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Critical Thinking , Movie About Miami Jackson's Chess Champs, Available for Download

Actors Will Hochman, Jeffry Batista, and John Leguizamo (left to right) shoot Critical Thinking in Miami.

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The Cinemaholic

Critical Thinking: Is the 2020 Movie Based on Real Chess Players?

 of Critical Thinking: Is the 2020 Movie Based on Real Chess Players?

Directed by John Leguizamo, ‘Critical Thinking’ is a 2020 sports film that follows a group of kids from Miami Jackson High School trying to win the National Chess Championship. Led by Mario Martinez, the team comprises Sedrick Roundtree, Marcel Martinez, Gilbert Luna, Rodelay Medina, and Olemy Paniagua. The five boys come from the inner parts of Miami, where the families strive daily for necessities such as food, shelter, and clothing. Coach Mario Martinez sees their interest in chess as an opportunity for growth and sets out on a quest to create history.

Set in 1998, the film portrays what it’s like to come from underprivileged backgrounds and how classism deprives poor people of great opportunities. In addition, the narrative tackles subjects such as racism and juvenile crimes and depicts how the latter results from several other factors in a system that doesn’t uplift the downtrodden. The various characters and backdrops feel authentic and allow the audience to empathize with the people they see onscreen. The compelling performances and organic character journeys have made many wonder if the the story is rooted in reality. Well, allow us to shed some light on the matter.

Critical Thinking: Based on True Events

Yes, ‘Critical Thinking’ is a true story. Written by Dito Montiel and directed by John Leguizamo, the movie captures the events leading up to the 1998 National Chess Championship. It showcases how Mario Martinez and his team of boys from Miami Jackson High School won the title. The group is also the first-ever team from Miami to win the national title in chess . Executive producer, Carla Berkowitz, came up with this idea when she read an article in 1997 about the boys of Miami Jackson. She wanted to tell the story of all these boys doing such incredible things in the chess world with Mario Martinez’s help.

critical thinking cast now

Interestingly the movie is quite close to how the events unfolded in real life. All 5 players in the movie are based on real-life chess players. Even the character of Coach Mario Martinez in the film has a real-life counterpart, who is a chess teacher . The real-life figures also played a significant role in the filming process. In an interview with CineMovie, Carla Berkowitz said , “All the boys that were portrayed and Mario obviously were the consultants in the chess movie.”

Another fascinating aspect is that Berkowitz wanted to make the movie for about two decades. Although filming began in 2018, Carla Berkowitz has been in touch with all players and Mario Martinez since 1997. While describing the movie’s accuracy, the real Mario Martinez and Carla Berkowitz mentioned a few things. First, all games we see the players play in the movie were played by their real-life counterparts. Second, Marcel’s book of chess moves also existed in real life. Third, the scene where Marcel plays with Mario, Sedrick, Roddy, and Gil, with his eyes closed, happened in reality too.

critical thinking cast now

Numerous events in the movie mirror circumstances that transpired in reality, which elevates the narrative’s authenticity. ‘Critical Thinking’ is far more than a chess championship for Mario Martinez and the boys. The group comes from a place where they have nothing but want to create a better life for themselves. However, the boys do not get a fair shot at anything due to racial discrimination and financial circumstances. Coach Martinez sees chess as an opportunity and a metaphor for their life.

At the film’s beginning, Martinez says that chess is an equalizer that puts everyone on a level playing field. In fact, the teacher solves almost every problem with a chess move because he considers the game symbolic of life. The ideology comes from the real-life coach. In an interview with Orlando Sentinel, he said , “Chess is a way of looking at choices and realizing, ‘If I do this, then this will happen. If I do that, then that will happen,'” Martinez deduced, “Choices have consequences. That’s critical thinking. That’s analytical. And that’s life.”

critical thinking cast now

The coach always applies this philosophy in the movie, which leads the boys to bag the national title. Marcel wins the title for the individuals’ category, and Miami Jackson High School wins in the teams’ category. In real-life, Coach Martinez didn’t stop with the 1998 championship title. The teacher went on to win several more via kids who developed an interest in the sport. In the next four years, he offered his guidance to various teams comprising different players representing Miami Jackson and won 4 more national championship titles.

In 2000, Rodelay Medina became the national champion in the expert division. Marcel played three opponents simultaneously while being blindfolded. Therefore, to reiterate, ‘Critical Thinking’ is a true story of a group of boys and their coach from Miami Jackson. It essays how Martinez and his team become the first from Miami to win the National Chess Championship. The narrative also portrays how the boys overcome several struggles and move toward a hopeful future.

Read More: Is Mario Martinez Based on a Real-Life Coach? Where is He Now?

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Critical Thinking

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In the press materials for “Critical Thinking,” producer Carla Berkowitz drops this line about her reaction to reading the true story that inspired the film: “The image and story was haunting and I felt like I had a quantum shift in my perception of chess and who plays it.” The who in question are five Miami-area Black and Latino men who, along with their teacher, Mr. Martinez, brought back to their underprivileged Florida neighborhood the U.S. National Chess Championship. This happened in 1998. The film chronicles the loving camaraderie of the players and the events leading up to their victory.

In that same press release, acclaimed writer and actor John Leguizamo , who plays Martinez and also directs, states that he wanted to make this film because there were very few representations of Latin people on-screen when he was growing up. He also mentioned that the book The Bell Curve  harmfully depicted people of color as being mentally inferior due to our genetics. I wondered if, like me, Leguizamo grew up in an environment where the Black and brown people he knew played chess, so that it wouldn’t seem unusual nor an anomaly that they did. Because Berkowitz’s statement really made me consider what exactly the standard issue chess player was supposed to look like.

Chess has appeared in a lot of movies, from Boaz Yakin ’s “ Fresh ” to Steven Zaillian ’s “Searching for Bobby Fisher” to 2016’s superb Mira Nair film, “ Queen of Katwe .” I even remember it being prevalent in a crappy Gary Coleman TV movie about a smart Black kid. The game always carries the same symbolic qualifier: the person who plays it has a mental capacity for strategy and is intelligent. Chess is often employed to teach life lessons in these movies, to the point where it has become a cliché that just so happens to be used differently depending on who’s playing it. This difference is something that I admit often sticks in my craw, so I found myself wrestling a bit with this movie even though it seemed to be addressing my concern.

