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      Soraya Nadia McDonald

      Soraya Nadia McDonald

      Tomatometer-approved critic

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      Rating T-Meter Title | Year Review
      Silver Dollar Road (2023) Haitian filmmaker Raoul Peck has a knack for making unconventional documentaries that pull no punches. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 14, 2023
      Nanny (2022) Director Nikyatu Jusu’s haunting tale of immigrant sacrifice engulfs and beguiles. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 16, 2023
      Emancipation (2022) The hollow Emancipation is a mismatch between director and subject. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 16, 2023
      The Woman King (2022) With its epic tale of the solidarity that grows between the Dahomey as they battle against enslavement and exploitation, The Woman King illustrates, with stunning grace, how sisterhood can be more than dangerous and powerful. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 13, 2022
      Nope (2022) With the release of his third feature, Nope, Jordan Peele has solidified his reputation for making ambitious, interesting thrillers that mystify enormous audiences. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Aug 05, 2022
      King Richard (2021) King Richard has a Will Smith problem. It is obviously meant to be award catnip for Smith and a cinematic crowning for Richard Williams, father of Venus and Serena. And yet Smith's starring role may be the weakest part of the film. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 24, 2021
      Passing (2021) Ruth Negga shines in Rebecca Hall's adaptation of the Nella Larsen novel. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 12, 2021
      Tina (2021) What stands out about Tina is that it takes her seriously as an artist, which remains an uphill battle for women in rock music. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 29, 2021
      The United States vs. Billie Holiday (2021) The biggest flaw of The United States vs. Billie Holiday, besides its commitment to substituting shocking violence for character development, is that it cannot decide how its leading lady sees herself. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 09, 2021
      MLK/FBI (2020) While MLK/FBI is expansive and humane, it leaves room for a deeper and more concentrated look at Coretta Scott King as an individual who faced her own enormous challenges as a public figure. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 09, 2021
      Malcolm & Marie (2021) Malcolm & Marie doesn't accomplish much besides telling on its progenitor. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 09, 2021
      Judas and the Black Messiah (2021) King has pulled off the near-impossible, taking a story of an anticapitalist civil rights martyr who we know will have a tragic, bloody end, and approaching it with daring and confidence. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 09, 2021
      Antebellum (2020) Antebellum sprinkles its under-considered plot with elements that recur but are never explained... Meanwhile, the more difficult questions behind Antebellum's world-building choices go unaddressed. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 20, 2021
      Time (2020) [Director Garrett] Bradley's mastering of craft is evident in all the ways she strays from convention. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 20, 2021
      The Forty-Year-Old Version (2020) The Forty-Year-Old Version offers a refreshing, unpretentious and often hilarious take on middle-aged Black womanhood. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 20, 2021
      Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020) Each of the actors rises to the occasion in this production, riding a wave of heat crafted by screenwriter and Wilson whisperer Ruben Santiago-Hudson. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 20, 2021
      The Old Guard (2020) Given a team of highly regarded actors in Charlize Theron, Chiwetel Ejiofor and KiKi Layne, Prince-Bythewood delivers both satisfying, high-octane fights and a proper storyline to stitch them together. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 20, 2021
      Miss Juneteenth (2020) Through her round-the-way-girl protagonist, Peoples reminds Turquoise and all of us that there's more than one way to get free. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jun 22, 2020
      Da 5 Bloods (2020) Da 5 Bloods [is] Spike Lee's sprawling, ambitious, vital and fiery entry into the Vietnam War film canon. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jun 12, 2020
      The High Note (2020) Ross is an actress who consistently punches above the weight class of the material she's given. And yet in the biggest moment of her film career to date, it's obvious that she deserves more, too. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jun 01, 2020
      Becoming (2020) Becoming more or less offers Obama fanservice... But it's most interesting in the rare moments when Obama speaks candidly about topics that had been verboten, or at least strongly discouraged. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted May 07, 2020
      The Photograph (2020) A dithering, unshakable ambivalence dooms The Photograph, which might be the most distilled example of the deficiencies in Meghie's work as a writer/director. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Feb 14, 2020
      Like a Boss (2020) But no amount of concealer can hide the plot holes or general laziness that tanks Like a Boss, and it is exactly those inadequacies that have consigned it to Dump Month. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jan 10, 2020
      Uncut Gems (2019) The magic trick of the Safdies is that even when they plunge you into the dyspeptic, spleeny, cyclical hell of Howard's own making, they manage to make you root for him anyway. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Dec 13, 2019
