Asides

Something to watch tonight: Friday 28 March

By March 28, 2025No Comments

Sing Sing (Kwedar, 2023)

Colman Domingo in the 2023 drama film Sing Sing.

For New Zealand read­ers, I want to draw your atten­tion to a new fea­ture that’s been launched by our friends at AroVision (the loc­ally owned digit­al rent­al ser­vice). You can now gift a movie rent­al to someone you love. Click the ‘gift’ icon on any film detail page and then send the link to any­one in New Zealand1 with an email address.

It’s like a recom­mend­a­tion on steroids.

Thanks for read­ing Funerals & Snakes! This post is pub­lic so feel free to share it.

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The first film you should give from AroVision is Sing Sing, which I reviewed for RNZ’s At the Summer Movies back in January:

Sing Sing is the name of a nearly 200-year-old pris­on in upstate New York. There, 1500 max­im­um secur­ity pris­on­ers see out their sentences.

They don’t execute people there any­more, although over 600 pris­on­ers per­ished in “Old Sparky” before the prac­tice was abol­ished in 1972.

Still, it’s a bleak envir­on­ment. Like many pris­ons, the term ‘cor­rec­tion­al facil­ity’ seems to be inapt to say the least. There does­n’t appear to be much cor­rect­ing going on.

The film Sing Sing shows us one of the excep­tions – a pro­gramme called Rehabilitation Through the Arts that offers some lucky incar­cer­ated men the oppor­tun­ity to rees­tab­lish some­thing of them­selves through cre­ativ­ity, team­work and fellowship.

Sing Sing isn’t a doc­u­ment­ary but it has deep authen­t­ic roots.

Most of the cast are them­selves alumni of the RTA and co-lead act­or Clarence Maclin plays a ver­sion of him­self – an inmate who found a way out through the programme.

The cent­ral char­ac­ter, though, is Divine G – played with deep wells of pain and pride by Colman Domingo in an awards-contender performance.

Divine G is the vic­tim of a mis­car­riage of justice and has been spend­ing his years fight­ing for free­dom. And writ­ing and act­ing for the RTA in his spare time.

Maclin – known as Divine Eye, which was a little con­fus­ing for a while – joins the troupe but at first, is brittle and res­ist­ant to what’s required to put on a show.

Guilt, shame and fear are emo­tions that don’t tend to serve you very well in a pris­on envir­on­ment, but you have to be able to access that vul­ner­ab­il­ity in order to make art.

Like the recent Netflix doc­u­ment­ary Daughters, which showed us what hap­pens when the chil­dren of inmates are allowed to actu­ally vis­it them and cel­eb­rate a Daddy-Daughter Dance, in Sing Sing we see what hap­pens when we – as a soci­ety – decide to treat people with grace.

But when we choose the path of dehu­man­isa­tion – as we so often do – we should­n’t be sur­prised at the res­ults we get.

Both films have some aston­ish­ing stat­ist­ics at the end that should con­vince any­one watch­ing of the value of invest­ing in these programmes.

If you choose to listen to the audio ver­sion, there are some clips from the film which will illus­trate what I’m talk­ing about.

Also reviewed in that edi­tion of At the Summer Movies: the Bob Dylan biop­ic A Complete Unknown, Upper Hutt’s Wolf Man, and Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh in the weepy We Live in Time.


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Where to watch Sing Sing

Aotearoa: Digital rent­al from AroVision and others

Australia: Digital rental

Canada: Streaming on Prime Video

Ireland: Not cur­rently available

India: Not cur­rently available

USA: Streaming on Max

UK: Streaming on Prime Video

1

This offer only applies with­in New Zealand because of those dast­ardly geo­b­lock­ing rules.