10. “I’m a Virgo” (Prime Video)
In Boots Riley’s Prime Video parable, men can fly high above the streets. Guns aren’t just guns — they’re laser rifles. Giants walk among us. Yet the people of Oakland are, well, the people of Oakland — they’re your friends and neighbors. Their joys are universal, and their problems feel all too real. “I’m a Virgo” balances its brilliant imagination against recognizable truths in ways that make the former feel irresistibly fantastic and the latter foolishly constricting. If we can dream this big, then why do we let earthly impediments make us feel so small?
Riley’s seven-episode series is anchored by its writer-director’s beguiling world-building and star Jharrel Jerome’s endearing, joyful performance. As Cootie, the 13-foot-tall teenager at the center of “I’m a Virgo,” Jerome conveys curiosity and conviction in equal measure. He may have been raised in a sheltered environment — by an aunt and uncle (Carmen Ejogo and Mike Epps, respectively) who feared what the public would do to their colossal child — but he’s still a kid, eager to get out there, find his friends, and make an impact. Cootie’s Oakland odyssey is at once surprising and foreseeable; going out for burgers with your buds isn’t quite so easy when you can barely fit in the restaurant (let alone afford enough double-doubles to satiate an enormous appetite), but the allure, the satisfactions, the fun, they’re all the same. Adjustments must be made, and it’s only when people, places, and things refuse to accommodate Cootsie do situations get tricky. It’s only a small world when we make it one, and no one knows that better than an actual giant.
For more, read Ben Travers’ SXSW review of “I’m a Virgo” and Eric Kohn’s behind-the-scenes feature on its creation.