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Monica 2022-03-28 09:01:08
Is it my illusion or...why do I always feel that there is no difference between movies of this...
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Maverick 2022-03-28 09:01:08
In an era when you may be killed if you don't like it, there will still be so many people who can stand up because they don't like...
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Charity 2022-03-28 09:01:08
Maybe a stage play is a stage...
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Jalyn 2022-03-28 09:01:08
omg Kingsley Ben-Adir is really good...
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Emmalee 2022-03-27 09:01:15
It is also a large number of dialogue films with scenes focused on the interior, but the narrative is monotonous and a little untenable. This may also be a common problem with stage adaptations. The emergence of black-themed films can also be regarded as a kind of accusation and response to today's fragmented era....
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Javon 2022-03-27 09:01:15
On the night of February 25, 1964, Cassius Clay, the future Ali, had just reached the pinnacle of his life; Malcolm X was the last year before his murder; Sam Cook, who was proud of his financial freedom, would never have imagined , he will be shot by the motel manager at the end of the year; and Jim Brown's football career is coming to an end and an actor's life is beginning. The lives of the four people meet on this hot night, and then move towards an unpredictable future. What matters this...
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Alysa 2022-03-27 09:01:15
The lines and tension are really powerful in the stage play style. Generally, four people who are no longer at the bottom get together to talk about black power. It is still a bit...
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Adeline 2022-03-27 09:01:15
More than half a century has passed, and racial discrimination has intensified. The revolution has not yet succeeded, and the affirmative action has a long way to...
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Eunice 2022-03-27 09:01:15
My personal favorite among several Black Lives Matter nominated movies (Jesus Is My Partner, Time, The Queen of the Blues). Not sticking to the drama space like the Queen of the Blues, the development of a four-person professional life scene dominated by Ali helped to promote the contradictions and conflicts that the four people gathered in Miami for one night. Sam Cook and Jim Brown, one used business history to justify his racial vested interests, the other clearly reminded Maxim X that...
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Jose 2022-03-27 09:01:15
Recommended by Dana Moore for two classes in a row, because the warm-up uses its ost. I know some of the deeds of Malcom X and Muhammad Ali before watching it, but I don't know the friendship between the other two celebrities and the four of them. The film is really about the conversation of "that night". It was released after the killing of George Floyd last year. The promotion of Malcom X in the film is more in line with the current demands. It's also the only film I've seen that portrays...
One Night in Miami... Comments
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Coby 2022-02-17 08:02:24
Regina King on a mysterious night in American history
On February 25, 1964, in Miami, Florida, 22-year-old Cassius Clay defeated Sony Liston in seven rounds and became the new heavyweight world champion.
That night at the Hampton Inn on the outskirts of Miami, Cassius Clay and his three black friends who had come to cheer him on held a celebration. The...
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Keagan 2022-02-17 08:02:24
Malcolm X being heroized: a questionable political orientation
The current movie competition is almost only whether the subject matter is remote enough and tricky. In this sense, the theme of "One Night in Miami" is quite predictable---- On the evening of February 25, 1964, the boxing that has not changed its name Wang Ali won his first heavyweight title....
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Malcolm X: [Quoting Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind"] 'How many roads must a man walk down before you call him a man?'
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Malcolm X: What kind of message are you sending, though, by doing one show for white folks and a completely different show for black folks, Sam?
Sam Cooke: [laughing in contempt] Ha.
Malcolm X: No, listen to me, you're performing in places where the only black people not on stage are the ones serving the food.
Sam Cooke: Don't you think I know that? I can't tell you how many times I wanted to reach out and punch somebody.
Malcolm X: Then, then, then, then strike with the weapon that you have, man: your voice! Black people, we, we standing up! We, we speaking out!
Sam Cooke: Umm hm.
Malcolm X: Sam, you have possibly one of the most effective, beautiful outlets of us all. You're not using it to help the cause, brother
Sam Cooke: The hell I'm not! I got the masters to my songs. I started a label, I'm producing tons of black artists. Don't you think my determining my own creative and business destiny is every bit as inspiring to people as you standing up on a podium trying to piss 'em off?