The Woman King
- 2022
- Tous publics
- 2h 15m
A historical epic inspired by true events that took place in The Kingdom of Dahomey, one of the most powerful states of Africa in the 18th and 19th centuries.A historical epic inspired by true events that took place in The Kingdom of Dahomey, one of the most powerful states of Africa in the 18th and 19th centuries.A historical epic inspired by true events that took place in The Kingdom of Dahomey, one of the most powerful states of Africa in the 18th and 19th centuries.
- Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
- 28 wins & 126 nominations total
Chioma Antoinette Umeala
- Tara
- (as Chioma Umeala)
Sivuyile Ngesi
- The Migan
- (as Siv Ngesi)
Angélique Kidjo
- The Meunon
- (as Angelique Kidjo)
Summary
Reviewers say 'The Woman King' is lauded for its powerful performances by Viola Davis and Thuso Mbedu, and its focus on female empowerment and African culture. However, it is criticized for historical inaccuracies, uneven pacing, and underdeveloped subplots. Despite these issues, the film's production values, including cinematography and costume design, are highly appreciated. Many reviewers commend its effort to bring lesser-known historical stories to light and its thrilling action sequences.
Featured reviews
The Woman King (2022) is a movie my wife and I caught in theatres last night. The storyline follows an African kingdom with a new(er) king in 1823 who posses the only female army in Africa. The leader of the female Army has a past that haunts her but the respect of her king, enough to be on his council. She strongly urges him to avoid the slave trade and find alternative methods of riches. Meanwhile, those who do believe strongly in the slave trade look to march on the kingdom and bring them down. A new recruitment class to the female army brings brashness, new ideas to defend the kingdom, and the female leader's ghosts back to the forefront...
This movie is directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood (Love & Basketball) and stars Viola Davis (The Help), Thuso Mbedu (The Underground Railroad), Lashana Lynch (No Time to Die), Sheila Atim (Doctor Strange: In the Mouth of Madness), John Boyega (Star Wars: Episode VII-IV) and Jimmy Odukoya (Mamba's Diamond).
This movie has so much depth and contains a great primary plot and even better sub plots. The writing is remarkable, thorough and very impressive. The character's inner demons are well portrayed as is their struggle to overcome them. The acting is out of this world across the board. You feel for every character; and if anything happens to anyone, you feel personally hurt. The villains were also excellent as is the outcome of each of them. The settings and cinematography is outstanding and there is impressive use of lighting. The action scenes are remarkable and the fight choreography is award winning caliber. My only complaint is an awkward love story that is obviously in here to show maturity and self discovery but I could have done without it.
Overall, this movie has literally everything you'd want in a movie - tremendous action, great villains, self discovery and character triumph. I would strongly, strongly recommend seeing this movie and score it a 10/10. We loved it.
This movie is directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood (Love & Basketball) and stars Viola Davis (The Help), Thuso Mbedu (The Underground Railroad), Lashana Lynch (No Time to Die), Sheila Atim (Doctor Strange: In the Mouth of Madness), John Boyega (Star Wars: Episode VII-IV) and Jimmy Odukoya (Mamba's Diamond).
This movie has so much depth and contains a great primary plot and even better sub plots. The writing is remarkable, thorough and very impressive. The character's inner demons are well portrayed as is their struggle to overcome them. The acting is out of this world across the board. You feel for every character; and if anything happens to anyone, you feel personally hurt. The villains were also excellent as is the outcome of each of them. The settings and cinematography is outstanding and there is impressive use of lighting. The action scenes are remarkable and the fight choreography is award winning caliber. My only complaint is an awkward love story that is obviously in here to show maturity and self discovery but I could have done without it.
Overall, this movie has literally everything you'd want in a movie - tremendous action, great villains, self discovery and character triumph. I would strongly, strongly recommend seeing this movie and score it a 10/10. We loved it.
When murderers, rapists and slave traders are presented as heroes and liberators, it is disgusting. It is disgusting to see how some directors and actors try to present evil with good. How something terrible is twisted to make it look beautiful. It is as if serial maniacs and murderers who killed hundreds of people in the most brutal ways would be made noble and just heroes. He killed 30 people, dismembered and ate them, oh no no, he was a hero who helps children with cancer. It's disgusting and I want to vomit from such cynicism! The acting is mediocre, even below average. And the appeals of the main characters to visit cinemas to watch this cynical lie. Strong female characters, heroes that the public should know about, good and honest people - all this will be on the screens someday, but not in this film!
So the good: Viola Davis! Viola Davis was so fantastic! She must have really worked out and trained for this role too. She looked amazing and was very believable as an a**kicking leader. The scenery and design was great. I liked the general feel of the filming and cinematography.
The bad: basically everything else. The "African" accents were cartoon bad. Really they were borderline offensive. If you'd played a clip of this and told me it was a 70's black exploitation movie I would not have argued with you. The "history" in this film was basically a complete rewrite of the history and the people. I guess you could say "loosely based" on historical events. Several of the other actors were cartoon villains... just not very good.
So three stars for the magnificent Viola Davis but racing to see this movie ASAP was a bit of a waste. If you're a huge fan it's worth catching her performance but otherwise give it a pass.
The bad: basically everything else. The "African" accents were cartoon bad. Really they were borderline offensive. If you'd played a clip of this and told me it was a 70's black exploitation movie I would not have argued with you. The "history" in this film was basically a complete rewrite of the history and the people. I guess you could say "loosely based" on historical events. Several of the other actors were cartoon villains... just not very good.
So three stars for the magnificent Viola Davis but racing to see this movie ASAP was a bit of a waste. If you're a huge fan it's worth catching her performance but otherwise give it a pass.
This is an insult on those people who were killed/enslaved, sold and used. History should not be rewritten and slavers should never be glorified! It completely baffles me how this movie is excused and celebrated by some people. (But I guess that's what happen when the education system fails people and children grow up learning their entire skillset from social media...)
Hollywood should have create a female empowerment movie about a different story, because this whole thing is just entirely infuriating.
I never would have imagine that one day I will see a movie come out about slavers being the good guys and somehow this should be about empowerment? What are you empowering? Betrayal? Slavery? The exploitation of people who are conquered, beaten, stolen from their homes? This is morally disgusting, no matter how well executed the movie is.
Hollywood should have create a female empowerment movie about a different story, because this whole thing is just entirely infuriating.
I never would have imagine that one day I will see a movie come out about slavers being the good guys and somehow this should be about empowerment? What are you empowering? Betrayal? Slavery? The exploitation of people who are conquered, beaten, stolen from their homes? This is morally disgusting, no matter how well executed the movie is.
Did you know
- TriviaProducer Maria Bello visited Benin in West Africa to research the Agojie, and returned to the US, convinced she had found a great movie pitch. The project then stayed in development hell for years, first at STX (which only offered $5 million for the budget), then at TriStar. Only after the massive success of Black Panther (2018) was the film greenlit with a $50 million budget.
- GoofsThe Dahomey Mino (or Dahomey Amazons) did not fight to end slavery but were in fact prolific slavers themselves. The Dahomey enslaved thousands of fellow Africans until the kingdom was defeated by the French in 1894.
- Crazy creditsThere's a mid-credits scene, in which Amenza is seen performing a memorial ceremony for her fallen sisters, pouring salt and whiskey over their weapons. She says their names aloud, and the last name we hear is Breonna.
- SoundtracksTribute to the King
Written and produced by Icebo M
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- La mujer rey
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $50,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $67,328,130
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $19,051,442
- Sep 18, 2022
- Gross worldwide
- $97,562,514
- Runtime2 hours 15 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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