Unlike Zaillian’s film, which I guess answers my question of what a “standard issue” chess player is supposed to look like, the protagonists in the other films I’ve mentioned, and in “Critical Thinking,” are people of color whose economical circumstances are far from ideal. This tends to be the model when minorities are seen playing chess in films, which bends the cinematic chess player cliché toward making the ability to play the game the audience’s reason to offer empathy. Sure, they’re broke, probably in crime-ridden areas and may even do a crime or two, but see, they’re smart, so it’s OK to feel for them! This line of thinking has to do with who stereotypically plays chess and who does not.

Leguizamo’s Mr. Martinez speaks to this early in “Critical Thinking” by asking why chess is never associated with brown people despite a Latin man playing a major role in its evolution. “Why don’t you think we know about him?” he asks the students in his critical thinking class before delivering a great, pointed monologue that speaks about how history is taught in schools. The script by Dito Montiel has some sharp commentary about the education system, from what gets funded to the over-reliance on test scores to the differences between Martinez’s inner city school and the posh preppy institutions who fall victim to our heroes on the tournament circuit. There’s a bit more bite than you may be expecting, and the writing is just prickly enough to balance out the moments when the film dives headfirst into its tropes. And there are numerous tropes to swim in; not only is this a sports movie, it’s also an entry in the “Beloved Teacher” genre.

Our chess champion team is comprised of Sedrick Roundtree ( Corwin C. Tuggles ), Ito Paniagua (Jorge Lendeborg Jr.), Gil Luna ( Will Hochman ), Rodelay Medina (Angel Curiel) and later, Marcel Martinez ( Jeffry Batista ) who joins the team after dispensing a hustler’s ass-whipping in a speed chess match. Their dialogue is peppered with the language the PG-13 won’t allow but realism will. Martinez is often telling them “watch your mouth” in his class, even if, in his less guarded moments, he’s prone to occasional profanity. Leguizamo gets good performances from each of them, especially in moments where you really feel the bond between teammates, both in the tournaments and in the streets. When they tell each other that they’ve got each other’s backs, there’s a real emotional pull that emanates straight from the actors.

Though this is an inspirational movie, Leguizamo and Montiel never sugarcoat the dangers of the environment their characters inhabit. The potential for violence, temporary homelessness, crime, and police harassment are always hovering in the margins, sometimes even invading the safe space of Martinez’s class or the school. An early sequence that shockingly ends in violence shows how good Leguizamo is at quickly establishing the audience’s tie to a character. When Rivera (Dre C) is thrown into critical thinking class after a disciplinary problem (“my class is not detention!” Martinez yells at frenemy Principal Kesler [ Rachel Bay Jones ]), he immediately runs afoul of Ito. Rivera’s lack of response is due to Spanish being his primary language, which may also have something to do with the infraction that got him sent to this class. Martinez talks to him in Spanish, lectures Ito and all seems well.

Rivera is then brutally assassinated in broad daylight after accidentally bumping into another person on the street. The film is barely 15 minutes old when this happens, but it immediately establishes that “Critical Thinking” has no plans of abandoning reality for its feel-good message. That sense of realism extends to the way the characters bond with, rib, and defend each other. Additionally, Leguizamo plays Martinez as someone who understands the temptations and frustrations of his students’ world. He challenges them to do for themselves because he knows all too well that the system has no intention of lending a helping hand.

Like Nair does in “Queen of Katwe,” Leguizamo also blatantly refuses to impose on poverty any notions of shame or requests for pity. “Chess is the great equalizer,” Martinez tells his team as they navigate snooty tournament heads and appearances against challengers from much posher ‘hoods. Even when things get expectedly dire for some of the characters, “Critical Thinking” remains focused on the characters’ response to the situation, never once stripping them of their dignity for cheap emotional manipulation.

Of all the team members, Sedrick has the most detailed arc. He has a girlfriend, Chanayah ( Zora Casebere ), who is supportive and tougher than she looks, and a father ( Michael Kenneth Williams ) whose sole job here is to fill that chess movie trope of the angry guy who uses chess as a means of brutal domination. Williams is an always welcome presence, but I could have done without him. Still, there is one very good moment where he shows some growth, and his son makes a snide comment that he silently acknowledges as being right.

The chess scenes are good even if you know nothing about chess. I’ve been playing since I was five, so of course I wanted more detailed representations than Leguizamo provides. I found his classroom lessons and the team’s banter about moves fascinating, and every time I was given a good look at a chessboard, I got closer to the screen to investigate. And yet, despite its acknowledgement of my aforementioned issues, I still felt a little itchy watching “Critical Thinking.” I am always game for a movie that makes me reckon with my personal feelings and biases, and I’m glad this one exists because representation will always speak volumes. If nothing else, “Critical Thinking” reminds you what a chess player can look like.

critical thinking cast now

Odie Henderson

Odie “Odienator” Henderson has spent over 33 years working in Information Technology. He runs the blogs Big Media Vandalism and Tales of Odienary Madness. Read his answers to our Movie Love Questionnaire  here .

critical thinking cast now

  • John Leguizamo as Mario Martinez
  • Rachel Bay Jones as Principal Kestel
  • Michael Kenneth Williams as Mr. Roundtree
  • Corwin C. Tuggles as Sedrick Roundtree
  • Jorge Lendeborg Jr. as Ito Paniagua
  • Angel Bismark Curiel as Rodelay Medina
  • Will Hochman as Gil Luna
  • Jeffry Batista as Marcel Martinez
  • Zora Casebere as Chanayah
  • Chris Hajian
  • Dito Montiel
  • Jamie Kirkpatrick
  • John Leguizamo

Cinematographer

  • Zach Zamboni

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Critical Thinking

Critical Thinking (2020)

Directed by john leguizamo.

