Selah and the Spades | |
---|---|
Directed by | Tayarisha Poe |
Written by | Tayarisha Poe |
Produced by |
|
Starring | |
Cinematography | Jomo Fray |
Edited by | Kate Abernathy |
Music by | Aska Matsumiya |
Production companies |
|
Distributed by | Amazon Studios |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Selah and the Spades is a 2019 American drama film written and directed by Tayarisha Poe in her feature directorial debut. It stars Lovie Simone, Celeste O'Connor, Jharrel Jerome, Gina Torres, and Jesse Williams. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 27, 2019 and was released on April 17, 2020, by Amazon Studios.
Selah Summers is a senior at the elite Haldwell Boarding School in Pennsylvania, where she leads a drug-dealing faction of students known as the Spades. Unlike the school's four other factions- the Sea, the Skins, the Bobbies, and the Prefects- the Spades have not yet nominated a candidate to replace Selah as their leader when she graduates.
As the leader of the Spades, Selah has developed a highly efficient operation with her right-hand man, Maxxie. When a new girl, Paloma, transfers to the school and photographs Selah during her Spirit Squad practice, Selah quickly recognizes her perceptiveness and talent. She tasks Paloma with taking photos of her rival Bobby (the leader of the Bobbies) cheating on her boyfriend with Two Tom (the leader of the Prefects), thrusting Paloma into the center of the factions' heated rivalry. Selah explains to Maxxie that Paloma reminds her of herself, and that she intends to begin grooming her to become the next leader of the Spades.
Tarit, the leader of the Sea, informs Selah of a possible rat within her ranks. Selah receives a call from her mother demanding she return home, where she is confronted about her failure to respond to a college acceptance letter. Her mother recounts the parable of The Scorpion and the Frog, implying that she is aware of Selah's dark nature and its need to be contained.
Back at school, Bobby confronts Selah about an incorrect drug order. After investigating, Selah discovers that Maxxie's carelessness allowed the aforementioned rat to steal the Spades' ledger. Selah interrogates the rat before pressuring Paloma into beating him.
The school's Headmaster announces that due to the recent severity of the factions' misconduct, the school prom has been cancelled. At an emergency meeting, Selah and Bobby angrily blame each other for the cancellation before Paloma suggests that they instead throw their own prom outside of the school grounds. The factions agree to work together, each facilitating a different aspect of the underground prom's setup.
In private, Bobby asks Paloma if she knows about Teela, Selah's previous protégé. She explains to Paloma that Selah drugged Teela, causing a car crash and her expulsion. When Paloma asks Selah about Teela, Selah refuses to give her a straight answer.
On their way to the prom, Selah slips pills into a bottle of alcohol and offers it to Paloma, who vomits and becomes unresponsive during the party. When Selah finds Maxxie and asks him about the potency of the pills, he quickly becomes worried. Selah and Maxxie search the forest for Paloma, who runs away from them in a daze. She stumbles over a railing on the edge of a cliff; as she manages to grab the railing, Selah and Maxxie hoist her to safety.
