Movie Preview: Lin Manuel Miranda’s pre “Hamilton” “IN THE HEIGHTS” comes to the big screen

A big 2020 release of a 2008 musical.

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Next screening: “A HIDDEN LIFE”

A World War II story about morality, not blindly plunging down the hole of doing whatever Dear Leader and his bigoted murderous minions say.

A very LONG WWII story, I should add.

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Movie Review: An elegy to age, rural post offices and community — “Colewell”

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Character studies are the chamber music of the cinema — intimate, uncluttered movies built upon carefully-observed and recreated details. They are movies unplugged, capturing small-scale tragedies or personal triumphs via layers of quiet reflection.

Not a lot happens in “Colewell,” a character study zeroed in on a village postmistress in tiny, aging Colewell in rural western Pennsylvania. You know what’s coming by the mere fact that I use “rural” and “postmistress” in the same sentence.

And Karen Allen, as Nora, the woman running that ancient, single-window gathering spot for mail, gossip, knitting and personal and community problem-solving, doesn’t give herself to big emotions or drama. Writer-director Tom Quinn lets her face tell her story, her eyes show her past, her dropped-hints reveal to us what she’s going through, who these people are to her and who our hitchhiking narrator is to all these folks “back home.”

Hannah Gross is that narrator, who tells stories through conversation where she lists what she’s picked up from her time with her thumb out.

“Life always seems the same length, no matter what age you are.” Times past and days ahead go on “forever–and not very long.”

That’s where Nora is when we meet her, a creature of decades of routine — clucking at her chickens, talking about her favorite “Rose” as she passes on coffee and a few eggs to postman Charles (Kevin J. O’Connor) before donning the blue uniform and making her way to “the office.”

She’s well-past 60, apparently widowed and living on the farm she used to share with her husband. Chickens are all she bothers with these days.

And then the letter comes telling her the USPS isn’t renewing her contract, that the local office is to be shuttered.

“Personal grievances regarding this transition must be kept private,” she’s ordered. But posting the notice gets the whole village up in arms — words like “legal recourse” and “heart of our community” are bandied about.

Nora? She can take a transfer or retirement.

“They think I’m old and I don’t have any fight left in me.”

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Quinn’s elegiac film, the very definition of “a film festival movie” (rewarding, but with few commercial prospects), doesn’t deny the inevitable of such decisions. These cubbyhole post offices have been shuttering all over rural America for decades.

Quinn just follows the silent, reflective Nora as she cooks, tends her flock in the coop and listens to the now-grousing flock that comes to her window every day. Visiting a worn carving on a cliff face on her favorite hike gives up her past.

And signatures, who the mail is addressed to, connects her to the picture’s simple, sweet mystery.

Allen has long been an actress with perfectly expressive eyes, and wearing her years with grace has been a hallmark of her recent work. Yes, she gets to show Nora still has “some fight” left in her. No, Nora doesn’t come off as reasonable when she does.

But “Colewell” makes a lovely metaphor for the emptying-out corners of America, which can be lovely places few want to live in any more, their residents aging out of the mainstream of work and thought, watching their lives lose relevance, bit by “retiring” bit.

2half-star6

MPAA Rating: unrated, some profanity

Cast: Karen Allen, Kevin J. O’Conner, Hannah Gross

Credits: Written and directed by Tom Quinn. A Gravitas Ventures release.

Running time: 1:19

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Movie Review: Aussie and Chinese villains fear “The Whistleblower

“The Whistleblower” is a Sino-Aussie thriller with plenty of properly potent action beats, a generally engaging cast, a global chase involving wildly improbable escapes and a script rife with knee-slappingly silly plot details.

A tale of a global mineral megacompany covering up an environmental disaster, and thereby enabling disasters to come, it’s almost refreshing in the ways it wants to depict China as both innocent of the machinations of global capitalism, and a corrupt partner in it.

Lei Jiayin of “The Wandering Earth” plays Mark, the Chinese emigre who has made to the top of the executive ranks of the Aussie multinational GPEC despite the “Chinese glass ceiling.” Foreigners, he tells other Chinese characters in the story, don’t get to the very top of Australian firms, implying xenophobia.

