Directed by: Ryan Coogler
Starring: Michael B. Jordan, Hailee Steinfeld, Delroy Lindo, Wunmi Mosaku, Miles Caton, Jack O'Connell, Jayme Lawson, Yao, Li Jun Li
I caught up late to Sinners, following a record sixteen Oscar nominations this year. The movie is an ungainly mix of crime drama, social commentary, and vampire horror all in one. The vampire stuff seems typical no matter how Coogler introduces it and tries to dress it up. The first hour before any bloodsuckers even show up gives us the players and some backstory, but it is a slog getting to the main event.
Sinners centers around bootlegging twins Smoke and Stack (Jordan), who are difficult to differentiate not just because it's Michael B. Jordan playing them both, but because their personalities are similar. One actor playing twins can be distracting because you're looking for the editing tricks. Sinners does this seamlessly, but after a while I gave up trying to figure out which twin is which. One way the movie differentiates them is by giving them different love interests. Stack is in love with Mary (Steinfeld), who is half-black but passes as white in societal circles. Smoke wants to reconnect with a voodoo priestess (Mosaku) whom he left behind when he and Stack moved to Chicago to work for Al Capone after they fought in World War I.
The twins want to open a juke joint in their Mississippi hometown and dream of making big dollars, but on opening night, the establishment and its many patrons are accosted by three vampires (concealing their identities of course) who ostensibly want to enter so they can play the blues. They're turned away and the horror show starts as the vampires turn each of the living into the undead. There is also teenager Sammie (Caton), a blues guitarist who wishes to break into the blues scene. In one time-bending scene, he plays a blues song, and Coogler reflects on how the blues influenced future music like disco, rock, etc. and the room is replete with visions of future singers and dancers occupying the same space.
Sinners is superior from a production standpoint, capturing the essence of its time and place in 1930's Mississippi, but it tries to be too many things at once, almost as if Coogler was filming two different movies at the same time and attempted to mesh them together. Themes of racism and cultural appropriation are also explored. Are the white vampires symbolic of these? Sinners makes the answer apparent, and you will be the judge as to whether that works for you. But from an entertainment perspective, Sinners is a mixed bag that never lifts off the ground despite its lofty intentions.