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The Lisa Dixon (Aja Naomi King) Boxing Day character poster. |
Aja Naomi King fans can breathe relief.
Our How To Get Away With Murder alum is the leading lady in Aml Ameen’s holiday romance, Boxing Day. King lights up the screen as Lisa Dixon, the American love of Jamaican-British writer, Melvin McKenzie (played by the film’s writer/director Ameen). Lisa is an accomplished casting agent moving up the film production ladder. She has been granted the opportunity of a lifetime— working with the Oscar winning director Peter Jackson in New Zealand! She’s also having a baby— but Melvin hates children!
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Lisa (Aja Naomi King) is trying to keep her co-worker and friend Chantal (Rochelle Rose) from acting ratchet in public.... |
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...and it just cannot be helped. |
The first person Lisa tells is not Melvin. It is Chantal aka Ms. London. Unfortunately, Chantal is the funny, curvy Black woman side character trope that needs to die immediately. After the moment in the office hallway, playing up a raunchy caricature, Chantal is never seen onscreen again. Now Chantal can celebrate sex and all that comes with it. No problem in freely expressing the joys of consummation. Yet if Black screenwriters believe that the over the top version is better than the Mammy stereotype, they need to revisit. Since men can be portrayed as anything—no matter their age and weight— this courtesy should extend towards curvy Black women too. Otherwise, they remain trapped in this seemingly inescapable box. Chantal serves the purpose to make tawdry jokes onscreen and prop Lisa up via phone call.
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“To Lisa, my darling love, the Voyage is you and I, this lifetime to the next.”— Melvin McKenzie’s dedication in his new novel, Voyage to Atlantis. |
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One of two gorgeous blown up images in Melvin’s utterly romantic proposal— Lisa (Aja Naomi King) and Melvin (Aml Ameen). |
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Part two. |
Now Lisa and Melvin’s proposal scene is sweet and romantic— the Isley Brothers’ classic hit For the Love of Love playing, the sprinkled red rose petals, the live acoustic band. Melvin goes all out in traditional fashion. He even sings the lyrics. Although the audience is entering Melvin and Lisa’s relationship right after they’ve obviously reached a comfortable place. The two blown up photos convey their happiness, their photogenic chemistry. This proposal could have suggested where they first met, how they fell in love, and/or why is now the time to marry her. Behind every good marriage proposal is a story about the couple. However, the nice and intimate gesture at their home is interrupted by Lisa’s puking. She returns and accepts. They agree to keep it secret. Yet Lisa does not reveal the job offer or her baby news.
And Melvin— well, he is keeping big secrets too.
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The Prodigal Son Melvin (Aml Ameen) has returned with his Queen Lisa (Aja Naomi King). In Coming to America— Prince Akeem falls in love with an American named Lisa as well. |
Melvin launches his book tour for his potentially successful new book Voyage To Atlantis in his London hometown with his newly cemented fiancée in tow. Lisa soon meets Melvin’s estranged relatives. Melvin fled due to his mother and father divorcing hence friction exists between Melvin, his parents, and younger siblings. He also abandoned his old girlfriend Georgia— a global singing sensation. It is wonderful to see a Black couple traveling together— see Lisa interact with Melvin’s fun, dynamic family. Almost everyone instantly loves her— the uncles especially. It also prepares her for the road ahead to New Zealand— a road that may or may not contain much inclusivity on a Jackson set. The biggie is that Lisa is a casting agent— she can hypothetically change all that for Jackson. Meanwhile in London, Lisa learns a different blackness— coming into that unique British comedy from the Black Caribbean perspective. Then Georgia happens to run into Lisa— a huge fan. They build a quick rapport until Lisa realizes that Georgia is Melvin’s ex-girlfriend.
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In front of the hotel that the trio are conveniently staying at, Lisa (Aja Naomi King) hits it off with Georgia (Leigh-Anne Pinnock) right on the street.... |
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...and take a selfie together. |
There are cheeky nods to Love Actually— the recreated card scene and even the cinematic color scheme for example. Yet My Best Friend’s Wedding elements are undeniable. Unlike the obsessive Julianne Potter’s clandestine sabotage schemes, Georgia is hellbent on winning back Melvin right before Lisa’s eyes. When Georgia throws significant emotional weight into serenading the Aretha Franklin classic Say A Little Prayer For You, (instead of the humor that George Downes and company display at the family brunch), Melvin is pulled in and Lisa notices. Now Lisa is no longer cool with Georgia.
