Jacob Latimore, Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Charlie Plummer star in Gully. Violence begats violence in ‘Gully’ TAMMYE NASH | Managing Editornash@dallasvoice.com Gully is a heavy, heavy movie.
It has an almost physical weight that sits on your shoulders and on your chest as you watch. It sits on your mind and your heart.
It is a weight that stays with you long after the credits have rolled. That’s not a bad thing; no one should be able to put this movie aside and ignore what it has to say.
Gully is set in what the promotional material calls “a slightly dystopian” version of Los Angeles. I’m assuming they mean it is only “slightly imaginary,” because I’m pretty sure that this depiction is real life for a lot of people.