Age, Identity, and Saying What Matters

Read Time:4 Minute, 49 Second

MOVIE REVIEW
Confessions of a Menopausal Femme Fatale
 –     

Genre: Comedy, Drama, Poetry, Stand Up
Year Released: 2025
Runtime: 1h 41m
Director(s): Jonathan Jewell-Chatten
Writer(s): Satori Shakoor
Where to Watch: available on-demand starting June 12, 2025, via Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, and Google Play. Pre-orders begin June 1 on iTunes for Apple TV+


RAVING REVIEW: There’s something galvanizing about a performance that doesn’t wait for permission to tell its truth. CONFESSIONS OF A MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE doesn’t ease its way into vulnerability—it bursts in with humor, and a kind of creative control that feels earned. What begins as a return to a former home evolves into a much deeper excavation of identity, self-perception, and the fallout that comes with life changes that are too often pushed to the margins. This isn’t a special-interest project aimed at a niche audience—it’s a bold, sharply crafted spotlight on stories that rarely get told.


Rather than unfolding in tidy, chronological order, the story is more like a psychological montage. There’s a reason for that: the emotional journey here isn’t linear, and the storytelling perfectly reflects that. Shakoor doesn’t guide the viewer through neatly labeled chapters—she drops them into memories and leaves them to ride the emotion. That decision gives the film a documentary-like authenticity while still hitting the paces of a well-constructed character arc.

The return to Hawaiʻi is the spark, but the show’s true subject is the long trail of poignant debris that surfaces when you stop ignoring it. This isn’t about memories in a scenic location—it’s about confronting the things we pack away until a sudden spark brings them back with intensity. That sets off a journey that covers grief, addiction, mental health, and self-acceptance, delivered in a way that mixes with creative range. The result is more dynamic than a confessional—a performance that asks you to sit with your truths while she sits with hers.

What keeps it engaging is how Shakoor modulates tone without losing focus. There’s a quality to her delivery that channels her background in live music and stage work. She can swing from a disarming punchline to a grounded moment of silence and then back again without losing the pulse. The result is less about watching a performance and more about being pulled into emotion.

Comedy becomes a deliberate tactic, not a fallback. The jokes hit because they’re smart, not because they’re safe. Shakoor doesn’t tiptoe around the discomfort of aging or the erasure that comes with it. Instead, she leans into the discomfort, frames it with punchlines, and uses those moments of laughter to open space for truths. It’s a balancing act—humor without detachment, intimacy without sentimentality—and she walks it confidently. The laughter feels earned, not forced.

You’re never sure whether you’re watching a theatrical production, a stand-up routine, or a documentary monologue—and that’s part of the appeal. The format shifts with the mood, and that unpredictability makes each moment feel fresh. While the core remains consistent, the presentation evolves to meet it.

CONFESSIONS OF A MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE doesn’t end with a clean conclusion or a triumphant realization. It lets the disorder exist, and that choice preserves its integrity. Life doesn’t offer act-three revelations or smooth fade-outs, and this project doesn’t pretend otherwise. Instead, it builds tension by acknowledging the work that continues even after the credits roll.

This one finds its lane in the larger conversation around storytelling formats and narrative representation. It doesn’t rely on traditional pacing or structure. It moves with the rhythm of reflection, breaking when necessary and accelerating when the moment calls for it. That refusal to conform is part of what gives it such resonance. The performance isn’t just about telling a story—it’s about telling it on its terms.

Ultimately, the experience is as raw as it is reflective. It stays with you because it doesn’t try to package pain or triumph in ways that feel artificial. Instead, it leaves space for discomfort, ambiguity, and unresolved emotion. That honesty gives it weight. And the skill with which it’s presented makes it worth sitting with, long after it ends.

Please visit https://linktr.ee/overlyhonestr for more reviews.

You can follow me on Letterboxd, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. My social media accounts can also be found on most platforms by searching for 'Overly Honest Reviews'.

I’m always happy to hear from my readers; please don't hesitate to say hello or send me any questions about movies.

[photo courtesy of CONFESSIONS OF A MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE, THE SECRET SOCIETY OF TWISTED STORYTELLERS, BLACK PEPPER STUDIOS]

DISCLAIMER:
At Overly Honest Movie Reviews, we value honesty and transparency. Occasionally, we receive complimentary items for review, including DVDs, Blu-rays, CDs, Vinyl Records, Books, and more. We assure you that these arrangements do not influence our reviews, as we are committed to providing unbiased and sincere evaluations. We aim to help you make informed entertainment choices regardless of our relationship with distributors or producers.

Amazon Affiliate Links:
Additionally, this site contains Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, we may receive a commission. This affiliate arrangement does not affect our commitment to honest reviews and helps support our site. We appreciate your trust and support in navigating these links.

