Monthly Archives: May 2024

Flash Movie Review: Abigail

I USED TO THINK IT WAS the parents’ fault if their child was acting inappropriately. However, I came to realize after a certain age, the child may just not be a nice person. There is so much involved with raising a child, inside and outside factors, that at times, it almost seems like a crapshoot to me. There was a kid in my class who the teacher thought was such a sweet child. I remember sitting farther back in class and just watching with bewilderment how this student could so easily fool our teacher. Outside at recess time, I tried staying away from him because he was always picking on kids or calling them names. Once after school, I remember seeing him in a fistfight with another student. Before there was a victor, a teacher broke it up. Through my friends, I heard two different sides to the story behind the fight. Because it was after school, both boys did not get in trouble. I would have thought just being in a fight would have put an inkling of doubt in our teacher’s mind, but nothing changed. In the classroom, this kid was always sickly sweet when communicating with our teacher, always referring to her as Ma’am or Miss ____ (last name). Once outside of the classroom, he was a mean bully.      I DID NOT HAVE THE ABILITY to hide my true feelings like he did. If I did not like someone, I simply stayed away from them. My family and I would visit a couple who had a boy close to my age. There was something about him that made me uncomfortable. He was aggressive; if we played catch outside, he would always throw the ball hard at me. I remember one time there was some type of party going on at his house. During the festivities he took a knife out of the kitchen drawer and went upstairs to one of the bedrooms that had guests’ coats piled on the bed. When I saw what he was starting to do, I told him it was wrong, but he did not listen to me. He was going through a few coats and cutting a hole in the pockets of each one. Afraid I would get in trouble if someone came upstairs, I left him and went back down. I thought of telling his or my parents but was scared if he got into trouble then he would do something to me. After that incident, I considered him “bad” and tried not to do too much with him whenever we were together. Knowing me, I also absolutely would not want to be with the young girl in this horror thriller.      AFTER KIDNAPPING THE DAUGHTER OF A POWERFUL businessperson, a group of criminals were instructed to hide with her in an abandoned mansion until her father paid the ransom. Only a few hours passed before the criminals realized ballet was not the only thing the young girl was obsessed about. With Melissa Barrera (Scream franchise, In the Heights) as Joey, Dan Stevens (Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire, The Guest) as Frank, Alisha Weir (Matilda: The Musical, Don’t Leave Home) as Abigail, William Catlett (A Thousand and One, The Devil You Know) as Rickles and Kathryn Newton (Lisa Frankenstein, Freaky) as Sammy; many of you know I am not a fan of horror films. But I must tell you, this twisted tale surprisingly entertained me. Yes, there were scenes of blood, gore, and violence; but they were so close to being over-the-top, that it almost became comical. I thought Alisha did a wonderful job of acting while the director kept things moving along in the story. There were, however, a few holes in the script where logic was left out in the story, causing me at times to just sit there perplexed. Nonetheless, I still was entertained by the twists and turns of good vs evil, family drama and the facets of the little ballet dancer.     

3 stars 

Flash Movie Review: Shirley

I WAS AWARE SHE WAS THE only girl in the class, but I thought nothing else about it. However, the boys in the class had a problem with it. I was signed up for day camp because I refused to go to an “away” camp during my elementary school’s summer vacation. There was a list of different activities I could sign up for that would then be spread across the weeks I was attending. The camp was at our community center; I could either ride my bicycle on good days or get a ride from a group of neighborhood parents that volunteered for carpooling duty. Some of the activities I attended, like swimming, only had boys in the class; others, like archery, had both boys and girls. I never thought anything about it. Any swimming lessons I attended always had boys participating, and campfire skills class always had a mix of boys and girls. This woodworking class was different because there was only one girl in it. Either the classes were filled with one gender or a mix; there never was only one or two in class that were of the opposite gender. I wondered if woodworking was supposed to be a boy’s activity. The boys in the class did not interact with her or help her out like they did with each other. I was stationed too far away, so had little contact with her myself; but I felt sad for her.      LATER IN LIFE WHEN I STARTED working in the fitness industry, I discovered men were a minority. At one private club, they did not even have a locker for me to change outfits; I had to do it in the bathroom. I cannot honestly say if I experienced any prejudices because I was a man. If a female member did not want to be taught by a man, she simply would not come to class. After I went back to school for yoga, I was the only male instructor, sometimes the only instructor who was teaching yoga classes in the fitness centers where I worked. I did feel not only a sense of responsibility but a pressure because I was laying down the foundation for what members would be expecting out of a yoga class. It was an exciting and thrilling time for me as I saw how yoga was affecting the participants. Though the classes started out with females being the majority, as word spread, I started seeing more and more men trying it out. I do not want to say I was a trailblazer, but I can honestly say I changed many people’s perceptions of yoga. There is something about being the first and seeing how one’s actions can change the minds of many people, just like the main character did in this biographical historical drama.      SHE WAS ALREADY THE FIRST BLACK woman to be elected to congress; and with her record and the things she had seen, why couldn’t she run for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination? With Regina King (The Harder They Fall, Flag Day) as Shirley Chisholm, Lance Reddick (John Wick franchise, White House Down) as Wesley McDonald, Terrance Howard (Cardboard Boxer, Hustle & Flow) as Arthur Hardwick Jr., Lucas Hedges (Manchester by the Sea, Boy Erased) as Robert Gottlieb and Michael Cherrie (She Paradise, Limbo) as Conrad Chisholm; Regina King gave it her all in creating a powerful character based on a true person. Soon into this film, I lost track of Regina and thought I was following Shirley. I understood the story focused on her presidential run, but I never really got a sense of the characters and what their relationships were to each other. A better script could have helped because several scenes felt like short video clips of Shirley’s life, instead of digging deeper into what was taking place inside of her and the people around. Because the story is so remarkable, I maintained interest all through the picture. In a case like this, I would enjoy seeing a prequel and sequel to what I had just seen.

3 stars