We Finally Watched SINNERS! | Movie Reaction | Michael B. Jordan | Jack O'Connell | Hailee Steinfeld
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Top Comments (10)
I’m on my 10th SINNERS reaction watch and I love it 😂❤
An interesting detail I noticed in Remmick’s first scene: when pleading with the two homesteaders, he initially calls the Choctaw by their proper name. But after noticing the Klan robe, he shifts to using derogatory terms, trying to gain their trust and get invited in.
If you guys noticed in the beginning of the movie they asked “why are the floors clean?” “Yall mopped?” It wasn’t for sanitation purposes. The floors were TOO CLEAN for an “old abandoned mill”. And it’s bc the klan cleaned the blood off the floor so they can resell the mill again to another unknowing black family. This wasn’t their first time. And I think what gets me is no one will ever know how many times this was conducted and undocumented and how many places this might have occurred. As historically tied as everything is, I don’t doubt that this has happened. Imagine going through it with no Stack, no smoke, mojo bag, or trunk.
when Mary says "it's not what it looks like." I think she's being honest because it looks like she's killing him but really she's turning the love of her life.
That Rocky Road to Dublin came on and Boose was ready to tear the club up lol.
The REAL horror of this movie is that this was the best case scenario. Smoke got to go home with Annie and their daughter and he got to stop fighting. He got to leave Smoke behind and just be Elijah with his family. Stack and Mary got to be in love and be together and they made the money the were so worried about. Sammie got to Chicago and got to keep using his gift and presumably inspire the next generation. But they're all such bittersweet happy endings. Stack never gets to see his brother again or the sun, Smoke and Annie are dead and Smoke will never see Stack. It all came at such a devestating cost. Cornbread's wife has no idea what happened to him and is now a single mother, Lisa doesn't know what happened to her parents, Pearline's husband doesn't know where his wife is, and so on. And had this not happened, the vampires, they would've been caught unawares by the KKK the next morning and probably still die. This movie made me feel so much, I can't wait to own a physical copy.
The father didn’t want his son to turn out like his brother. He knew from the beginning it was his brothers guitar… amazing details in this film
“That’s the last time I saw my brother” Stack has no reflection in the mirror. He will never see himself or his brother again.
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I noticed that all the Black people in the film are gathered together in one place, completely surrounded by death. The vampires approach slowly, one by one, and if the people had somehow managed to defeat them, the KKK would have come next. And even if they managed to survive that attack, eventually the vampires would return. It creates a cycle — an endless loop of violence — where no matter how hard they fight, another threat is always waiting. This really shows how the characters are trapped, both physically and symbolically. They’re not just fighting for survival; they’re stuck in a system designed to keep them under constant threat, with no real way out
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Top Comments (10)
I’m on my 10th SINNERS reaction watch and I love it 😂❤
An interesting detail I noticed in Remmick’s first scene: when pleading with the two homesteaders, he initially calls the Choctaw by their proper name. But after noticing the Klan robe, he shifts to using derogatory terms, trying to gain their trust and get invited in.
If you guys noticed in the beginning of the movie they asked “why are the floors clean?” “Yall mopped?” It wasn’t for sanitation purposes. The floors were TOO CLEAN for an “old abandoned mill”. And it’s bc the klan cleaned the blood off the floor so they can resell the mill again to another unknowing black family. This wasn’t their first time. And I think what gets me is no one will ever know how many times this was conducted and undocumented and how many places this might have occurred. As historically tied as everything is, I don’t doubt that this has happened. Imagine going through it with no Stack, no smoke, mojo bag, or trunk.
when Mary says "it's not what it looks like." I think she's being honest because it looks like she's killing him but really she's turning the love of her life.
That Rocky Road to Dublin came on and Boose was ready to tear the club up lol.
The REAL horror of this movie is that this was the best case scenario. Smoke got to go home with Annie and their daughter and he got to stop fighting. He got to leave Smoke behind and just be Elijah with his family. Stack and Mary got to be in love and be together and they made the money the were so worried about. Sammie got to Chicago and got to keep using his gift and presumably inspire the next generation. But they're all such bittersweet happy endings. Stack never gets to see his brother again or the sun, Smoke and Annie are dead and Smoke will never see Stack. It all came at such a devestating cost. Cornbread's wife has no idea what happened to him and is now a single mother, Lisa doesn't know what happened to her parents, Pearline's husband doesn't know where his wife is, and so on. And had this not happened, the vampires, they would've been caught unawares by the KKK the next morning and probably still die. This movie made me feel so much, I can't wait to own a physical copy.
The father didn’t want his son to turn out like his brother. He knew from the beginning it was his brothers guitar… amazing details in this film
“That’s the last time I saw my brother” Stack has no reflection in the mirror. He will never see himself or his brother again.
Try Freecash today and start earning in your spare time! https://freecash.com/c/a7f16a
I noticed that all the Black people in the film are gathered together in one place, completely surrounded by death. The vampires approach slowly, one by one, and if the people had somehow managed to defeat them, the KKK would have come next. And even if they managed to survive that attack, eventually the vampires would return. It creates a cycle — an endless loop of violence — where no matter how hard they fight, another threat is always waiting. This really shows how the characters are trapped, both physically and symbolically. They’re not just fighting for survival; they’re stuck in a system designed to keep them under constant threat, with no real way out