Happy
Happy
38 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
63 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
100%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

10 thoughts on “Age, Identity, and Saying What Matters

  1. Satori’s show is funny, gut wrenching and informative. It is a must see more than once. It is more than worth the time. Every woman and man should watch.

  2. Satori’s memoir is a deeply moving narrative that explores personal transformation and self-discovery. Through her poignant storytelling she meticulously chronicles her emotional odyssey of returning to Hawaii and reconnecting with a part of herself she had abandoned. Her vivid and introspective storytelling allows the audience to experience her emotional landscape drawing them into her profound journey of healing and reclamation.Her narrative is so compelling that you cannot help but to empathize with her experiences feeling as if you were walking alongside her throughout her transformative path of self-understanding and personal growth.
    This is a powerful movie well worth seeing!!!

    1. This! Absolutely! There was something about this presentation that I couldn’t quite put into words; something about her presentation just made this all so special!

  3. I would rather not use clichés to describe this emotional journey. There are certainly the usual words of “raw,” “brave,” “transparent,” “impactful,” and “funny” that are all applicable to this movie. They also describe the person. This movie allows you to reflect on your journey with awareness, forgiveness, and humor. So, whether you are a femme fatale who has completed or is enduring their menopausal journey or soon will, or you are someone who has witnessed it, you will find bits of yourself here. You will appreciate and gain clarity and be relieved that there is healing, life, and love after menopause and even throughout it. Kudos, bravo, and congratulations, Satori.

  4. Everything you ever wanted to know about Menopause

    Who’s in? Who wants to go with me to that showstopper? EEWWW‼️
    Menopause⁉️We don’t even want to talk about Menopause. Why would I spend my uncorrupted mind/time
    listening to some mid-life woman (got to be a woman, unless it’s that gynecologist you have to talk to every two years from the lithotomy position!) But I digress! You know, we menopausal women do that from time to time! Why would I though?
    Why talk about menopause?
    I’ll tell you why.
    Cause it’s a new day
    and Satori Shakoor’s “CONFESSIONS of a MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE” – the film, is at your doorsteps! Satori Shakoor, master storyteller, performing artist extraordinaire, writer, producer, singer and former Bride of Funkenstein has lived her life preparing this delicious story for your consumption. It’s not like anything you’ve experienced before. You’ll appreciate what I mean when you’re sitting in the comfort of your favorite recliner, sipping tea or chablis listening and talking back with this creative woman genius. She’s right there, face to face sharing with you the most precious, intimate, and bittersweet stories of her life like discovering love when a boy name Marvin Ware (I made that name up cause I don’t remember that detail) picked up her dropped pencil in the classroom. I laughed so hard when she confessed to dropping it everyday just so he would pick it up and hand it to her again. Ooo his eyes! Or the part in her story about going through puberty at the same time her mother was going through menopause. I’ll leave you to imagine what that was like! There is unbridled humor in Satori’s story and well as tearful tragedy. While you sit in that one place watching, your mind, body and soul will travel the universe – your own universe! Whether you are woman, man or child, get ready for the ride of your life! You will ride the cruisecar of your own experience-better than any e-ticket ride at Disneyworld! See, what Satori Shakoor shares with you and me from that stage (as filmed from her live performance Detroit,2024) is real. The stage is set with colorful and dramatic lighting, minimal stage setting, a comfortable sofa chair and lamp on stage left, two chairs together on right stage. Other than that, there’s you and the story, CONFESSIONS…
    You will sit, stomp, laugh, cry, maybe even pray a little bit. Don’t forget this is the story of a femme fatale not sister Mary. There are raucous good times and bad times to relive. There are the people and events that altered the direction of her life. These passages through time are familiar to most of us. Satori walks through her life with you as if to prove you’re not alone. You’re not a monster or a jezebel because of the thoughts you’ve thought or the things you’ve done. You are human.
    Woman. Sometimes Saint. Sometimes Sinner. Always and forever, a child of The Most High.
    Last comment I’d like to make is this:
    Nobody wants to talk about Menopause but everybody wants to be known and appreciated. Everybody’s got a story to share and that story is made up of real people and real drama that occur over a lifetime or maybe it occurs in a split second – moment by moment sometimes labeled childhood, middle-age, and even change of life. In “CONFESSIONS OF A MENOPAUSAL FEMME FATALE, Satori Shakoor shows you how she set herself free to live a life – being and doing the things she loves for the rest of her life.
    All for now. I’m off to watch “CONFESSIONS” for the sixth time.

    Altheal Randolph

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Previous post Survival Meets Moral Reckoning in Nature
Next post Bleeds Style, but Struggles With Substance