Film Snail

Judas and the Black Messiah
Judas and the Black Messiah

7.3

Judas and the Black Messiah

R·2021·126m

Summary

Bill O'Neal infiltrates the Black Panthers on the orders of FBI Agent Mitchell and J. Edgar Hoover. As Black Panther Chairman Fred Hampton ascends—falling for a fellow revolutionary en route—a battle wages for O’Neal’s soul.

Cast

Daniel Kaluuya

Daniel Kaluuya

Fred Hampton

LaKeith Stanfield

LaKeith Stanfield

Bill O'Neal

Jesse Plemons

Jesse Plemons

Roy Mitchell

Dominique Fishback

Dominique Fishback

Deborah Johnson

Ashton Sanders

Ashton Sanders

Jimmy Palmer

Algee Smith

Algee Smith

Jake Winters

Darrell Britt-Gibson

Darrell Britt-Gibson

Bobby Rush

Lil Rel Howery

Lil Rel Howery

Wayne

Dominique Thorne

Dominique Thorne

Judy Harmon

Martin Sheen

Martin Sheen

J. Edgar Hoover

Amari Cheatom

Amari Cheatom

Collins

Khris Davis

Khris Davis

Steel

Ian Duff

Ian Duff

Doc Satchel

Caleb Eberhardt

Caleb Eberhardt

Bob Lee

Robert Longstreet

Robert Longstreet

Leslie Carlyle

Amber Chardae Robinson

Amber Chardae Robinson

Betty Coachman

Ikechukwu Ufomadu

Ikechukwu Ufomadu

Walter Hicks

James Udom

James Udom

Compton

Nick Fink

Nick Fink

Fesperman

Mell Bowser

Tex

Alysia Joy Powell

Alysia Joy Powell

Mrs. Winters

Nicholas Velez

Nicholas Velez

José Cha Cha Jiménez

AJ Carr

AJ Carr

Anthony Timmons

Tommy Lafitte

Tommy Lafitte

Pool Hall Bartender

Terayle Hill

Terayle Hill

George Sams

China Shavers

China Shavers

College Student

Crystal Lee Brown

Crystal Lee Brown

Darlene

Graham Lutes

Graham Lutes

Alex

Jonathan Scialabba

CPD Officer

Adam Ratcliffe

Cop

RayJonaldy Rodriguez

RayJonaldy Rodriguez

Mexican Teen

Tyra Joy Smith

Tyra Joy Smith

Tracy Randle

Deonte Stubbs

Dice Game Onlooker

Cliff Weissman

Hospital Cop

Tone Tank

Officer Carcetti

James Bruner

Officer Williams

Winston Haynes

Captain James Byrne

Raymond Seay

Raymond Seay

Oldest Kid

Latjuan Wells

Youngest Kid

Michael Harrity

Michael Harrity

Menard Prison Warden

Will F. Moore

Interviewer (voice)

Ken Bolden

Ken Bolden

Maître d'

Maggie Callahan

Maggie Callahan

Blonde Girl

Michael Buonomo

Michael Buonomo

FBI Agent

Aaron Kleiber

Agent Saunders

Brian 'Wolfman Black' Bowman

Brian 'Wolfman Black' Bowman

Reg

Cooper Bucha

James

Robert Forte Shannon III

Prisoner

The Lady of Rage

The Lady of Rage

Lady Panther

Jermaine Fowler

Jermaine Fowler

Mark Clark (uncredited)

Chris Hahn

Chris Hahn

Prison Guard (uncredited)

Linda D Gaines

Linda D Gaines

Female Protestor Church / Police Station (uncredited)

Samantha Seawolf

Protestor / Puerto Rican (uncredited)

Brian Andrus

Brian Andrus

Restaurant Patron (uncredited)

Crew

Director, Screenplay, Story

Shaka King

Lyricist

H.E.R.

Lyricist

Tiara Thomas

Screenplay, Story

Will Berson

Story

Kenneth Lucas

Story

Keith Lucas

Reviews

m

msbreviews

February 2, 2021

9

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Judas and the Black Messiah was a last-minute addition to this year’s Sundance, which basically changed every list about the most anticipated films of the festival, including my own. The buzz surrounding its Oscar chances, the remarkable cast, and mainly its important narrative based on true events were more than enough reasons to generate an undeniably powerful hype. When I watch movies inspired by real people and/or true stories, I want them to teach me about the historical moment they’re depicting. I want to finish my viewing sessions and know more than what I did at its beginning. I want the film to be enlightening, thought-provoking, and, most of all, impactful.

