
Tyler Perry's ‘Straw' stands with stressed-out single mothers everywhere
Few filmmakers portray the Black American experience with so much heart and so little finesse as Tyler Perry. Doesn't matter if his movies aren't art — they reach an audience whether they're comedies (his Madea movies), middle-class melodramas or period pieces like 2024's World War II-era 'The Six Triple Eight.' That last was a high point in a career of directing nearly 30 movies in 20 years, not counting Perry's many TV shows and stage plays — a run of inspired workaholism that has made the writer-director one of the most financially successful filmmakers of his generation.
Streaming on Netflix, 'Straw' is Perry's version of 'Dog Day Afternoon.' Anchored by a heroic if undisciplined lead performance by Taraji P. Henson ('Hidden Figures,' TV's 'Empire'), it finds solidarity with every overworked, underpaid, stressed-out single mother in a coldhearted America, even those who don't go to the extreme of shooting their boss and robbing a bank.
Technically speaking, Janiyah Wiltkinson isn't robbing a bank. A supermarket checkout clerk having the worst day ever, she just wants her paycheck cashed and happens to have a gun in her hand, prompting the teller (Ashley Versher) to panic and hit the silent alarm. Before that, we've looked on as Janiyah has gotten evicted from her apartment, been a victim of road rage from a psycho off-duty cop (Tilky Jones), had her car impounded, lost her job, seen her sick daughter (Gabby Jackson) taken away by social services and had her workplace robbed by gunmen with unexpected results. The teller pushing all the money in the bank at Janiyah instead of the $521 she's due is merely the final straw from which the movie takes its title.
'Straw' has a bone-deep empathy for the struggles of those living below the poverty line or just keeping their chins above it. While Perry sets up a familiar scenario, with an army of police outside the bank and a handful of hostages inside, the movie is really about Black women bonding across boundaries of class, profession and the law. The bank manager, Nicole (Sherri Shepherd), is well aware of how hard she's worked to get where she is and how much responsibility she has to help the people in her community. The hostage negotiator on the phone, Detective Kay Raymond (Teyana Taylor, a little too glam for the role), is a single mother who gives Janiyah the benefit of the doubt when her partner (Mike Merrill), her chief (Rockmond Dunbar) and a racist FBI agent (Derek Phillips) are all urging her to shoot first and ask questions later.
When one of the other tellers (Shalèt Monique) starts live-streaming from inside the bank and Janiyah's Job-like litany of woes goes out on the local news, 'Straw' brings in a supportive mob chanting for her freedom from behind the police line. Even some of the other hostages take her side, including a woman (Diva Tyler) who serves as Perry's wise elder, schooling the callow younger characters in the hardships of life. It's a cheering development in the midst of looming disaster, and what suspense there is comes from the fear that Janiyah — and maybe the others — won't get out of it alive.
'Straw' plays fast and loose with that fear in a wholly unnecessary penultimate scene, but it's already tripped over its own feet with a final-act twist that is simply one too many — one more piano falling on poor Janiyah's head after the whole orchestra has come crashing down. To her credit, Henson plays her role without false ennobling: Janiyah is a believable mess, a woman barely clinging to the bottom rung of the working class, and the movie is smart enough to hint at an entire system that keeps the Janiyahs of America running frantically in place.
Perry's not quite brave enough to tackle that system head-on, though, and he stands back while his star's performance turns chaotic and screechy — a big, heartfelt turn that could have used a lot more guidance. Likewise, 'Straw' has all the feels it wants and little of the art it needs. But there's nothing to suggest Tyler Perry would have it any other way.
Unrated. Available on Netflix. Contains language and potential violence. 105 minutes.
Ty Burr is the author of the movie recommendation newsletter Ty Burr's Watch List at tyburrswatchlist.com.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
16 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Big Take: The New Economics of Broadway
Broadway has always been a high-risk, high-reward kind of business — but with costs to mount a production higher than ever, producers are leaning into new strategies to try to recoup investments. Now, as Broadway wraps its highest-grossing season on record, the hottest tickets to celebrity-studded shows are going for upwards of $800. On today's Big Take podcast, we speak with two Tony Award-winning producers, Daryl Roth and Lucas Katler, about what it takes to succeed these days in show business, and we hear from Bloomberg Pursuits' Chris Rovzar about what Broadway's new economic reality means for tourism, for art and for what audiences pay at the box office.


Bloomberg
17 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Why Broadway Shows Cost So Much
Business Big Take Podcast On today's Big Take podcast: Tony Award-winning producers break down the new math of how to succeed on Broadway. Never miss an episode. Follow The Big Take daily podcast today. Broadway has always been a high-risk, high-reward kind of business — but with costs to mount a production higher than ever, producers are leaning into new strategies to try to recoup investments. Now, as Broadway wraps its highest-grossing season on record, the hottest tickets to celebrity-studded shows are going for upwards of $800.


Fox News
24 minutes ago
- Fox News
Happy Hour with Maksim Chmerkovskiy
Choreographer, ballroom dancing champion, and Dancing With the Stars alum Maksim Chmerkovskiy joins Kennedy for a toe-tapping Happy Hour. The dancer-turned-liquor connoisseur sips a transfusion made with his Tetra Kapa Vodka. He and Kennedy discuss the old-school ways to avoid a hangover, why traveling with kids is a nightmare, and how the Chmerkovskiys integrate dance into their everyday lives. Follow Kennedy on Twitter: @KennedyNation Kennedy Now Available on YouTube: Follow on TikTok: Join Kennedy for Happy Hour on Fridays! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit