One Night in Miami 2021
IMDb Ratings: 6.7/10
Genres: Drama
Language: English
Release Year: 2021
Director: Regina King
Stars Cast: Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge
Director: Regina King
Stars Cast: Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge
One Night in Miami Movie Screenshots
One Night in Miami Movie Review
Oscar-winning actress Regina King made her debut in One Night in Miami.
Taken from the stage play. He is thinking of meeting at a hotel after the defeat of Sonny Liston's Cassius Clay (Eli Goree) in 1964 when he was crowned world heavyweight champion.
Clay and his friends Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr) and Malcolm X (Kingsley Ben-Adir) come together to celebrate, joke, debate and debate about the blackness of the 1960s in America.
The pre-credit sequence is focused on each male. It reflects the underlying and unfamiliar prejudices that some of them experience.
The plot of the film Clay decides to become a Muslim and joins the Nation of Islam which includes changing his name.
Meanwhile Malcolm X is contemplating his future with the Nation of Islam creating divisions within the party.
Jim Brown wants to leave football and become an actor. Better his knees.
Cooke has realized that there is money to be made if white bands like The Rolling Stones burn the grass with songs he has written.
Malcolm X, however, is angry with Cooke for not taking a strong political stance. He reminds Cooke that black people are being killed every day. Some told Malcolm that he was too strong for Cooke.
Deep down is the political film, which coincides with the Black Lives Matter debate.
The nature of the stage of this movie is hard to ignore. It also takes time to move on but it is imperative when Malcolm X and Sam Cooke collide.
The ensemble cast jumps well with each other. The best performance for me was Leslie Odom Jr, especially his singing voice.
It should be noted that within a year of the alleged meeting, both Malcolm X and Sam Cooke will be dead.
Taken from the stage play. He is thinking of meeting at a hotel after the defeat of Sonny Liston's Cassius Clay (Eli Goree) in 1964 when he was crowned world heavyweight champion.
Clay and his friends Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr) and Malcolm X (Kingsley Ben-Adir) come together to celebrate, joke, debate and debate about the blackness of the 1960s in America.
The pre-credit sequence is focused on each male. It reflects the underlying and unfamiliar prejudices that some of them experience.
The plot of the film Clay decides to become a Muslim and joins the Nation of Islam which includes changing his name.
Meanwhile Malcolm X is contemplating his future with the Nation of Islam creating divisions within the party.
Jim Brown wants to leave football and become an actor. Better his knees.
Cooke has realized that there is money to be made if white bands like The Rolling Stones burn the grass with songs he has written.
Malcolm X, however, is angry with Cooke for not taking a strong political stance. He reminds Cooke that black people are being killed every day. Some told Malcolm that he was too strong for Cooke.
Deep down is the political film, which coincides with the Black Lives Matter debate.
The nature of the stage of this movie is hard to ignore. It also takes time to move on but it is imperative when Malcolm X and Sam Cooke collide.
The ensemble cast jumps well with each other. The best performance for me was Leslie Odom Jr, especially his singing voice.
It should be noted that within a year of the alleged meeting, both Malcolm X and Sam Cooke will be dead.