Synopsis
It's time we knew
A police raid in Detroit in 1967 results in one of the largest citizens' uprisings in the history of the United States.
2017 Directed by Kathryn Bigelow
A police raid in Detroit in 1967 results in one of the largest citizens' uprisings in the history of the United States.
John Boyega Will Poulter Anthony Mackie Algee Smith Hannah Murray Jason Mitchell Jack Reynor Ben O'Toole Jacob Latimore Kaitlyn Dever John Krasinski Joseph David-Jones Ephraim Sykes Leon G. Thomas III Peyton Alex Smith Nathan Davis Jr. Gbenga Akinnagbe Tyler James Williams Chris Chalk Jennifer Ehle Jeremy Strong Laz Alonso Austin Hébert Samira Wiley Mason Alban Miguel Miguel Pimentel Darren Goldstein Kristopher Davis Show All…
Ele Bardha Stephen A. Pope Bryce Biederman William Cote Robert Lee Harvey Xavier Dillingham Califf Guzman Peter Wallack Edward Gabree Michael C. Brennan Brandon M. Shaw Derek Johnson
Nerses Gezalyan Gary A. Hecker Randy Singer Hamilton Sterling Sarah Monat Rick Owens Jamie Hardt Paul N.J. Ottosson Christian Schaanning Ryan Juggler
Francine Jamison-Tanchuck Angelique Paull Wayne Allen Alyson MacInnis Rosa J. Colón Taryn Walsh Dana Pacheco
Detroit em Rebelião, Detroit: Zona de conflicto, 디트로이트, 底特律
Detroit is one of the scariest films I've ever seen.
This film reminded me of Funny Games and Passion of the Christ.
Will Poulter's character is more evil than Michael Myers, Jason, and Freddy Kruger.
Fuck.
I'm from Detroit. I've lived in and around the city for the majority of my life. This movie has nothing to say about this city, the uprising of '67 or, most damningly, what it's like to be black in America. Detroit (the movie) is the cinematic equivalent of Ramsay Bolton from Game of Thrones; it luxuriates interminably in the depths of human depravity without ever arriving at a meaningful conclusion. Maybe the hopelessness I felt watching Detroit was intentional. It certainly doesn't feel like we've made any progress in becoming a more empathetic and just society since '67. Still, what's the point? For a black audience member, I don't see how there's anything to be found here that with which…
did not anticipate this being the liberal version of the michael bay benghazi movie but here we are
It’s easy to try to do too much with a historical film. As a filmmaker, you might feel the need to cast a wide net over the events in question, going down a laundry list of important dates in an effort to do due diligence to history. I prefer the approach taken by Detroit, which zeroes in on the Algiers Motel and stays with it for over an hour. The film certainly provides context for the tensions that flare in that motel, opening the film with an excellent prologue that places you right in the heat of the Detroit riots. However, Bigelow’s concerns do not lie with the riots as a whole; rather, she and Boal are interested in how…
65
Senseless provocation, although more in the idea surrounding such brutality; not whether we should show these images, but questioning what they truly provide for audiences. The nation is long past utilizing re-creation for the sake of sensation. Nothing contained within Detroit's two hours and twenty-three minute run-time provides any further introspection or advancement in depiction of racial tension. In the best way, Bigelow's film reminds me of late-historical Spielberg joints akin to Amistad or Munich; portrayals caught between the flurry of feeling and the necessity of broader contextual coherence. You'd think with Bigelow behind the camera that the film wouldn't begin with a strange animated educational re-cap regarding America's deep-seated injustices and anxiety, but it does. You'd also think…
Exploding across the stressed out summer of 2017 like a powder keg thrown into a room that’s already on fire, Kathryn Bigelow’s hectic but harrowing docudrama account of the 1967 Detroit riots is inevitably as concerned with the persistence of systemic racism as it is with its past. The years between now and then have made it impossible to isolate the two — names like Tamir Rice and Philando Castile have disallowed us from deluding ourselves into thinking what’s done is done. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Nevertheless, there’s something broadly instructive about a major director choosing this moment to make a movie about this episode in the fraught history of American race relations. With…
Kathryn Bigelow’s Detroit works best when the focus is on the events at the Algiers Motel. In these scenes, Detroit becomes a horror movie, a home invasion thriller and survive the night story of pure Manson Family-esque holy terror. Will Poulter wins the Creep of 2017 award as one of the most unlikable characters in recent memory as the White Devil Redneck Racist Policeman. Poulter has to play his character this way, because the story will not have the same impact on the audience. After the tragic events at the motel unfold, Detroit gets lost in its own screenplay. There’s so many questions left unanswered. Especially, the why. Why did the inexcusable horrible tragical events at the motel really occur?…
Action! - Female 4 Front: The Bigelow's Kinetic Alphas
And our journey and marathon conclude with a film I've been wanting to watch lately. A film with, to put it mildly, mixed reviews. When it was first released, many people were critical of it, while others loved it. And now that I've seen it, I can say that I understand both sides.
Indeed, much of the style that Bigelow has been perfecting for nearly a decade is present. Again, with the handheld camera makes you feel like you're right in the middle of the action, almost like a documentary. Will Poulter is outstanding as the story's villain, owing to his coldness and wickedness, making it clear that underneath the lambent…
Detroit is a period crime drama that was intense to sit through. Set in 1967, riots break out in Detroit, a report of a gunshot from the annex at the Algiers hotel sets off all the armed forces, from National Guard to Police Department, several policemen take point to viciously interrogate the unarmed guests to confess. Powerful performances. The stand out for me were Algee Smith, John Boyega, and Will Poulter, even though he was evil. The film goes in many directions with different themes but I did like it when it was more focused on the incident at the hotel. That event was horrific, it was hard to watch at times. The animated sequence was confusing, shaky hand cam made it feel like we were thrown into the chaos, mixed with real-life footage of the riots. I think it tried to take on a lot. It’s still a very good unforgettable film.
Ooof...
Look, I'm really not the person to talk about the major issues of this film, so I'll keep this brief (you can read what some smarter people wrote about it here, here, and here). Kathryn Bigelow is still a technically exceptional filmmaker who can make a damn gripping movie, but Mark Boal's script depicts the whole situation as a horror film with almost no context of how it got to that point (yes the animation at the beginning helps a bit, but it is not enough).
Worst of all, Detroit presents the situation in the motel as "these police officers are horrible" instead of "what happened to these people was horrible," which is, I think, an important distinction. It…