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Official Trailer
Trailer

"I Want To Be A Marine" Official Clip
Clip

Clip
Clip

Interview with Elegance Bratton
Featurette

"Arrival" Official Clip
Clip

"Birth Certificate" Official Clip
Clip

"Meet the Filmmakers" Official Featurette
Featurette

Official Preview
Clip

"Behind the Scenes" Official Featurette
Behind the Scenes

Elegance Bratton on The Inspection
Featurette

Elegance Bratton & Cast on the Making of The Inspection
Featurette

'The Inspection' with Jeremy Pope, Raúl Castillo & more
Featurette

Elegance Bratton, Jeremy Pope, Gabrielle Union & More on The Inspection
Featurette

Official Promo
Teaser

THE INSPECTION Q&A with Gabrielle Union, Jeremy Pope, Elegance Bratton | TIFF 2022
Featurette
Social
C
A review by CinemaSerf
7.0
Written on February 25, 2023
"French" (Jeremy Pope) is an itinerant gay man who, estranged from his prison office mother "Inez" (Gabrielle Union), has concluded that the only way to stop himself becoming subsumed into an underworld of drugs, disease and most likely death, is to join the US Marines. Having failed at just about everything else, his mother is somewhat sceptical, but to bootcamp he goes where he encounters the stereotypically brutish gunnery sergeant-major "Laws" (Bokeem Woodbine). It's all based on a true story directed and adapted from his own story by Elegance Bratton, so jeopardy here there isn't. That said, Pope and Woodbine are both on good form as the former runs the gamut of a tough training regime coupled with a prejudice against his sexuality that proves distinctly dangerous. His trainer offers him nothing by way of support or sympathy, intent on instilling the most primitive of "survival of the fittest" mentalities amongst all of his recruits. It is a little procedural, but it's still an interesting tale from a man who resisted the temptations to jack it all in - and sends a clear message of perseverance and determination that does resonate to a certain, predictable, extent. Essentially, though, it's a television movie that doesn't really need a cinema screening and though watchable and important, it isn't a story that will linger in the memory for long afterwards, I'm afraid.
































































