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poster of Till
Rating: 7.5/10 by 273 users

Till (2022)

The true story of Mamie Till Mobley’s relentless pursuit of justice for her 14 year old son, Emmett Till, who, in 1955, was lynched while visiting his cousins in Mississippi.

Directing:
  • Felix Jordan
  • Rebecca Strickland
  • Claire Tanner
  • Barbara Abelar
  • Benjamin M. Dessecker
  • Chinonye Chukwu
Writing:
  • Michael Reilly
  • Keith Beauchamp
  • Chinonye Chukwu
  • Chinonye Chukwu
  • Michael Reilly
  • Keith Beauchamp
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Oct 14, 2022

Rating: 7.5/10 by 273 users

Alternative Title:
Till - A Busca por Justiça - BR
Emmett Till - FR

Country:
United Kingdom
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 02 hour 11 minutes
Budget: $33,000,000
Revenue: $11,498,884

Plot Keyword: chicago, illinois, mother, funeral, son, based on true story, racist, grief, murder, racism, justice, casket, lynching, death of son, woman director, 1950s, civil rights movement
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Danielle Deadwyler
Mamie Till-Mobley
Jalyn Hall
Emmett Till
Frankie Faison
John Carthan
Haley Bennett
Carolyn Bryant
Jayme Lawson
Myrlie Evers
Tosin Cole
Medgar Evers
Kevin Carroll
Rayfield Mooty
Roger Guenveur Smith
Dr. T.R.M. Howard
Josh Ventura
S. Carlton
Ed Amatrudo
J.J. Breland
Tim Ware
Judge Curtis Swango
Keisha Tillis
Elizabeth Wright
Bradley King
White Mob Member
Jackson Beals
Leslie Milam
Reid Jameson Smith
Boy in department store
Al Mitchell
A.A. Rayner
Lee Spencer
Council President
Njema Williams
Henry Loggins
Jamie Renell
Security Guard
Friedman Twinkies
Roy Bryant Jr and Lamar Bryant
Jaylin Webb
Willie Hemphill
Cora Maple Lindell
Gallery Observer
Angela Yale
Department store clerk
Phil Biedron
Courthouse Reporter
Torey Adkins
White Man #1
Maurice Johnson
Ernest Withers
Noel Sampson
David Jackson
Brandon P Bell
Funeral Home Reporter
Bree Fyffe
Townsperson (Child)
Marcus Atkins
Onlooker / Juke Joint Background
Darian Rolle
Willie Reed
Blaine Huslig
Photojournalist
Richard Nash
1950's Courtroom Onlooker / Pedestrian
Kevin Brown
White Mob Member / Juror

Peter McGinn

This is a very good movie and can be a difficult one to watch if you know the history as I did, I of course knew where it was going front the beginning and where it would end up. The writing was strong and the acting superb much of the time. I highly recommend it for anyone young or old who is unfamiliar with he story. Despite the rawness of Danielle Deadwiler’s performance and the clean way the tragedy unfolded, on some weird level I wasn’t as affected emotionally as I would have expected to be. I don’t even know why. A few intangible reasons perhaps? Such as not feeling a lot of chemistry between the main characters. Like I say, I am not even sure myself. It is an excellent movie, but not one that will stick with me as a powerful slice of history like this should, or make me likely to feel I have to watch it again. But yes, do see it once at least.

CinemaSerf

Based around the true story of the appalling murder of the young Emmett Till in a racially divided 1950s USA, this delivers a truly powerful performance from Danielle Deadwyler as his mother. A woman who becomes distraught, angry and determined. Determined that those who killed her child are brought to justice. The history, sadly, tells us just how the judicial process of Mississippi back then was just as bigoted as the vast majority of the white folks who treated African Americans as little better that labouring cattle. This film is well put together, with plenty of attention to the aesthetics of the scenarios. What helps is stand out though, is the lead performance. It is gently complemented by a supporting cast that includes the engaging young Jalyn Hall as the optimistic and decent young man, but it is really all about Deadwyler and her nuanced and thought-provoking effort as the mother who funnels her distress and despair into something positive. For her, and for a broader society at large that was either unaware or just indifferent to the practical, political and downright dangerous obstacles faced by those of a different colour if they even thought about staring from the prescribed social "norms". Chinonye Chukwu keeps the pace of the story tight and well focussed - there is little room for sentiment or melodrama in this drama. There's a slide at the end that rather sums the whole thing up - the anti-lynching legislation that bears this young man's name was only implemented in 2022!


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