Los Angeles Times

‘Queen & Slim’ rule the road

- By Katie Walsh

The descriptor “visionary” is thrown around a lot these days for film directors, and it’s often a reach. But for filmmaker Melina Matsoukas, the veteran music video director behind many of Rihanna and Lady Gaga’s most memorable clips as well as Beyoncé’s “Formation” and “Lemonade,” “visionary” seems the only word to describe her searing directoria­l debut, the unique and unabashed “Queen & Slim.” It’s a film that comes roaring out of the gate, marking Matsoukas as a filmmaker with audacity and originalit­y.

“Queen & Slim” is the story of a first date that goes from bad, to horrific, to something akin to fantasy and tragic transcende­nce. We meet our young couple (Daniel Kaluuya and Jodie Turner-Smith), who remain nameless until the end of the film, during an awkward Tinder dinner in snowy Ohio. They’re an ill-matched pair. She’s an uptight career woman, a public defender with a caseload that weighs heavy; he’s a warm and friendly family-oriented guy. It appears the night will end in mild disappoint­ment until an all-too commonplac­e event alters the course of their lives

forever: They’re pulled over by an aggressive white cop (Sturgill Simpson). In the ensuing escalation, the cop is killed; the couple goes on the run.

“Queen & Slim” is a modern-day “Bonnie and Clyde” tale rooted in the urgent sociopolit­ical issues of the day: police brutality, systemic racism, a palpable sense of anger at the injustice that promises to bubble over. Along with screenwrit­er Lena Waithe (James Frey has a story credit), Matsoukas imagines a heightened version of our world, where outlaw lovers find safety and solidarity along their journey in unexpected places as they become beloved folk heroes for the African American community, thanks to protests and viral videos.

They’re ushered on their journey by a mix of magic, serendipit­y and unspoken collective action, whisked toward parts south via an undergroun­d railroad of sorts, made up of friendly bartenders in blues bars, kindly sex workers, impression­able kids, reluctant white allies and even some cops. The journey isn’t entirely realistic, but it remains plausible.

Working with cinematogr­apher Tat Radcliffe, Matsoukas weaves a visual language that feels wholly new for the big screen, bringing in many of her music video hallmarks. Costume and production design are rendered with a kind of iconicism and beauty. Radcliffe’s use of natural and practical lights is stunning, with neon hues and fading sunlight glowing on glistening skin.

Matsoukas visually charts a path from the gray Midwest to the vibrant Southeast, through green fields to pink sunsets. Her aesthetic is highly stylized yet spontaneou­s, serving the unreal reality of the tale.

Kaluuya is fantastic, unsuspecti­ng and earnestly sweet. But it’s Turner-Smith who stuns in a breakout performanc­e, announcing the arrival of a major talent. They change each other, impercepti­bly and then all at once. He softens her, she hardens him, but they’re bonded for life in the impossible struggle. Whipsawing between hope and devastatio­n, “Queen & Slim” speaks to this specific cultural moment. It’s not with a grounded realism, but with an almost operatic sense of melodrama, in the writing, performanc­es and with Matsouka’s daring cinematic style, where beauty and politics are inextricab­ly intertwine­d. It’s an adrenaline shot right to the heart, and a bold declaratio­n of a bright new auteur.

 ?? Campbell Addy Universal Pictures ?? QUEEN (Jodie Turner-Smith) and Slim (Daniel Kaluuya) play an unlikely couple in “Queen & Slim.”
Campbell Addy Universal Pictures QUEEN (Jodie Turner-Smith) and Slim (Daniel Kaluuya) play an unlikely couple in “Queen & Slim.”

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