Jerrod Carmichael: Rothaniel
- TV Special
- 2022
- 55m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Features Jerrod Carmichael in a standup comedy show at the legendary Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City.Features Jerrod Carmichael in a standup comedy show at the legendary Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City.Features Jerrod Carmichael in a standup comedy show at the legendary Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City.
- Director
- Writer
- Star
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 3 wins & 7 nominations total
Jerrod Carmichael
- Self
- (as Rothaniel Jerrod Carmichael)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A therapy session where the viewer/audience is the therapist & Jerrod is the incredibly vulnerable patient attempting to come to grips with his truth amid the myriad of lies he grew up in. It is moving in its honesty, humor, & questions it dares ask.
But I don't see that as a bad thing.
It's been awhile since I've seen a new comedian who didn't think 'funny' was to tear others down.
Jerrod's humour comes from the pain/truth of his life. That's both funny and sad.
The throw away line that he could never bring someone home to meet his Mom, will stick with you. For you hope that it's not true; but feel for him because he believes it.
By the end, you will cheer for him to find happiness and acceptance.
It's a rare performance well worth your time.
It's been awhile since I've seen a new comedian who didn't think 'funny' was to tear others down.
Jerrod's humour comes from the pain/truth of his life. That's both funny and sad.
The throw away line that he could never bring someone home to meet his Mom, will stick with you. For you hope that it's not true; but feel for him because he believes it.
By the end, you will cheer for him to find happiness and acceptance.
It's a rare performance well worth your time.
I have watched all of his specials and was never impressed by any of them. It seemed to me his POV always had a mean streak in them, one that was unpleasant to watch. I decided to watch this one because of all the hype and was glad I did. His usual mean persona.was gone, replaced by an exposed and vulnerable person who was also funny and smart. I think all that meanness was the result of him hiding who he was. I'm glad he took the plunge and decided to finally tell the truth about himself. That is where his true funny will emerge. I expect great things from him now.
Transcendent, honest, and modern. A conversation about the secrets we keep, and I mean conversation. It's open, and breezy. With talk with the audience scattered throughout. But that doesn't take away from the structure, it is beautifully structured.
I won't spoil anything, despite news outlets talking about parts of the special already.
JUST WATCH IT, you won't regret it.
Incredible. Simply incredible.
I won't spoil anything, despite news outlets talking about parts of the special already.
JUST WATCH IT, you won't regret it.
Incredible. Simply incredible.
Can a performer be quietly electric?
I believe so. Jerrod Carmichael is so real and raw here I was tempted, towards the end, to lace my fingers over my eyes and hold my breath in suspense.
In 'Rothaniel,' director Bo Burnham perfectly sets the mood with a long opening shot of Carmichael gradually coming into focus walking along the street under a light snow before entering a dim, hushed Blue Note.
The opening, the stage set, Carmichael's demeanor-all spoke of what was to come even before he opened with, "I want to talk about secrets."
For 57 minutes that felt like a lightning strike eternity, Carmichael spilled, interwoven with jokes, very funny commentary, amidst a two-way conversation with the crowd that made his bare intimacy much warmer than just stand-up meat. Long-held family secrets, personal secrets, real fear.
The fact that he may've fought tears toward the end (I cried briefly), to me, only burnishes the fact that Carmichael is funny as hell here. If you have ever been estranged from a parent, or hit with family secrets so deep they made you question who you are, you may just laugh even harder. I did.
I believe so. Jerrod Carmichael is so real and raw here I was tempted, towards the end, to lace my fingers over my eyes and hold my breath in suspense.
In 'Rothaniel,' director Bo Burnham perfectly sets the mood with a long opening shot of Carmichael gradually coming into focus walking along the street under a light snow before entering a dim, hushed Blue Note.
The opening, the stage set, Carmichael's demeanor-all spoke of what was to come even before he opened with, "I want to talk about secrets."
For 57 minutes that felt like a lightning strike eternity, Carmichael spilled, interwoven with jokes, very funny commentary, amidst a two-way conversation with the crowd that made his bare intimacy much warmer than just stand-up meat. Long-held family secrets, personal secrets, real fear.
The fact that he may've fought tears toward the end (I cried briefly), to me, only burnishes the fact that Carmichael is funny as hell here. If you have ever been estranged from a parent, or hit with family secrets so deep they made you question who you are, you may just laugh even harder. I did.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in Les 74e Primetime Emmy Awards (2022)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Джеррод Кармайкл: Ротаниел
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime55 minutes
- Color
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By what name was Jerrod Carmichael: Rothaniel (2022) officially released in Canada in English?
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