Toni (Tristan Cunningham) is being abused by her husband Marcus (Tarek Zohdy), and to find out how to get away, she sneaks away and attends Destiny’s (Meyon Jacobs) “Take It Back” empowerment seminar. After all, if Destiny could heal herself and fight back after a sexual assault, maybe she could teach Toni how to survive.
The problem for Destiny is that she’s not in all that great of a marriage either. Kendall (Leah Pipes), her wife, wants her to go corporate instead of helping women. These ladies could benefit from a Strangers On a Train-style path out of their bad relationships, which is exactly what happens. The problem is when Toni fulfills her end, and Destiny doesn’t exactly live up to her end of the deal.
Destiny also has a sister named Faith (Paigion Walker) who plans on marrying Senator James Hawthorne (Matt Marshall), while Kendall has eyes for Destiny’s assistant, Sufe (Emily Morales-Cabrera). When Toni learns that Destiny’s entire empire is based on her not exactly telling the truth, she decides that if her husband isn’t going to die, Destiny’s reputation will.
Directed by Dylan Vox (who also made Deadly DILF for Tubi) and written by Jeremy M. Inman (who wrote Sinister Squad and Avengers Grimm: Time Wars, as well as Hustlers Take All for Vox), this isn’t as good as even Throw Mama from the Train, but let’s hear it for it having a same-sex couple and gender swapping the story. The first part has the crazy energy I wanted this entire movie to have. I just wish it could have kept up the wildness.
You can watch this on Tubi.