Double Play (film)

Double Play is a 2017 drama film directed by Ernest Dickerson. It is based on Curaçaoan author Frank Martinus Arion's internationally acclaimed Dutch-language novel Dubbelspel.[2] The title Double Play refers to a move in dominoes where a player can play a final domino on either end of the snake, earning that team double points.

Double Play
Theatrical release poster
Directed byErnest Dickerson
Produced byLisa Cortes
Gregory Elias
Rose Geddes
Yaron Schwartzman
Volkert Struycken
Written byEvan Jones
Alaric Smeets
Based onDubbelspel by Frank Martinus Arion
StarringLennie James
Music byJay Wadley
CinematographyPatrick Murguia
Edited byStephen Lovejoy
Production
company
Cortés Films
Double Play Production
Distributed byParadiso Entertainment
Release date
  • January 27, 2017 (2017-01-27)
(International Film Festival Rotterdam)[1]
  • May 25, 2017 (2017-05-25)
(Netherlands)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Ostrik, now a grown man working as a doctor in the Netherlands, returns to his childhood home on the island of Curaçao and recalls his experiences with his family and neighbors there during a time of colonial unrest in the 1970s. Each Sunday his father Bubu would play dominoes with his friends while discussing a variety of issues as Ostrik would observe. After chasing bus drivers away from an important location for taxi cabs, Bubu becomes the likely choice for president of a newly formed taxi cab union. That Sunday the union meeting for the election is scheduled to be held at his house but the drivers witness Bubu experiencing a day-long losing streak at dominoes and they begin to lose confidence in him until he gives a rousing speech about revolution. Before he has the opportunity to become president, he gets into a fight with the man his wife is sleeping with and loses his life. Ostrik returns years later to confront his father's killer over a game of dominoes.

Cast

Production

The film is adapted from Curaçaoan author Frank Martinus Arion's Dutch-language novel Dubbelspel. Filming took place on Curaçao.[3]

gollark: How do you intend to quantify "labour"? Because hours worked is stupid.
gollark: So I can just not work and get infinite things? Great.
gollark: Do we work everyone as hard as possible? What if they want but don't need things?
gollark: It is too poorly defined.
gollark: The correct political/economic system is me as supreme world dictator. I would work something good out probably.

References


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