that had been released since 2020 to make sure that I wasn’t somehow forgetting one. I was not.
That makes this a very hard movie to review, especially without spoilers. There’s just so much that I want to tear into and spool out and luxuriate in that my brain just kind of ends up flailing around, levitating inside my skull, repeating “Best Movie of the Decade” over and over again before crashing down back into gooey, brain paste with the fear that I’ll hype the movie up so much that people will leave the theater wondering what drug I was on that made my brain buzz at hypersonic frequencies like that.
I want to go see it in theaters again, and wish that I was near an IMAX screen so that I could see it on that instead. I want it to show up on streaming so that I can just watch specific scenes over and over again and watch a different person during them each time. I want to write multiple, long, academic papers about it, the kind with footnotes and screenshots and probably a little bit too much pretentiousness.
I love this movie.
I love it in a way that I love very few others.
Set in 1932 in the Mississippi Delta, Sinners follows twins “Smoke” and “Stack” as they return home from Chicago to open a juke joint, a place where their community could come to drink, dance, and gamble after working on cotton plantations, only for it to all come crashing down when three strangers arrive.
Smoke and Stack are both played by Michael B. Jordan, although if you had told me that Jordan actually does have a twin who just happens to also be a talented actor, I would have believed you. Like, I thought that the effects in Mickey 17 were impressive, but both Mickeys still felt like Robert Pattinson playing the role. I was always aware that there was movie magic trickery happening.
But here? Yeah, my brain was entirely convinced that there were genuinely identical twins there with no trickery involved at all. There’s this one moment at the beginning of the movie where the pair pass a cigarette back and forth in one, seamless wide shot and from that moment, I was sold.
There is just so much care and talent poured into every shot from a production standpoint on every single level. It’s not just the costumes, or the texture of the setting, or the acting, or the camera work, or the music. It’s all of them working in concert.
And the music.
The music!
There is so much music in this movie, and not a single note is extraneous. The opening lines talk about music and musicians who can pierce the boundaries between the mundane and the magical with their talent, and then the movie follows through.
The turning point in the plot is this gorgeous long-take over the course of a song that sent chills running down my body, and that isn’t just a turn of phrase. It actually jolted me because I distinctly felt the chills go from my shoulders, over my arms, and down my legs. It’s utter magic, matched only by its sister scene a little later on set to “The Rocky Road to Dublin.”
I’m half-Irish. Irish culture was a huge part of my life growing up. I learned Irish step dancing. Irish music can and will bring me to tears in a way that few other genres can. So that entire scene was very much perfect for me.
Now, depending on what trailers you’ve seen, you might know what the deal is with the strangers that show up to the juke joint. But some of you may not, so I’m dancing around the specifics just a little bit. But I really love the take on them. I thought that it was very clever and creative.
I especially love that Remmick, the leader, is so specifically Irish and that his Irishness informs who he is and what he wants just as much as other character’s Blackness does for them. He isn’t just a generic white villain. He’s Irish. And if you know your history, especially about how the Irish were first viewed and treated during their first wave of immigration and the interplay between that and the Black community?
My brain is levitating again.
Of course, it wasn’t perfect. Some people might find the first half a little slow, but I really didn’t mind that. It took my ear a few minutes to catch on to the Southern accents, so some of the dialogue slipped past me in the beginning, especially when the characters talk quickly.
I have bigger issues with the last act. The action was occasionally muddy and confusing, and fell into the same trap that a lot of horror and action movies fall into where characters get stupid because you need to whittle a lot of characters down very quickly. There were more than a few indulgent scenes that really could have been cut down a bit.
But even within the muddy and confusing, there were moments that I want to wrap pretty fabric around and bring home, like a specific fire stunt or the look of terror and heartbreak on Mary’s face.
Sinners is a horror movie. There is some excellent gore and effective jump scares. It’s an action movie involving guns, knives, fire, really everything you could hope for. It’s an incredibly sexy and erotic movie. (Josh Allen, you are a very lucky man.) It’s practically a musical. It’s about culture and spirituality and religion and assimilation and integration and race and pride and all of the places where those things meld together, and all of the places where those things kill each other.
I love this movie.
Note: The comments MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS. Beware!
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An Honest Fangirl loves video games, horror movies, and superheroes, and occasionally manages to put words together in a coherent and pleasing manner.
I'm not a fan of horror movies, but I might have to make an exception for this one. Thank you for your review, Fangirl. :)
ReplyDeleteThis is on my list but I'll wait for VOD. I do understand there are two after credits scenes, and one of them is effectively the actual end of the movie. Cougler seems to have taken some things he learned from the MCU to heart.
