Selma (2014)

Movie · 2014 · History, Drama · 2h 8m · PG-13 · English

Curator score: 7.7/10 (208.2K ratings)

One dream can change the world.

Overview

"Selma," as in Alabama, the place where segregation in the South was at its worst, leading to a march that ended in violence, forcing a famous statement by President Lyndon B. Johnson that ultimately led to the signing of the Voting Rights Act.

Ratings

Director

Ava DuVernay

Production

Plan B Entertainment, Cloud Eight Films, Ingenious Media, Harpo Films

Cast

David Oyelowo, Carmen Ejogo, Tom Wilkinson, Giovanni Ribisi, Tim Roth, André Holland, Colman Domingo, Common, Stephan James, Omar J. Dorsey, LaKeith Stanfield, Oprah Winfrey, Tessa Thompson, Cuba Gooding Jr., Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Kent Faulcon, Lorraine Toussaint, Alessandro Nivola, David Dwyer, E. Roger Mitchell

Where to watch

Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential

Curator Review

Verdict

A serious, humane civil-rights drama with strong performances and a focused sense of purpose. It’s especially effective as an organized-action film rather than a standard inspirational biopic, though a few familiar biographical beats and some heightened dramatization keep it from feeling flawless.

Best for

  • viewers interested in civil-rights history and political struggle
  • fans of grounded historical dramas
  • people who value performance-driven prestige filmmaking
  • audiences looking for an urgent, socially conscious film

Skip if

  • you want a light or purely uplifting watch
  • you dislike historical dramatization or biographical compression
  • you prefer fast-paced, action-heavy storytelling
  • you’re looking for a broad, feel-good crowd-pleaser

Overview

Selma is one of the more disciplined and forceful American historical dramas of its era. Rather than treating its subject as a monument, it frames the movement as a living, strategic, and dangerous collective effort, with pressure building from the street level to the highest offices of power. That approach gives the film real tension and moral clarity.

Worth noting

David Oyelowo anchors the film with a performance that is both measured and emotionally open, while Ava DuVernay keeps the material intimate without losing sight of its political scale. The film is at its best when it shows negotiation, organizing, and resistance as interconnected forms of action, and when it lets the cost of that struggle register in faces, bodies, and silences.

Bottom line

It does lean on some familiar biopic conventions, and a few sequences are more overtly engineered than the rest. Even so, the overall effect is powerful and timely: a reminder that progress is fought for, not granted, and that the tactics of power can remain stubbornly recognizable across generations.

Top Letterboxd reviews

davidehrlich (4★) · 584 likes

filed under “historical revolutionary epics i’m really glad were not directed by Ridley Scott." Bilge Ebiri's comparison to the films of Francesco Rosi was spot on. this isn't a sweeping biopic in the traditional sense (and it falters during the few moments it concedes to those tropes), it's a precisely modulated story of organized action (and reaction). understated, humane, and hugely valuable.

demi adejuyigbe (4★) · 535 likes

Just had a conversation with my friend where she reminded me the reason we saw this movie in theaters was because she was having a bad day and wanted to see something that would make her realize other people have had it way worse. Absolutely fucking hilarious.

Mike D'Angelo (3.5★) · 431 likes

64/100 Got very worried early on, because DuVernay's handling of the Birmingham church bombing is atrocious—not only does she shoot the buildup to the explosion with various doomy portents (close-ups of little hands sliding down bannisters, etc.), she isolates one of the little girls on the stairs in a way that telegraphs what's about to happen, to the point where I actually said "And boom!" out loud about one second before the bomb went off. (Sadly, this obnoxious comment disturbed… more

matt lynch (3.5★) · 342 likes

Depressingly timely, not just because inhumanity persists but because power hasn't changed its tactics much.

SilentDawn (4★) · 194 likes

Simultaneously quietly reverberating and viscerally horrific; Ava DuVernay's Selma is a fiery and subdued look at racial tensions in the mid-1960s. David Oyelowo as Martin Luther King Jr. silently stuns, portraying the historic man with vulnerability and a classical presence. Carmen Ejogo, playing King's wife, is just as vigorous and hushed, and their conversations are as powerfully intense as anything released in 2014. The direction is quite good, with some bravura set-piece moments, and the cinematography is elegant in all… more

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Topics

civil rights, historical drama, political biopic, racial injustice, activism, 1960s, social realism, state power, prestige drama, American history

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