In the Heights
The movie tells the story of an immigrant community coming together to forge its own future through commerce.

In the Heights, a movie musical based on the hit Broadway production by Hamilton mastermind Lin-Manuel Miranda, is set in the heavily Dominican New York City neighborhood of Washington Heights. At heart, it's the story of an immigrant community coming together to determine its own future.
Sometimes that future is forged by fighting with a labyrinthine immigration bureaucracy and racist attitudes. (There's an admittedly too on-the-nose subplot about DREAMers.) But politics are only part of the story.
By and large, In the Heights portrays immigration as an entrepreneurial act. So it is fitting that the community's future is forged through commerce. The plot concerns a neighborhood bodega, but there's also a salon run by two neighborhood women, a taxi dispatch run by another local, a friendly lawyer who handles tough immigration cases, and even a piragua cart run by a character played by Miranda.
These businesses are consistently portrayed as sources of both hard-earned personal wealth and valuable social connection, especially when the neighborhood faces a crisis—a power outage—late in the second act. Charging people money in exchange for useful services, and keeping those services going in tough times, is how the characters make their own lives better and how they help their neighbors.
The movie doesn't quite bang you over the head with this message, but it's not subtle, either: The final, post-credits scene shows Miranda's street-cart shaved ice becoming a hot commodity with the block's residents. In response to rising demand, he raises prices, and in the process he outcompetes the Mister Softee truck that had been his biggest rival. It's an entrepreneurial immigrant success story and a fitting grace note for a movie that ebulliently celebrates the value of communities built on buying and selling.
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By and large, In the Heights portrays immigration as an entrepreneurial act. So it is fitting that the community's future is forged through commerce.
Is this movie set in the 1950's or something? Everybody knows the way to get ahead these days is to become a "community activist" and lobby the government for free shit. Working for something you want is white supremacy thinking.
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Sounds like a terrible movie.
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We enjoyed it. Admittedly, partly because it was our first trip out to watch a movie in a theater in over a year.
Couldn’t believe the attempts to cancel the movie, and Miranda, because it didn’t have a high enough count of dark-skinner Puerto Ricans. Well, it’s exactly what is to be expected these days. He should have told them to shove it instead of apologizing.
Lol, who'd you see it with sarc, your ex wife who got custody of your kids, or the daughter you molested which resulted in your ex wife getting fully custody of your kids?
Zero sympathy for him. None. If you apologize, then you agree with the racism. Plain and simple. Imagine being one of the actors that worked for him, and then watching him publicly apologize for casting you.
These people are odious.
What the movie is about is irrelevant. The primary task of a musical is to have good music. There is none in this movie.
Couldn’t believe the attempts to cancel the movie, and Miranda, because it didn’t have a high enough count of dark-skinner Puerto Ricans. Well, it’s exactly what is to be expected these days. He should have told them to shove it instead of apologizing.
Thank you,
Love Status
Suderman isn't keeping up. In the Heights is highly problematic.
Summary: The People of "Color" are all too light skinned.
Harry Reid would support any of them for POTUS.