The Girl Is in Trouble (FILM REVIEW)
The Girl Is in Trouble
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Columbus Short
Stars in Serpentine Whodunit Produced by Spike Lee
August (Columbus Short) would have
been better off rolling over and going back to sleep the fateful night he got a
call at 2:30 in the morning from Signe (Alicja Bachjleda), an
attractive woman he met at the nightclub where he DJs over a month ago. For,
although the damsel in distress was in desperate need of a place to rest her
head, she had only reached out to him after being turned down by everybody in
her phone book.
Nevertheless,
the Nigerian immigrant lets her crash at his crib without asking any questions
when she shows up naked under her trench coat. Sparks fly, and a few
compromising positions later, August is ready to bid adieu to the Swedish
temptress he so easily succumbed to as a booty call.
But then he catches her trying to leave
the apartment with all the cash from his wallet. And in the ensuing struggle he
discovers that she has recorded what appears to be a murder on her cell phone
camera.
The apparent
perpetrator is Nicholas (Jesse Spencer), a spoiled-rotten rich kid-turned-drug
dealer. He’s the son of a very well-connected Wall Street powerbroker who’s
made a fortune off a Bernie Madoff-quality Ponzi scheme.
When August asks Signe
whether the slaying on the video is real, she curtly responds, “None of your
business!” That only serves to whet his curiosity, and before you know it, he
finds himself being slowly sinking deeper and deeper into a veritable quicksand
comprised of intrigue and innuendo.
Executive produced by Spike Lee, The
Girl Is in Trouble marks the feature-length directorial debut of Julius Onah.
The movie is narrated by its star, Columbus Short, in an attempt to emulate the
tone of the hard-nose hero of your typical pulp fiction novel. Regrettably,
that’s where any similarities to the film noir genre ends, as this predictable
whodunit proves a tad too transparent for this critic to recommend.
This film is in
trouble.
Fair (1 star)
Unrated
Running time: 94 minutes
Distributor: E1
Entertainment
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