IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Follows Huey P. Newton's life. He escaped to Cuba to avoid prosecution for murder with the help of Bert Schneider, the Hollywood producer behind Easy Rider, as well as a few other celebrity ... Read allFollows Huey P. Newton's life. He escaped to Cuba to avoid prosecution for murder with the help of Bert Schneider, the Hollywood producer behind Easy Rider, as well as a few other celebrity radicals.Follows Huey P. Newton's life. He escaped to Cuba to avoid prosecution for murder with the help of Bert Schneider, the Hollywood producer behind Easy Rider, as well as a few other celebrity radicals.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
On June 14th AppleTV+ released the finale of its 6-episode docudrama about one of the Black Panther Party's founding members, Huey P. Newton. The series is based on a book by Joshuah Bearman and was produced by Don Cheadle who even directed a couple episodes. The show follows Newton as escapes to exile in Cuba with the help of some film producers under guise of making a major motion picture titled The Big Cigar. The premise of the series seemed cool, and I was excited to learn more about the Black Panther Party.
To put it plainly, this was a perfectly forgettable series. It wasn't bad but it wasn't great either. I felt that the acting was good, especially by P. J. Byrne who I felt stole the show as one of the movie producers, and it was cool to learn about this piece of history. Unfortunately, I found the show as a whole to be on the boring side and gave it an overall rating of 6/10.
To put it plainly, this was a perfectly forgettable series. It wasn't bad but it wasn't great either. I felt that the acting was good, especially by P. J. Byrne who I felt stole the show as one of the movie producers, and it was cool to learn about this piece of history. Unfortunately, I found the show as a whole to be on the boring side and gave it an overall rating of 6/10.
One of the things I love most about the various series created by Apple TV+ is uncovering gems like The Big Cigar that you might not normally see on other streaming services. This series is entertaining from start to finish. Even if you don't know anything about the Black Panther movement, the story of Huey P. Newton is fascinating. From the opening disclaimer, the viewer knows that this is basically Newton's version of the story, so if you're a stickler for 100% accuracy, you might not appreciate the liberties that have been taken. Nonetheless, this doesn't detract in any way from what is a great series. The acting is stellar from top to bottom, starting with Andrew Holland's standout performance as Newton. Despite the character's many flaws and often unlikeable attributes, Holland still manages to create empathy for Newton. Although the subject matter is mostly serious, The Big Cigar is often very humorous and there is enough action to keep the series moving along. Like me, even if this isn't a series you think would interest you, try watching it and you'll likely be hooked. This is great entertainment.
Apple is getting good at making historical miniseries: Franklin, Manhunt and now The Big Cigar. You can think of each as a snapshot of the overall American saga of the search for freedom, in the 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries.
The Big Cigar is the most cogent of the trio, focused just on one aspect of Huey P. Newton's life: fleeing trumped up murder charges with the help of some Hollywood admirers.
André Holland and Alessandro Nivola lead a very accomplished cast. They should have gotten some Emmys attention. The story has many "oh come on" moments but apparently is largely true, even the part about the underwater Jesus who had it in for the Black Panthers.
The one fault of the miniseries is the over-reliance on jarring flashbacks, with several flashbacks per episode that makes the whole thing jump around like a jack in the box on meth. It's only six episodes long, can't we just have one episode be the flashback and the rest normal?
The Big Cigar is the most cogent of the trio, focused just on one aspect of Huey P. Newton's life: fleeing trumped up murder charges with the help of some Hollywood admirers.
André Holland and Alessandro Nivola lead a very accomplished cast. They should have gotten some Emmys attention. The story has many "oh come on" moments but apparently is largely true, even the part about the underwater Jesus who had it in for the Black Panthers.
The one fault of the miniseries is the over-reliance on jarring flashbacks, with several flashbacks per episode that makes the whole thing jump around like a jack in the box on meth. It's only six episodes long, can't we just have one episode be the flashback and the rest normal?
Shouldn't have been a show it should've been a movie. There are some nice actors in there. The story is interesting, but not as good as you would hope it would be but it's entertaining for if you do not have anything else to watch that's why it is ranked almost as low as the top 20 on Apple TV there's other shows that aren't even on anymore and it's even beating it. It doesn't seem like it's close to the history. The history is vague, not a lot of people will understand this show because it's not popular history and I think they should've done a better way of showing off the black panthers and their movement instead of making this over the top movie of a movie.
This show is brilliant. It has all the great elements in terms of events (action, romance, suspense); above that, it's brilliantly written (you can tell that from the dialogues), and it's reasonably historically accurate - in any case, in terms of highlighting the Black Panthers. This show does justice to history.
Why does it have such bad reviews?? Beats me. Is it too smart? That's a possibility - most series are mindless nowhere stories, while this actually has a point, and historical background. Is it because most of the people reviewing it can't cope with the facts that a poor minority was actually more progressive and accomplished more things than the majority what conspired against it? Maybe Americans just still aren't ready to accept all the messed up stuff their country / government / nation / etc. Did.
In any case, this show is absolutely fantastic, and it puts the finger right where the booboo's at. As far as I'm concerned, I'm recommending it to everyone, and I'm sure it will get more recognition in the future.
Why does it have such bad reviews?? Beats me. Is it too smart? That's a possibility - most series are mindless nowhere stories, while this actually has a point, and historical background. Is it because most of the people reviewing it can't cope with the facts that a poor minority was actually more progressive and accomplished more things than the majority what conspired against it? Maybe Americans just still aren't ready to accept all the messed up stuff their country / government / nation / etc. Did.
In any case, this show is absolutely fantastic, and it puts the finger right where the booboo's at. As far as I'm concerned, I'm recommending it to everyone, and I'm sure it will get more recognition in the future.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilming in Toronto Ontario Canada
- How many seasons does The Big Cigar have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Велика сигара
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
