
Octavia Spencer celebrates 'iconic' Sinners' duo Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordan for EW's 2025 Entertainers of the Year
If 2024 belonged to Brat, then 2025 unquestionably belongs to Sinners. While some have jokingly suggested that the resurgence of vampire films signals economic uncertainty, Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordan’s fifth collaboration proves something far more enduring: when the right creative forces come together, even the most familiar genres can feel revolutionary. Under Coogler’s direction and Jordan’s magnetic presence, vampires don’t merely return — they reign.
Sinners transcends the expectations of a blood-drenched period thriller. Yes, it features a pulsating soundtrack and striking visuals, but its true power lies in its ambition. Set against the backdrop of 1932 Mississippi, the film fearlessly weaves together themes of racism, xenophobia, religious ideology, and cross-cultural communication. Genre boundaries blur as the story unfolds into a bold meditation on identity, resistance, and survival. Ultimately, Sinners feels like a love letter to original storytelling — one signed unmistakably by Coogler and Jordan in vivid, blood-red ink.
One scene in particular stands out as pure cinematic alchemy. When Sammie (Miles Caton) performs inside Smoke and Stack’s juke joint — Jordan portraying twin brothers with remarkable distinction — the music seems to pierce the veil between worlds. Shamans and African tribal dancers appear alongside modern-day DJs, an electric guitarist, a ballerina, twerking clubgoers, and more. Time collapses, cultures collide, and the sequence becomes the kind of moment cinephiles dream about long after the credits roll. It is spectacle with purpose, and it reflects the creative trust that Coogler and Jordan have built over more than a decade.
That partnership, which includes Fruitvale Station, Black Panther, and all three Creed films, shows no signs of slowing. Their collaboration recalls legendary creative duos — Steven Spielberg with Harrison Ford or Tom Hanks — pairings so rare and effective that audiences feel personally invested in their continuation.
I first met Ryan and Michael when Ryan cast me as Michael’s mother in Fruitvale Station, the film that brought them together. What struck me immediately about Ryan, beyond his talent, was his humanity. His set was the most diverse and inclusive environment I had encountered in nearly 20 years of working in this industry. The cast and crew represented every ethnicity — Black, Asian, white, Indigenous, Latin — spanning generations, with women in key leadership roles. The atmosphere felt familial, intentional, and deeply respectful. That inclusivity wasn’t performative; it was foundational. Ryan’s script resonated with me on a personal level, and watching him work, I knew I was witnessing the rise of a filmmaker whose impact would be lasting.
We often overuse the word “iconic” until it loses meaning, but it is the most accurate way to describe Ryan and Michael’s work together. Ryan is a true auteur — a young visionary who refuses to compromise his voice while reshaping how the next generation of filmmakers approaches the creative process. His commitment to artistic integrity is especially vital at a time when stories from underserved communities, particularly Black stories, are increasingly challenged or marginalized.
Michael, too, has reshaped the cultural landscape. As an actor, director, and producer, his choices consistently elevate the material and expand representation on screen. His evolution behind the camera reflects a deep understanding of story, character, and responsibility. Together, Ryan and Michael create films that audiences don’t simply want to see — they need to see. The anticipation surrounding each of their projects, and the passion with which viewers engage them, is the clearest marker of excellence.
In an era when many filmmakers accumulate projects to remain socially visible, Ryan and Michael operate differently. They are deliberate. They find the story that demands to be told and then devote themselves fully to mastering it. That focus is evident in a filmography defined not by quantity, but by quality.
From Fruitvale Station to Creed, Black Panther, and now Sinners, their résumé stands as proof that originality, when executed with intention and craft, can also be commercially powerful. With Sinners, they once again demonstrate that new ideas — bold, challenging, and unapologetically specific — can thrive both artistically and financially.
Their work doesn’t just entertain; it leaves a mark. And in 2025, that impact feels more necessary than ever.
— As told to Mekishana Pierre
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