Una madre single affronta una serie di sfortunati eventi, che la conducono lungo un percorso imprevisto in cui viene coinvolta in una situazione che non aveva mai immaginato, trovandosi al c... Leggi tuttoUna madre single affronta una serie di sfortunati eventi, che la conducono lungo un percorso imprevisto in cui viene coinvolta in una situazione che non aveva mai immaginato, trovandosi al centro del sospetto in un mondo indifferente.Una madre single affronta una serie di sfortunati eventi, che la conducono lungo un percorso imprevisto in cui viene coinvolta in una situazione che non aveva mai immaginato, trovandosi al centro del sospetto in un mondo indifferente.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Shalèt Monique
- Rayah Dunnam
- (as Shalet Monique)
Recensioni in evidenza
The movie "Straw" by Tyler Perry I just felt compelled to write about and share my thoughts and my heart for advocating in the mental health community; mental health in the Black Community; mental health Awareness. I am someone who lives with Bipolar-my experience living with it has been a challenge still challenging, breaking and being broken. Yes mental health struggles have broken me still break me. I've lived through psychosis, mania, depression and mixed episodes while raising my son as a single mother. I swear Janiyah's heart towards Aria reminded me no matter the broken parts of me I had this little person relying on me. Living with mental illness is an unexplainable brokenness it's a relentless condition to live with. Watching Taraji character "Janiyah" break down mentally from experiencing such a traumatic moment in her already broken life. Those moments were triggering, yes, her moments triggered me just because I lived it I still live it was such a true reflection.
I've been diagnosed with Bipolar since I was 19, living it for 31 years. This movie has struck a core within me it reminded me why I got involved in the mental health field. To save a life by bringing awareness of sharing my close and personal journey with Bipolar and all its impactful possibilities it can have in someone's life. Many of the mentally ill can be so misunderstood just reflecting on the scene when "Janiyah" Taraji's character went through a series of memories towards what caused her psychotic break or the psychosis she experienced; and just in the series of events brought her to that pivotal moment of committing crime(s) or how she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. So many men and women and adolescence end up in jail from these moments of a mental break down or lacking awareness and perhaps others saw the mental state of someone but didn't get involved because our community is taught to turn a blind eye of helping each other even when it's obvious and being witnessed.
Straw just brought up so many thoughts it reminded me of the fire and passion to stay involved and to further help someone like a "Janiyah" from a woman's perspective with a mental health condition and surviving the ugliness of having Bipolar and still surviving. Due to my faith and by God's grace I can go through those broken moments because they still happen but I know my faith is still here and it's been my saving grace. Not to say I live a normal life but truly what's normal these days. I've been able to endure even when nothing makes sense to why am I having these moments, but it wasn't until I learned awareness that's when I decided to fight back. Awareness is what saved my life many people aren't aware of, but it can be the first step to a better life not a cured life but better, to bring hope and healing. Creating a healing community is something I pray about to continue fighting for the mental health of others. I've been blessed to find myself at the center of advocating although I am one person and sometimes, I can't reach everybody but if I can reach one person that brings me joy, and everybody deserve to feel and see God's grace during those broken moments. God may not take it away, but resources and people are in place to help those hurting and who suffer in silence.
Straw was an amazing depiction of mental health and the broken parts no one talks about. I commend Tyler Perry and the cast for the amazing work, and this put mental health at the center of bringing awareness because you never know what the next person is experiencing. Thank you Tyler for bringing mental health to for frontline and mainstream.
If You See Something Say Something.
Blessings to the mental health community we must do better.
Truly, Ayana H.
I've been diagnosed with Bipolar since I was 19, living it for 31 years. This movie has struck a core within me it reminded me why I got involved in the mental health field. To save a life by bringing awareness of sharing my close and personal journey with Bipolar and all its impactful possibilities it can have in someone's life. Many of the mentally ill can be so misunderstood just reflecting on the scene when "Janiyah" Taraji's character went through a series of memories towards what caused her psychotic break or the psychosis she experienced; and just in the series of events brought her to that pivotal moment of committing crime(s) or how she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. So many men and women and adolescence end up in jail from these moments of a mental break down or lacking awareness and perhaps others saw the mental state of someone but didn't get involved because our community is taught to turn a blind eye of helping each other even when it's obvious and being witnessed.
Straw just brought up so many thoughts it reminded me of the fire and passion to stay involved and to further help someone like a "Janiyah" from a woman's perspective with a mental health condition and surviving the ugliness of having Bipolar and still surviving. Due to my faith and by God's grace I can go through those broken moments because they still happen but I know my faith is still here and it's been my saving grace. Not to say I live a normal life but truly what's normal these days. I've been able to endure even when nothing makes sense to why am I having these moments, but it wasn't until I learned awareness that's when I decided to fight back. Awareness is what saved my life many people aren't aware of, but it can be the first step to a better life not a cured life but better, to bring hope and healing. Creating a healing community is something I pray about to continue fighting for the mental health of others. I've been blessed to find myself at the center of advocating although I am one person and sometimes, I can't reach everybody but if I can reach one person that brings me joy, and everybody deserve to feel and see God's grace during those broken moments. God may not take it away, but resources and people are in place to help those hurting and who suffer in silence.
Straw was an amazing depiction of mental health and the broken parts no one talks about. I commend Tyler Perry and the cast for the amazing work, and this put mental health at the center of bringing awareness because you never know what the next person is experiencing. Thank you Tyler for bringing mental health to for frontline and mainstream.
If You See Something Say Something.
Blessings to the mental health community we must do better.
