I thought this was a fine, messy movie. Coogler is at his best in the first act, which feels borderline-novelistic in its deliberate pace and for how it imbues a strong sense of mystery and world-building at once. The second act was good too, especially the musical sequences, but they tried to fit a lot into a short timeframe - Hailee Steinfeld's arc needed more to earn its intended emotional payoffs, and the character development in general felt cut short just when it was blossoming - that includes all the fun side characters, who were memorable even with just a few lines. And that brings along the main problem: This film establishes itself as an epic and never delivers on its promise. The narrative structure of an uninvited surprise coming into these characters' lives is emulated by a jarring second-to-third act transition that doesn't work very well, and so the film is defeated by its own climax. pianocrash's
Avengers observation is apt, and Jack O'Connell isn't given enough to work with to pull off an engaging villain in a film with these ambitions, even if he's effectively creepy earlier in the movie. I was surprised that the film had the spine to
gruesomely kill off all its female characters with what felt like closer, harsher attention than the male ones
if only for how it contributed to this vicious dog-eat-dog worldview, breaking through the fantasy of sustained success for people of color. I also liked the juxtaposition between "the real" (some on-the-nose stuff here for sure, especially when they just name that in the mid-credits sequence - about music, sure) way of resilient living for black folks and the vampire cult's allegory for a collective attitude of surrender breeding relief, which would do no good but takes the pain of living harshly away. In that sense, the cult emulates an addiction mentality that's a bit nuanced from vampirism's traditional addiction metaphors, and the way they're portrayed reminded me of
Doctor Sleep's depiction of its own vampire-y group, in a good way - slightly campy with serious ideas behind it, making it believable if not entirely formidable for the story being told