Total Film

JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH

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Daniel Kaluuya’s second Black Panther movie. Fewer armoured rhinos in this one.

FILM

OUT SPRING TBC CINEMAS

FGary Gray tried. Forest Whitaker tried. Despite filmmakers’ curtailed attempts to make one, Fred Hampton is long overdue the biopic treatment. After his appearance as a support player in The Trial Of The Chicago 7, the assassinat­ed leader of the Illinois Black Panthers chapter has finally been given the portrait he deserves: a punchy, full-bodied and bitingly topical tale of passion, politics and betrayal, wrapped in a crime drama and played with commitment by a note-perfect cast.

After debates on the casting of a British actor, Daniel Kaluuya roars with righteous charisma as Hampton, who we meet stirring followers with calls to action (and later spearheadi­ng the Rainbow Coalition) against a charged late-’60s America backdrop. Alongside Kaluuya’s galvanisin­g lead, LaKeith Stanfield tackles the more reserved role of William O’Neal, a petty thief manipulate­d by Jesse Plemons’ fed Roy Mitchell into informing on Hampton.

While O’Neal could have been simply demonised, Stanfield and co-writer/director Shaka King draw out judiciousl­y humanising, complicati­ng themes of coercion and inner conflict,

without diluting his actions. As Bill’s position becomes more precarious, Stanfield’s wary, alert eyes tell a story the rest of his body suppresses: a duly subdued psychodram­a of guilt, fear and cunning, couched in discreet nuances.

Kaluuya is equally commanding in his quieter moments with Dominique Fishback, who fulfils the promise of TV’s The Deuce as Hampton’s fiancée Deborah Johnson. Though she could use more screentime, Fishback brings measure and magnetism to Johnson: her speech about the legacy her generation will leave for their children pierces in its clarity. The supports provide New Hollywood-style ballast. A sturdy Plemons evokes vintage Jack Nicholson in his insidious delivery. Meanwhile, Martin Sheen underplays a potentiall­y show-boating cameo as J. Edgar Hoover, whose barely veiled racism seems all-too similar to today’s toxic alt-right speak.

Though the plot strands don’t cohere too cleanly in a crowded second half, King’s keen direction and DoP Sean Bobbitt’s naturalist­ic images hold the attention with tactile immediacy. That in-the-moment anchorage makes for a devastatin­g climax, which lands with the punch of tragedy and more besides. Between its genre know-how and furious anger, King’s biopic makes damn sure you feel the weight of Hampton’s loss – and the need for his legacy to be honoured. This message from the past is a vital, heartbreak­ing film for now. Kevin Harley

 ??  ?? Kaluuya gives perhaps the best portrayal of Fred Hampton to date.
Kaluuya gives perhaps the best portrayal of Fred Hampton to date.
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