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Description by Wikipedia

Critical Thinking is an upcoming American biographical drama film directed by and starring John Leguizamo. Set in 1998, Critical Thinking tells the true story of Cuban-American teacher Mario Martinez and his national championship winning chess team at Miami Jackson High School.

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Critical Thinking - Full Cast & Crew

  • 65   Metascore
  • 1 hr 57 mins
  • Watchlist Where to Watch

In Miami's inner-city, teacher Mario Martinez steps up to coach Miami Jackson High School's struggling chess team, helping the ragtag group of teens to qualify for and claim victory at the 1998 United States National Chess Championship. Based on true events.

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‘Critical Thinking’ Review: John Leguizamo’s Inspirational High-School Chess Drama

The true story of the Miami Jackson High chess team — five brainy wizards from the inner city — is told in a rousing but conventional way.

By Owen Gleiberman

Owen Gleiberman

Chief Film Critic

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Critical thinking

“ Critical Thinking ” is one of those up-from-the-streets high-school competition movies where just mentioning the true story it’s based on kind of gives the game away. Set in 1998, it’s about the five chess wizards from Miami Jackson High who became the first inner-city chess team to win the National Championship. Boom! But, of course, it’s how they got there that matters, and even if this movie weren’t based on a true story, you’d know more or less know where it’s going. “Critical Thinking” has some appealing young actors, and it’s been directed, by John Leguizamo (who costars as the film’s tough-saint teacher), in a way that gives them the space to clown around and then get serious. It’s still, in the end, a bit of a connect-the-inspirational-dots movie, but that doesn’t mean you won’t be inspired.

Leguizamo plays Mario Martinez, who teaches an elective class in chess at Miami Jackson, where his students call him “Mr. T.” They’re a rowdy, bellicose, street-smart bunch, hard to control in class, so at first we think we’re seeing one of those movies, like “Stand and Deliver” or “To Sir, with Love,” about a captivatingly square gadfly instructor who shows a bunch of underprivileged kids how to transcend the expectations (or lack thereof) that have been thrust upon them.

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In a way, “Critical Thinking” is one of those movies, though with a crucial caveat: The basic training — the intellectual whipping into shape — has all happened before the drama even starts. Martinez, in his thankless underpaid plaid-shirts-off-the-rack way, is beloved by his students, and he has taught them well; they’re chess players who’ve got the game in their blood. (It’s the only thing that gets them to settle down .) Leguizamo, who spent a number of his early one-man stage shows sketching in (often quite brilliantly) the lives of young people from a similar background, knows how to create scenes that bubble with spontaneity. And he himself plays Martinez with an effusive, slightly weary middle-aged demeanor that’s touching, because what he nails is the unabashed corniness of certain great high-school teachers — their willingness to put on a show for their kids, to turn the life of the mind into energized nerd theater.

At one point, using the magnetic chess board at the front of the class, he plays out a chess match authored (and recorded) by Paul Morphy in 1858, and he makes it sound as exciting as something on Roblox. He employs silly accents (Southern, French, Austrian) and puts on wigs and fake beards to enact the game, and he draws the kids into it, challenging them in his geek-with-cool-slang way (“Why is it a wack move, Sedrick? Don’t just talk to me, man, show me!”).

It’s one of the only scenes where we actually witness the mechanics of chess, and while that’s always a challenge for a chess drama (there’s only so much it can lure the lay audience into the heady intricacies of the game), I wish the students’ connection with chess were less of a given, and a little less abstract. Watching “Critical Thinking,” you’d never even know that the art of chess is rooted in thinking several moves ahead. Yet Leguizamo stages the matches with percussive power, the kids pounding their time clocks even as their eyes burrow into the board like lasers.

Much of the film’s appeal lies in the way it revels in chess as a pure symbol of leveling the playing field of opportunity. As Mr. T explains, chess is “the great equalizer.” It doesn’t matter how rich or poor you are, what Ivy League college or prison you’re in: The elemental nature of the game shears away everything but intellectual ability. So in a drama like “Critical Thinking,” where five students (four Latinx and one African-American) bust out of a high school with limited resources to attend a series of tournaments, there’s a democracy-in-action, anyone-can-win-in-America spirit.

The actors are terrific; the roles, as written, less so. Leguizamo is working from a script, by Dito Montiel, that walks the line between lived-in experience and overboiled cliché. Sedrick is played by Corwin Tuggles, who has a great pensive face, and he lends conviction to the character’s struggles at home. But it still feels like a contrivance that his father (Michael Kenneth Williams), an angry curmudgeon who treats his son’s chess victories as if they were beneath contempt, is also…the guy who plays chess with him every day! The other pivotal character is the canny hothead Ito (Jorge Lendeborg Jr,.), who begins to moonlight as a drug dealer, and though it’s not that we don’t buy it, it plays out like one of those obligatory flirtation-with-delinquency subplots from the 1980s.

There’s also a newly arrived immigrant from Cuba who joins the class — a sleek prodigy named Marcel (Jeffrey Batista), who can play (and win) four simultaneous games with his eyes closed. Always good to have someone like that on your team! As likable an actor as Leguizamo is, “Critical Thinking” never generates the teacher/student face-off intensity that “Stand and Deliver” did. The issue of how the team members fund their trips, with Martinez having to win over a skeptical principal (Rachel Bay Jones), creates some tension along the sidelines, yet once these kids start to win their tournaments it seems like they can do no wrong. The picture is pleasant enough, but watching it you’re always one or two moves ahead.

Related: 

Reviewed online, Aug. 31, 2020. MPAA Rating: Not rated. Running time: 113 MIN.

  • Production: A Vertical Entertainment release of a Chaplin/Berkowitz production, in association with NRSP, Cinema Veritas. Producers: Scott Rosenfelt, Jason Mandl. Executive producers: Harvey R. Chaplin, Carla Berkowitz, Emilio Estefan Jr.
  • Crew: Director: John Leguizamo. Screenplay: Dito Montiel. Camera: Zach Zambone. Editor: Jamie Kirkpatrick. Music: Chris Hajian.
  • With: John Leguizamo, Corwin Tuggles, Jorge Lendeborg Jr., Will Hochman, Angel Curiel, Jeffrey Batista, Michael Kenneth Williams, Rachel Bay Jones, Zora Casebere.

