3 Key Films That Inspired Queen & Slim, According To The Director

Queen and Slim are depressed

Queen & Slim is an ambitious and powerful movie, and watching it you’d never expect that it was from a first time feature filmmaker. And yet, it is the first venture into that particular realm for Melina Matsoukas, who has had a long and successful career in directing music videos before making this particular leap. It’s an impressive venture that balances a variety of tones and genres, and would have been a challenging project for a veteran to take on, let alone someone looking to establish their particular voice on a new stage.

The reason the film succeeds is because Matsoukas emerges with the feature as an exciting potential auteur – and as I recently learned during a recent interview with the filmmaker, that vision was constructed with some particular inspirations in mind. In the making of the movie she recognized all of the different elements at play in Lena Waithe’s script, and drew from particular sources. And while she didn’t give me a full list of all the titles that had their part to play in the making of Queen & Slim, she did highlight three in particular.

DMX in Belly

Belly

Like Melina Matsoukas, director Hype Williams was well-established in the world of music videos when he decided to make his feature debut with the crime drama Belly, and it was that particular title that the Queen & Slim was first to identify when discussing the films that inspired her work. It’s not so much that there are specific narrative elements in the 1998 movie that the filmmaker noted, but instead the way that the cinematography captures the skin tone of the characters.

Offering high praise to Williams, Matsoukas explained,

Belly by Hype Williams has influenced me so much as a filmmaker. The way he's able to celebrate black culture with the lens, the way that he highlights us. I really consider him the godfather of modern day black cinema. He really redefined a visual language for my generation. And the way that he was able to play between something that was really commercial and beautiful and artful all at the same time. It was really intriguing to me as a filmmaker.

Anyone who has ever seen work by Hype Williams recognizes it immediately – the basic definition of an auteur – and it’s exciting that Melina Matsoukas is implementing elements of it into her work. It’s something that can be seen in the way that Queen & Slim is lit.

In The Mood For Love

In The Mood For Love

While it’s true that it’s the crime drama aspect of Queen & Slim that drives the narrative, romance is a key subgenre at play, as one of the most important aspects of the movie is the relationship between the titular characters – which starts as “bad first date” and evolves into something much deeper as they find themselves on the run from the law following a horrific encounter with the police.

In determining the best way to portray this on-the-run romance, Melina Matsoukas turned to the great Wong Kar-wai, and specifically his 2000 film In The Mood For Love:

I was thinking about making a love story, and I was trying to figure out like what my favorite film was in terms of passion, and that's In the Mood for Love by Wong Kar-wai. That tone, and those long languid moments and how he just allows their story to develop on screen without always having to be dependent on a script, but how all the elements of their environment kind of add to that passion and richness that these two characters have between them - that was really important. And I wanted to create literally that mood for love in a similar way.

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The Wong Kar-wai film follows a man (Tony Leung) and a woman (Maggie Cheung) who discover that their respective spouses have been cheating on them, and while sharing in their shared grief together start to develop stronger feelings for each other. That’s clearly not the circumstances faced by the characters in Queen & Slim, but it’s easy to see how Melina Matsoukas would learn from the way that the pacing of the relationship plays out.

Y Tu Mamá También in a car

Y Tu Mamá También

On top of everything else, Queen & Slim is also very much a road movie, as the eponymous outlaws make their way from Ohio to Louisiana in their attempt to evade the law and escape to freedom. The episodic nature of the storytelling does occasionally leave them on foot, but a great deal of the film is set within the interior of various cars, and Melina Matsoukas was challenged to find a way to make the cinematography interesting and not feel repetitive.

Obviously there are many classic and brilliant road movies out there, but in this case Matsoukas reflected on work from yet another brilliant filmmaker, namely Alfonso Cuarón. The man shot what is considered one of the best car sequences of all time in the making of Children of Men, but for inspiration purposes, the Queen & Slim director found herself looking at 2001’s Y Tu Mamá También:

When I was thinking of car films and road movies and odyssey, and how to shoot a car – obviously that's really challenging for a filmmaker cause you're in this really tight space… But I knew we would spend a lot of time in a car, and so I was trying to figure out how there could be a progression to the way I shot the car; how it should mimic their relationship and their connection with each other. And the film that I looked to for that was Y Tu Mamá También.I love how [Alfonso Cuaron] was able to shoot the car in different ways. Sometimes the camera is outside as the car travels through the landscape, and the environment becomes another character. And sometimes the camera is inside the car, and we're actually a camera on the journey with them. I thought it was a really interesting approach to shooting a car that wasn't expected. So I looked to that to help me in my approach to how to shoot these cars.

All of this culminates in a vision that is uniquely Melina Matsoukas’ in Queen & Slim, and the results are tremendous. The film stars Daniel Kaluuya and Jodie Turner-Smith, and will be in theaters for your consumption early this week, arriving everywhere on November 27th.

Eric Eisenberg
Assistant Managing Editor

Eric Eisenberg is the Assistant Managing Editor at CinemaBlend. After graduating Boston University and earning a bachelor’s degree in journalism, he took a part-time job as a staff writer for CinemaBlend, and after six months was offered the opportunity to move to Los Angeles and take on a newly created West Coast Editor position. Over a decade later, he's continuing to advance his interests and expertise. In addition to conducting filmmaker interviews and contributing to the news and feature content of the site, Eric also oversees the Movie Reviews section, writes the the weekend box office report (published Sundays), and is the site's resident Stephen King expert. He has two King-related columns.