
About Sing Sing

Title: | Sing Sing |
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Original Title: | Sing Sing |
Plot: | Divine G, imprisoned at Sing Sing for a crime he didn't commit, finds purpose by acting in a theatre group alongside other incarcerated men in this story of resilience, humanity, and the transformative power of art. |
Cast: | Colman Domingo, Clarence Maclin, Sean San Jose, Paul Raci, David "Dap" Giraudy, Patrick "Preme" Griffin |
Director: | Greg Kwedar |
Cinematography: | Patrick Scola |
Editor: | Parker Laramie |
Sing Sing
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express

A Shawshank Redemption-level stunner that features Colman Domingo’s career-best performance
Featuring a career-best performance by Colman Domingo, director Greg Kwedar's prison drama is one of the best film's of 2024.
Perhaps the single greatest scene in any movie released last year was the one where Colman Domingo’s character — a convict named Divine G — pleads his case during a clemency hearing in the startling prison drama Sing Sing. He tells the examining committee about the theatre programme that he has spearheaded at the facility, and how uplifting the experience has been not just for him, but each and every prisoner who has participated in it. The scene purposefully recalls the many similar moments in The Shawshank Redemption, in which a hopeful Red, played by Morgan Freeman, desperately begs for mercy. It isn’t a flashy scene, but one that relies almost entirely on Domingo’s (mostly reactionary) performance — easily the best that he has delivered in his career. The same is true of the film itself. Directed by Greg Kwedar, Sing Sing debuted on Max after a negligible theatrical run abroad. Based on the real-life Rehabilitation Through the Arts programme that is conducted at the Sing Sing Correctional Facility in New York, the movie features a handful of ex-convicts playing semi-fictionalised versions of themselves. This gives it a layer of authenticity that would’ve been difficult to achieve with professional actors. There’s a rawness to the drama that’s mostly missing from mainstream American cinema these days, although Sing Sing — the movie premiered at Sundance in 2023 — doesn’t exactly qualify as mainstream.