Jimmy

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Jimmy
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The penalty position in the 2018 World Cup, one of the most controversial moments in football history, was not just an incident on a field; It also sparked much deeper issues such as identity, belonging and social oppression. While Jimmy brings the story of former Swedish national team player Jimmy Durmaz to the big screen, it does not present a pure sports biography to the audience; It reveals the struggle of an individual with migration roots to both belong to his country and remain himself. Durmaz's experience as a Swede of Assyrian origin paints a familiar picture for many second- and third-generation immigrants in Europe. If a mistake you make on the field can suddenly be attributed to your roots, name and past, this burden is much heavier than what an ordinary athlete shoulders. Director Yashaddai Owens handles this dilemma with a visual and dramatic language and does not put football ahead of the main story; On the contrary, it puts humanity in the background and brings humanity to the fore. The main character, played by Benny O. Arthur, portrays both an athlete and an individual trying to exist in a society. This identity crisis narrative that overlaps with sports creates emotional resonance even for non-fan viewers. Jimmy tells not about a goal or a match, but about the invisible weight on a person, and this weight is enough to keep the audience in the story.

Rating: 0/10
Release Date: July 31, 2026
Runtime: 1 hr 7 min
Original Name: Jimmy
Languages: English
Country:

US

United States of America
Popularity:1.2133

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Brent Marchant

November 19, 2024

6/10

From 1948 to 1957, author James Baldwin relocated from New York to Paris in hopes of finding a more fulfilling life, both personally and creatively. But what was that experience actually like for a young African-American man who had grown wary of the relentless discrimination he had faced in his homeland, both on the basis of his race and sexual orientation? That’s what this documentary-style release attempts to envision, following a young Baldwin (Benny O. Arthur) in his explorations of the Cit...

y of Lights, told from an impressionist standpoint primarily in cinema verité format made to look like vintage archive footage. The result is an experimental, decidedly ambitious undertaking from writer-director Yashaddai Owens that works beautifully on some levels but misses the mark on others. “Jimmy” effectively captures the curiosity and wonder of a wide-eyed adventurer exploring a new world, one in which he’s able to enjoy freedoms that weren’t accessible to him in America. It’s a place where he could now feel a sense of liberation unlike anything he had experienced before. However, in depicting these revelations, the filmmaker puzzlingly seems to run out of material unexpectedly quickly, a rather perplexing outcome for a picture with scant 1:07:00 runtime that features an innately flamboyant, charismatic protagonist in a rich, culturally and artistically diverse environment. Instead, the narrative falls back on a lot of footage that feels more like filler than insightful and engaging imagery. In addition, having been filmed in modern-day Paris, far too little effort has been made at trying to conceal or exclude anachronistic elements that get caught on camera, an oversight that some might call nitpicking but that occurs all too often to ignore. Some aspects of Baldwin’s character receive short shrift, too, such as precious little attention paid to the emergence of his gay lifestyle, an element that almost feels intentionally underplayed. The same can be said about his observations of life and the world, material that adds much when incorporated into the film but that is employed far too seldomly for my tastes. However, perhaps the most bewildering element here is the production’s inclusion of a somewhat lengthy home movie-style travelogue of Istanbul at the film’s outset with no images of Baldwin anywhere in sight. While it’s true that the author lived in the Turkish metropolis on and off for many years, he didn’t spend time there until after his days in Paris, so the presence of this footage is quite baffling, ill-timed and, ultimately, fundamentally extraneous. To be sure, “Jimmy” is to be commended for its casting of a lead who bears an uncanny resemblance and demeanor to the picture’s protagonist and for tackling an undertaking as audacious as this, but the end result comes across as a case of the filmmaker’s reach exceeding his grasp for a project that, sadly, deserves better.

Frequently Asked Questions

Jimmy was released in 2026.

Jimmy has a runtime of 1 hr 7 min (67 minutes).

Jimmy belongs to the following genres: History, Drama.