‘Sinners’: A vampire wants to crash Michael B. Jordan’s party
Cornbread (Omar Miller) isn’t acting like his old self when trying to re-enter the party in Ryan Coogler’s period horror movie “Sinners.”
Ryan Coogler has been trying not to get too emotional in interviews about his new film “Sinners.” Which, admittedly, he’s been “failing at dramatically.”
It’s a sign of what this gangster vampire musical horror movie (in theaters April 18) means to him. Coogler is a filmmaker known for creatively putting his all into films, from “Fruitvale Station” and “Creed” to both “Black Panther” adventures. But “Sinners” is his most personal effort yet, inspired by his favorite entertainment and beloved relatives.
Coogler’s “such a grounded person” who “uses his surroundings and his background to tell a story,” star Miles Caton says. “Through all his films, you can see that everything is always tied into the culture. It can relate to so many different people.”
Set in 1930s Mississippi, “Sinners” features Michael B. Jordan ‒ a frequent Coogler collaborator ‒ as gangster twins Smoke and Stack, who’ve arrived back home after a spell in Chicago. They buy a sawmill to open a juke joint, hiring their young cousin Sammie (Caton) to play his prized blues guitar and entertain the crowd on opening night. Unfortunately, a vampire named Remmick (Jack O’Connell) crashes the celebration, sparking a battle to survive for the twins, their exes (Wunmi Mosaku and Hailee Steinfeld) and this tight-knit community.
Family inspired much of the movie for Coogler, 38. Sammie was named after his grandmother’s youngest sister, and the period, culture and music all came from Coogler’s relationship with his Uncle James, a Mississippi man who ended up in California. (Coogler was born in Oakland.) His uncle loved the blues and the San Francisco Giants; he died in 2015 while Coogler was working on “Creed” with Jordan. “What I would find myself doing to remember him is listening to those blues records,” says the filmmaker, who also tapped into his pop-culture leanings.
The Stephen King book “Salem’s Lot” and Joel and Ethan Coen’s 2013 film “Inside Llewyn Davis” motivated Coogler in terms of vampires and music performances, respectively. Yet his “flat-out biggest” influence was a 1962 episode of “The Twilight Zone” titled “The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank,” about a man who comes back to life at his own funeral. Coogler says he’d “never seen something that was white and totally double consciousness” ‒ which sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois defined as marginalized Blacks being true to their culture while also trying to fit into white society ‒ and still gets “goosebumps” thinking about it.
Michael B. Jordan’s gangster twins are two sides of a complex coin
To build out his dual roles, the scheming Stack and the more serious Smoke, Jordan says he thought about how “their earliest childhood traumas” informed their personalities and coping skills. “One smiled (and) talked his way through it, convinced himself that it wasn’t that bad. And the other one had probably more of an exact memory of what really happened and came from a more responsible place. Two survival instincts, but just approached differently.”
Jordan made sure to create a strong connection between the two, despite their differences. The actor, 38, figures they had “ongoing huge debates and arguments” that lasted an entire lifetime. “I’m pretty sure they had a running tally of who was right and who was wrong the most. What grudges are they still holding onto with each other? Who left the toilet seat up last? That type of dynamic was interesting.”
But mystique and danger surround the twins when they return, from talk of their time as soldiers to working with Al Capone, and it’s hard to separate truth from legend. There’s a folkloric element to the men, Jordan says: “That game of telephone, it goes from one person to the next person. They heard this and they heard that, and by the time it comes back around, these dudes were vampires before vampires were even introduced in the movie. They’re immortal. They don’t die.”
‘Sinners’ musical sequence is a surreal showstopper
One of the most rewarding scenes for Jordan in “Sinners” was the showstopping musical number: Sammie plays a blues tune for the crowd and the juke turns into a living museum of music history as the main characters are joined by African drummers, Asian dancers from the past and DJs and rock guitarists that ordinarily wouldn’t exist for decades. Seeing “those spiritual elements and the ancestors and the nuance, I’m like, ‘Oh, this shot’s going to be crazy!’” Jordan recalls.
Because things were going to get terrifyingly bad for our heroes, as vampires rip throats and cause chaos later in the movie, Coogler wanted the night to include a positive supernatural quality. The ‘30s were “an era where it was really tough to be a person who wasn’t white, but it was also a hard time to be white,” he says. “It was like this vicious cycle of pressure being put on everybody. How awesome would it be if people in that time, when it was so difficult, could commune and dance and party with people they’re related to from different times where the pressures were different?”
Coogler’s efforts to tie into the culture take a surreal turn in the musical sequence. “If a party got crazy and everybody’s feeling it, we say, ‘Man, you burned the house down,’” Coogler says. “In a movie like this, through film language, I could really burn the house down! But also the vampire exists in that surreal, magical space. It was so exciting, bro. I was really fired up to have that kind of fun.”