ReplyDeleteSo, I actually missed the "second" after credits scene. I'm putting it in quotes because I can't call the first one after credits. It's not like a Marvel movie where you have the fun animated credits and then a hard cut to a scene. Sinners keeps going. Some credits play, but the movie never actually stops. (Which is why reports of people leaving and missing that scene are wild to me.)
DeleteBut yes, you are correct!
Just got back from seeing it a second time. And it was just as thrilling as the first time. Sinners is a rugged and invigorating cinematic experience, the kind that makes you appreciate filmmaking and art and the life it all reflects. And it definitely renewed my appreciation for the movie theater experience; as good as it will look on my TV, the big screen and surround sound of the theater enhances the sights and sounds of a movie like this so much. And when THAT scene came up, I felt an electricity run through the audience in a way I had not felt in a long time.
ReplyDeleteThere are only a few flaws. It's a little drawn out in parts, and the fact that it's filmed with IMAX cameras results in the picture quality being slightly diminished on a regular theater screen; though I suspect it will be re-released at some point, so I'll make an effort to catch it on IMAX then. While it's not entirely original as some might claim, it doesn't have to be. Some movies these days can feel soulless with how perfunctory they seem in their production or presentation. This movie's got a strong heartbeat, it feels as muscular and lively as the killer music that runs throughout and is a character onto itself.
Part of me wants to go on and on about this, but I don't want to give too much away. I'll just end by saying that I also love this movie. It's artistic, sexy, violent, soul-stirring fun. Thank you for reviewing it.
Are we allowed to do spoilers in the comments here?
ReplyDeleteBecause I loved it absolutely and want to talk about all the specifics of my love.
Josie, fire away. I'll add a note at the bottom of Fangirl's review that the comments may contain spoilers. We've done it before.
DeleteYes, this movie was amazing.
ReplyDeleteI'd gotten a bit spoiled on the From Dusk 'Til Dawn element, but in a way that made me think the brothers were vampires (with daylight rings, or something) setting up a massive feast. I'm really glad that wasn't the plot.
The music was amazing. And then it was even amazinger in that scene you mentioned, the long take with the dancing.
It's an amazing contrast, too: the Irish vampires honor their heritage, but that's it. They look to the past. But the Black and Asian-American characters bring the past (multiple pasts!), present, and future (our present day) into the club. It mixes the mundane and the magical, but also speaks of growth and power, links between all the stages of diasporas.
Like Logan, I watched this at home, and the Imax format didn't work perfectly on my very small screen. That's not Coogler's fault; I had the exact same problem when I recently rewatched Oppenheimer. It just made me wish I'd seen Sinners in the theaters, especially for that amazing dance scene. If they ever do a theatrical re-release I will be delighted to go.
I liked this so much that I'm tempted to watch Creed, even though I've never seen a Rocky movie all the way through. Should I?
I still can't get over the dance scene. The opening lines were about how certain musicians can do something magical with their gift, and that scene made me 100% believe it.
DeleteWhile I have never seen Creed, I've heard that it is excellent. It is a sports movie, though, so if you absolutely hate that genre then you might not like it. But then again, I have watched many, many movies of incredibly questionable quality just because I loved an actor. At least you know that Creed will be of high quality!
I actually have yet to watch Sinners at home; was lucky enough to see it twice while it was in theaters, though. And yes, that dance sequence made for one of the most memorable theater moments I can think of. I will also be there for any potential re-release.
DeleteI've seen all three Creed movies, and all the Rocky movies. While they do have a bit more impact if you're familiar with the lore of Rocky, the Creed movies are very well-made and perfectly enjoyable on their own.
Just caught the film on Crave and it is indeed very good despite me suffering from the same small-screen situation as Josie. The use of music in particular is superlative, as others have said. And importantly the music kept me from getting up toward the end when I thought the closing credits were starting to roll--I almost missed an important scene!
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm with An Honest Fangirl--the "slow" first act was the best part of the film. I loved how carefully it built the milieu and held back the horror element. Granted, I've never been to Mississippi and am far from expert on the Jim Crow South, but it felt authentic.
I feel compelled to defend Rocky a bit. It's an excellent sports movie, well written and acted, and genuinely moving. What's ruined it for many is a bunch of mediocre sequels and Stallone becoming such a big chiche of a movie star. I've rewatched the original Rocky several times. I saw some, not all, of the sequels once and won't bother again.
ReplyDeleteFWIW, I thought Creed was pretty good.
That's cliche, not chiche. How would one even pronounce chiche?
DeleteEither shi-che, or chick-ə!
DeleteI definitely know the general plot of the first Rocky. I've climbed (slowly) those steps at the museum in Philly, too.