Then he admits he never became a citizen and gives other hints as to where his true national loyalties lie and undercuts his own complaint.

Mark is unflashy, a plodder who gets stuff done, just the way his peers (John Batchelor among them) like it. His old school rival Peter (Wang Ce) is the flashy one, running the company’s underground coal gassification plant in Malawi, Africa.

Peter returns to a resort at Twelve Apostles (landmark Australian islets) to berate Mark publicly at a corporate retreat as someone whose “mind is never entirely on the job…Don’t be stupid! No mistakes!”

If it wasn’t for his supposed job security and the presence of an old flame, now married to the CEO of a Chinese firm about to partner with GPEC, Mark would be bummed. Siliang (Tang Wei of “Lust, Caution” and “Blackhat”) was his bey, back in the day. And on this night, they renew their acquaintance and their passion. No kissing, though.

She’s on a plane and gone in the AM, Mark heads home to the digital effects-creator wife (Qi Xi) and kid, and all is forgotten.

Only diabetic Peter has died in his sleep. That corporate jet Siliang and other honchos were on crashed. “What’s going on?” we wonder.

Not Mark. NoEven after Siliang calls him from a fleabag motel in the Melbourne red light district. Even after an assassin chases them into the night.

It takes Mark a LONG time to realize there’s something up with this company, his Aussie overlords, Siliang and her husband and that extract-gas-from-coal tech that we’ve seen cause a fiery earthquake in Africa in an early moment in the movie.

The reluctant couple, led by guilt-torn Mark, must traipse hither and yon to uncover the truth, recover her marital cash, expose the flaws in the technology and save the heavily-polluted (everybody wears filter-masks) coal-rich Chinese province of Lvhan from what happened in Malawi.

Mark’s wife? She is furious at Mark’s shame, which seems to be the biggest crime the movie truly wants to wrestle with.

They rely on “the best place to hide is a leaf in the forest” strategy — hiding out among sympathetic Chinese restaurateurs, friends and relatives in Australia’s Chinese diaspora.

The chases and escapes have their share of what I call “Bugs Bunny Physics” — leaning not just on insane coincidences, but humans and drones defying Laws of Motion and weight disproportions.

Some African scenes feature Africans with Australian accents (virtually all filming was done in Oz).

Money is a huge concern, and every corporate bribe and pay-off, every “Let’s stay under the radar” transaction that keeps the fleeing duo flush and enables their investigation, is paid for by check. See a flaw in that strategy? The writer-director didn’t.

The depiction of Chinese corruption, pollution and infidelity comes off as almost-refreshing, with so much of this film (in Chinese, with English subtitles, and occasionally in English with Chinese subtitles) funded and promoted as Chinese. Those are the sorts of things that have kept China’s greatest filmmakers and their more “honest” yet controversial works out of film festivals over the decades.

As I said, the action is fun. And the unintentional laughs from the plot lapses, check-writing and black-face — Did I mention how these two try to “pass” in Africa? — are almost worth devoting well-over two hours to “The Whistleblower.”

Almost.

1half-star

MPAA Rating: Unrated, violence, sexual content, profanity

Cast: Lei Jiayin, Tang Wei, Qi Xi, John Batchelor, Wang Ce.

Credits: Written and directed by Xue Xialu. A CMC release.

Running time: 2:14

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Movie Review: Clint Eastwood’s version of the tragedy of “Richard Jewell”

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Clint Eastwood cast his aged eyes upon America, the flood of indictments and prison sentences raining on a Russian puppet in the White House, the daily affronts to truth, decency, morality, legality and patriotism reported by the press, and decided now was the perfect time to make a movie attacking the F.B.I. and the media.

It’s not wholly unexpected for a movie star/director with clout who vented his politics in his movies during the Clinton years, who engaged in dubious battle with a chair on national TV to ridicule a president who didn’t share his ideology.

