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Trailer Thelma - Official Trailer

The feature directorial debut of Josh Margolin, THELMA is a poignant action-comedy that gives veteran Oscar® nominee June Squibb (NEBRASKA) her first leading role and features the final performance of trailblazing actor Richard Roundtree (SHAFT). Squibb, who did most of her own stunts in the film, plays Thelma Post, a feisty 93-year-old grandmother who gets conned by a phone scammer pretending to be her grandson (The White Lotus’ Fred Hechinger) and sets out on a treacherous quest across Los Angeles, accompanied by an aging friend (Roundtree) and his motorized scooter, to reclaim what was taken from her. Parker Posey, Clark Gregg, Nicole Byer, and Malcolm McDowell also star.


Inspired by a real-life experience of Margolin’s own grandmother, THELMA puts a clever spin on movies like MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE, shining the spotlight on an elderly grandmother as an unlikely action hero. With infectious humor, Margolin employs the familiar tropes of the action genre in hilarious, age-appropriate ways to tackle aging with agency. In the first leading film role of her 70-year career, Squibb portrays the strong-willed Thelma with grit and determination, demonstrating that she is more than capable of taking care of business – despite what her daughter Gail (Posey), son-in-law Alan (Gregg), or grandson Danny might believe.
 

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Whew. For a moment there I was afraid someone had decided Thelma & Louise needed a prequel. Well, two prequels, presumably.

I had a GURPS GM use that pair as NPC agents of a "karmic correction service" that hopped around spacetime fixing cosmic injustices. They'd been recruited when their car landed in the swimming pool on top of the cloaked flying saucer that was hovering just below the cliff they drove off of. I've never been able to decide if the concept was stupidly awesome or awesomely stupid, but I have to admit the ending of the film does leave the possibility of that being their real fate open. The camera doesn't follow them all the way down, after all.
 


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