The Man in My Basement explores racial energy dynamics utilizing horror theatrics in an onerous and plodding try at a thriller. Creator Walter Mosley adapts his novel for the display screen with director Nadia Latif, making her characteristic movie debut; their mixed efforts have stylistic benefit, however fall woefully brief in addressing thorny points. The function reversal that drives the narrative turns into misplaced in a myriad of different subplots in regards to the Black protagonist. His journey of addressing self-worth wanted higher integration with the movie’s total message, which in itself could possibly be seen as divisive. What we get are N-bombs dropped for shock worth and declarative prejudice that is casually dismissed.
The Man in My Basement takes place in the course of the early ’90s in Sag Harbor Hills, New York, a historic African-American group nestled on prized Lengthy Island beachfront. A drunk Charles Blakey (Corey Hawkins) performs playing cards at his home with shut associates Rickey (Jonathan Ajayi) and Clarence (Gershwyn Eustache Jr). The dialog turns into heated when Clarence tells Charles he must discover a job and cease being shiftless. Clarence then implies that Charles’ deceased mom can be ashamed of his present state. Charles insults Clarence in a private manner that results in a bodily altercation.
A Poor Racial Discourse

The Man in My Basement
- Launch Date
-
September 12, 2025
- Runtime
-
115 Minutes
- Director
-
Nadia Latif
- Writers
-
Nadia Latif, Walter Mosley
- Producers
-
Diane Houslin, John Giwa-Amu, Dave Bishop, Len Rowles
A hungover Charles will get a shocking customer the following morning. Anniston Bennet (Willem Dafoe) knocks on his door with a weird, seemingly random supply. He’d prefer to hire the basement for 2 months and is keen to pay a staggering sum. Charles, who desperately wants cash to stop foreclosures, declines Anniston. He would not need a roommate and is unnerved by a creepy white man simply stopping by out of the blue. Anniston leaves his enterprise card in case Charles modifications his thoughts.
Charles continues to drink with the mere pennies he has left. His aged Volvo virtually runs out of fuel on the way in which to the financial institution, the place he curses the mortgage officer after being given per week’s discover to pay a few of his excellent mortgage. Then Rickey tells Charles about Narciss (Anna Diop), a neighborhood historian and appraiser who might be able to assist him promote the previous artifacts in the home. However that will take months. Charles has almost run out of time, leaving him little selection however to name Anniston and settle for his puzzling association.
Corey Hawkins as Charles
The movie opens with Charles as a recognized commodity. He is a lazy and aimless drunk. The one factor he has left is the home, which we be taught has been in his household for generations. (They have been among the many first Black individuals to settle in Sag Harbor Hills.) This reality means nothing to Charles, whose causes for staying are each simple and sophisticated. Charles has nowhere else to go, however traumatic occasions related to the home have him shackled there with guilt and grief.
The rub is that Anniston has no intention of leaving the basement for the agreed rental time period. He needs to be locked away behind bars, with Charles as his warden. This beautiful growth unnerves Charles even additional. Why is that this ostensibly loopy man right here? What’s he attempting to perform? Why did he select Charles and this home? Charles can kick him out in a heartbeat, however he wants Anniston’s cash.
The plot thickens to mud in a second act that embraces racial discourse in an unpleasant manner. Anniston’s a wealthy and highly effective white man in a society that lets him get away with every thing. So he has chosen a singular penance for his many terrible misdeeds. Overlook remedy or flagellation, being underneath a Black man’s lock and key’s the very best soul-cleansing various. It is time for the oppressor to get a style of his personal bitter medication, which he is perversely prescribed for himself.
A Satan’s Cut price
In the meantime, Charles has to wrestle with what his Black heritage actually means. That is primarily represented by African masks that hang-out Charles’ goals, forcing a disturbing reckoning together with his previous. Charles has carried out nothing together with his life whereas failing to grasp the values and wrestle of the place he got here from. He spirals into additional self-loathing and rage, as Anniston turns into the best vessel to vent his anger. You’ll be able to see the place The Man in My Basement goes from a mile away. Nobody is aware of that Anniston is there. A Black man holds Anniston’s destiny like a grasp with a slave.
There’s zero complexity or subtlety to the movie’s racial themes. There are clear villains to this story they usually have the least melanin. Mosley and Latif are heavy-handed with no shades of grey. They paint a damning image with a broad accusatory brush. That is a troublesome capsule to swallow as an impetus for Charles to get off his behind and make one thing of himself.
Latif achieves a modicum of thrills with discordant sounds, eerie lighting and disturbing imagery, however regardless of Charles’ hallucinations, the movie is not a haunted home story. As an alternative, the atmospherics gas an apparent flip that is clumsy in its execution. The Man in My Basement can finest be described as a hole train in reparations.
The Man in My Basement is a manufacturing of Andscape, B.O.B. Filmhouse, Good Gate Media and Protagonist Footage. It premieres September twelfth completely on Hulu.