Director Tayarisha Poe stated that she was inspired to write the script because she wanted to see a film with characters that looked like her getting to experience the "unlimited potential and freedom" that she remembered feeling as a teenager. [1] While working at an unfulfilling job, she set a goal for herself to write one scene each day. [2] Inspired by the unconventional nature of the film La Jetée , she imagined the story of Selah being told through a variety of nonlinear media: a website of short stories, short films, music and photographs which together would tell a complete story. [3] This project, which she called an "overture", launched online in 2014 and quickly garnered attention, including from film director Terence Nance. [2] Eventually Poe changed direction and crafted the story into a feature film, believing that the audience's experience watching a two-hour film in a single sitting was necessary for the project to work. [3]
Shooting for the film was originally scheduled to begin in 2015, but was postponed due to financing issues. Poe continued developing the script through the Screenwriters Lab and the Directors Lab hosted by the Sundance Institute. [4] Poe was also selected to participate in the Sundance Institute's Catalyst Program, which helps pair filmmakers with investors. Through that process she met producer Lauren McBride and was able to pitch her idea to a room of investors, both of which led to the film being produced. [1]
Filming took place for 25 days in the summer of 2018 on the campus of Academy at Penguin Hall in Wenham, Massachusetts. [4] The film's director of photography, Jomo Fray, stated that the film's visual style was inspired by the album Anti by Rihanna. Handheld camera shots were increasingly used towards the end of the film to represent Selah's gradual loss of power. [5] Blueish colors are used throughout most of the film to give it a cold feeling, but warm colors were chosen in certain moments where "something unnatural is happening or there is deep violence entering into the space". [4] The film's creative team set different color palettes for each of the factions in the story. [5]
Selah and the Spades had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 27, 2019. [6] [7] In July 2019, Amazon Studios acquired distribution rights to the film, with plans for an original series based on the film. [8] The film was released on Amazon Prime Video on April 17, 2020. [9]
Because the online premiere happened during the confinement period of the COVID-19 pandemic, Amazon Studios partnered with restaurants in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Atlanta, Boston, Philadelphia, and other cities to deliver catered meals to people's homes to celebrate the online premiere. The goal was to support local businesses that were losing money during the shut-downs as well as raise money to support local charities. [10]
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 86% based on 109 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "A smart, well-acted, and refreshingly messy coming-of-age story, Selah and the Spades suggests a bright future for debuting writer-director Tayarisha Poe." [11] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [12]
In Rolling Stone , David Fear praised the filmmaker. [13] "You can tell there’s a voice and vision behind Selah and the Spades, one that’s likely to come into its own after some seasoning. It might seem like faint praise to throw a 'watch this space' sign on top of what is indeed a more-than-impressive first movie. But think of how many debuts of fresh young filmmakers you’ve seen over the years, and how that initial spark eventually gifted us with careers defined by exponential level-ups. That’s how you feel watching this. 'They never take girls seriously,' Selah complains at one point. 'It’s a mistake the whole world makes.' Only an idiot would not take Poe seriously after this. You get the sense she’s just getting warmed up."
Selah and the Spades was a New York Times Critics Pick. [14] Critic Teo Bugbee wrote that "While there is simple pleasure in watching a movie that is so precisely produced, Selah and the Spades aims to do more than look good. It is expressive, using images to make dynamic statements — student leaders on opposing sides of a table become a makeshift war council; Selah swipes her braids over her shoulder and is transformed into a figure of ultimate power."
Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian likened it to Heathers and suggested "it is an intriguing, opaque, tonally elusive story that seems weirdly unfinished." [15]
Elizabeth Freya Garbus is an American documentary film director and producer. Notable documentaries Garbus has made are The Farm: Angola, USA,Ghosts of Abu Ghraib,Bobby Fischer Against the World,Love, Marilyn,What Happened, Miss Simone?, and Becoming Cousteau. She is co-founder and co-director of the New York City-based documentary film production company Story Syndicate.
Tze Chun is an American film and TV producer, director, writer, painter, and comic book publisher. He was born in Chicago and raised outside of Boston, and graduated from Milton Academy in 1998. He received his bachelor's degree in film studies at Columbia University.
Rachel Brosnahan is an American actress. She is best known for portraying an aspiring stand-up comedian in the Amazon Prime Video period comedy series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017–2023), for which she won a Primetime Emmy Award in 2018 and two consecutive Golden Globe Awards in 2018 and 2019.
Dawn Porter is an American documentary filmmaker and founder of production company Trilogy Films. Her documentaries have screened at The Sundance Film Festival and other festivals as well as on HBO, CNN, Netflix, Hulu, PBS and elsewhere. She has made biographical documentaries about a number of historical figures including Bobby Kennedy, Vernon Jordan, and John Lewis and has collaborated with Oprah and Prince Harry.
Eliza Hittman is an American screenwriter, film director, and producer from New York City. She has won multiple awards for her film Never Rarely Sometimes Always, which include the New York Film Critics Circle Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award—both for best screenplay.
