MOVIES PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 • THE BULLETIN MOVIES EMPHASIZE STICKING TOGETHER From left: Re- gina Hall, Tif- fany Haddish, Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Lati- fah in a scene from “Girls Trip” (2017). Submitted POUR OVER all the latest Brew news at DANDDRINKS M/LIFESTYLE/FOO CO N. TI LE UL DB WWW.BEN Celebrating a Decade on the Deschutes www.gregsgrill.com 395 SW Powerhouse Drive 541-382-2200 Advertise on this page for as little as $25 A WEEK • 541-383-0303 BY MAKENZIE WHITTLE • The Bulletin S ticking together is no easy task. Film always seems to throw protagonists into hairy situations and if they go in with a partner, sometimes they don’t always come out with one. But for the following movies and TV shows, they stuck it out. Whether romantic, platonic or familial the characters in the following list step up when they need to or are there in one way or another. This is also the fourth and final week of Black History Month meaning this week’s list focuses specifically on stories highlight- ing Black characters. ”A Wrinkle in Time” (2018) — I actually enjoyed this fantastical story based on Mad- eleine L’Engle’s 1962 young adult book more than a lot of people did (though I fully ad- mit it’s not altogether great and I have not rewatched it since it was released). It’s wild, gorgeous, big and broad and focuses on the story of Meg Murry (Storm Reid) and her little brother Charles Wallace (Oz Kalvan) as they enter an alternate dimension in order to save their father Dr. Alex Murry (Chris Pine) who is stuck there. Their journey tests them every step of the way and forces Meg to be both her little brother’s protector and the only one who can save their dad. Direc- tor Ava DuVernay takes the source mate- rial and gives it a bold world for the screen. It definitely is a kids movie though and at times it seems too broad, but it’s a nice fa- ther-daughter/sister-brother/friendship story. Stream it on Disney+ or rent it from Amazon Prime, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu or YouTube ”Black-ish” (2014-present) — The ABC single-camera sitcom has for seven seasons followed the upper-middle-class Johnson family headed by ad exec Dre (Anthony An- derson) and surgeon Rainbow (Tracee El- lis Ross) along with their five children and Dre’s parents who also live with them. The multi-generational family comedy follows most of the sitcom stylings of similar shows, but this one manages to throw in a few more serious episodes that discuss social justice, voting, and more recently COVID. Through all the antics and occasional seriousness, Dre and Bo always manage to work things Continued on next page