Empire (UK)

queen & slim

- Jimi Famurewa

★★★★ OUT 31 january Cert 15 / 132 mins

DIRECTOR Melina Matsoukas

cast Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Turner-smith, Chloë Sevigny, Flea, Bokeem Woodbine, Indya Moore

PLOT After a first date, a young black man and woman (Kaluuya and Turner-smith) are involved in a routine traffic stop. Things escalate, there is a tussle and the white policeman is killed. With no other option, these relative strangers — and sudden folk heroes — make a dangerous run for it.

“Well, if it isn’t the Black Bonnie and Clyde,” says tracksuite­d pimp Uncle earl (Woodbine) midway through Queen & Slim, regarding our two fugitive protagonis­ts with more than a little scenery-chomping relish. it is the sort of line that may as well come with a turn to the camera and a wink; an irresistib­le, snappy marketing propositio­n that distils this complex, nonemore-2019 project into the sort of arresting pitch that could be scrawled onto a cocktail napkin.

But scratch the surface and it has a more significan­t resonance. Because just as the real Bonnie and Clyde (a desperate pair of career criminals actually more prone to robbing small grocery stores than banks) have been lost to the more seductive, romanticis­ed 1930s legend, so too do runaways Queen and slim (a similarly electric Jodie turner-smith and Daniel Kaluuya) find themselves as the baffled, scared recipients of wider public mythologis­ing. in a film that ultimately proves to be about how the world chooses to view you — and how dangerous or powerful that can be — it’s far more than a throwaway gag.

Yes, debut feature director Melina Matsoukas delivers on the promise of a Black lives Matter spin on Thelma & Louise — replete with stomachkno­tting moments of tension, neon-bathed visual razzmatazz and exhilarati­ng musical cues. But Queen & Slim always affords time and space to intimate, quiet moments that orientate themselves around these issues of race, perception, legacy and the fledgling love between its two central characters. from a certain angle, it is merely a movie about the most traumatic, life-changing first date imaginable. And it’s all the better for it.

Written by lena Waithe (perhaps best-known for her Matsoukas-directed, emmy-winning episode of Master Of None), it opens with Kaluuya and turner-smith’s largely unnamed Ohio natives in the midst of a decidedly lacklustre tinder date at a bright-lit diner (“Did you pick this place because it’s all you could afford?” zings turner-smith’s character before slim shoots back that, no, it’s because “it’s black-owned”).

Afterwards, in the wintry slush of an abandoned street, they are pulled over by a white cop (played by alt-country singer sturgill simpson) who — as tensions rise — grazes Queen with a bullet. in a powerful, transgress­ive twist on how these encounters usually go, slim fires back with the dropped weapon, kills the officer and (prompted by the fact that turner-smith’s character is a criminal defence attorney who knows how, well, slim their chances of

exoneratio­n are) the two of them hit the road, bound for Florida and then, hopefully, Cuba.

It’s an opening that perhaps induces some dramatic whiplash. However, from there, as a viral video of the incident casts Queen and Slim as both dangerous criminals and vital avenging angels for a brutalised African-american community, the film settles into an irrepressi­ble groove; visuals, dialogue and performanc­es purring away like the gleaming Pontiac Catalina that Woodbine’s terrific, Louisianab­ased relative reluctantl­y loans our heroes.

Waithe peppers her wry, almost theatrical script with tension-easing comic moments (including a Tarantino-worthy debate about whether Fat Luther Vandross is better than Skinny Luther Vandross) but also artfully reveals Queen and Slim’s divergent character traits in conversati­ons that feel both fiercely personal and like universal disagreeme­nts between opposing sides of the modern Black American psyche. Matsoukas — who brings a painterly eye and dreamlike cutting from the world of music videos — maintains a curious, agile camera, taking us from flickering juke joints to lush fields that are tended by prisoners who may as well be latter-day slaves.

But it’s perhaps the grounded, magnetic lead performanc­es that are most important (especially as the third act throws in a few light implausibi­lities). Kaluuya, from the moment we see terror and pride swim across his face during that traffic stop, is extraordin­arily affecting as god-fearing, slightly gawky Slim. And Turner-smith (Syfy’s Nightflyer­s) matches him all the way as Queen: a proud, lonely workaholic who gradually opens herself up to the possibilit­y of love and letting go. If that character progressio­n sounds like the stuff of a Netflix romcom then, in truth, that is sort of the point. Queen & Slim tackles urgent, difficult subjects with bravery, care and adrenalise­d genre cool. But it triumphs because it shows you the personal toll beyond the politics. And how Black lives brimming with potential can still turn on one fateful moment.

VERDICT

anchored by the magnetism of Kaluuya and Turner-smith, Queen & Slim crackles with urgent anger and provocativ­e swagger. a road movie with a lot going on under the bonnet.

 ??  ?? Here: Slim (Daniel Kaluuya) and Queen (Jodie Turner-smith) have a bumpy start. Above right: Desperate times call for desperate measures. Below: Dark times for the beleagured couple.
Here: Slim (Daniel Kaluuya) and Queen (Jodie Turner-smith) have a bumpy start. Above right: Desperate times call for desperate measures. Below: Dark times for the beleagured couple.
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