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Thursday, May 21, 2026
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Is God Is review
IS GOD IS:
A BLOODY, WILD ROAD TO REVENGE!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: **** out of 4
MGM AND ORION PICTURES
Kara Young and Mallori Johnson in Is God Is
Two sisters visit their dying mother, who asks them to kill their father in Is God Is, the feature film directorial debut of Alesha Harris and a revenge thriller adapted from Harris’ play of the same name. I was onboard for this the moment I saw the trailer. I love these grainy, Tarantino-esque revenge movies with witty dialogue and pools of blood spurting out of people with a very Blaxploitation feel in a lot of areas.
This definitely seemed like a Jackie Brown meets Kill Bill and Thelma & Louise buddy movie with emphasis on blood-drenched revenge. I’ve never seen the play the film was based on, but after seeing this, I’m curious to check it out.
Is God Is is a really damn good movie and entertaining from beginning to end, it’s tension-filled, darkly comical, and completely fucking insane. It was an enjoyable watch for me, chaotic and crazy, while still having strong character moments between the two leads.
The film follows Racine (Kara Young-Chemical Hearts, Master, I Love Boosters) and Anaia (Mallori Johnson-The Other Zoey, Steal Away), two sisters who visit their dying mother, whom they call God (Vivica A. Fox-Independence Day 1 and 2, Set It Off, Kill Bill). Their mother, God only has one request for Racine and Anaia before she dies, “Make their daddy dead…like, real dead!” after he set her and them on fire and abandoned them, Racine and Anaia set course for a violent and chaotic manhunt to kill their father (Sterling K. Brown-This Is Us, Black Panther, The Marvellous Mrs. Maisel).
The film also stars Erika Alexander (The Cosby Show, Get Out, American Fiction) as Divine the Healer, Janelle MonĂ¡e (Moonlight, Hidden Figures, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery) as The New Wife, Mykelti Williams (Forrest Gump, Ali, Fences) as Chuck Hall the Lawyer, and Josiah Cross (King Richard, A Thousand and One, Lady in the Lake) as Ezekiel.
Overall, Is God Is is a wild and bumpy ride for retribution in the best way and one of the most consistently entertaining films I’ve seen all year. It didn’t have a low point at all during its runtime and kept this non-stop and frantic energy going all throughout the flick.
One thing the movie does that I thought was extremely clever is when Young and Johnson are completely silent and give each other little facial expressions to communicate with subtitles on the screen to say what they’re saying to one another. Just goes to show, even without speaking to each other, Kara Young and Mallori Johnson have incredible chemistry, though I must say, I really hope those subtitles onscreen were written by a black person.
Kara Young and Mallori Johnson are amazing as the two sisters and do a stellar job working off each other, with Young as the unhinged, wild card of the duo and Johnson as the quieter, more restrained sister. I love hearing their banter with one another, and despite this grim, psychotic predicament they’re in, they also bring a lot of heart to the film.
Actors like Vivica A. Fox and Sterling K. Brown are more like supporting roles and aren’t in the film much, but they make do with the screen time given to them, with Fox giving probably the most chilling performance I’ve ever seen from her and Brown having a ball chewing the scenery and hamming it up. Definitely the kind of character you can’t wait to see get his blood-soaked comeuppance by the end.
The film definitely has a sort of Quentin Tarantino/Grindhouse movie vibe in terms of tone and filmmaking, but I wouldn’t call it a complete gore-fest from start to finish. It has moments like that, and the moments it has are effective, but it’s not trying to be the Kill Bill of movies about siblings killing their evil dad; it has blood and gory scenes, but it’s shockingly reserved for a film like this with more focus on the characters and their mission.
The makeup effects on Vivica A. Fox and Mallori Johnson are incredible, especially on Fox, who is almost unrecognizable under all this paint and prosthetics to make her look like a burn victim. Both she and Johnson have the exact same thing going on with their makeup as burn victims and look spectacular, but Fox’s makeup really stood out to me.
Not sure what else to say, Is God Is combines various genres like dark comedy and tense drama with outstanding performances by its cast and a script that mixes heart and bloodshed. It’s a wild but also endearing trip that I highly encourage buckling up for because it is quite a ride.