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‘Critical Thinking’ Review: All the Right Moves

John Leguizamo directs and stars in this warmhearted drama about underprivileged teenagers who enter a national chess championship.

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By Jeannette Catsoulis

Whether championing math, poetry, or just how to be a decent human being , the inspirational teacher is as familiar to movie audiences as the class stoner. “Critical Thinking” does little to detach itself from genre cliché; yet this heartfelt drama about a rough-and-tumble group of high-schoolers who claw their way to a national chess tournament has a sweetness that softens its flaws.

Based on a true story and set in an underserved Miami neighborhood in 1998, the movie drops us into the boisterous classroom of Mr. Martinez (played by the director, John Leguizamo).

“Chess is the great equalizer,” he tells his multiethnic students, using the game to teach his critical thinking elective — with a side of racial history discouraged by his school board. The principal (Rachel Bay Jones) might treat his classroom like a dumping ground for miscreants, but Martinez, assisted by wigs and funny accents, explains complicated chess moves with a deftness that cuts through their indifference.

With goals as modest as the lives of its characters, “Critical Thinking” follows the predictable arc of the underdog drama as the chess team overcomes troubled home situations and other setbacks on the road to a Beverly Hills-set finale. Slow and straightforward, the movie knows that a chess match is hardly a barnburner; but its lively young performers and their eventual triumph are easy to warm to. Drugs and gangs might beckon — and immigration officers hover just outside the frame — but they’re no match for the values of sportsmanship and teamwork. And Mr. Martinez’s pep talks.

Critical Thinking Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 57 minutes. Watch through virtual cinemas, or rent or buy on iTunes , Google Play and other streaming platforms and pay TV operators.

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Critical Thinking streaming: where to watch online?

Currently you are able to watch "Critical Thinking" streaming on Netflix, Netflix basic with Ads. It is also possible to buy "Critical Thinking" on Amazon Video, Microsoft Store, Apple TV as download or rent it on Apple TV, Amazon Video, Microsoft Store online.

Based on a true story from 1998, five Latino and Black teenagers from the toughest underserved ghetto in Miami fight their way into the National Chess Championship under the guidance of their unconventional but inspirational teacher.

Where does Critical Thinking rank today? The JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. This includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. This includes data from ~1.3 million movie & TV show fans per day.

Critical Thinking is 9556 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The movie has moved up the charts by 5516 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Wonderstruck but less popular than Suitcase Killer: The Melanie McGuire Story.

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9552.

9553.

9554.

9555.

+4965

9556.

9557.

9558.

9559.

9560.

Streaming charts last updated: 9:19:25 PM, 09/11/2024

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Critical Thinking

Where to watch.

Watch Critical Thinking with a subscription on Netflix, rent on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV, or buy on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

What to Know

Strategic in delivering all the feels, Critical Thinking is a good old-fashioned underdog story that marks a winning directorial debut for John Leguizamo.

Critics Reviews

Audience reviews, cast & crew.

John Leguizamo

Mario Martinez

Rachel Bay Jones

Principal Kestel

Michael Kenneth Williams

Mr. Roundtree

Corwin C. Tuggles

Sedrick Roundtree

Jorge Lendeborg

Ito Paniagua

More Like This

critical thinking cast now

CULTURE MIX

Where Lifestyle Cultures Blend

Review: ‘Critical Thinking,’ starring John Leguizamo, Jorge Lendeborg Jr., Angel Bismark Curiel, Corwin Tuggles, Will Hochman, Rachel Bay Jones and Michael Kenneth Williams

Arts and Entertainment

Angel Bismark Curiel , Corwin Tuggles , Critical Thinking , drama , Jeffry Batista , John Leguizamo , Jorge Lendeborg Jr. , Miami , Michael Kenneth Williams , movies , Rachel Bay Jones , reviews , Will Hochman , Zora Casebere

September 5, 2020

by Carla Hay

critical thinking cast now

“Critical Thinking”

Directed by John Leguizamo

Culture Representation:  Taking place primarily in Miami in 1998, the drama “Critical Thinking” has a racially diverse cast (Latino, African American and white people) representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash:  A dedicated teacher in a tough Miami school encourages his students to learn how to play chess to boost their learning skills, even though they live in an area where some people pressure the students to become school dropouts and criminals. 

Culture Audience: “Critical Thinking” will appeal primarily to people who like feel-good stories about people who overcome obstacles, despite having the odds stacked against them .

critical thinking cast now

There have been many movies about underestimated students, led by an inspirational teacher, who go on to achieve a certain goal together. In these movies, the students are usually underprivileged or disadvantaged in some way when they go up against people who are more privileged and have more advantages than the “underdogs” have. “Critical Thinking” (which is a very bland title for a movie that’s actually quite good) takes this concept and makes a slightly above-average movie, even though it hits a lot of familiar tonal beats that lead to a very predictable ending.

John Leguizamo not only stars in “Critical Thinking,” but he also makes his theatrical-release feature-film directorial debut with the movie, which is based on true events about a group of underprivileged students who competed in a national chess championship. Under his solid direction, “Critical Thinking” has some moments that are less cliché than others. Dito Montiel’s screenplay for “Critical Thinking” doesn’t clutter the movie with too many backstories, although it leaves the impression that the teacher gave higher priority and more attention to the male students than the female students.

In “Critical Thinking,” which takes primarily in place in Miami, it’s 1998 at Miami Jackson High School, where many students are from financially deprived homes in crime-ridden neighborhoods. Mario Martinez (played by Leguizamo) is a teacher for an elective class called Critical Thinking. Mario knows his class is often a dumping ground where delinquent students are sent, but that doesn’t stop him from fighting for the type of respect (and budget) that the financially strapped school gives to regular classes.

Mario’s boss is school principal Ms. Kestel (played by Rachel Bay Jones), a hard-nosed cynic who has an air of racial condescension about her when she deals with Mario and the school’s students, who are mostly people of color. Ms. Kestel comes across as someone who wants everyone to think she’s doing her part to help underprivileged kids, but she’s the type that thinks she’s too good to actually mix with people of color in her personal life.

