The collection of sources analyzes the film Sinners across critical, commercial, and personal dimensions, beginning with an academic document that outlines the structural inequalities and biases hindering the global distribution of black films. Director Ryan Coogler explains in an interview that he made the historical vampire thriller as a highly personal project and a tribute to his late uncle, prioritizing it over a major sequel due to an innate need to tell this story. Coogler elaborates that the film utilizes the supernatural creatures as a powerful metaphor for systemic oppression and cultural exploitation against a backdrop of 1930s Jim Crow Mississippi. Despite the systemic barriers discussed in the case study, the Collider article highlights the movie’s explosive commercial success, confirming the film rapidly became one of the highest-grossing domestic horror films of all time within its first five days. Furthermore, Coogler successfully negotiated a deal to regain ownership of the film after 25 years, a unique contractual achievement that emphasizes the project’s deep, non-franchise importance to him.