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Serpentwithfeet And Nao Embrace Love’s Intensity On ‘Heart Storm’

Following the 2018 debut album Soil, Serpentwithfeet is ready for a second project, as Deacon will be out at the end of this week. So far, advance singles “Fellowship” and “Same Shoe Size” have addressed love in one way or another, and that topic gets brought back out once again on Serpentwithfeet’s latest, “Heart Storm.”

On the epic and ethereal number — a collaboration with Nao — Serpent with feet sings about the intense energy that being with his partner brings, with lyrics like, “Boy, when you and I get together / ‘spect some wicked weather / When we kiss, what for lightning / Being near you’s so exciting / Every time you speak my name / God’s gonna send a little rain.”

Serpentwithfeet says of the track, “I love a little magical realism. In this song I’m saying that there is so much love and power every time me and my man unite, even the heavens rejoice. Here, we welcome the storm.”

He also previously said of Deacon, “I originally approached this project wanting to make something that felt very sensuous. Something a lot softer, a lot more gentle than my previous work. I wanted to create something that felt calm and restrained. This was my way of tapping into the energy many deacons possess.”

Listen to “Heart Storm” above.

Deacon is out 3/26 via Secretly Canadian. Pre-order it here.

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Bryan Cranston Has Provided A New Explanation Behind A Popular ‘Breaking Bad’ Theory

It’s been eight years since “Felina,” the finale of Breaking Bad aired, but certain questions still linger about the series and the finale. Since the finale, in fact, a number of viewers have long wondered why Walter left a watch given to him by Jesse Pinkman on a gas station payphone, a seemingly bizarre choice in the context of the episode.

AMC

After the finale aired, Vince Gilligan confessed on The Talking Bad (and in an interview with The Guardian) that leaving it behind allowed them to fix a continuity error. Jesse Pinkman had given Walt the watch on his 51st birthday, but when they shot the flash-forward teaser in the season’s opening episode, Walt wasn’t wearing the watch, so leaving it behind allowed them to explain why he wasn’t wearing the watch in the earlier flash-forward:

We shot that teaser way back in episode 501, and we had Walt in the Dennys, making the 52 on his 52nd birthday. He was not wearing a watch. Then, later on, we came up with this fun moment where Jesse, on his 51st birthday, gives Walt that beautiful watch, and he has worn it ever since. And we thought to ourselves, uh-oh, we’d better get this right.

More recently, however, the Walter White actor disputed the continuity error explanation, saying that it had actually been written into the script since the beginning. “No, this was not continuity,” Bryan Cranston told Dan Patrick on the That Scene podcast. “It was specifically written in the script that he leaves it behind specifically to not be a part of that world anymore. He’s transitioning. He knew that was the end of his days. He knew he was not going to survive beyond that day, and he was leaving everything behind. That was a symbol of that.”

Cranston added to the explanation. “To me, it was leaving the past. Ridding himself of any talisman that put him back to who he was at the beginning of the show or any association with that. He was given that watch by Jesse Pinkman.”

So there you go: Another lingering Breaking Bad question finally put to bed. Sort of!

Source: That Scene with Dan Patrick

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Big Sean Introduced His Mom To Goku’s Voice Actor From ‘Dragon Ball’

For years, rappers have voiced their appreciation for anime through their rhymes, their album art, and even their fashion choices. Lately, though, the folks who work in anime have been returning that attention, from giving rappers shout outs in their work to meeting with some of their biggest fans in hip-hop. Over the weekend, one such meet-and-greet went down with one of the standout artists of the past decade and another special guest.

Big Sean posted a video to Instagram on Sunday in which he introduces his mom to Seán Schemmel, the voice actor who famously plays the character Goku in the Dragon Ball franchise of series. As excited as the Detroit native must be as a child of the Dragon Ball generation, his mom seems just as enthused about the moment, telling Schemmel how much her Sean “loved, loved, loved, and still loves” the massively popular franchise that Schemmel has been part of for decades.

