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Home»Movies

Michael Jai White leads a raw new family drama in theaters

Dorcas OnasaBy Dorcas OnasaApril 19, 2026 Movies No Comments4 Mins Read
Michael Jai White
Photocredit : Shuutterstock.com/Andrea Raffin
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The kind of story that does not announce itself with spectacle but instead pulls viewers in quietly that is what The Secret Between Us aims to be. Now playing in AMC Theatres, the new theatrical drama stars Michael Jai White and Lisa Arrindell in a film directed by Tamera Hill and executive produced by R&B veteran Keith Sweat. At its core, it is a movie about what happens when the past refuses to stay buried.

The film centers on a married couple whose lives are disrupted when a son from a previous relationship unexpectedly re-enters the picture. What follows is not a melodrama built on confrontation for its own sake, but a slower, more honest reckoning with accountability, empathy, and what it truly takes to grow both individually and as a family unit.

A story that feels familiar for a reason

White, widely recognized for action-heavy roles, found himself drawn to this project precisely because the subject matter hits close to home for so many people. The actor, who plays Jack, a man whose self assurance is thoroughly tested by the arrival of this unknown son, has spoken about how widespread this kind of family experience actually is the hidden sibling, the secret kept for years, the quiet rearrangement of everything once thought settled.

What makes Jack compelling is not his strength but his confusion. There is a point in the story where he genuinely does not know how to move forward, and that uncertainty is rendered with care. White’s background in martial arts, a discipline he has long described as being as much about internal reflection as physical skill clearly informed how he approached the role. The philosophy that real growth happens when you face what is uncomfortable translates directly into Jack’s arc.

Lisa Arrindell brings Wanda to life with quiet strength

As Wanda, Arrindell plays a woman navigating the particular pain of betrayal while refusing to let that pain define her entirely. Her performance stands out because it does not lean into the expected emotional beats. Instead of fury or collapse, Wanda moves through the story with a measured humanity that makes her deeply watchable.

What Arrindell brings to the film is a nuanced understanding of how Black women specifically process grief and betrayal not with the explosive release that screens so often demand, but with a more layered, complicated kind of hurt that eventually has to make room for the other person’s pain as well. The film asks whether acknowledging someone else’s wounds diminishes your own, and Arrindell’s portrayal argues convincingly that it does not.

Forgiveness as a process, not a resolution

One of the film’s most deliberate choices is refusing to wrap forgiveness in a tidy bow. Both White and Arrindell have spoken about how holding onto trauma ultimately damages the person carrying it far more than anyone else. That idea is baked into the structure of the film itself healing here is not presented as a moment of catharsis but as a series of difficult, conscious decisions made one at a time.

This is particularly meaningful in how the film treats emotional expression. There is a tendency in both life and storytelling to absorb a blow and keep moving. The Secret Between Us insists on slowing down, naming the pain, and sitting with it long enough to understand what it is asking of you.

Shot fast, felt deeply

The film was completed in just 10 days a constraint that, rather than diminishing the final product, appears to have sharpened it. There is an immediacy to the performances and the pacing that suits a story about people caught off guard by circumstances they never anticipated.

Written and produced by Keith L. Underwood, The Secret Between Us arrives as a quiet but firm reminder that some of the most compelling stories are the ones happening in living rooms and around dinner tables the ones families have been carefully not talking about for years. The Secret Between Us is in AMC Theatres now.

AMC Theatres Black cinema family drama forgiveness Keith Sweat Lisa Arrindell Michael Jai White new movies Tamera Hill The Secret Between Us
Dorcas Onasa

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