Fruitvale Station is a highly impressive debut from 26-year-old writer-director Ryan Coogler. It's made with skill and confidence, evoking sensitive performances from everyone involved, even as it treads controversial ground, especially in light of the recent Trayvon Martin ruling in which George Zimmerman, accused of killing an unarmed black teenager, got off scot free. The way Coogler tackles this similar material is not to make a politically charged statement about what happened to Oscar Grant, but to depict the last day of this 22-year-old's life by using a highly personal, intimate, and small scale docudrama approach, which has the effect of gutting the audience emotionally and thereby leaving the most powerful impact of all.
We have one day to get to know Oscar Grant, the young man from Oakland who was shot and killed by a white police officer in the early morning hours of New Year's Day, 2009. That may seem like not enough time to get involved with who he is, his problems and his feelings, but the small slice of life we are provided with is infused with so much detail, a vivid evocation of time and place, and three great performances that bring a sense of real energy and authenticity to the story. Michael B. Jordan is the lead, and in what should be a star-making performance, he manages to convey the charisma that makes Oscar so popular with his friends and family, as well his hotheadedness and reckless behavior that has already landed him a couple of convictions for drug-dealing in the past. Oscar isn't whitewashed or made into a saint- he's a nice kid with potential, who's nevertheless troubled and saddled with a girlfriend and a 5 year old child at a young age, struggling to make it in a working class life that hasn't offered him many opportunities.