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A comedy movie that revolves around Collin, the young fellow who needs to change his life better after he has been discharged from the correctional facility. He searches for an occupation to begin another life. Be that as it may, his ideal arrangement presented to a few snags when his companion, Miles, causes inconveniences that jeopardize their friendship.
This indie dramedy could have been a hard-knock urban story, but instead it's funny and insightful, with heartfelt characters, as well as astute enough to explore many sides of the issues at hand.
The film's empathetic lens instills the feeling that the places on screen may already be gone by now, turning Blindspotting into a kind of documentary of the area that also shares its story: one of survival in the face of trauma.
Movies about race in America are seldom in short supply, but rarely do they venture past the realm of personal prejudice into the more complicated terrain of economic racism.
Like all great movies, Blindspotting is a force to be reckoned with and wrestled with. No matter where you land in your assessment, your expectations are guaranteed to be shattered.
Blindspotting's searing exploration of hot-button issues as race, class and police brutality in such confrontational fashion makes for a thought-provoking experience guaranteed to affect you long after leaving the theater.