The threat of violence is always a danger to many of the school’s students. A Spanish-speaking immigrant student who is transferred into Mario’s class doesn’t attend the class for very long, because he gets shot and killed on the street by a local gangster over a petty misunderstanding. Ms. Kestel has this reaction when she and Mario talk about the murder: “While unfortunate, it’s not a total shock anymore.” This police investigation into the murder becomes a subplot to the movie, since one of Mario’s students witnessed the crime, but he doesn’t want to snitch on the gangster.

Meanwhile, life has to go on in Mario’s class, where he teaches a hodgepodge of topics, including art, literature, history and philosophy. The favorite thing he likes to teach is chess. He encourages his students to “dig deeper than your dusty old Britannica encyclopedia” and find things that aren’t taught in textbooks.

He’s not shy about telling his students that influential people of color have often been erased from history because white men were in charge of writing history books for centuries. Mario is aware he could get in trouble for this kind of talk in the classroom, so he peeks outside the classroom door first to make sure that a white co-worker such as Ms. Kestel isn’t lurking nearby to possibly overhear him. On the subject of chess, Mario tells his students, “How come we don’t know that chess was invented in India, perfected in Persia and modernized by a [Puerto Rican] guy named Maura?”

Mario shows the students how chess can help in all aspects of life because it involves the skill of thinking ahead and strategizing. Although he has about 30 students in his classroom on any given day, there are four (and then later five) students who end up being the focus of the story, since they’re the chosen ones for the school’s chess team.

Sedrick Roundtree (played by Corwin Tuggles) is the unofficial student leader of the chess team and the one most likely to encourage the others when they feel defeated. Even before he took Mario’s class, Sedrick was an avid chess player. Sedrick has an unassuming confidence about himself that most people respect.

Oelmy “Ito” Paniagua (played by Jorge Lendeborg Jr.) has a big rebellious streak and is Sedrick’s closest friend. Ito doesn’t really think chess is cool until Sedrick convinces him to join the school’s chess team. Ito is also the student in this chess group who’s most likely to be tempted into joining a gang or becoming a drug dealer. It’s hinted at, but not shown, that Ito comes from an abusive home.

Rodelay “Roddy” Medina (played by Angel Bismark Curiel) is the group’s jokester. He dislikes confrontation and arguments, and he gets easily hurt if he thinks his friends are disloyal. Just like Sedrick, Roddy has a passion for chess and is highly competitive when it comes to the game.

Gil Luna (played by Will Hochman) is the quietest and most mellow member of the group. Although he has a Latino name, he can easily pass for being white. His apparent “whiteness” makes him the target of some teasing by the darker-skinned members of the group, but the teasing is never mean-spirited. All of the members of the group end up getting teased or taunted by one another at some point.

Much later in the story, a fifth student joins the chess team. His name is Marcel Martinez (played by Jeffry Batista), a Cuban immigrant who doesn’t know much English. Sedrick recruited Marcel to enroll in the school and join the chess team, after Sedrick and Roddy were playing some chess in Domino Park, invited some local people to pay chess with them, and were blown away by Marcel’s extraordinary talent. There’s a scene in the movie where Marcel can play chess with multiple people at a time, with his back turned to them and without looking at the chessboard, and by calling out the moves that he wants to play.

Sedrick is also the only student whose unhappy home life is shown in the movie. He lives with his alcoholic widower father (played by Michael Kenneth Williams), whose first name is never revealed in the movie. Sedrick father, when he’s not passed out drunk, frequently gets angry and picks fights with Sedrick.

The only time that Sedrick and his father bond is when they play chess together, but his father is a sore loser. Sedrick’s mother was killed by a hit-and-run accident that Sedrick witnessed when he was 6 years old. It’s obvious that he and his father haven’t been able to grieve or talk about her death in a way that can help them heal from the trauma of their loss.

When Sedrick’s father hears about Sedrick being on the school’s chess team, he scoffs at Sedrick and tells him it’s a waste of time because chess isn’t the kind of thing that most people can do as a job. And his father gets even more irritated when Sedrick’s chess team starts competing with other schools’ chess teams. Although it’s never said out loud, it’s clear that Sedrick’s father didn’t have an opportunity to be part of a school chess team that got to travel to different competitions, and he’s jealous and resentful that Sedrick is doing what he never got to do.

Although “Critical Thinking” has some heavy issues, such as gang violence, alcoholism and abusive homes, the movie also has some humor—namely, the camaraderie that the boys have with each other, especially when Roddy is around. And in a rarity for a movie about high-school students, dating isn’t really the cause of any of the angst or conflict in the story, because the boys are so focused on chess. Sedrick is the only one in the group who has a girlfriend. Her name is Chanayah (played by Zora Casebere), and she attends the same school, but she’s written as a fairly minor character.

In fact, the movie’s biggest flaw is how the female students in the movie are essentially written as background characters, with the implication being that the female students weren’t good enough to be on Mario’s chosen chess team. It’s not clear if the girls in his class aren’t interested in chess or if Mario didn’t think they were worth encouraging as much as he encourages the male students to be on the chess team.

Whatever the case, there’s definitely more than a whiff of sexism about how this chess team was assembled—and the gender imbalance is all the more noticeable when Miami Jackson High School’s chess team competes against other schools who have plenty of girls on their chess teams. That’s not to say that the movie needed to rewrite history and put girls on the Miami Jackson team, which was apparently an all-male team in real life in 1998. But the screenplay should have at least addressed why none of the girls in Mario’s class ended up on the team.

Another big question left unanswered in the movie is: “What is Mario’s own background and why did he want to become a teacher?” In one of his many “tough love” lectures to his chosen chess students when they get discouraged or act too rowdy, Mario hints that he also comes from a troubled and tough background like they do. But that’s as far as it goes. No further details are given about what kind of man Mario is when he’s not working as a teacher. There’s no “home life” shown for any of the movie’s characters except for Sedrick.

