MOVIE OF THE WEEK (9/14/18): WHITE BOY RICK

"You listen here, Richie, Jr. – you stay away from that Marshall Mathers, kid, ya hear me?!" Rick Wershe, Jr. (Richie Merritt, left) hands off as his father (Matthew McConaughey) prepares to roll out in a scene from WHITE BOY RICK. Credit: Scott Garfield. © 2018 CTMG, Inc. All rights reserved.

WATCH THE TRAILER(S) HERE:


KEY CAST MEMBERS: Matthew McConaughey, Richie Merritt, Bel Powley, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Brian Tyree Henry, Rory Cochrane, RJ Cyler, Jonathan Majors, Taylour Paige, Eddie Marsan with Bruce Dern and Piper Laurie


WRITER(S): Andy Weiss and Logan & Noah Miller

DIRECTOR(S): Yann Demange

WEB SITE: https://www.whiteboyrick.movie/

HERE'S THE STORY: It's the mid-1980s. In Detroit. And Rick Wershe, Jr. (Richie Merritt) isn't exactly living the American dream. His father (Matthew McConaughey) is a low-level gun dealers who makes modified weapons he sells to less-than-upstanding clientele. His sister Dawn (Bel Powley) is a drug addict in a bad relationship and Rick Jr. himself? Well, he's currently not enrolled in school and spending his time between helping his dad with the family business and ... Just living. 

But things are about to change for Rick in a major way.

He's about to start spending time with Lil Man (Jonathan Majors) and his posse ... Which will attract the attention of FBI Agent Alex Snyder (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and FBI Agent Frank Byrd (Rory Cochrane) as well as Detroit PD's own Detective Jackson (Brian Tyree Henry). Which, given his dad's work, means he's going to need to cooperate with them ... Or else. 

So ... What happens when a 15 year-old kid gets involved with dope boys, the FBI and a desire to break free of his urban prison? An unbelievable story inspired by true events in the life of the kid who would come to be known as White Boy Rick

WHO WILL LIKE THIS FILM THE MOST? Rappers; people who find true crime stories with outrageous details fascinating; people interesting the American legal system; Matthew McConaughey fans; 80s urban culture afficionados; fans of crime and punishment tales 

WHO WON'T (OR SHOULDN'T) LIKE THIS MOVIE? Anyone who believes certain types of entertainment promote criminal activities; those who would like the film to go deeper into certain aspects of Wershe, Jr.'s story (substance over style)

SO IS IT GOOD, BAD OR JUST AWFUL? A movie that looks good, has solid performances and yet at the same time, manages not to add anything terribly new to the crime and punishment genre, White Boy Rick is not quite Scarface for millennials ... But I'm sure it will serve many of them well in the meantime. 

Based on the it-used-to-be-unbelievable-but-now-seems-quite-conceivable-given-today's-headlines-with-teenagers, White Boy Rick features a strong performance by newcomer Richie Merritt, who's street smart cool fits his character perfectly to be able to make the story real. Exhibiting a screen presence that is everything it needs to be, Merritt slides into his character's world with a magnetism and charisma that is impossible to deny, more than holding his own alongside McConaughey, who delivers one of those performances award season voters tend to love. 

Director Yann Demerage makes the grit of Detroit's 80s despair come fully alive on screen, making it quite viable to understand how it could produce a kid like Rick, Eminem or any number of impoverished youth who's entire reality is guns, drugs and despair. At the same time, he is able to create moments that show the fragile hope of Richie's youth – if you own a pair of roller skates, this movie is going to make you want to practice going backwards after you dig for your old mixtapes – and how he tries to do the right thing despite the worst possible means.

What audiences will either be most enthralled or appalled by isn't the film's language, sex or drug use. Those things are now as common in American culture/entertainment; no, it will be with the film's ending and whether or not the true facts of Wershe, Jr's fate were justifiable. That's what a logical movie watcher would expect, anyway – his choices were his own, but it's the age-old question of does the time fit the crime(s) and what do the events of this (then) young man's life say about life in America and the subcultures we like to act don't exist in our happy, 22-minute sitcom with commercials world?

That is a question I cannot answer for you; I can only answer whether or not you should give White Boy Rick a watch or not. And that answer – for anyone who wants to watch an inherently compelling American story from one of its favorite decades – is "yes."

OVERALL RATING (OUT OF FOUR POSSIBLE BUCKETS OF POPCORN):



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