There are several problems with the movie Eenie Meanie , starting with the fact it is called “ Eenie Meanie ”. Another big one though is that in spite of that puerile title it endeavours to take itself, for the most part, seriously; like a genuine, dramatic crime movie with a pair of heroes who might be a latter day Bonnie and Clyde. More power to debut writer-director Shawn Simmons, who does seem honestly compelled by these characters and their personal stakes, but his tonally counter-intuitive title and character -which seem positively winking in nature- set the movie on a bad disjointed path right from the get. And I think even he knows it, consciously dropping “Eenie Meanie” from the most critical sequences. Not that it particularly helps them. For its silly juvenile sound, the “Eenie Meanie” moniker comes from a rather tragic situation -bestowed on a girl Edie as a young teenager by a gangster as well as her drug addict parents, exploiting her as a getaway driver for criminal jobs...
The Netflix drama starring Vanessa Kirby in a performance far out-pacing the quality of the movie itself is becoming a streaming subgenre. She got an Oscar nomination for it in Pieces of a Woman , easily the strongest of them and still a pretty good movie overall; less successful though was Italian Studies -curiously atmospheric but fairly dull beyond the efforts Kirby put in. And Night Always Comes is firmly in the same territory. Though it too has some good moody filmmaking courtesy of Andor director Benjamin Caron, it is a movie that seems principally developed to give Kirby a juicy performance and not a lot else. In this facet, along with the subject matter it deals in, Night Always Comes is quite reminiscent of To Leslie , the 2022 film carried on the back of Andrea Riseborough to a surprise Oscar nomination, in which the lead actress “de-glamourizes” themselves to play a troubled woman struggling through poverty. To Leslie was much more of a full-blooded charact...