Well... It's a movie about the general fatigue of the whites, social triumph of PC and black people being more... vital I would say (as synonymous to active, charismatic etc.). However, the movie is not in any way racist or critical towards such a state of affairs. It just outlines the current situation.
I work in psychology and have spend huge amounts of time in ghettos in Philly. It's a good bet that your white daughter, black one, etc will get raped or worse around black guys.
In the film, the husband and wife instantly agree on this and there's no argument. I am white and would never let my child live in a black neighborhood or go to a school with too many blacks. I have worked in some of their schools and violence is common including rapes, that the blacks working there do nothing about.
I don't see the movie as "racist" if it's sending out factual info as facts aren't racist. PC is reverse racism as such ideas make it seem like there are no problems with anyone, which actually dehumanizes blacks, etc by making them into protected almost pet like people.
I am curious about why the film decided to "go there" when the film really isn't about the realities of racial/cultural behavior.
While I liked everyone in the film, it had a very cliched plot. I just watched Triple Frontier on Netflix and it had the same plot. It's a plot I've seen in movies from the 1940s. People are after money they believe with change everything then life and all the money is lost.
I don't really get what the money was going for as far as message, but I enjoyed it overall.
Yeah I used to work in bad neighborhoods, lets just leave it at that.
But there is reality
And there is woke latte sipping wealthy white people, never worked a shitty job in their life where they needed to mix with a wide range of society, thinking they know what reality / the world is, then dogmatically tells everyone how to think and feel. Bizzare.
I've recently seen white people call black people all sorts of things (edit - on youtube about the riots), buts its "a-ok", because those black people were police officers.
The gore scene was very unrealistic and borderline bizarre. Same in this film with the mother getting her hands blow off then head. Kinda for no reason.
Yes. They had Vince Vaughn destroying a car with his bare hands. Like what would normally require a sledgehammer. I think it's supposed to be a bit campy and look like a B flick, even though they have the means to up the production if they wanted to.