Obsession review
OBSESSION:
ONE BAD WISH GONE HORRIFYINGLY WRONG!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: *** ½ out of 4
FOCUS FEATURES
Michael Johnston in Obsession
A man makes a wish to have the girl he has a crush on fall in love with him, only for it to backfire in the most nightmarish way possible in Obsession, the new horror film from Blumhouse and director Curry Barker (Milk & Serial). I was definitely interested when I saw the teaser trailer for this (I don’t recall if I ever watched the full trailer of it), as it showed very little about the film other than it involving a guy with some shitty novelty wish toy from the 80s who made a wish and is now regretting it, that was all I knew going into it.
I gotta say that minimal knowledge of the film did not prepare me for the absolute chaos I would witness while watching Obsession, Holy Fucking Shit! Obsession is crazy, and this is coming off of the completely unsettling Hokum, which I saw recently, though this probably isn’t anywhere near as nightmare-fueled as that film.
The film follows Bear (Michael Johnston-Teen Wolf, Slash, Endangered Species), a music store employee who has a serious crush on his co-worker and childhood friend, Nikki Freeman (Inde Navarrette-Wander Darkly, 13 Reasons Why, Superman & Lois). One day, while shopping at a mystic shop for Nikki, Bear finds a novelty toy known as a One Wish Willow that claims to grant a wish when broken, which he uses to make her fall in love with him.
At first, everything seems fine, albeit a little off that Nikki instantly falls for him, but Bear begins to suffer the nightmarish consequences of his wish with no way to reverse it…at least nonfatally.
The film also stars Andy Richter (Andy Richter Controls the Universe, Madagascar franchise, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby) as Bear and Nikki’s boss, Carter Harper.
Overall, Obsession is a dark, twisted take on, I guess, a romance that’s bursting with terror, sick humor, and a (slight) sense of relatability for anyone who’s ever had a huge crush on someone. The movie is basically like a horror version of a rom-com with a similar premise and plays around with the tropes, which I thought was very clever considering how formulaic that genre can get.
How often does a romantic-comedy depict someone being intensely affectionate towards another person because of something magical happening to them, or doing something completely insane for the sake of love, and it’s seen as charming? Pretty often, though, in actuality, that crazy rom-com behavior would be seen as creepy if done in real life, and this film illustrates that in the most extreme ways possible.
In an actual rom-com, Michael Johnston’s Bear would probably be this awkward but kind-hearted kid trying to get the girl of his dreams. That’s not what this movie does, as they don’t exactly portray him as particularly likable, but they make him sympathetic and endearing enough for the film to work, though there are plenty of times in it where he’s too stupid to pick up on things that are wrong.
Inde Navarrette is freaking incredible as Nikki and genuinely frightening when the wish’s effects take hold, while also having a degree of humor on top of that. She’ll scream, say, and do something crazy, and all of a sudden she’ll say something casual and normal, which is probably the best running joke in the movie because it always happens when you’d least expect it.
Also, something the film does with her that I thought was extremely clever was keeping her in the shadows during a lot of scenes and leaving just enough light for you to make out her face, and you’re never certain if they’re going to do something with her face or it’s just her normal face that’s just in the shadows. I was waiting for her to turn into some kind of demonic entity and do a jumpscare, but it never happened, and it was an effective suspense builder.
The scares range from quiet silence followed by booming sounds to gross-out scenes and gory kills, with one in particular involving somebody’s head, a brick, and a steering wheel. It’s not a straight-up gore-fest from beginning to end, but it gets pretty fucking grisly at times.
This is a solid movie with good tension and dark humor, but there’s one huge issue I have with it: the sound design. As someone who enjoys the loud, booming audio of an IMAX theater, this movie was way too fucking loud, and it wasn’t even in IMAX. Navarrette is screaming her lungs out (And damn, she’s got powerful lungs according to this film), but it got annoying and repetitive to the point where it did affect my rating of it a little.
I feel this movie is going to have varying reactions amongst moviegoers, and truth be told, they’re all valid. For me, aside from…the sound designers trying to put Christopher Nolan to shame for some odd reason, I really liked Obsession as a bizarre, completely unpredictable horror take on a rom-com premise, if you know what you’re getting into, you've got quite a date with this film.



























































