His “Richard Jewell” is a quasi-comical “Absence of Malice” remake and a defense of a guy rightly “investigated” by the Feds, who crossed the line from investigating to targeting the security guard who was the first person who found the pipe-bomb stuffed backpack in a park during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. And it’s a troublingly inaccurate account of the media circus that descended on this hapless hero briefly at the center of a terror case that riveted the world, which is what you get when “The World comes to Atlanta.”

Eastwood’s Jewell, played with sympathy and an unsophisticated native wit and integrity by Paul Walter Hauser, is rescued from the TV and print press stereotyping of the day and remembered as a fellow who wanted to be a cop so badly he immersed himself in the procedures and even the bomb-making arcana that made him literally “the right guy, in the right place at the right time.”

He may come off as a morbidly obese crank and a zealot who goes overboard as a campus security “rent-a-cop” in early scenes, as a starstruck fanboy who goes way above and beyond in cooperating with the F.B.I. (Jon Hamm) that is turning him from a national hero who saved lives into the focus of their suspicions. But he was clever enough to get his lawyer (Sam Rockwell, a hoot) in there, and fast.

Kathy Bates plays his overwhelmed mother, whom he lived with, perhaps another nail in the coffin of “he fits the profile” — a frustrated lone white male who wants to be perceived as a hero, even as he’s plotting his revenge on America.

And to her lasting shame, Olivia Wilde signed on to play an oversexed caricature of the admittedly imperfect Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter who first broke the news that Jewell was under suspicion, thanks to an F.B.I. leak that history says she DIDN’T sleep her way into, the “Absence of Malice” element to Eastwood and screenwriter Billy Ray’s bastardization of this “history.”

But the real “malice” here is the missing context, the refusal to focus on the victims, the panicked search for the killer or portraying the real bomber.

When you’ve got the time to slap an “I fear government more than I fear terrorism” bumper sticker on the wall of the lawyer’s office, shove in a joke about “organizations and associations” Jewell is asked if he belongs to — “You a member of the NRA?” “Is the NRA a terror group?” (Russian financed, inspiring violence and sowing national division? Yes it is.), you’ve got time to do this right.

That missing context is skipping past the Oklahoma City bombing, and its bombers, not bothering to profile, even briefly, right wing Atlanta bomber Eric Rudolph, to not even note how the F.B.I. was on high alert because Wing Nut America was in the middle of a militia-forming, bomb making, violence-threatening and government-attacking nervous breakdown because a Democrat was elected president.

With every Trump rally including crowd-interviews threatening “a new civil war” if Putin’s pick is removed from office, these are poisonous omissions. In an era of daily denials of fact, an “up is down” barrage of partisan hacks screaming conspiracy theories on TV when the facts point to their complicity, Eastwood turns himself into the cinema’s Lindsey Graham for “Richard Jewell.”

Clint, of course, gets Clinton footage in here, a dig at academic “elites” along with a final needle in the balloon of Tom Brokaw’s career (NBC covered the Olympics, and we see Brokaw, Couric and an actor playing Bryant Gumbel asking questions and repeating speculation).

It’s a film that moves in fits and starts. But I liked most of the performances, and was most interested in Rockwell’s attorney Watson Bryant, who brings some welcome moral outrage to the proceedings, and a sophistication and legal savvy that also fly in the face of how out of his depth this guy was, like his client. But bully for Clint, making a lawyer a hero, even if he storms into the newspaper newsroom to upbraid the “poor excuse for a reporter” who shone the spotlight on his client.

Did that happen. Nope. And there are plenty of places where we know Ray/Eastwood crossed the line that undercuts the credibility of the picture.

Jewell was a complicated man, who had plenty of red flags on his work and arrest record, a “get back into police work” agenda and a house full of guns. Of course they’d look at him. And if the press gets word of that in a story the whole world is competing over, it’s not going to be pretty.

But “Richard Jewell” doesn’t do the man, the tragedy, the case or the political climate that surrounded it then and now justice.

Eastwood’s made some bad movies in recent years, along with some gems. This is the first film of his I’ve seen since his orangutan co-star days that had me embarrassed for him.

