Netflix's Rob Peace tells the moving true story of the late Robert DeShaun Peace, a New Jersey native who went to Yale University while also attempting to help his incarcerated father. Rob Peace's courageous true story of a young Black man working to survive systemic oppression and break patterns of generational trauma has long resonated with audiences, since the late Peace's friend Jeff Hobbs published the novel on which it is based. The Short And Tragic Life Of Robert Peace was published in 2014.
Much of Rob Peace's central story and characters is based in reality, as Hobbs was a Yale classmate and close friend to Peace prior to his untimely death in a drug-related shooting. However, there are several pivotal changes made in this dramatized version of Peace's life. The film boasts a star-studded cast, including Mary J. Blige, Mare Winningham, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Camila Cabello, and rising talent Jay Will. The film was shot on location in Newark, New Jersey, where much of Rob Peace is set.
7 It Is Unknown If Rob's Father Pushed For His Involvement In His Legal Battle
While The Movie Depicts Rob's Voluntary Involvement, It Also Depicts His Father Asking For Help
When Rob Peace's (Jay Will) father, Rob "Skeet" Douglas (Chiwetel Ejiofor), is arrested, charged, and convicted of a murder he did not commit, Rob balances his efforts to exonerate him with his academic pursuits. He is convicted of murdering two women in his apartment building, which happened in real life (via FindLaw). Highly intelligent and gifted in mathematics and the sciences, Rob's mother, Jackie Peace (Mary J. Blige), recognizes his potential and places him in a private high school (St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, New Jersey), working multiple jobs to make ends meet.
Throughout his life, Rob's mission to exonerate his father becomes an albatross around his neck. While he remains focused on his education and builds strong friendships and connections along the way, viewers see him go to extremes in order to find the money to pay for his father's legal fees, and later, his cancer treatment. One pivotal scene sees Skeet yelling at Rob on the phone about how he has not succeeded in exonerating him yet. This only further contributes to Rob's guilt.
As is the case with many films based on true stories, some conversations featured are fictionalized versions of true events.
As is the case with many films based on true stories, some conversations featured are fictionalized versions of true events. It is entirely anecdotal whether Skeet pressured Rob into helping him earn his freedom. Rob made it clear to Hobbs, his Yale roommate, who later immortalized him in written form, that he sincerely believed in his father's innocence, and was working on his case of his own volition.
6 The Film Does Not Explore His Role As Senior Group Leader In High School
From A Young Age, Rob Was A Leader
Rob's time at St. Benedict's Prep is briefly showcased in Rob Peace, where he learns to swim and s the school's water polo team. It is clear that he excels academically and makes new friends in private school, though these relationships are not explored with as much depth as his time at Yale. In reality, Rob was a pillar of every single community he was a part of, and his presence was never fleeting. He left an indelible mark on the school and the reason why it could have been examined closer.
At St. Benedict's, the real young Rob served as Senior Group Leader and snagged the Presidential Award upon his graduation (via The Benedict News Online). His leadership, both in water polo and beyond, left a mark on the private school community in Newark, New Jersey. These leadership roles came into play later in his life, yet again, when he returned to St. Benedict's to teach and inspire a new generation of young students.

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The film would have benefited from exploring this side of Rob, as the bulk of the narrative focuses on his journey to exonerate his father. Understanding his character traits outside his book smarts would have really developed him further as a character and shown more of his personal interests. This would have only further explained why he was such a devoted son and friend, and felt such a responsibility to his community.
5 The Film Does Not Explore Rob's Travels
Rob Worked At Newark Liberty International Airport And Traveled To Several Countries
Following Rob's graduation from Yale, he struggles to balance his ambitions in the scientific research world with what he feels are his responsibilities to his community. He works at his alma mater, St. Benedict's Prep, as a science teacher, before working as a real estate agent as part of a larger initiative to revitalize his hometown of South Orange and renovate local homes. Rob feels a unique sense of responsibility to give back, as he is the most academically successful out of his New Jersey peers.
In reality, one of his places of work was additionally Newark Liberty International Airport. He reportedly used his work-sponsored miles to travel the world. One of the locations Rob traveled to was Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (via Yale Daily News). While this is not mentioned in the film, it is loosely referenced through his relationship with Naya Vazquez (Camila Cabello), a fellow student at Yale who relocates to the city post-graduation. Rob's travels would have been interesting to touch upon, as they clearly served as a much-needed respite from his many responsibilities and rigorous studies. The film could have benefited from including this, to offset the trauma with joy.
