Sing | Sing

Colman Domingo’s Divine G is the anchor. He is a man of immense dignity and intelligence—a writer, an actor, a mentor—who is serving time for a crime he did not commit. Domingo plays him not as a martyr, but as a man fraying at the edges. You see the exhaustion of hope, the weight of a system that refuses to see him as reformed. When he receives news of yet another parole denial, the silence in the theater is deafening. It is a masterclass in restraint.

The film is also a quiet indictment of the American carceral state. It never preaches, but the facts speak for themselves. You see men who have spent twenty years in a cage becoming experts in Shakespeare. You see the absurdity of a system that spends billions on concrete and bars but scraps for pennies to fund a program that actually lowers recidivism rates. RTA graduates have a recidivism rate of under 5%, compared to the national average of over 60%. The math is simple, but the will is lacking. Sing Sing

When the credits roll, you are left with a lingering question: If a man can find redemption and purpose within the walls of Sing Sing, what is our excuse for the rest of the world? Colman Domingo’s Divine G is the anchor

What makes Sing Sing structurally brilliant is its casting. Kwedar made the radical decision to fill the cast not just with Hollywood actors, but with several alumni of the actual RTA program, including Maclin himself. This blend of professional craft and raw, lived experience creates a texture that feels impossible to fake. When Divine Eye describes the feeling of being unseen, or when an actor stumbles over a line in rehearsal, you aren’t watching a performance of pain—you are witnessing the real thing, filtered through the safety of art. You see the exhaustion of hope, the weight

On the surface, the premise sounds heavy: a drama set inside the maximum-security Sing Sing Correctional Facility in New York. But to dismiss Sing Sing as just another "prison movie" would be a grave mistake. It is not a story about punishment or despair, though those shadows lurk in every frame. Instead, Sing Sing is a soaring, heartbreaking, and unexpectedly joyous testament to the transformative power of art, the complexity of friendship, and the indomitable nature of the human spirit. The film is based on the real-life Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA) program, one of the country’s first prison-based arts programs. For decades, a group of incarcerated men at Sing Sing have come together to stage original plays and classic productions. We are introduced to this world through the eyes of John “Divine G” Whitfield (a career-best performance by Colman Domingo) and a volatile, newly arrived inmate named Clarence “Divine Eye” Maclin (playing a fictionalized version of himself).