Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Highest 2 Lowest

Last night my nephew and I went to see Highest 2 Lowest at the Broadway.  We both had been looking forward to this for weeks and we couldn't have been more disappointed.  David King (Denzel Washington) is a successful music mogul trying to structure a deal to take back control of the music label he founded.  However, these plans take a back seat when his son Trey (Aubrey Joseph) is kidnapped and a $17.5 million ransom is demanded.  Things become complicated when it is revealed that Kyle (Elijah Wright), the son of King's driver Paul Christopher (Jeffrey Wright) and Trey's best friend, was mistakenly taken instead of Trey because now he doesn't feel obligated to pay the ransom.  He needs the money to save his record label but he ultimately agrees to pay because he doesn't want to be cancelled on social media.  Kyle is eventually released but the police lose track of the money during the handover which puts King's deal in jeopardy.  He decides to search for the kidnapper himself and discovers that the culprit is a rapper named Yung Felon (A$AP Rocky) who wanted to be signed to his record company.  After several confrontations with Yung Felon, he relinquishes control of his company to get away from the business and get back to the music.  The plot is an incoherent mess with lots of editing and pacing issues and it features some of the most cringe-worthy dialogue I have heard in a long time.  I still do not know how I feel about Washington's performance because, while it is often very melodramatic, there is no denying that he is a compelling presence.  Wright is absolutely brilliant (one of the few highlights of this movie) and I did like A$AP Rocky (even though he is essentially playing himself) but all of the other performances are almost laughably bad.  Ilfenesh Hadera, as King's wife, and Dean Winters, as a police detective, are absolutely abysmal.  There are lots of cameos but, while Ice Spice has a powerful moment during the last five minutes, most of them feel shoehorned in.  The score is particularly egregious (which is ironic in a movie about the music business).  It feels like it belongs in a completely different movie and it undercuts the tension in every scene because it is so incongruous.  The only reason this isn't the worst movie I've seen this year is because of an incredibly suspenseful sequence on a subway filled with Yankees fans and on the street in the middle of a Puerto Rican Day festival but this is not enough for me to recommend it.  You can definitely wait until it streams.

Note:  The only message I got from this movie is that Spike Lee hates sports teams from Boston!

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