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    Movie Review

    Detroit is a frustrating — yet powerful — moviegoing experience

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 27, 2017 | 3:15 pm
    Detroit is a frustrating — yet powerful — moviegoing experience
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    Watching the new movie Detroit prompts several feelings. Frustration. Incomprehension. Anger. Fear. Sadness. What never comes is any sense of relief, but that's as it should be, since the people involved in the film’s real-life events never got any, even after that one particular night was far behind them.

    The film mostly centers on events that transpired at the Algiers Motel in Detroit on July 25 and 26, 1967. At that point, riots stemming from a racial incident had been happening across the city for several days. The ongoing violence had kept tensions high for both the African American populace and law enforcement, which had grown to include not just city police but also the state police and National Guard.

    When gunshots were heard from the vicinity of the Algiers, the motel’s annex was raided by police, with multiple people getting lined up for questioning. Over the course of the evening, every occupant in the lineup had been beaten by the police to some degree, with three of them ending up dead.

    Director Kathryn Bigelow and writer Mark Boal, reteaming for the third time after The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, have created a story that is powerful in its execution, if not its focus. They painstakingly show a series of events that led up to the night at the Algiers, indicating how the decisions made by multiple people can, inadvertently or purposefully, lead to tragedy.

    While it’s the actions of the police, especially one particular patrolman (Will Poulter), who are to blame for the violence at the motel, Bigelow and Boal place import on the inaction of a variety of people for the continuation or escalation of the events. The complicated part of human nature will likely lead to audiences wanting to scream at the injustice of what they are watching, and how it might have been stopped if the right person had spoken up at the right time.

    The cast has a handful of known actors (Poulter, John Boyega, John Krasinski, Anthony Mackie), but the vast majority of the performers have yet to become stars. This is a smart play by the filmmakers, as it allows the emotions of the film to be played out with few preconceived notions by the audience. The one big exception to that is Poulter, whose distinctive face has already led to him playing multiple bad guys at the young age of 24.

    There is much to laud about Detroit, with its deft handling of tricky subject matter and the performances of much of the cast. But the film loses focus toward the end, with Bigelow and Boal deciding they have to include every little part of the story. If they had pulled back a bit, they might have ended up with a masterpiece.

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    Detroit is now playing at AMC NorthPark; it will open wide on Friday, August 4.

    Scene from Detroit.

    Scene from Detroit movie
    Photo courtesy of Annapurna Pictures
    Scene from Detroit.
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    Movie Review

    Michael Jackson can do no wrong in fawning biopic Michael

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 23, 2026 | 1:01 pm
    Jaafar Jackson in Michael
    Photo by Glen Wilson
    Jaafar Jackson in Michael

    Among the complicated figures in pop culture history, Michael Jackson has to be at or near the top. On one hand, he’s responsible for some of the most enduring music of all time, thrilling generations with his voice and dance moves. But his later years were marred by accusations of child sexual abuse and erratic behavior, including his premature death at the age of 50.

    So the new biopic Michael is a tough one to judge from a critical standpoint, not least because director Antoine Fuqua and writer John Logan have elided - perhaps temporarily - the thornier parts of Michael’s history. Instead, this film focuses on the 20-year period in which Michael (played as an adult by Michael’s nephew Jaafar Jackson) goes from the prepubescent lead singer of the Jackson 5 to one of the biggest music superstars of all time.

    That choice puts an overly sympathetic tint to Michael’s story, as he spends most of that time under the thumb of his domineering father, Joseph (Colman Domingo). Joseph has a vision for Michael and his brothers, and he pushes them hard in a quest to become rich and famous. Even when they achieve that goal, though, Joseph refuses to let up, holding onto Michael even when it’s clear he should go out on his own.

    As a reminder of the enormous impact Michael Jackson had on the music industry and world at large, the film is successful. Fuqua and Logan include plenty of music, naturally, but they seem to be most interested in depicting Michael as a human being. They lay it on thick, whether it’s showing him spending time among his family members away from the stage, hanging out with bodyguard Bill Bray (KeiLyn Durrel Jones), or visiting sick kids in hospitals. The message that Michael is a harmless, good person couldn’t be clearer.

    The film hints at but doesn’t really explore Michael’s oddities. His obsession with kids literature and movies, especially Peter Pan, are seen as inoffensive quirks, as is his menagerie of animals, including a creepy CGI version of Bubbles the chimp. His arrested development seems to be partially blamed on his parents treating him like a child well into his adulthood, and the resulting fallout is not (yet) addressed.

    Many viewers will be most interested in the music sequences, and - save for some repetitive shots of fans fainting at the mere presence of Michael - they are handled well. Whether it’s at home, in the studio, on the set of the “Thriller” video, or at live performances, the film manages to fully get across just what a phenomenon Michael was at his peak. The staging and editing of each scene is dynamic, complementing Michael’s other-worldly abilities well.

    If there is one reason to see the film, it is the performance of Jaafar Jackson. Whether he’s capable of doing any other kind of role is undetermined, but his portrayal of his uncle is compelling, as he demonstrates singing, dancing, and acting skills in equal measure. He’s aided by an equally great performance by Domingo, who - with the help of facial prosthetics - overcomes the trope of the bad father. Nia Long and Larenz Tate are also good in smaller roles, but Miles Teller is an odd presence as Michael’s manager.

    There are reports that legal complications prevented the filmmakers from using previously-shot scenes delving into accusations against Michael, and there are rumors that a second film will be made about the last 20 years of his life. But that speculation can’t absolve Michael of showing all the positive aspects of Michael Jackson’s life and not even touching any of the negative ones.

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    Michael opens in theaters on April 24.

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