1half-star

MPAA Rating: R for language including some sexual references, and brief bloody images

Cast: Paul Walter Hauser, Jon Hamm, Olivia Wilde, Sam Rockwell and Kathy Bates.

Credits: Directed by Clint Eastwood, script by Billy Ray. A Warner Brothers release.

Running time: 2:09

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Netflixable? “A Cinderella Story: Christmas Wish”

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You shouldn’t make a Cinderella movie without having some killer “Steps” in mind. “A Cinderella Story: Christmas Wish,” has some doozies.

You don’t have to be a tweenage girl to get your back up at how LOATHESOME the evil stepmother (Hallmark Channel favorite Johannah Newmarch) and her daughters, Joy (Lillian Doucet-Roche) and Grace (Chanelle Peloso) are.

They are SO mean to poor Kat (Laura Marano of “Perfect Date” and “Ladybird”). Her dad married Deirdre (Newmarch, perfectly vile) and died, leaving her stuck cleaning up after and even financially supporting these golddigging neer-do-wells.

Stepmom bullies and steals and connives and will not HAVE you interrupt her time to “bitchwatch ‘The Real Housewives of Manhattan Beach.'”

Joy has a vlog, and never misses a chance to humiliate Kat, videoing her after she stumbles while toting their shopping and massive Starbucks order.

“You’re TRENDING, Starbucks Girl!”

Grace and Joy take turns trashing her appearance.

“You could use some color. You look like a fetus!”

And gauche? Fuggedaboutit! They’ll be right at home at the big Chrismas Eve gala.

“It’s pronounced GAW-la! I’ve been working on an upper class accent!”

At some point, MANY points in this little ditty of a holiday musical comedy, you may find yourself wishing Kat would just nunchuck the lot of them.

NOT that kind of movie, though. It’s a simple holiday wish-fulfillment romance about a girl who just wants to write songs and sing songs and “sell out arenas.”

For now, she sings and dances in the show at Santa’s Village with BFF Isla (Isabella Gomez), wearing an elf costume as they do.

But wait! There’s a new Santa joining the ensemble. He’s their age, but he’s already got the beard on every time they see him. “Hot Santa” they call him, not realizing he’s rich boy/would-be music impressario Dominic Wintergarden (Gregg Sulkin of Hulu’s “Runaways”), the VERY guy Kat tripped up and spilled all that Starbucks product all over herself in front of.

All these movies are offspring of that 2004 Hilary Duff hit, “A Christmas Story,” which took its plot from the famous fairy tale. No magical mice or glass slippers are here, and actress/choreographer/writer/director Michelle Johnston doesn’t make the movie “fit” the tale’s parameters as neatly as you’d hope.

Glass snowglobe, not glass slippers? Nah. It’ll take “A Christmas Miracle” to throw the downtrodden Kat and handsome Prince/Son of the Richest Guy in Town together. We know it’s coming.

The emphasis here is on the wish fulfillment stuff, not the romance. So “chemistry” barely matters. Marano has a cute, plucky presence, and Sulkin isn’t “sulkin'” when they’re together (Sorry!).

The songs? Think “Autotune: The Musical.”

Truthfully, there’s no much to it save for some some pleasantly-underwhelming choreography, and lots of righteous bullying. Those “steps” do it like they were born to pick on the less fortunate.

“Potatoes wear sacks better than you!”

1half-star

MPAA Rating: PG for rude and suggestive material

Cast: Laura MaranoGregg Sulkin, Isabella Gomez, Johannah Newmarch, Lillian Doucet-RocheHa, Chanelle Peloso.

Credits: Written and directed by Michelle Johnston,   A Warner Home Video release, on Netflix.

Running time: 1:26

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SAG nominations boost “Bombshell,” Taron E., bury “Little Women,” Sandler, Murphy

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No DeNiro for “The Irishman,” a lot less Netflix than the critics’ groups and Golden Globes crowd have been crowing over.

