


‘Brian Banks’
A young football star and
his long road to exoneration

Aldis Hodge is a terrific young actor, straight out of “Straight Outta Compton,” “Hidden Figures,” the WGN America series “Underground” and soon to appear in, among others, the remake of “The Invisible Man.” He’s especially effective as a slow boil, letting a character’s inner life and torments bubble up vividly but naturally.
“Brian Banks” is somewhat less terrific — a conventionally made docudrama elevated by Hodge and his fellow performers, including Greg Kinnear, Melanie Liburd and Sherri Smith. But the story pulls you along, traveling a long, winding path from wrongful conviction to exoneration.
Years later, the woman got in touch with Banks on Facebook. Under video surveillance, in a face-to-face meeting, she recanted her testimony. But she wasn’t told she was being videotaped: a textbook example of inadmissible evidence. Banks’ longtime ally, champion and legal representation, Justin Brooks of the California Innocence Project, believed his client’s story. “Brian Banks,” on which Banks and Brooks served as executive producers, streamlines the full, fraught account into an inspirational message picture.
Kinnear can make the flattest of boilerplate dialogue — “The system is broken; it just doesn’t care” — sound like someone just thinking out loud and saying what’s on a generically written real-life character’s mind. As Banks’ prison mentor and spiritual turnaround wizard, Morgan Freeman brings the gravitas, while Smith (as Banks’ devoted mother) brings the gravitas plus the fervent Christian overlay ever-present in the movie.