I’m just a young white man living in Portugal with no previous knowledge of who Fred Hampton was or what he did. The closest I got to learning something about him was during last year’s The Trial of the Chicago 7, but that movie wasn’t even focused on the Black Panther Party, let alone one of his most important revolutionaries. My voice is far from being meaningful in regards to this film, and I will share Black critics’ articles that I find to be worthy of investing your time in reading. However, I do have an opinion about this movie, and I’m in my right to share it. I find Shaka King’s flick to have all of the qualities I mentioned above and much more. One of the best films of the festival, and I’m not risking it by writing it will end up as one of my favorite movies of the year.

In all honesty, I found myself struggling to completely understand Fred Hampton's intent during the first half or so. His goals are clear and can be summed up in simply trying to offer everyone a better life, one that was fair and where everyone was treated equally. My issue wasn't in his motivations or beliefs, but on the violent, murderous path that Hampton was *apparently* inciting people to take - I repeat, I didn't know a single thing about the real story nor Hampton himself. However, Daniel Kaluuya's very first words as the character stuck with me until now - "We're not gonna fight fire with fire, we're gonna fight it with water. We're not gonna fight racism with racism. We're gonna fight it with solidarity. We're not gonna fight capitalism with Black capitalism. We're gonna fight it with socialism" - and he kept developing this idea, which I find incredibly timely.

The scene that ultimately cleared my perception of Hampton's ideas was when William O'Neal takes the latter's most famous speech at the end of the second act in its most literal sense, which leaves Hampton baffled and shocked at O'Neal's interpretation of his words. Hampton's reaction, as well as a more emotional moment with the mother of his child, Deborah Johnson (Dominique Fishback), was the click I needed to fully comprehend the revolutionary's desires. This is one of the best compliments I can offer Shaka King and Will Berson's exquisite, detailed screenplay. It doesn't make Hampton a flawless superhero that never makes mistakes but instead depicts him as a human being who fought for everyone's rights. The latter is closer to being a Messiah than the former.

The intricate narrative might feel a bit too heavy for some viewers, but it packs extraordinarily energetic, inspirational, chill-inducing speeches that I won't forget that soon. Both Hampton and O'Neal raise sensitive themes that will definitely leave the audience thinking and discussing them throughout the year. Despite it being the longest film of the festival, its two-hour runtime feels adequate and well-paced. In addition to this, the terrific, "in your face" cinematography (Sean Bobbitt) focuses on the actors' performances, not giving a chance to the viewers to be distracted with anything else besides the characters' words. The emotional investment in the characters elevates the well-edited (Kristan Sprague) shooting sequences that left me on the edge of my seat (couch), which ultimately serves as a huge praise to the movie's writing.

I left the cast for last. Now, I know 2021 just started, but if Daniel Kaluuya isn't nominated in every single awards show for the respective Best Supporting Actor category, I'll riot. I've yet to witness a less-than-great display from this unbelievably talented actor. Kaluuya is exceptionally captivating from the very first time he shows up on-screen and never drops his level. Lakeith Stanfield is also brilliant as a conflicted William O'Neal, delivering an extremely complex portrayal of someone who has to deal with actions he knows are wrong. Dominique Fishback and Jesse Plemons (Roy Mitchell, an FBI agent) also deserve a shoutout.

Judas and the Black Messiah deserves all the hype it’s been getting and some more. Shaka King and Will Berson deliver a film inspired by true events with all the qualities this type of movie needs: enlightening, inspirational, thought-provoking, and tremendously impactful. Boasting what I’m sure will end up as one of the year’s best performances (Daniel Kaluuya), the story of Fred Hampton and William O’Neal is told through an incredibly captivating narrative, filled to the brim with absolutely epic, riveting, chill-inducing speeches and dialogues that will leave no viewer indifferent. Both characters bring timely themes back to the spotlight, hopefully generating a critical discourse regarding freedom, human rights, and equality. Besides Kaluuya, Lakeith Stanfield deserves massive praise, and I can’t forget about the lingering, character-driven cinematography that elevates every single scene. Final shoutout to Mark Isham and Craig Harris’s unforgettable, addictive score that plays a significant role in the narrative.

Rating: A

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$26,000,000.00

Revenue:

$6,416,063.00

Keywords

chicago, illinois
assassination
black panther party
based on true story
betrayal
betrayal by friend
hard
1960s
african american history
rainbow coalition
awestruck
exhilarated