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Hailee Steinfeld’s Multi-Racial ‘Sinners’ Role Had “Personal” Impact

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Despite the undead nature of her latest role, Hailee Steinfeld had a profound connection to the character.

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The Oscar nominee recently opened up about how she related to her multi-racial role in Ryan Coogler‘s Sinners, which premieres April 18 in theaters, as she reflected on “all the questions … that this movie raised for me.”

“It had such an impact on me personally,” she told People. “Therefore, I feel like the least it can do is make an impact on those that watch it. I think it affected all of us so personally and so deeply, and I do believe that you feel that and you see that when you watch this movie.

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Steinfeld, who is part-Black and part-Filipino on her mother’s side, plays a multi-racial vampire named Mary in the 1930s southern-set horror.

“I’m so grateful for the deeply personal connection that each of us have [to the material], mine being with my family history, with my grandfather, who I wish was still here to answer all the questions that I have that this movie raised for me and making this movie raised.

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Ryan Coogler interview

Michael B. Jordan with Ryan Coogler on the set of ‘Sinners’

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Warner Bros.

Michael B. Jordan stars in Sinners as twin WWI vet enforcer brothers, Smoke and Stack, who come home to start a blues club in 1930s Mississippi, but discover a supernatural evil waiting for them.

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Coogler previously explained to Deadline that the film came from a very personal place for him as well, following a death in his family.

“Look, it all started with my Uncle James, who was from Mississippi. He passed away while I was working on Creed. He was, for a long time, the oldest man in our family, and he lived in close proximity to me,” he explained. “And his house was close enough that I could walk to it as a kid. I spent a lot of time with him, man. And he would listen to blues music. That was his thing.”

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Coogler added, “I would find myself listening to those blues records when I wanted to think about him, and I would feel like I was conjuring him, if the song was good enough and loud enough. If the room was dark enough, I would feel like he was right there listening with me.”



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