Terence Nance is artist, musician, and filmmaker born in Dallas, Texas in what was then referred to as the State-Thomas community. He is best known for his directing debut An Oversimplification of Her Beauty, and as the creator of the avant-garde TV program Random Acts of Flyness, which is produced by his production company MVMT for HBO and streams on Max.
Evan Christopher Roe is an American actor. He is known for his roles in the CBS political drama series Madam Secretary (2014-2019) and the Netflix miniseries A Man in Full (2024).
Lulu Wang is a Chinese-born American filmmaker. She is best known for writing and directing the comedy-drama films Posthumous (2014) and The Farewell (2019). For the latter, she received the Independent Spirit Award for Best Film and the film was named one of the top ten films of 2019 by the American Film Institute. Wang has also written, produced, and directed several short films, documentaries, and music videos.
Camila Carraro Mendes is an American actress. She made her acting debut portraying Veronica Lodge on The CW teen drama series Riverdale (2017–2023), for which she won a Teen Choice Award in 2017. Mendes transitioned her career to film, taking on supporting roles in The New Romantic (2018), The Perfect Date (2019), and Palm Springs (2020). She has since played leading roles in the black comedy film Do Revenge (2022), and the romantic comedies Upgraded (2024) and Música (2024), also serving as an executive producer for the latter two.
Jharrel Jerome is an American actor. He made his film debut in Barry Jenkins's drama film Moonlight (2016), and gained prominence for his portrayal of Korey Wise in Ava DuVernay's Netflix miniseries When They See Us (2019), which earned him the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie. In 2023, he starred in the lead role of a 13 foot tall boy in Boots Riley's limited series I'm a Virgo.
Monster is a 2018 American legal drama film directed by Anthony Mandler, from a screenplay by Radha Blank, Cole Wiley, and Janece Shaffer, based on the novel of the same name by Walter Dean Myers. It stars Kelvin Harrison Jr., Jennifer Ehle, Tim Blake Nelson, Nas, ASAP Rocky, Paul Ben-Victor, John David Washington, Jennifer Hudson, and Jeffrey Wright. Wright, Nas, and John Legend also serve as executive producers on the film.
Nikyatu Jusu is an American independent writer, director, producer, editor and assistant professor in film and video at George Mason University. Jusu's works center on the complexities of Black female characters and in particular, displaced, immigrant women in the United States. Her work includes African Booty Scratcher (2007), Flowers (2015), Suicide By Sunlight (2019), and Nanny, which received the Grand Jury Prize at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival. She has endorsed the use of Generative artificial intelligence in filmmaking and uses the technology in her work.
The 2019 Sundance Film Festival took place from January 24 to February 3, 2019. The first lineup of competition films was announced on November 28, 2018.
Chinonye Chukwu is a Nigerian-American film director best known for the drama films Clemency and Till. She is the first African-American woman to win the U.S. Dramatic Grand Jury Prize at Sundance.
Lovie Simone Oppong is an American actress, best known for her role as Zora Greenleaf in drama series Greenleaf.
Time is a 2020 American documentary film produced and directed by Garrett Bradley. It follows Sibil Fox Richardson and her fight for the release of her husband, Rob, who was serving a 60-year prison sentence for engaging in an armed bank robbery.
Celeste O'Connor is a Kenyan-born American actor. They are known for playing Paloma Davis in the Amazon original film Selah and the Spades.
Jessie Cannizzaro is an American actress, best known for her roles in the long-running off-Broadway comedy Puffs, or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic and the Amazon Studios feature film Selah and the Spades.
Tayarisha Poe is an American writer and director. Her feature directorial debut Selah and the Spades won the Best Narrative Feature Award at the 2019 BlackStar Film Festival and premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival.
Jomo Fray is an American cinematographer. He is known for his work on Port Authority (2019), Selah and the Spades (2020), All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt (2023), and Nickel Boys (2024).