“Critical Thinking” is not a disappointing movie, but parts of the story could have done more to fill in some blanks. For example, something happens to Ito toward the end of the film and the outcome is never fully explained. If not for the acting of the main cast members, several parts of “Critical Thinking” would be quite boring to watch. Leguizamo’s fast-talking, sometime wisecracking persona serves him well in this role, since Mario is supposed to be an unconventional teacher who can relate to his students.

Lendeborg (as Ito) and Curiel (as Roddy) also stand out in their roles. Ito is a tough guy who doesn’t want to show his vulnerabilities, while Roddy is a vulnerable guy who doesn’t want to be so tough that he alienates his friends. Both portrayals are nuanced and worth watching, since these two characters are more than just generic roles.

Tuggles (as Sedrick) also does a commendable performance, particularly in some emotionally raw scenes that Sedrick has with his father. Williams is a very good actor, but he’s had many roles in movies and TV shows where he’s a guy with a mean streak/bad temper, so there’s really nothing new or noteworthy that Williams does in this movie.

“Critical Thinking” is worth a look for people who want to see a real-life inspirational story portrayed in a familiar way. The believable performances from most of the cast go a long way in preventing the movie from sinking into forgettable mediocrity. With “Critical Thinking,” Leguizamo also has proved that he can do well as a director who makes very good casting choices and who has a knack for telling a crowd-pleasing story.

Vertical Entertainment released “Critical Thinking” in select U.S. virtual cinemas, on digital and on VOD on September 4, 2020.

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Critical Thinking (2020)

Full cast & crew.

critical thinking cast now

Directed by 

Writing Credits (in alphabetical order)  

Cast (in credits order)  .

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... (as Jorge Lendeborg)
... (as Angel Bismark Curiel)
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...
... (as Ruben E. Brown)
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Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
...
... /
...
...
...
... (as Big Sailor Baby)
...
... (archive footage)
...
...
...
... (as Roddy Prince)
...
... (uncredited)
... (uncredited)
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Produced by 

... executive producer
... producer
... associate producer
... executive producer
... executive producer
... co-producer
... executive producer
... producer
... producer
... co-producer

Music by 

Cinematography by .

... director of photography

Editing by 

Casting by , production design by , art direction by .

... (Assistant Propmaster)

Set Decoration by 

Costume design by , makeup department .

... hair department head

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director 

... set production assistant
... first assistant director
... second second assistant director
... second assistant director
... additional second assistant director

Art Department 

... graphic designer
... art department coordinator
... armour weapons / property master
... leadman
... set dresser
... assistant art director
... art department associate
... assistant property master

Sound Department 

... sound effects editor
... foley artist
... adr supervisor
... adr recordist
... boom operator
... foley mixer
... adr mixer
... foley artist
... supervising sound editor
... foley editor
... adr recordist
... foley mixer
... boom operator
... sound mixer
... boom operator

Visual Effects by 

... visual effects supervisor

Stunts 

... Stunt Double: Sedric's Mother
... stunt performer

Camera and Electrical Department 

... a camera operator
... first assistant "a" camera
... lighting technician
... Drone Tech
... first assistant camera: "b" camera
... still photographer
... second assistant camera: "b" camera
... video assist
... drone operator (as Jordan Klein Jr.)
... key grip
... B Camera Operator/2nd Unit DP
... digital imaging tech
... grip
... best boy electric
... lighting technician
... best boy grip
... gaffer
... second assistant camera
... drone pilot
... grip
... grip

Casting Department 

... adr voice casting
... casting associate
... casting associate
... casting associate

Costume and Wardrobe Department 

... set costumer
... costume supervisor

Editorial Department 

... on-line editor
... assistant editor
... color assist
... assistant editor
... assistant editor: Miami
... digital intermediate producer
... digital colorist / digital intermediate colorist
... engineer

Location Management 

... location production assistant: day player
... assistant location manager
... location manager

Music Department 

... music editor
... synth programmer
... music supervisor
... composer: Trailer Score

Script and Continuity Department 

... script supervisor

Transportation Department 

... transportation coordinator

Additional Crew 

... office production assistant
... festival publicist
... production assistant (as Lisa A. Sacco)
... production assistant
... Additional Voices
... assistant production coordinator
... production coordinator
... Localization Director
... Drone Aerial Coordinator
... key craft service
... craft service
... 1st assistant accountant
... accounting clerk
... payroll accountant
... florida assistant to john leguizamo
... production assistant: first team
... festival publicist
... office production assistant
... publicist
... production supervisor

Thanks 

... special thanks
... special thanks

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Screen Rant

Laverne cox embraces her villainous & "ethically questionable" side in netflix's uglies.

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This Tease For Netflix's Upcoming Sci-Fi Movie Shocked Me (& Not For The Reason I Expected)

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Netflix's Uglies is set in a futuristic world where mandatory cosmetic surgery is set for the age of sixteen so that everyone will look beautiful. The idea is that this will put a cease to war and fighting, because everyone is living on an even playing field. Tally Youngblood (Joey King) is eager for her turn to join the rest of society, but when a friend runs away, she embarks on a journey to save her that upends everything she thought she wanted.

Uglies is a sci-fi movie based on Scott Westerfield's novel of the same name. It is the first of four books, leaving the door wide open to make this a franchise rather than just a standalone film. Something that Netflix would surely love to see happen. Uglies starts streaming on Netflix on September 13th.

This Tease For Netflix's Upcoming Sci-Fi Movie Shocked Me (& Not For The Reason I Expected)

I've waited years to see Scott Westerfeld's Pretties brought to life, but Netflix's Uglies didn't shock me - and that's not the sci-fi movie's fault.

Screen Rant sat down with Laverne Cox to talk about Netflix's Uglies . She reveals the advice she would give to younger audiences who are dealing with the thoughts that they are less than or not enough. Laverne also details the inspirations she looked to when embracing her villainous side and what it was like working alongside the young cast.

Laverne Cox Wants Viewers Of All Ages To Take Away "Critical Questioning" From Uglies

Joey King in bed as Tally Youngblood in Uglies

Screen Rant: What would you say to kids that are watching this movie? Because it definitely has a message that will resonate with them.

