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    Movie Review

    Keanu Reeves soars as an angel with attitude in Aziz Ansari’s Good Fortune

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 16, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Keanu Reeves and Sandra Oh in Good Fortune

    Keanu Reeves and Sandra Oh in Good Fortune.

    Photo by Eddy Chen

    Actor/writer/director Aziz Ansari is best known for his role on the sitcom Parks & Recreation and for creating and starring in the Emmy-winning Master of None on Netflix. While he had directed multiple episodes of Master of None, he had not been given a chance to test out his filmmaking skills on the big screen until now with the comedy Good Fortune.

    The film is centered on Gabriel (Keanu Reeves), a guardian angel who’s assigned the task of helping people avoid accidents while texting and driving. This gig puts him in the orbit of Arj (Ansari), whose mostly aimless life has him working at a hardware store and doing odd jobs through an app called Task. Gabriel, hoping to become a more senior angel, sees Arj as a “lost soul” who he might be able to rescue.

    When Arj delivers food to tech entrepreneur Jeff (Seth Rogen), Gabriel sees an opportunity to get through to Arj. The idea is to have Arj switch lives with Jeff to understand that money is not the solution to all problems. But things backfire when Arj becomes comfortable in his new opulent lifestyle, and Gabriel has to scramble to undo what was supposed to be a temporary detour.

    Written and directed by Ansari, the film is a pleasant but unfulfilling twist on the body swap genre. The idea that the switch is being controlled by a desperate guardian angel who’s only hoping to move up in the world is objectively funny. The more Arj enjoys the rich life, the worse things become for Gabriel (and, by extension, Jeff). This results in some funny scenes between Gabriel and his boss, Martha (Sandra Oh), as well as some fun discoveries Gabriel makes about life as a human.

    However, each of the three main characters are so broad that it’s difficult to care about anything that happens to any of them. Ansari never goes beyond surface level on any larger issues the film confronts, like the gig economy and wealth disparity, and so most of the jokes in the story are equally superficial. He’s clearly aiming for Gabriel, Arj, and Jeff to learn lessons by the end of the film, but the message becomes muddled along the way.

    A big part of the issue is that neither Ansari nor Reeves are very good in their line deliveries. The stilted way in which they speak doesn’t lend any believability to their characters’ motivations, thereby diminishing the audience’s desire to see them succeed. Even worse, Ansari cast the dynamo Keke Palmer as a love interest for Arj, and then saddles her with a role that makes her about as boring as possible.

    Rogen, who’s on a TV hot streak with the Apple TV shows The Studio and Platonic, is one of the lone bright spots in the film, but even he is given a role that doesn’t play entirely to his strengths. Oh is great in her very brief time on screen, and the film could have used more of her. A cameo by Matt Rogers also makes you wish he could have had a bigger part.

    Ansari has made a film that remains watchable throughout even as you wish he had executed the details better. He also seems to match Reeves’ odd acting style, something that serves neither their characters nor the overall film well.

    ---

    Good Fortune opens in theaters on October 17.

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    Movie Review

    Twin sisters set out for revenge in Tarantino-esque film 'Is God Is'

    Alex Bentley
    May 15, 2026 | 10:00 am
    Kara Young and Mallori Johnson in Is God Is
    Photo by Patti Perret
    Kara Young and Mallori Johnson in Is God Is.

    The revenge story is one of the most enduring in all of cinema as it can be adapted to multiple different genres. It most naturally fits in the action/thriller genre, but comedies, dramas, Westerns, and more have made good use of characters seeking revenge. The new film Is God Is demonstrates that malleability by detailing an intensely personal story that turns into something bigger.

    Twins Racine (Kara Young) and Anaia (Mallori Johnson) have lived a difficult life, going in and out of foster care and forced to endure stares and taunts because each bears burn scars from a childhood attack. Racine, whose scars are “only” on her left arm, has developed into the protector of Anaia, who suffered burns over much of her face.

    An unexpected call from their mother, Ruby (Vivica A. Fox), who was burned almost beyond recognition in the attack, gives them a purpose: Seeking revenge on the man who ruined their lives. Setting out in a barely working car and with only a small amount of direction, the sisters attempt to fulfill the mission without losing their souls.

    Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Aleasha Harris, the film may remind some viewers of Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill, and not just because Fox has small roles in both films. Harris has a knack for dialogue, especially between the twins, that ably gets across the story exposition and entertains at the same time. There are many instances where she has the sisters hold silent conversations told on screen via subtitles to convey twin-speak, a method that deepens their connection and draws the viewer in.

    Harris also has her characters engage in the type of shocking violence that Tarantino has used to great effect. The difference here, though, is that even though the story is heightened to a certain degree, the egregious nature of the crime perpetrated upon the girls and their mother makes the whole thing feel bracingly real. This revenge plot is not meant to merely entertain; it’s designed to put the audience in Racine and Anaia’s shoes and fully embrace the call for justice.

    There are a few times when the lack of experience by Harris shows up, especially in the climactic sequence where the stunt work could have used some more precision. But overall, it’s a self-assured filmmaking debut for the playwright-turned-director, who’s adapted her own play with a richness and depth that is not often found from someone stepping behind the camera for the first time.

    Young and Johnson don’t especially look alike, but they embody the essence of twin sisters, and it’s their chemistry together that makes the story as impactful as it is. They’re joined by other strong female performances by Fox, Erika Alexander, and Janelle Monáe, each of whom brings a different vibe. And anyone who loves This is Us or Paradise should prepare themselves for a completely different kind of role for Sterling K. Brown.

    Is God Is uses a variety of inspirations for its storytelling, but in the end it becomes its own thing. The filmmaking world can always stand to have another strong Black voice, and Harris has made an auspicious debut, one that should have cinephiles wondering what she’ll do next.

    ---

    Is God Is opens in theaters on May 15.

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