Surveillance on Screen: Monitoring Contemporary Films and Television Programs
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The theme of surveillance has become an increasingly common element in movies and television shows,...
The Future is Not What it Used to be: Climate Change and Energy Scarcity
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The future is not what it used to be because we can no longer rely on the comforting assumption that...
Must Close Saturday
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The ominous announcement "Must Close Saturday" too often heralded the demise of British musicals....
Autonomic Road Transport Support Systems: 2016
Thomas Leo McCluskey, Apostolos Kotsialos, J.P. Muller and Rene Schumann
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The work on Autonomic Road Transport Support (ARTS) presented here aims at meeting the challenge of...
From Pattern Formation to Material Computation: Multi-Agent Modelling of Physarum Polycephalum
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This book addresses topics of mobile multi-agent systems, pattern formation, biological modelling,...
Lust for Life: Irvine Welsh and the Trainspotting Phenomenon
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In the early 1980s Irvine Welsh's life was going nowhere fast. His teenage dreams of being a...
Poetic Conventions as Cognitive Fossils
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Poetic Conventions as Cognitive Fossils offers a major theoretical statement of where poetic...
Karina Longworth recommended Caught (2015) in Movies (curated)
Dave Navarro recommended Nosferatu (Eine Symphonie Des Grauens) (1922) in Movies (curated)
Emma @ The Movies (1786 KP) rated The Hate U Give (2018) in Movies
Sep 25, 2019
There are stellar performances from everyone, but I was really pleased to see Amandla Stenberg in this role. It's a strong lead which was a great relief as I wasn't overly enthusiastic after seeing some of her previous roles. Regina Hall really hit home for me too, I'm used to her as a comedic actor so this break from that was surprising and very welcome. She did still get the chance for moments of humour, they're just not as over the top as we might be used to.
This is an adaptation of the young adult book of the same name by Angie Thomas. While the protagonist is indeed a teenage girl the film certainly doesn't limit itself to that audience. Many adaptations before this have made it difficult to see its success past the intended age group but I can see this being popular on so many levels. It's a tough subject handled in an excellent way. This really feels like something special.
If I have to quibble about something it's that the ending feels a little too "and they all lived happily ever after". I don't know if that's how it ends in the book or not, I'm going to find out. It's still a good ending though, regardless.
What should you do?
See it. No haggling about ticket prices, it's worth every penny.
Movie thing you wish you could take home
The film doesn't quite fall into the category for this part of my post, but I'd really want Starr's determination and courage.