Laverne Cox: It's interesting. I've been watching a lot of YouTube videos of people who read [Uglies] as a kid, and now they've reread it, and they have a different take as an adult than they did as a kid. And, for me, what I love about Tally versus Shay, if we will, is that Tally has fully bought into this system of this is the way I'm supposed to be, and doesn't really question. Shay is like, "Maybe there's another way?" I've always been the person [that asks] maybe there's another way, right? The system never really worked for me growing up. I didn't feel pretty. I didn't feel like I belonged or fit in, so I had to question that system to survive. And I think there's something really healthy about that. Someone earlier asked me what I remember reading as a kid and [I remember] reading Walt Whitman. I was obsessed with Whitman in high school. I don't remember what poem it was, it was somewhere in leave the grass. He was like, question everything and never just make a blind assumption about things. So fostering this sort of critical lens to the world. Basically that metaphorical, getting on a hoverboard and going to the smoke, to this other world, that encourages you to question everything you've been taught. I think having critical thinking really, but critical questioning, is what I want people to take away. People of all ages, don't be afraid to question the system.

Laverne Took Inspiration From Wolves When Creating Dr. Cable

"when there is food and prey, the way that they lurk and wait for their moment...".

Laverne Cox as Dr Cable clasping her hands in a white room in Uglies

Screen Rant: That ideal is a little bit of the opposite of your character's way of thinking.

Laverne Cox: Yes indeed. Laverne and Dr. Cable are not the same person, but I had so much fun being this woman who ultimately wants what I want. She wants everybody to be treated equally and not be discriminated against because. Her methods are ethically questionable. And the way she squashes the scent is also morally questionable, but it's also so much fun to play. Just deliciousness. The process of preparing to do it - any role for me is always excruciating. I've been working with this acting coach, Kimberly Harris, for seven or eight years now. We always do character private moments, and we started doing animal work with a role I did on The Blacklist. We will often pick an animal for a character, not always. But in the book, Scott writes she has eyes like a wolf. So it just made sense that she would be a wolf. And so Kimberly compiled all these videos, and I found other videos myself. There are probably hundreds of hours of wolf videos. It's amazing that you can find them, because people go, there's all these National Geographic and other things, where people have gone to the woods and put cameras there, and watch wolves in the Arctic or wherever. Just watching them be aware that there's a camera there and that their environment has been disturbed. When there is food and prey, the way that they lurk and wait for their moment... They're predators, but then they have, when they have cubs, they're so nurturing and so just beautiful to them. That sort of dichotomy is really interesting. And then just the physicality and the vocalizing. Kimberly sent me these beautiful recordings of wolves howling that just reminded me of Diamanda Galás. All of that process was a lot of fun. Then you virtually humanize the animal and find ways to incorporate her into the physicality. So embodying an animal, and then combining that with your wants and needs, gives you, hopefully, an idea of who the character is, and helps you to live in the character in your body and lift it into your imagination and all that good factory stuff.

Laverne Says The Young Actors On Uglies Are "So Talented And Professional"

Tally crying while looking at Peris in his Special form in Uglies

Screen Rant: You're absolutely phenomenal in this movie. I was going to ask you what inspirations you took, but clearly wolves were an inspiration.

Laverne Cox: I love that it comes from the text. It's not always the case, but often, there is, I found, if you really read the source material, it's in the script, it's in the text, and you can glean a lot. And that is really gratifying. Hopefully you've done so much work, and you're so prepared, that when you get to set, you can just live. You can just live. The other actors will do things that inspire you, the director will say things, and you're still in character and operating as the character, but something else has occurred to you, or there's a new approach to something, so you do all the preparation so you can be free on set. McG was just such a joy to work with. And all the young actors in this are just so talented and professional. I just was blown away, because sometimes... I've been on projects with younger actors who were just a little bratty and a little whatever, and these actors were so dialed in. So professional and prepared. Hitting marks, hitting emotional notes, take after take. Just so prepared. It's the commitment, I guess, because I take this very seriously, and it's just wonderful to be on a set where everyone is really hardcore and serious about the work. It's inspiring.

Could Uglies Have More Movies To Follow Future Books?

"if enough people watch, then maybe there will be a sequel.".

Laverne Cox As Dr. Cable In Netflix's Uglies Adaptation

Screen Rant: This is not the end in the books, so is there more to come?

Laverne Cox: People have to tune in to Netflix. If enough people watch, then maybe there will be a sequel. So we'll see.

More About Netflix's Uglies (2024)

In a futuristic world that imposes a cosmetic surgery at 16, Tally is eager for her turn to join the rest of society. But when a friend runs away, Tally embarks on a journey to save her that upends everything she thought she wanted.

Check out our other Uglies interviews here:

  • Joey King & Brianne Tju
  • Chase Stokes & Keith Powers

Uglies comes to Netflix on September 13.

Source: Screen Rant Plus

Uglies (2024) - Poster

Uglies (2024)

In a futuristic society where everyone undergoes compulsory cosmetic surgery at 16 to become "pretty," Tally eagerly awaits her transformation. However, when her friend goes missing, she embarks on a journey that challenges her beliefs about beauty, conformity, and rebellion, ultimately questioning the foundations of their world.

Uglies

IMAGES

  1. ‘Critical Thinking’ Review: All the Right Moves

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  2. Critical Thinking (2020)

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VIDEO

  1. Then and Now! Critical Role on their "scripted" show

  2. Top Critical Thinking Skills

  3. Casting Out Wrong Thoughts

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COMMENTS

  1. Critical Thinking (film)

    Critical Thinking is a 2020 American biographical drama film based on the true story of the 1998 Miami Jackson High School chess team, the first inner-city team to win the U.S. National Chess Championship.. Critical Thinking was directed by John Leguizamo (in his directorial debut), written by Dito Montiel, executive produced by Carla Berkowitz and Harvey Chaplin, and stars Leguizamo alongside ...

