Film reviews: Sinners and The King of Kings
Vampires lay siege to a Mississippi juke joint and an animated retelling of Jesus' life

Sinners
Directed by Ryan Coogler (R)
A movie in which Michael B. Jordan plays twins and takes on a pack of vampires "would have been more than enough," said William Bibbiani in The Wrap. But Ryan Coogler's "bloody, brilliant" first non-franchise film since 2013's Fruitvale Station "evolves into a tale of cultural survival," and while the director of Creed and Black Panther has probably tried to do too much with Sinners, "its allure cannot be denied." Jordan portrays the Smokestack brothers, who have returned to their Mississippi hometown in 1932 to open a transcendent juke joint with ill-gotten riches. The star proves "dynamic and alive in a way that allows this movie to be at least two things at any one time—not just silly and serious, but also ruthless and loving," said David Ehrlich in IndieWire.
When the grand opening is threatened by the arrival of three white vampires, viewers will expect blood and get it. Really, though, "the only thing scary about Sinners is the abstract notion of losing someone, or yourself, to the devil's embrace." And instead of making a movie about white interlopers feeding like vampires on Black culture, said Richard Lawson in Vanity Fair, "Coogler, as ever, digs deeper." The lead vampire, played by Jack O'Connell, is an Irish immigrant who has also known discrimination, and he temptingly suggests that joining his tribe of bloodsuckers can be a way for the Black revelers to seek revenge against their oppressors. "Messy but always compelling," Sinners fumbles certain details. Even so, it "announces a new and perhaps further elevated era of Coogler's cinematic reach."
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
The King of Kings
Directed by Seong-ho Jang (PG)
Judged as cinema, the new animated life of Jesus is "ripe for a Sunday youth group but not much else," said Carlos Aguilar in Variety. "Serviceable if uninspired," The King of Kings has nevertheless scored the highest-grossing opening weekend ever for an animated biblical movie, bouncing 1998's The Prince of Egypt if no adjustment is made for inflation. Jesus' story is told here by Charles Dickens, which is "not quite as Mad Libs–adjacent as it sounds," said Alissa Wilkinson in The New York Times. The great novelist wrote a book about Jesus exclusively for his children in which he emphasized Jesus' kindness. By contrast, this movie from Angel Studios, the faith-based media company responsible for the 2023 hit Sound of Freedom, focuses hazily on what it calls the power of faith, and it seems to have been made purely to take money from the type of people who feel obligated to buy tickets to any retelling of Jesus' life.
"As a Christian, and as a movie critic, I would like to say this loudly, with my whole chest: This movie doesn't need to exist." But if you're a Christian moviegoer and you have children, said Bob Strauss in the San Francisco Chronicle, "there are worse ways to celebrate Easter." The all-star vocal cast includes a "credible" Oscar Isaac as Jesus and Kenneth Branagh as Dickens, and while there's little subtlety to the characters' expressions, the animators "can serve up stirring tableaux." Besides reviewing Jesus' story from birth through death and resurrection, the film also "makes a good case for the power of imagination."
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
-
May 24 editorial cartoons
Cartoons Saturday's political cartoons feature Medicare and Medicaid cuts, James Comey's social media post, and Trump's big beautiful bill.
-
5 cartoons about the Russia-Ukraine peace talks
Cartoons Artists take on a stand-in for Vladimir Putin and phone calls with Donald Trump.
-
Donald Trump's foreign policy flip in the Middle East
Talking Point Surprise lifting of sanctions on Syria shows Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar are now effectively 'dictating US foreign policy'
-
6 lounge-ready homes with conversation pits
Feature Featuring a terrazzo-flanked pit in California and a fire-side pit in Nevada
-
Is a River Alive?: a 'powerful synthesis of literature, activism and ethics'
The Week Recommends Robert Macfarlane's latest book centres on his journeys to four river systems around the world
-
Good One: an 'intensely compelling' coming-of-age tale
The Week Recommends India Donaldson's 'quietly devastating' debut feature about a teenage girl's life-changing camping trip
-
The best lemon pepper wings in Atlanta
Feature Marinated turkey wings, a Korean barbecue sauce combo and an off-menu staple
-
Film reviews: Friendship and Fight or Flight
Feature An awkward dad unravels after he's unfriended and Josh Hartnett attempts a John Wick sidestep
-
Art review: Ai, Rebel: The Art and Activism of Ai Weiwei
Feature Seattle Art Museum, through Sept. 7
-
Book reviews: 'Second Life: Having a Child in the Digital Age' and 'Mark Twain'
Feature Navigating pregnancy in the digital age and an exploration of Mark Twain's private life
-
Richard Bausch's 6 favorite books that are worth rereading
Feature The award-winning author recommends works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and more