Truly, Ayana H.
Taraji's acting is superb - as it always is - but this movie seems beneath her. Most of the movie - except for the reveal at the end - felt like one of those Dhar Mann films on Facebook.
The supporting characters were terrible, the plot was unbelievable, and it felt like a cheap attempt at a difficult and nuanced topic. I could not believe the lack of understanding the script had for law enforcement processes.
I have not seen much of Tyler Perry's recent movies, but if this is the level of his films these days, then that is truly disappointing and someone needs to save Taraji from his projects.
The supporting characters were terrible, the plot was unbelievable, and it felt like a cheap attempt at a difficult and nuanced topic. I could not believe the lack of understanding the script had for law enforcement processes.
I have not seen much of Tyler Perry's recent movies, but if this is the level of his films these days, then that is truly disappointing and someone needs to save Taraji from his projects.
Taraji p. Henson earned every dollar on this project - she acted her heart out and truly carried the film. The writing still has that signature tyler perry cringe we've all come to expect, but this time it's handled with a bit more finesse and a noticeable step up in overall quality. Honestly, this is the best story he's written in a long while. The pacing kept me engaged, and the twist was genuinely unexpected - it caught me off guard in the best way. I really appreciated how everything wrapped up in the conclusion. If you're hesitant, i say give it a shot. It's worth watching and delivers a solid experience.
As always Taraj P Henson is outstanding. Shes one of the best actors in Hollywood in my opinion. The movie starts out very good and tense.the story is typical of a hostage style bank robber who's had a bad day formula. It is pretty much an all black cast and that is cool being a Tyler Perry movie. It highlights the difficulty of a single black mother who is trying desperately to take care of her sick child in a world where nobody cares about her or her child. She is just in a terrible situation that only seems to get worse as the day goes on. It's nothing super original in that aspect. I guess where the message gets a bit mixed is that just because someone is on hard times and is having a terrible day or whatever doesnt make it ok to go into a bank with a gun and pull it on a bank teller for not cashing your check due to policy procedures. I get the feeling that Tyler Perry goes for us to feel bad and even look past a crime because it is a black woman . I mean people of all colors go through the exact same thing and is someone supposed to be totally forgiven because they are a minority? In the film a she cuts off a white cop on her way to her daughters school and of course he is a racist who drives her off the road and then tells her if he sees her again he's going to shoot her right in front of a female white officer who tells the white male cop to leave but still writes her a ticket that Taraj Henson character can't affords. I mean that is totally a ridiculous premise and we all get tickets we can't afford and again, is the officer supposed to not give her a ticket because she is black ? It just seems like the message is if you are a minority going through a hard time then you should be forgiven or given a break over others because of the color of your skin and that should not be the case. I'm sure people will think I'm being offensive, and I get that things are different between minorities and law enforcement but I don't understand really the message that Tyler Perry is going for if it is in fact that somehow because of race that it's ok to commit crimes and take people hostage because someone is going through a hard time in life. It's a fine movie and I enjoyed it but this mixed message I'm sure does not go unnoticed by many people.
I gave Straw a try because of all the hype and, admittedly, because Taraji P. Henson is a phenomenal actress and to her credit, she delivered a strong, committed performance. Unfortunately, that's where the praise ends.
Like many of Tyler Perry's films, Straw falls into the same tired formula: a struggling single mother, dramatic twists that defy basic logic, and a storyline that leans heavily on stereotypes rather than fresh storytelling. The plot was not only predictable, but at times completely unrealistic, even bordering on absurd.
It's disappointing, especially considering the platform and influence Tyler Perry has. There's a clear opportunity to tell deeper, more nuanced stories, especially about Black women, that doesn't rely on trauma, caricatures, or recycled plotlines. But once again, that opportunity is missed.
Let's be honest: aside from Henson's solid acting, this was a painfully poor film. We need to be more open and objective when discussing these movies. Hype doesn't equal quality, and it's okay to say it: Tyler Perry's films consistently falls short.
Like many of Tyler Perry's films, Straw falls into the same tired formula: a struggling single mother, dramatic twists that defy basic logic, and a storyline that leans heavily on stereotypes rather than fresh storytelling. The plot was not only predictable, but at times completely unrealistic, even bordering on absurd.
It's disappointing, especially considering the platform and influence Tyler Perry has. There's a clear opportunity to tell deeper, more nuanced stories, especially about Black women, that doesn't rely on trauma, caricatures, or recycled plotlines. But once again, that opportunity is missed.
Let's be honest: aside from Henson's solid acting, this was a painfully poor film. We need to be more open and objective when discussing these movies. Hype doesn't equal quality, and it's okay to say it: Tyler Perry's films consistently falls short.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFilming took place over four days.
- BlooperWhen she went to the bank to cash her check it was closed but they opened the door for her to come in. Then as soon as the drama started there were four customers waiting behind her.
- Colonne sonoreLet Her Cook
Written by GloRilla (as Gloria Woods), Jaucquez Lowe, Pooh Beatz (as Darryl Clemons), Squat Beats (as Julius Rivera III), Coupe (as Edward Maclin Cooper III), Isaac Hayes
Performed by GloRilla
Published by CMG the Label Publishing, Artist 101 Publishing Group, 2 Door Publishing, Irving Music Inc., Darryl Clemons Pub Designee, Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. and Winners Circle Worldwide Publishing
Courtesy of CMG Enterprises/Interscope Records under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Contains a sample of "Ike's Mood" by Isaac Hayes
Courtesy of Stax Recordings, a division of Concord
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 45min(105 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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