Based on actual events, Fruitvale Station, dramatizes the last day in the life of Oscar Grant, a 22 year-old man that was fatally shot by a police officer at the titular BART station near San Francisco on New Year's Day 2009. In the wake of the public outcry over the Trayvon Martin trial, it's easy to draw parallels between the two tragedies, while also being reminded that this is nothing new. Coogler doesn't sanitize Grant's character or gloss over his flaws, but as played by Michael B. Jordan, in a star-making turn, it's easy to forgive him for his shortcomings. Oscar's infrequent flare ups show that he can be volatile and hot headed, but beneath it all is a young man still maturing and trying to be better.
The script is so simple and authentic it's as if the actors are improvising. Octavia Spencer is subtly heartbreaking as Oscar's mother Wanda, showing more emotional complexity than she did in her Academy Award winning performance in The Help. First time writer/director Coogler has presented himself as an assured and natural storyteller. The ending definitely packs an emotional wallop, but it's earned rather than coerced.
9/10 Stars *********
Fruitvale Station is now playing in select theaters and will be released nationwide July 26.
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