Jinn

    Jinn
    2018

    Synopsis

    Summer is a carefree teenage girl whose world is turned upside down when her mother abruptly converts to Islam and becomes a different person. At first resistant to the faith, she begins to reevaluate her identity after becoming attracted to a Muslim classmate, crossing the thin line between physical desire and piety.

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    Cast

    • Zoë ReneeSummer
    • Simone MissickJade
    • Kelvin Harrison Jr.Tahir
    • Dorian MissickDavid
    • Hisham TawfiqImam Khalid
    • Kelly JenretteRasheedah
    • Ashlei FousheeBlaine
    • Damien D. SmithDawud
    • Maya MoralesTati

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Variety

      Jinn is the rare coming-of-age story that doesn’t simply pat kids on the head and tell them they just need to love themselves. Instead, Mu’min holds her characters accountable for the way they discombobulate each other’s lives, while giving them the space to do better, if they can figure out what better is.
    • 90

      Los Angeles Times

      Jinn is a familiar story, told in a cultural context rarely depicted on film, and Mu’min’s approach is so lyrical and empathetic that it feels completely fresh and new. It’s a remarkable film with sensitive and stirring turns by Renee and Missick in the mother-daughter roles.
    • 88

      RogerEbert.com

      Jinn holds several beautiful elements, especially in its central mother-daughter story.
    • 80

      New York Magazine (Vulture)

      For the most part, Mu’min’s script is pleasantly inquisitive, and its refusal to arrive at easy answers is its engine. Jinn is a special little film, one that never lets its complicated, contradictory characters become abstractions, but instead revels in all the disparate elements that make them who they are.
    • 80

      L.A. Weekly

      There’s nothing preachy about Jinn, even though Nijla Mu’min’s elegant debut feature is about a teenager coming to terms with her mother’s newly embraced religion.
    • 80

      The New York Times

      Jinn may end a little too neatly after challenging so many of the conventions of its genre, but it’s easy enough to look past.
    • 75

      The A.V. Club

      Equally importantly, it shows how much an artist like Mu’min can bring to otherwise well-trod material, and how valuable underrepresented points of view like hers really are.
    • 67

      The Film Stage

      At a time when Islam has become weaponized as a synonym for ISIS, we need glimpses at its positivity and humanity. That doesn’t mean Mu’min sanitizes things (a lot happens that could reinforce reductive stereotypes of social conservatism and familial oppression), only that she’s creating healthy representations at once relatable, laudable, and flawed. Nothing is black and white.