A Thousand and One Poster

A Thousand and One (2023)

R Mar 31, 2023 Drama, Crime 1h 56m
67%
User Score
7.0/10
97%
81/100

Times change. Love stays the same.

Overview

Struggling but unapologetically living on her own terms, Inez is moving from shelter to shelter in mid-1990s New York City. With her 6-year-old son Terry in foster care and unable to leave him again, she kidnaps him so they can build their life together. As the years go by, their family grows and Terry becomes a smart yet quiet teenager, but the secret that has defined their lives threatens to destroy the home they have so improbably built.

A.V. Rockwell
Director

Top Billed Cast

Full Cast & Crew

Media

Terry Passes the Exam
Terry Passes the Exam
Clip
Inez Reassures Her Son
Inez Reassures Her Son
Clip
A THOUSAND AND ONE wins BEST FIRST FEATURE at the 2024 Film Independent Spirit Awards
A THOUSAND AND ONE wins BEST FIRST FEATURE at the 2024 Film Independent Spirit Awards
Featurette
A Failed Foster Care System Extended Preview
A Failed Foster Care System Extended Preview
Clip
A Thousand And One's A.V. Rockwell & Teyana Taylor Bond Over Their Love of Crooklyn | Five Firsts
A Thousand And One's A.V. Rockwell & Teyana Taylor Bond Over Their Love of Crooklyn | Five Firsts
Featurette
A.V. Rockwell on her film A THOUSAND AND ONE
A.V. Rockwell on her film A THOUSAND AND ONE
Featurette
How Family In A Thousand And One Is Beyond Bloodlines | Origin Story
How Family In A Thousand And One Is Beyond Bloodlines | Origin Story
Featurette
"Little Boy" Official Clip
"Little Boy" Official Clip
Clip
A Thousand and One's A.V. Rockwell On Authentic Representation in Casting | 60 Second Film School
A Thousand and One's A.V. Rockwell On Authentic Representation in Casting | 60 Second Film School
Featurette
"How We Met" Official Clip
"How We Met" Official Clip
Clip
Loading Wikipedia summary...

Similar Movies

Reviews

Sign in to write a review.
A review by CinemaSerf
Written on May 16, 2023

This features quite a strong performance from a convincing Teyana Taylor. She is "Inez" who decides that she wants to reclaim her young son "Terry" from his life on the streets of New York. What now ensues illustrates quite well the difficulties they both face as they both grow up with little by way of opportunity - or money - but determined to stick together despite their not always seeing eye to eye. Along the way, she marries "Lucky" (William Catlett), a decent man who offers some stability and it begins to look like "Terry" (by this stage played by Josiah Cross, but played well as a child by Aaron Kingsley Adetola) might just have a chance. Thing is, as the audience know by now, the relationship between mother and son is not as it seems - and the impending action of the authorities, co...

Read the full review on TMDb
A review by Brent Marchant
Written on January 3, 2024

It’s been said that a mother’s love for her child runs so deep that she’ll do virtually anything to protect her young. But is it possible to carry things too far? That’s a question raised in writer-director A.V. Rockwell’s debut feature about a mother with a criminal record (Teyana Taylor) who kidnaps her young son (Aaron Kingsley Adetola) out of foster care upon her release from prison. She questions the adequacy of the care he is receiving as a ward of the state, and so she snatches him from his foster caretaker and hides him away as she seeks to get her life together. Over the next 11 years (1994-2005), she largely succeeds at this, too, even in the midst of many challenges, including an often-uneven relationship with her former partner in crime (literally) (Will Catlett) and ...

Read the full review on TMDb
A review by MartyCrooner
Written on January 23, 2024

A story about a mother-son relationship and how it changes over the course of a decade. With a background setting of New York in the 90s and 00s, the movie depicts how issues like poverty, crime, race, and gentrification interact. Well acted with beautiful characters. Except the kid can be a little too sniveling at times. I mean, I get that there's childhood trauma and abandonment issues, but geeeeez....

Read the full review on TMDb
×