The Nikki Giovanni Project Featured, Reviews Film Threat
Nov 26, 2023
After taking it to the streets, we take it to the stars in Joe Brewster and Michele Stephenson’s stellar documentary Going To Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project. It explores the life and work of revolutionary poet Nikki Giovanni, who emerged from the Civil Rights Movement to become a major literary force.
“She believes black women are best equipped to colonize the red planet.”
Now in her 70s, Giovanni is itching to be picked to be sent to Mars. She believes black women are best equipped to colonize the red planet. This is because they have already survived being taken to an alien world and forced to breed with aliens. As to her life, Giovanni remembers what she wants to do and has let go of what never did her any good. She is helped by the seizures she has suffered, with more memories vanishing with each one. So when at a Q&A, she is asked where she was on the day MLK was assassinated, she no longer has an answer. When asked about tragic events she had written about, she would refer to the poems themselves as she no longer wants to relive or react to what hurt her. Producer Taraji P. Henson reads these poems, intercut with footage of Giovanni back in the day and scenes from the movement. We see Giovanni through her granddaughter’s eyes, Kai Giovanni, who is just now beginning to realize the scope of what Grandma did.
There is one point in the film where it was discussed how it was challenging to find Giovanni a position in academia because she was seen as too well known. It is staggering that a poet could be too famous to get a university gig at any point in US history. It is just as staggering that despite this popularity, vast swathes of humanity are unaware of her work. Going To Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project will school you thoroughly on why this great poet is so damn important. Henson’s recitations of Giovanni’s greatest hits mold the power of words like bullets flying through the air.
Publisher: Source link
Anaconda Review | Flickreel
To some, the original Anaconda is a 90s cult classic. To others, it’s a so bad, it’s good guilty pleasure. To me, it’s just a bad movie. Not awful, but as weird as it sounds, Anaconda wasn’t quite over-the-top enough…
Feb 11, 2026
A Cinematic Marvel Sans Thrill
Starring the ultimate action hero of Bollywood, Sunny Deol, as Lieutenant Colonel Fateh Singh Kaler Jai Hind! A highly anticipated Hindi war epic blasted the big screens on January 23, 2026, marking the weekend of India’s Republic Day. It is…
Feb 11, 2026
Kevin James’ Romantic Comedy Lacks Depth and Sincerity
Kevin James strikes a new, softer chord in Solo Mio, the romantic comedy from the Christian faith-based Angel Studios. It's an Eat Pray Love riff which sees the usually boisterous comedian moping around Rome after his fiancée leaves him at…
Feb 9, 2026
Kingsley Ben-Adir & Rob Morgan Are Solid In An Unremarkable Prison Drama [Sundance]
As if responding to a dare to see if she has the range, Swiss director Pietra Biondina Volpe follows up her heart-stopping emergency room thriller “Late Shift” with about as quiet a film as possible in “Frank & Louis.” This…
Feb 9, 2026







