Movies

‘Anything’s Possible’ Review: Teenagers’ Romance Flowers

Senior high school Kersa (Evalein) is delighted to discuss her favorite animals on her YouTube channel and reassures the fact that her name tends to derive from the uniqueness of the animals. I am. The details stand out in the fun and diverting feature film director’s debut, “Anything’s Possible,” by actor, singer, and writer Billy Porter. It’s currently being streamed on Amazon Prime. Whether intentional or unintentional, young adult romantic comedies struggle with uniqueness and seek to unravel its meaning.

It’s also YouTube that Kersa discusses and documents her migration experience, and while she’s nominally out of school, she finds it most comfortable to talk about this aspect of her life on the camera. Her mother of her Kelsa (Reney Elise Goldsbury) loves and supports her, but for fear that her transparency defines her, she’s her “awakening point” Will be her tool for. She usually avoids talking about it.

It begins to change when she meets Cal (Abu Bakr al-Ali), a cool, cute and sensitive artist boy. As romance flourishes, their relationships are what they can and cannot eliminate in the real world where they have friction between their responsibilities and self-preservation, alliances, communities, and (implications) of harmful political context. Forces you to look up.

From time to time, Reign and Ali feel struggling to identify fascinating chemistry under the hands of Porter’s addition to the internet but unobtrusive. Both can play naturally towards the camera, reigning with a bewitching laugh and playing ants with pensive eyes. But what can be clearly defined in their performance is more rough.

This movie is inconsistent and deadlocked like the main character. We need a high enough stake to be a credible teenage viewer because we are uncertain about how central identity politics and their impact are, but we just want to improve human quality. .. The brilliance of the story. Unlike its protagonist, “anything is possible” does not fully understand whether it wants to be unique or to be another child in school.

Anything is possible
It is rated PG-13 for language, thematic material, sexual material, and easy teenage drinking. Execution time: 1 hour 36 minutes. Watch on Amazon Prime Video.

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