4 Naya Vazquez Is Fictional
The Character Is Loosely Based On Rob's College Relationship
While at Yale, Rob meets Naya through a group of mutual friends. The pair strike up a friendship and, eventually, a relationship. Naya s Rob's academic endeavors in advanced lab research, and is empathetic and understanding of his family situation and hard work to exonerate his father. She also offers him constructive criticism about his marijuana dealing, understanding that he urgently needs money to help his father but not wishing for him to slip into the generational patterns that have affected his family.
Naya is not a real person, but Hobbs based the character on a relationship Rob had while at Yale (via NJ.com). She is meant to be an amalgamation of real people that knew Rob during his college years, and also serve as a wake-up call for falling into his father's patterns. Prior to his arrest, Skeet also used to independently deal marijuana to local customers. While Naya is clearly kind and intelligent, her character is thinly developed, and largely serves as a plot device.
3 Police Never Raided Rob's Dorm Room At Yale
This Aspect Of The Film Is Fictional
The film shows police raiding Rob's dorm room at Yale in New Haven, Connecticut, after they are tipped off to his marijuana business. Rob works as a low-level dealer solely to other students at Yale to raise money for his father's cancer treatment. Rob manages to toss the money into the garden below his dorm room as the police come to search his room. No formal charges were filed, and Rob was able to finish his junior year at Yale and graduate the following year.
In reality, this raid never happened, and was included for dramatic effect in the film, likely to symbolize that his marijuana side job would lead to his tragic death. Hobbs confirmed that the raid never occurred, though he was aware of his roommate and friends' business (via NJ.com). However, Rob did indeed stop selling marijuana upon his graduation. Rob only resumed this practice amid the 2008 stock market crash and housing crisis, which affected his real estate business.
2 Professor Durham Is Loosely Based On Rob's Time At Yale
Durham Is Another Fictionalized Element Of His Experience
Professor Durham, who is the first to believe in Rob's potential in the clinical research world at Yale, is largely fictionalized. Rob did indeed work in a cancer research lab at Yale, where he once planned to secure recommendations for graduate programs. Throughout Rob Peace, Rob is ionate ing his knack for science and math to help people.
Professor Durham quickly entrusts Rob with more access to the lab than many of his freshman peers, both for his diligence and willingness to learn. Durham, while fictional, is an example of the biomedical engineering program's work to uplift a young Black man in the sciences. As Rob encounters racism during his time at Yale (including security constantly asking for his ID, lab researchers not believing he is a student, and more), Professor Durham remains a source of and understanding, reaffirming that his lived experience makes his place in the program all the more important.
1 The Tuckers Are Fictional And Did Not Come Forward With Evidence
The Film Shows That They Are Family Friends Who Had An Alibi For Skeet
The Tuckers live down the road from Rob and his mother, and even bought one of the houses that he flipped and sold through his real estate business. In the film, shortly before the couple is about to lose the home to foreclosure amid the 2008 market crash, Rob asks the couple if they think his late father, who has since died of cancer, really committed the murder over a decade earlier. The couple then reveals a photograph of the late Skeet holding his gun, which was clearly not the murder weapon.
The revelation leaves Rob with conflicted emotions, as he feels better knowing that his father was innocent given all of his work to exonerate him. However, he is angry that the couple did not come forward with the evidence that could have set him free. The Tuckers are fictional, and whether Skeet was innocent or guilty remains unclear. Skeet maintained his innocence until his death in 2006, though his conviction was never overturned (via Fox 5 New York). Rob Peace explores themes of perseverance, survival, and the struggle to break generational patterns, including letting go of grief.
Sources: FindLaw, The Benedict News Online, Yale Daily News, NJ.com, Fox 5 New York

Rob Peace
- Release Date
- January 22, 2024
- Runtime
- 119 Minutes
- Director
- Chiwetel Ejiofor
Cast
- Jay Will
- Mary J. Blige
Rob Peace is a biographical drama written and directed by Chiwetel Ejiofor and was released in 2024. Based on the biography by Jeff Hobbs, Rob Peace follows the titular man who grew up in a life of poverty and crime in New Jersey but still managed to attain an Ivy League education at Yale while making money selling marijuana on the side.
- Writers
- Chiwetel Ejiofor
- Studio(s)
- Hill District Media, Participant, 25 Stories
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