      Hala (2019) The film shines with a glorious commitment to the emotional evolution of its female characters, which James Sizemore's score accents with notes of subtle agony. - NPR
      Read More | Posted Dec 11, 2019
      Queen & Slim (2019) The director's confident patience guides the pacing of Queen & Slim, allowing both the film and the relationship between its titular characters to unfold organically, even as the stakes of the picture are established within its first 15 minutes. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Dec 03, 2019
      Harriet (2019) Harriet is so consumed with reverence for the patron saint of Black History Month that it neglects to make her, or any of the supporting characters around her, a real person. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 01, 2019
      Dolemite Is My Name (2019) What a relief to see something so nakedly committed to entertaining its audience, and which made the case for doing so with such passion. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 16, 2019
      Our Lady of the Nile (2019) Director Atiq Rahimi has once again created a beautiful and disturbing work of cinema. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 16, 2019
      Sweetness in the Belly (2019) Sweetness in the Belly has its moments of grace... But for a complicated story set during even more complicated times, Sweetness in the Belly just feels altogether too simple. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 16, 2019
      Just Mercy (2019) It's a new twist on the old formula of Yankee lawyers who come to the South and find a wall of community resistance to racial equality and injustice, but it's a powerful one. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 13, 2019
      Clemency (2019) [Clemency] continue the work of highlighting racial inequality in the justice system. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Sep 13, 2019
      Lucas Brothers: On Drugs (2017) It's sharp, smart, insightful and hilarious. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jul 16, 2019
      Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am (2019) [Toni] Morrison remains an inspiration for many reasons, but especially because she believed in her own talents long before the institutional arbiters of such things caught on to them. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jul 15, 2019
      The Farewell (2019) The Farewell leaves you marveling at sincerity, selflessness, and grace, and nursing a need to call your grandmother. - Film Comment Magazine
      Read More | Posted Jul 15, 2019
      The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019) The Last Black Man in San Francisco is an exquisite dirge for the loss of a city, of home, of community. But most of all, it mourns the loss of possibility, and for some that load is just too heavy to bear. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Jun 07, 2019
      See You Yesterday (2019) No matter the inspired cinematography or considered, authentic performances, these stories carry a weight of inevitability as they suck every particle of hope out of the air. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted May 18, 2019
      The Sun Is Also a Star (2019) Shahidi and Melton are charming and utterly watchable together. They're both absurdly attractive and skilled actors, but whatever magic exists between them is limited by Tracy Oliver's script. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted May 17, 2019
      Fast Color (2018) Fast Color is an exceptional, poetic ride that cries out for further exploration. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Apr 27, 2019
      Native Son (2019) Nearly 80 years after Native Son was first published, we're still searching for answers. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Apr 11, 2019
      Us (2019) As social commentary, it's not as razor-sharp as Get Out. But it still feels like an exceptional accomplishment, mainly because Peele created a role that is a worthy showcase of Nyong'o's talent. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 22, 2019
      Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story (2019) With archival footage from college basketball games in the 1940s and pro ball in the 1950s, Hamilton illustrates how much Sailors seemed like a time traveler from the future. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Mar 13, 2019
      High Flying Bird (2019) To avoid spoilers, I'll hold my tongue on the rest of High Flying Bird's deliciously crafty plot. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Feb 08, 2019
      If Beale Street Could Talk (2018) In his adaptation of If Beale Street Could Talk, Jenkins has fully established himself as one of American cinema's finest architects of intimacy. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Dec 14, 2018
      Say Her Name: The Life and Death of Sandra Bland (2018) More than anything, the value in Say Her Name lies in its refusal to allow Bland to be silenced, even in death. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Dec 06, 2018
      Widows (2018) Widows is filled with wild beauty, heart-thumping grotesquerie and even some good ol' soapy treachery. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 16, 2018
      Jinn (2018) Jinn quivers with joy and uncertainty, confidence and shame, delivering exactly what makes independent cinema exciting: a bright new voice with a bold vision. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 16, 2018
      The Hate U Give (2018) In dealing with all of it, the book character finds her confidence and her voice. But the movie version of The Hate U Give leaves me unsure that its makers ever found theirs. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 02, 2018
      Student Athlete (2018) A new documentary about the exploitation of college athletes is right on time. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Nov 02, 2018
      Crazy Rich Asians (2018) The best romantic comedy from a big studio since Bridget Jones's Diary was released in 2001. - Andscape
      Read More | Posted Aug 30, 2018
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