From Variety…
SAG Nominations: 22 Biggest Snubs and Surprises From ‘Little Women’ to ‘The Morning Show’ https://t.co/RK1nA9rwPo https://t.co/yORJ4oFvtn https://twitter.com/Variety_Film/status/1204805932951035905?s=20

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Movie Preview: Carey Mulligan gets her revenge as a “Promising Young Woman”

Oh, look at all the guys who try to take advantage of the tipsy lady at the bar. Look at what she does to them. Or seems about to.

“Promising Young Woman” opens in April.

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Movie Review: Not a lot of faith that anything original will happen in “Hold On”

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The “great singer who can’t get a break in this business” trope earns a desultory, if occasionally tuneful treatment in “Hold On,” a faith-based drama “inspired by true events.”

It plays as preordained, and the emotionally-flat performances, even in roles designed to manipulate, undo it as it covers ground many before have covered.

Sidney Rhodes, played by Micayla De Ette, is introduced as the most gifted singer ever to come out of North Oakland, California. We hear her being interviewed on local radio, a contest victory under her belt and her eyes on that “Make it big in LA” prize in her voice, under the opening credits.

Years later, we see her dealing with the reality of the music business in the showbiz capital. She’s singing jingles, showing off that five octave range for a cut-rate producer with a “studio” in his apartment. His only note to her? “Be less ethnic.”

She’s a singer. She can sound “whiter” if that what he doesn’t have the nerve to request.

She keeps up a video blog, summoning up bubbly enthusiasm for her “fans,” excited for this “big audition” coming up, her “new music.”

But the truth is, Sidney’s nobody’s idea of a modern pop star. She’s aging out of her window to “make it,” and knows it. She’s got talent and training, but she’s Adele-sized, and then some.

“It’s about more than the voice,” a dismissive talent scout mutters, refusing to make eye contact. “What’s special about you?”

“I was meant to reach more people,” Sidney thinks.

Her day job is with a local church, working in the office, making deliveries to the homeless, choral director and singing “worship leader” on Sundays. Her pastor (Luiz Guzman) would love for her to come up with some more traditional fare for the worship band/choir to perform.

That’s what sends Sidney to a local record store, where the owner has no idea who Mahalia Jackson is.

“Is she the one between Janet and LaToya?”

But the irritable clerk there, Vic (writer-director Tarek Tohme) helps her out, before having the final meltdown that’ll get him fired. That sets the stage for this troubled “rich kid,” driving a Mercedes SUV that the record store owner used as his contemptuous nickname (“Mercedes”) to fall under Sidney’s spell.

NOT romantically, he and the screenplay keep insisting (if there’s “fat shaming” here, it’s in moments like that). But he’s the estranged son of a famous producer (Maurice Benard). He finds Sidney’s singing samples on Youtube, swipes some gear from his daddy’s home studio, and badgers her into letting him record her and manage her.

The “douchebag bipolar crazy person” has to convince Ms. “I can’t trust ANYbody out here” to sing him that one song, “written from a hard place,” that captures the scope, range and drama of her Mahalia Jackson-sized voice. And the rest will be history, right? Or at least according to formula.

Flavor Flav is wackily miscast as “the kid’s” probation officer. He’s not an awful actor, but he doesn’t adjust his appearance to look the part — in the least.

Guzman is one of Hollywood’s best character actors, but he’s nobody’s idea of a charismatic preacher. No presence in the pulpit.

Amanda Lillard plays an example of the sort of pop star record companies adore today, Alvaro Manrique is Sidney’s prodigal (junky) brother that she won’t give up on and Mikel Butler plays her supportive younger sister.

Merely introducing the characters points us in exactly the direction all of this is going. It’s going to take some magical performances to bring this predictable tale to life, and nobody here is up to the task.

De Ette is a much more dramatic singer than actress, Tohme has but a wan, single note to play and he can’t make that an interesting one. The shots and editing have an enervated feel, as if everybody involved is just showing up on a shoot they realize is just “Here we go again.”

As with most every film, there’s the germ of a good idea here — a faintly-edgy faith-based music movie with an unconventional leading lady and a story arc that avoids conventional “Star is Born” dynamics. It’s just that nobody involved seems to have a grasp of what they could do with this, other than the most predictable choices.