“I didn’t know Big Sean,” Schemmel says of his mentality when recording lines. “But in my head I’m thinking, ‘That little kid needs to be flipping out. I gotta make him believe this guy is real… To hear it come back after all these years is astounding.’” The video finishes out, naturally, with the elder Seán throwing on that familiar voice and doing the signature “powering up” yell from so, so many epiosdes that the younger Sean undoubtedly grew up enjoying.

A few weeks ago, another well-noted anime fan in hip-hop got a nod from a voice actor as well. Jujutsu Kaisen voice actor Adam McArthur took a fan’s challenge to update a very specific reference in the show to name-check Megan Thee Stallion, delighting fans of both the rapper and the show. At this rate, it’s probably only a matter of time before the rappers and the voice actors are one and the same.

Watch Big Sean’s big moment with Goku above.

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HBO’s ‘The Last Of Us’ Will ‘Deviate Greatly’ From The Video Game, But Some Things Are ‘Pretty Close’

Game of Thrones season one isn’t an exact replica of George R.R. Martin’s A Game of Thrones, but it’s pretty darn close. Much closer than in subsequent seasons, even before the show caught up with the books. Similarly, HBO’s The Last of Us, the network’s next mega-event adaptation, won’t skew too far from the source material.

In an interview with IGN, game director and show executive producer Neil Druckmann was asked about how he and showrunner Craig Mazin plan to turn The Last of Us, one of the greatest video games of all-time, into a TV show. “We talked at length that season one of the show is going to be [the first game],” he said, adding that “the philosophical underpinnings of the story” will be similar to what Joel and Ellie go through in the 2013 game (an equally acclaimed sequel, The Last of Us Part II, was released last year). But “as far as the superficial things, like should [a character] wear the same plaid shirt or the same red shirt? They might or might not appear in it, that’s way less important to us than getting the core of who these people are and the core of their journey.”

Druckmann also discussed the difference making a video game vs. a TV show:

In the game, [you have to] train the player about mechanics. You have to have more violence and more spectacle to some degree than you would need on a TV show because you don’t need to train people on how to use a gun. So that’s something that’s been really different, and HBO’s been great in pushing us to move away from hardcore action and focus more on the drama of the character. Some of my favorite episodes so far have deviated greatly from the story, and I can’t wait for people to see them.”

HBO’s The Last of Us, starring Pedro Pascal as Joel and Bella Ramsey as Ellie, does not currently have a release date. But don’t expect it before 2022, at the earliest.

(Via IGN)

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All The Best New Music From This Week That You Need To Hear

Keeping up with new music can be exhausting, even impossible. From the weekly album releases to standalone singles dropping on a daily basis, the amount of music is so vast it’s easy for something to slip through the cracks. Even following along with the Uproxx recommendations on a daily basis can be a lot to ask, so every Monday we’re offering up this rundown of the best new music this week.

This week saw Lana Del Rey’s long-awaited album and a Justin Bieber album that Donald Glover saw coming. Yeah, it was a great week for new music. Check out the highlights below.

Lana Del Rey — Chemtrails Over The Country Club

Uproxx’s Steven Hyden writes of Del Rey’s latest, “Many of the songs on Chemtrails are about leaving LA and starting over in the suburbia of flyover-country, a reaction to Del Rey feeling burdened by the weight of fame. I know this because she literally says she’s ‘burdened by the weight of fame’ in the song ‘Dance Till We Die.’ As always, LDR is telling us exactly what’s on her mind. Maybe it’s time to take those words at face value.”

Justin Bieber — Justice

In a 2016 episode of Donald Glover’s Atlanta, Justin Bieber (not portrayed by himself) said he had a new album called Justice. Sure enough, five years later, Bieber actually dropped an album called Justice. The record touches on themes of social justice and includes Martin Luther King, Jr. samples, and his family seems grateful for the shout-out.

