Changing the Game (DVD REVIEW)
Changing the Game
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Ghetto Serves as Setting for Coming-of-Age Saga of Shakespearean Proportions
Darrell Barnes (Sean Riggs) was
dealt a horrible hand as a baby, having been abandoned by his mother after his
father was shot dead on the rough streets of North Philly. At least he was
lucky enough to be taken in by his paternal grandmother (Irma P. Hall), a
Bible-quoting Christian who did her best to insulate the boy from the host of
evils permeating their crime-infested neighborhood.
Heeding her admonition to trust in
the Lord, Darrell stuck to the straight and narrow as a child. He did his best
to keep out of trouble, excelling in school, where he cut a sharp contrast to
his best friend, Dre (Dennis L.A. White), a clueless victim of social promotion
allowed to slip through the academic cracks at an early age.
So, it’s no surprise that juvenile
delinquent Dre would eventually drop out to become a drug kingpin, and
rationalize operating such a reprehensible enterprise by liberally quoting
misanthropic lines from Machiavelli like, “Kill enemies before they kill you.”
Meanwhile, Darrell did good and Grandma Barnes proud by gaining admission to
the prestigious Wharton
Business School.
In most coming-of-age sagas, the
empathetic underdog’s making his way out of the ghetto would herald a
proverbial “happily ever after” ending. But in the more nuanced and
multilayered world of Changing the Game, directed by Rel Dowdell, entre to the
Ivy League merely signals the start of a new set of challenges to be faced by
this naive inner-city refugee.
After graduating, as warned by his
wise, rapidly-expiring grandma, Darrell finds himself still tempted by the
Devil and having to negotiate his way through a different gauntlet of
wickedness. With both Jesus and Machiavelli’s teachings competing for control
of his mind, he goes into business with a corrupt classmate (Brandon
Ruckdashel) against his better judgment.
The tension builds as Darrell lets
greed get the better of him to a point of no return where it’s gonna take a
miracle for the ambitious brother to escape with his soul intact. Touching on a
litany of timely themes, this modern morality play of Shakespearean proportions
packs an emotional punch while sending a sobering message about what really
matters most.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R for
sexuality, nudity, violence, ethnic slurs, drug use and pervasive profanity.
Running time: 103
minutes
Distributor: Lionsgate
Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Stills
gallery.
To see a trailer for
Changing the Game, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMxR9DZ-suM
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