For a few years now I’ve been pretty leery about seeing
movies starring Cuba Gooding Jr. since I’ve usually been very let down by them. Life of a King piqued my interest since it’s based on a real story in
Washington DC. This is one of the times
that I have been surprised and pleased with what I saw. While it’s another one
of those movies about a person going into a school and helping kids that everyone else has forgotten about, it’s well done and in an angle different enough that it’s doesn’t become just a fill in the numbers affair.

Cuba Gooding Jr. gives a great performance as Eugene here. This performance reminds you why he was in so many of those great dramas in
the 90s and why he has that Academy Award. He gives a subtle performance as Eugene especially when showing his frustration and caring. The film does what you'd expect it to, but doesn’t make it too saccharine. Gooding all but carries the film as
the other actors, who are decent enough, don’t really grab you
amazing. Malcolm Mays, who plays Tahime, is an exception. Mays plays a kid from a bad home who's on the line between a normal life and a life of crime and boy does he sell the
struggle well. Along with Gooding’s Eugene these two characters are the main
reason to watch this film.
In terms of negatives of the film Paula Jai Parker, who is usually a
fine actress, doesn’t really have much to do here. Her character
is just terrible and for no apparent reason. There is no depth on why she
acts or continues to treat her son Tahime in the way she does. Richard T. Jones’
character Perry is also poorly handled as a temptation for Eugene to fall back
into the life of this bad influence. Also the film is
color corrected in a gray and very washed out way. You lose some details in the
shots by going that route. It could’ve pushed the values more so that darks and
lights didn’t seem so close.