Ty Dolla Sign — “Be Yourself” Feat. Bryson Tiller, Jhené Aiko, and Mustard

Ty Dolla Sign is perhaps the most prolific collaborator in music today, which he cleverly referenced with the title of his 2020 album, Featuring Ty Dolla Sign. Naturally, last week he returned with another joint effort: A new Tiller-boosted version of his Aiko collab “Be Yourself.”

Lord Huron — “Mine Forever”

A few years after 2018’s Vide Noir, Lord Huron is ready to return with a new album, Long Lost. The group has shared a couple tracks from it so far, the latest being “Mine Forever,” a nostalgic mix of Americana and chamber pop.

IDK — “Just Like Martin”

Martin Lawrence becomes more and more beloved as the years go on, and he received a fitting tribute last week via IDK’s “Just Like Martin.” The rapper even paid homage to the actor with a lyrical reference to Lawrence’s self-titled TV show: “If we ain’t sexin’ (yeah), you might have to get to steppin’.”

Benny The Butcher and Harry Fraud — The Plugs I Met 2

Griselda rapper Benny The Butcher is back with a new project titled The Plugs I Met 2, which he made with help from Harry Fraud. He gets other assists throughout the record as well, like from 2 Chainz and Fat Joe, the latter of which got Joe in a bit of trouble.

CJ — “Whoopty NYC Remix” Feat. French Montana and Rowdy Rebel

CJ has a breakout hit on his hands with “Whoopty,” which has so far managed to peak in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 chart. That likely made it easier for him to attach some more established names to the track, as he got French Montana and Rowdy Rebel to hop on a new “NYC Remix” of it.

Foxing — “Speak With The Dead” Feat. Why?

It’s been a quiet past couple years for Foxing, but it’s 2021 and the group is back. Last week, they dropped their first new song in three years, “Speak With The Dead,” which features Why? and serves as a reminder that our loved ones are never fully gone.

DDG — Die 4 Respect

In a new feature, DDG told Uproxx about where he’s at right now, “Nobody can tell me that I’m not an artist. It sounds dumb. I just wanted to prove people wrong at this point. I’m more impactful than a lot of rappers that’s already lit because I got kids on lock. Every minority kid, every minority teenager know who I am. That was my goal. That was me at one point. I want these people to look up to me. I just got a cult following.”

Guapdad 4000 — 1176

Guapdad has been as productive as just about anybody over the past year: Last week, he dropped the Illmind-produced 1176, his third new project since April 2020. The rollout of the album has been entertaining and on the record, Guapdad keeps the focus on himself, as there is only a dash of featured guests sprinkled throughout the 14-track effort.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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How Arthouse Movie Theaters Are Surviving the Pandemic

It was midway through a matinee screening of Little Women when Josh Stafford realized he’d have to close Ottawa’s Mayfair Theater with no clear idea of when it would re-open.

A co-owner of the venerable venue, a fixture of the Old Ottawa South neighborhood since 1932, Stafford had been following the spread of Covid-19 from the early days of 2020. But, like much of the world, Stafford wasn’t sure how seriously to treat it or what its ultimate impact would be. “You kind of heard about this, this Covid thing,” Stafford says, “and we started taking precautions on our own, like a lot of businesses, just kind of saying, ‘Oh, we’re going to limit the number of people in, we’re gonna have hand sanitizer.’”

That ended on March 15th.

“March 15, rolled around, and it was all over the news,” Stafford continues. “I just happened to be working that day and one of my partners said, ‘I think we just have to close down because businesses are starting to close down.’ It felt like —not to make light — we were in a disaster movie. Just a couple of weeks before, everything was fine. We were doing well, riding the coattails of Parasite and bringing in people and, and then, ‘Oh, we have to close down the business because we’re afraid of a terrible worldwide pandemic.’”

