‘Blindspotting,” the directorial debut of Carlos Lopez Estrada, stalks the streets of Oakland with a heightened, spoken-word flow, passionately freestyling on race, police brutality and gentrification through a searing story about two friends: one black, one white.
Though stylistically scattershot and often overstated, the funky rhythm of “Blindspotting” undeniably finds a pulse. That’s overwhelmingly thanks to the chemistry between its two talented stars — Daveed Diggs, the “Hamilton” Tony-winner, and his longtime pal Rafael Casal — whose characters’ relationship, like in a Tennessee Williams play, steadily simmers until it boils over in an emotional, theatrical showdown.
Diggs plays Collin, who has just days until his probation is over for a violent incident vaguely referred to as a “fire technicality.” He and Miles (Casal), his more hotheaded lifelong friend, are Bay Area movers who trade poetic versus along their routes while cursing the influx of hipsters to their once grittier neighborhood.
Collin is the cool, composed one, trying to lay low and get his life back on track. Miles, with a grill in his teeth and righteous fury at the changing face of Oakland, is buying a gun to protect his girlfriend and their young son. Their paths feel increasingly divergent, even as their devotion to one another remains deeply, sweetly sincere.