Don't go into seeing #CharmingTheHeartsOfMen (2021) expecting to see #MississippiBurning. It's not even close.

The end of the film was very rushed, and really this was a lengthy character study of the ills of Southern U.S.A. in the early 1960s, from the viewpoints of various single women.

Historical accuracy is not the movie's forte. If #KelseyGrammer is truly playing Howard W. Smith, which is *not* stated, then this is a very suspect 'inspired by true events' tale.

#AnnaFriel is alright, and her character #TinaIvlev's, and #PaulineDyer's are the main foci.

There are a few unresolved plot points, such as the bank man, but then they weren't resolved in reality in the movie's set time period, either. The Equal Credit Opportunity Act was over a decade in the future.

Filmed in #Georgia, it wasn't clear in-universe what part of the South it was supposed to be. Smith represented #Virginia.

This is roughly as passable as #WhereTheCrawdadsSing.