The crux of the film is the tension after Louis Farrakhan gave a shout-out to Tamika Mallory and apparently launched into one of his anti-Semitic screeds, and Mallory apparently took the resulting backlash as anti-black.
There is only one dialog in the movie, really. a meeting between Mallory and Rachel Timoner, senior rabbi at a synagogue in Brooklyn. Perhaps surprisingly they all give Farrakhan a pass on his anti-gay hate. Mallory clumsily deflects from her endorsement of Farrakhan, and antisemitism is relegated to it "can only be seen as linked to Islamophobia" and one white guy holding up a sign.
The irony is lost in the identities
There is only one dialog in the movie, really. a meeting between Mallory and Rachel Timoner, senior rabbi at a synagogue in Brooklyn. Perhaps surprisingly they all give Farrakhan a pass on his anti-gay hate. Mallory clumsily deflects from her endorsement of Farrakhan, and antisemitism is relegated to it "can only be seen as linked to Islamophobia" and one white guy holding up a sign.
The irony is lost in the identities