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Lisa (whose believable excitement is purely contagious) is all smiles listening to Melvin’s gift— and dances joyously to Donaeo’s Party Hard. |
The fierce competition between Lisa and Georgia incessantly drags on with even Aretha (haha)— Melvin’s sister and Georgia’s assistant— quick to defend Georgia to Lisa. It could have been a complex triangle— something refreshing and unique versus two grown women competing for a man. It did not even have to be a triangle at all. Obviously, Melvin chose Lisa. Instead Georgia’s jealousy increases scene by scene— heightening at Melvin’s big family gathering. The game playing uncles treasure both Georgia and Lisa— the history and the future. Lisa stands her ground and strikes out her claws against Georgia’s sly remarks— letting it known that she refuses to be intimidated. While the ladies in one triangle battle using dominoes and snark— the triangle between Josh and Joseph becomes violent. Artist and poet Josh is desperately wooing Joseph’s ex Allison and the threatening Joseph wants him to leave her alone.
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Lisa (Aja Naomi King) is not blind. |
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Melvin (Aml Ameen) is captivated by Georgia’s vocals. She is talented. |
Highlights include Lisa’s terrible British and Jamaican accent, Lisa and Chantal rapping together over the phone and bonding over the Spice Girls, Melvin’s deep conversations with both of his parents which offered him introspective on his unresolved resentment issues, and Aretha initiating the laughter filled cupcake fight— which in the aftermath made everyone look like victims in a paintball game. Plus, Melvin’s relationship with his siblings began a healing journey— Aretha coming around to liking Lisa and helping her brother win his girl back. These heartfelt moments that Melvin’s Caribbean family share are familiar in ways that oceans and continents cannot change.
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Aretha (played terrifically byTamara Lawrance, far right) orchestrates the food fight to ease tension. |
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A frustrated Shirley (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) gives Melvin advice. |
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And another triangle between cousins: Josh (also Melvin’s younger brother played by Sheyi Cole) and Joseph (Samson Kayo) battling for Allison (Yasmin Monet Prince) comes to a rather amusing conclusion. |
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Aretha (Tamara Lawrance) and Melvin (Aml Ameen) bond. |
The ending is feminist in nature— Lisa and Georgia working together to create the perfect outdoor forgiveness concert and Melvin accepting Lisa’s terms and conditions. It may seem overly sappy and cheesy. The sentiments are very endearing. Most past and present romance films feature women who drop their lives and choose the man. Their whole entire identity rests on love. Some do not travel the world. Some quit school. Some quit jobs. In the beginning, Lisa had internalized doubt and fear— simultaneously learning about her pregnancy and receiving a rare job offer. She realized that she could do both with or without Melvin. She had a resilience about herself— in the face of a new city, Melvin’s family, and his ex— and persevered. If things did not work out, Lisa Dixon was going to be okay. Chantal was more than ready to meet up with her in New Zealand too.
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Lisa holds her own playing dominoes with the Uncles and Georgia’s father. |
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She needs no help from her boo. |
Overall, Boxing Day accomplishes its mission— telling a warm, fluffy story about the complications of love and its sacrifices through the Black lens. King— having experienced questionable material in the past— definitely has a fine quality screen presence. She can always turn rubbish into gold. Oscar nominee Marianne Jean-Baptiste is absolutely delightful as Shirley, Melvin’s divorced mom— hiding her white lover from everyone and knowing Lisa’s secret before Melvin. Her comedic timing was just what the film needed. The whole family antics were great— the bickering, the food, the dancing. Ameen has promise in acting, screenplay, and direction too. Hopefully, his next feature steps it up a notch.
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Lisa and Melvin’s heads form a heart. |
So although Boxing Day has a few minor problems, it has enjoyable moments worth revisiting during the holiday season. Stay for the rolling credits too— the outtakes are hilarious.
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