Nickel Boys (2024) | agoodmovietowatch
Back
Movie

Nickel Boys 2024

An intimate, immersive, and incredibly inventive look into the racial abuse of a Jim Crow-era reform school

Our Take (by Renee Cuisia)

The first things that grab your attention in Nickel Boys are its beauty and technicality. Director RaMell Ross, a large-format photographer, ensures every frame relays something deep, intimate, and moving. Then there’s how he takes these shots: we see things unfold through the POV of Elwood and Turner, students at an abusive reform school in Tallahassee, Florida. The year is 1962, and even though the civil rights movement inspires Elwood and his peers to stand up for themselves, the political climate is as skewed and violent as ever. Nickel Boys tells the unfortunately common story of how Black men, in particular, had to endure unimaginable abuse during the Jim Crow era in the South. What is uncommon, though, is the sensitivity and boundless inventiveness with which Ross tells this story. Yes, violence is unavoidable in a story like this, but Ross swaps trauma porn with something more effective and chilling—a mixture of silence, archival photographs, time jumps, and that immersive POV, which forces you to be in Elwood and Turner’s shoes. The world before them may be brutal, but inside, they hold space for beauty, fun, relationships, and wonder, manifested in the film in dreamy visual sequences. What Ross does is art in the highest form, an unforgettable balance between style and substance.

Notable Critics

"Where Whitehead’s novel describes his characters’ physical torments in the third person, with psychological discernment and declarative precision, Ross’s movie fuses observation and sensation with its audiovisual style."

— Richard Brody

"Were Nickel Boys merely a galvanising accomplishment in post-colonial essay filmmaking, that would be enough. It is doubly wondrous, then, that the film itself is a rivetingly constructed, impressively subtle work of dramaturgy."

— Sam Bodrojan

Synopsis

Chronicles the powerful friendship between two young Black teenagers navigating the harrowing trials of reform school together in Florida.

More about it

What happens

1962, Florida. Sixteen-year-old Elwood (Ethan Herisse) is unjustly sent to the reform school Nickel Academy, where he befriends Turner (Brandon Wilson). In between hard labor and violent reprimands, the two bond and dream of a better life.

What sets it apart

Shooting purely in POV can be jarring at times, but there’s no doubt that this is a technical feat.

TL;DR

Though mostly snubbed during the awards race, The Academy can’t help but nominate it for the highest honor—the Best Picture Oscar—because it’s simply too good of a film to be ignored.

Awards

Oscars

2 nominations

Nominated: Best Adapted ScreenplayNominated: Best Picture

Golden Globes

1 nomination

Nominated: Best Motion Picture

BAFTA

1 nomination

Nominated: Best Screenplay (Adapted)

DGA

1 win

Won: Michael Apted Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in First-Time Theatrical Feature Film

Spirit Awards

1 win, 1 nomination

Won: Best CinematographyNominated: Best Feature

WGA

1 win

Won: Adapted Screenplay

NYFCC

2 wins

Won: Best CinematographyWon: Best Director

LAFCA

2 wins

Won: Best CinematographyWon: Best Editing

Comments

Add your review

Your email address will not be published.*

About the author

Renee Cuisia

Renee Cuisia

Renee Cuisia is the lead curator at A Good Movie to Watch. In her spare time, she likes to watch K-dramas and analyze them to death. She's also seen You've Got Mail one too many times but is still convinced it's one of the greatest films out there.