1half-star

MPAA Rating: PG-13 for a scene of violence, thematic elements and some language

Cast: Micayla De Ette, Tarek Tohme, Luis Guzmán, Mikel Butler and Flavor Flav.

Credits: Written and directed by Tarek Tohme. A Film Bureau release.

Running time: 1:46

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Netflixable? “Atlantics,” a spooky romance/human migration tale from Dakar, Senegal

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Netflix could use some help in its “plot summar blurb” deparment. Because their brief description of “Atlantics” is so far off as to lure viewers in under false pretenses, and scare off the viewers most likely to enjoy it.

It’s a hip, topical and sexy romance with a dose of the supernatural, set in a place few in the West would associate few of those adjectives — Senegal, West Africa. Built on a fated love-affair in a (somewhat) strictly Muslim country, it shows a vibrant capital city, Dakar, where the young like to dance, go to clubs, fall in love with a person of their choosing and dream of a future unencumbered by their present.

Just like young people any place else.

Ada, sensitively played by the radiantly beautiful Mame Bineta Sane, loves Souleiman (Traore). They steal away, any chance they can. And when she returns to her “girls,” a couple of whom wear the product-placement names of Dior and Fanta, they know what she’s been up to.

“Why the smile?” Mairana (Coumba Dieng) wants to know (in the local language Wolof, with English subtitles). “Did you lose your virginity on the way?”

Hey, they’re young, good looking and hormonal. They act like the 18-20 year-olds they are.

But Ada is engaged to Omar (Babacar Sylla), an arranged marriage according to local Muslim custom. Omar is handsome, aloof and well-off, with a car and a job that puts him on a plane every now and them. He’s given her an iPhone.

But the heart and hormones want they want. That iPhone is just another way to be with Souleiman. On the down-low, of course. Her family acts as if they don’t know something’s up, but Mairana does.

“God is testing you! He put Souleiman in your path!”

Not for long, it turns out. He’s one of the legions of laborers working on another modernist high-rise in the coastal city. But the rich developer building it is months behind in paying them. Yes, it happens there, too.

Souleiman and his mates resolve to sail off, up the coast to Spain, to try their in the EU. Ada is bereft, with a wedding day marching towards her, pressure from friends and family to marry and get pregnant “before (Omar) takes a second wife!” Her Romeo has gone to sea. Who will save her, now?

That’s when the ghosts start showing up. That’s when things start to “spontaneously combust.”  

French actress-turned-director and co-writer Mati Diop makes her feature debut with “Atlantics,” a langorous and at times luxe affair that uses its stately (ok, slow) pace and many many MANY shots of the tranquil or turbulent sea to suggest how serious and meaningful it all is.

I don’t think she makes that case. But in showing us another of an Afro-Islamic country rarely seen on film, she has done a great disservice. And in her depiction of the very “natural” supernatural, she gives “Atlantics” righteously chilling overtones.

The “ghosts” are white-eyed avengers straight out of Greek tragedy, ad hoc assemblies of women out to right the wrongs of the developer, the arranged marriage, all of it.

The fires even get the interest of an arson investigator. How are the vengeful harpies with the white eyes going to take that?

Sane’s Ada is not overtly willful, and she gets across her youthful impulsiveness, quiet desperation and silent suffering. She can’t really confide in anyone, with Souleiman away. But her friends all know what she’s going through and take sides. Sane is a terrific, understated “re-actor,” letting Ada reflect the pressures and wishes of whoever she confronts — friend, family or the cop wondering about these fires.

Still, lovely as it often is, “Atlantics” isn’t as deep as it wants to come off and isn’t anybody’s idea of a great film. But in the world it depicts and the vivid characters inhabiting it, it is engaging, informative and absolutely worth your while — perfectly Netflixable.

2half-star6

MPAA Rating: TV-14, sex, some frightening images

Cast: Mame Bineta Sane, Traore, Babacar Sylla and Diankou Sembene

Credits: Directed by Mati Diop, script by Olivier Demangel. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:46

 

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