  2. The True Story Behind Critical Thinking, Movie Based in Miami

    The movie Critical Thinking was more than two decades in the making by the time the cast and crew began filming in Miami in 2018.After reading a 1997 article about the Miami Jackson High School ...

  3. Critical Thinking (2020)

    Critical Thinking: Directed by John Leguizamo. With John Leguizamo, Rachel Bay Jones, Michael Kenneth Williams, Corwin C. Tuggles. The true story of the Miami Jackson High School chess team which was the first inner city team to win the U.S. National Chess Championship.

  4. Critical Thinking (2020)

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  5. Critical Thinking: Is the 2020 Movie Based on Real Chess Players?

    Rohan Jain. December 15, 2022. Directed by John Leguizamo, 'Critical Thinking' is a 2020 sports film that follows a group of kids from Miami Jackson High School trying to win the National Chess Championship. Led by Mario Martinez, the team comprises Sedrick Roundtree, Marcel Martinez, Gilbert Luna, Rodelay Medina, and Olemy Paniagua.

  6. Critical Thinking (2020)

    Based on a true story from 1998, five Latino and Black teenagers from the toughest underserved ghetto in Miami fight their way into the National Chess Championship under the guidance of their unconventional but inspirational teacher.

  7. Critical Thinking (2020)

    Now Streaming Watch Now. Critical Thinking (2020) 輔12級 09/04/2020 ... Top Billed Cast. John Leguizamo. Mario Martinez. Rachel Bay Jones. Principal Kestel ... Chanayah. View More . Full Cast & Crew. Social. Reviews 0; Discussions 0; We don't have any reviews for Critical Thinking. Media. Most Popular; Videos 1; Backdrops 2; Posters 10 ...

  8. Critical Thinking movie review (2020)

    The film is barely 15 minutes old when this happens, but it immediately establishes that "Critical Thinking" has no plans of abandoning reality for its feel-good message. That sense of realism extends to the way the characters bond with, rib, and defend each other. Additionally, Leguizamo plays Martinez as someone who understands the ...

  9. Critical Thinking (2020)

    Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for Critical Thinking (2020) - John Leguizamo on AllMovie - In the late-1990s, the Miami Jackson High School,…

  10. Critical Thinking (2020) Cast and Crew

    Meet the talented cast and crew behind 'Critical Thinking' on Moviefone. Explore detailed bios, filmographies, and the creative team's insights. Dive into the heart of this movie through its stars ...

  11. Everything You Need to Know About Critical Thinking Movie (2020)

    Critical Thinking in US theaters September 4, 2020 starring John Leguizamo, Rachel Bay Jones, Michael Kenneth Williams, Jorge Lendeborg Jr.. ... Who stars in Critical Thinking: Cast List . John Leguizamo. Bob Trevino Likes It, Ice Age: Continental Drift ... Subscribe Now . e track upcoming movies through all stages of film production.

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  13. 'Critical Thinking' Review: John Leguizamo's High-School ...

    "Critical Thinking" has some appealing young actors, and it's been directed, by John Leguizamo (who costars as the film's tough-saint teacher), in a way that gives them the space to clown ...

  14. Critical Thinking Cast & Crew Credits

    Critical Thinking Cast & Crew Credits: John Leguizamo John Leguizamo Rachel Bay Jones Michael Kenneth Williams Jorge Lendeborg Jr. Angel Bismark Curiel. ... Subscribe Now . e track upcoming movies through all stages of film production. Our story Email Us Call Us: 248.387.9826 Popular Lists. Top In Production;

  15. 'Critical Thinking' Review: All the Right Moves

    Critical Thinking Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 57 minutes. Watch through virtual cinemas, or rent or buy on iTunes, Google Play and other streaming platforms and pay TV operators.

  16. Critical Thinking streaming: where to watch online?

    It is also possible to buy "Critical Thinking" on Amazon Video, Microsoft Store, Apple TV as download or rent it on Apple TV, Amazon Video, Microsoft Store online. Synopsis Based on a true story from 1998, five Latino and Black teenagers from the toughest underserved ghetto in Miami fight their way into the National Chess Championship under the ...

  17. Critical Thinking Trailer #1 (2020)

    Check out the official Critical Thinking Trailer starring John Leguizamo! Let us know what you think in the comments below. Watch on FandangoNOW: https://ww...

  18. Critical Thinking

    1 h 57 m. Summary Based on a true story from 1998, five LatinX and Black teenagers from the toughest underserved ghetto in Miami fight their way into the National Chess Championship under the guidance of their unconventional but inspirational teacher. Drama. Directed By: John Leguizamo. Written By: Dito Montiel.

  19. Critical Thinking

    Miami -- 1998. Poverty, broken families, and a prejudiced system push underprivileged youth to the fringes of society. But for a magnetic group of teens, there's a reprieve. A game where it's not ...

  20. Critical Thinking (2020) Cast and Crew

    Rodelay Medina. Will Hochman. Gil Luna. Zora Casebere. Chanayah. Jeffry Batista. Marcel Martinez. SEE ALL OFFERS. Based on a true story from 1998, five LatinX and Black teenagers from the toughest underserved ghetto in Miami fight their way into the National Chess Championship under the guidance of their unconventional but inspirational teacher.

  21. Review: 'Critical Thinking,' starring John Leguizamo, Jorge Lendeborg

    "Critical Thinking" is not a disappointing movie, but parts of the story could have done more to fill in some blanks. For example, something happens to Ito toward the end of the film and the outcome is never fully explained. If not for the acting of the main cast members, several parts of "Critical Thinking" would be quite boring to watch.

  22. Critical Thinking (2020)

    Critical Thinking (2020) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Movie News India Movie Spotlight. TV Shows.

  23. Laverne Cox Embraces Her Villainous Side In Netflix's Uglies

    Netflix's Uglies is set in a futuristic world where mandatory cosmetic surgery is set for the age of sixteen so that everyone will look beautiful. The idea is that this will put a cease to war and fighting, because everyone is living on an even playing field. Tally Youngblood (Joey King) is eager for her turn to join the rest of society, but when a friend runs away, she embarks on a journey to ...