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As a result of a science class blood test, African American Zora discovers that the man she thought was her father actually wasn't. Actually she is the result of artificial insemination. And if that weren't bad enough, the sperm doner is white. This comes as a major shock to her mother Sarah, who had explicitly requested a black donor.
Has anyone else noticed the apparent subtext that black men are unstable and unreliable, and only a white man can be sensitive to a black woman's needs?
This first-time screenplay by Holly Goldberg Sloan feels more like an outline, and director Richard Benjamin doesn't seem to know quite what to do with it.