This ‘Sinners’ Star Knew You’d Have Feelings About That Grace Scene

This ‘Sinners’ Star Knew You’d Have Feelings About That Grace Scene

This ‘Sinners’ Star Knew You’d Have Feelings About That Grace Scene

Ryan Coogler’s Sinners is one of the most important movies of the year for a lot of reasons. There’s the fact that it’s a phenomenal genre-chameleon film that’s unapologetically Black; also, that Coogler broke the minds of Hollywood bigwigs by owning the rights to his movie. Sinners is also one of the most talked-about releases in recent memory and is therefore subject to folks having opinions about what could’ve been avoided in the period-piece vampire epic. Namely, that infamous scene with Grace Chow—a moment its actor and Coogler were aware would get quite the reaction from audiences.

In a recent feature by Variety, Li Jun Li spoke about the camaraderie she felt with co-stars Hailee Steinfeld, Wunmi Mosaku, and Jayme Lawson. She also said Coogler engendered a working environment where she didn’t feel like she had to make herself smaller as an Asian American actress, something she’s experienced in other movie productions. During the interview, Li acknowledged that she knew her character was going to get some shit from audiences for a pivotal moment in the film’s climax where she invites Remmick’s growing vampire horde into the juke joint.

The infamous scene was spurred by Remmick threatening the life of Grace’s daughter, but as far as some audience goers were concerned, Grace’s “crash out” led to a lot of fan-favorite characters dying. Speaking with Variety, Li said she anticipated the reaction to what she characterized as a “morally questionable and controversial decision.” It got to the point where she pulled Coogler aside to discuss the scene.

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“I said, ‘Why is it that she has not considered anyone else’s lives before doing what she does?’” Li recounted. “And he simply answered, ‘Because she’s a mother.’ There was no other explanation to it.”

Li went on to reveal that Coogler added dialogue to the scene, having Grace and Smoke (Michael B. Jordan) argue about trying to wait out the night rather than fight.

“That scene didn’t exist initially,” she continued. “And I talked to Ryan and said, ‘We need something there because she has very little to show for herself, and when she invites them in, she is going to be absolutely hated. I think we need to remind people a little bit about the context.”

Variety concludes this bit of behind-the-scenes info is a testament to Coogler’s uncanny ability as a director to collaborate and listen to his cast to build a film like Sinners. Returning to Li’s point, viewers who hate on Grace are overlooking the obvious: Remmick’s hive-minded legion of vampires would only swell the longer they lingered in the juke joint. Cutting them off at the root, striking down as many as possible, was the smarter play than waiting idly.

Was it an emotionally selfish move? Sure. But to Coogler’s point and how the film was bound to end (in a big brawl), Grace did nothing wrong. Argue with a wall.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.





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