As the pandemic spread and the scale of the crisis became easier to discern, variations on Mayfair’s story played out at arthouses across North America and beyond. Once thriving theaters now stood empty, their marquees still advertising the last films to play before the shutdown or bearing messages like “See You Soon!” But as “soon” stretched from the anticipated two weeks to months — interrupted only by the occasional ability to reopen at partial capacity during dips in the disease’s speed in certain regions — it became clear that theaters would have to get creative if they wanted to fire up the arc lamps again when the crisis abated.

That involved finding ways to meet the needs of customers whose isolation didn’t quell their desire to watch movies. But what do you do when you’re in the movie theater business and you can’t operate a movie theater? For many arthouses, the answer has been twofold: 1) Bring the movies directly to viewers stuck and home. 2) Take the movies elsewhere.

Fortunately, one distributor had an idea at the ready. Shortly after the closure of the Jacob Burns Film Center, a non-profit arthouse located in Pleasantville, New York, senior film programmer Andrew Jupin (who also co-hosts the popular podcast We Hate Movies) heard from the New York-based indie distributor Kino Lorber. The Kino release Bacurau had been scheduled for shortly before the shutdown, but the company had a backup plan. “They said, ‘Hey, we kind of have this idea for a virtual cinema based off of our Kino Marquee platform. Would you be interested in partnering with us?’,” Jupin says. “And so the next thing I knew, we were playing Bacurau virtually On March 20th, 2020, we had one film ‘onscreen’.”

The idea is simple: Rather than a physical release, films make the virtual rounds, following a release pattern that mimics the way they would travel from theater to theater. Viewers can purchase a ticket to a film “playing at” a favorite theater then stream it as a video-on-demand title at home and said theater then gets a cut of the ticket sales. Films scheduled for release still make it out into the world and they play in such a way that local theaters benefit. The virtual cinema idea caught on quickly, with other distributors adapting it for their own releases. Stafford describes the pitch as an everybody-wins scenario, saying, “They said, ‘All you have to do is talk about it on social media and we’ll give you a cut. You don’t have to pay a distribution fee. You don’t have to do anything.’ So we kind of became like a video store.”

But what about those in search of a pandemic-safe moviegoing experience that involved leaving the house? Where the virtual theater provided a solution in the form of a new idea, a different sort of solution presented itself in the form of an old idea: the drive-in. In regions where drive-ins remained open, this was practically as simple as flipping a switch, but such places have become vanishingly rare over the past few decades as changing viewing habits and swelling real estate costs, particularly near cities, have combined to endanger what was once an institution.

One solution: create drive-in theaters where no drive-in theaters had been before. “With the exception that we had parking lots, we had to build it from scratch,” Richard Williams, programming manager of Atlanta’s 81-year-old Plaza Theatre says. “It was arduous. It was very annoying, but it made everybody feel better at the end of it.” The effort proved successful enough that the Plaza eventually opened a second drive-in space in the parking lot of the improv theater Dad’s Garage. Williams notes they did have to shift strategy with their programming a bit for the new venues.

“We played a few newer movies over the course of the summer,” Williams says. “Right before Senator John Lewis passed, we played his movie Good Trouble. We played the Neon movie She Dies Tomorrow. But for the most part, we were playing classics, movies people already knew. […] Nostalgia makes people happy and during a pandemic, people need a reason to smile.”

Other theaters had to get more creative still. Chicago’s The New 400, a venue in the Rogers Park neighborhood whose lineage as a movie house can be traced back to Regent Theater in 1912, temporarily reinvented itself as a Covid-testing center. Over the course of the shutdown, The New 400 also partnered with and provided popcorn for the charity A Just Harvest, operated a patio bar and concession stand during summer months, served as a headquarters for those marching in Black Lives Matters protests, and made itself available for private rentals. Hoping to reopen for regular business this summer, its Facebook page now boasts of having “served Rogers Park through two pandemics.”

Elsewhere in Chicago, the Music Box Theatre spent its 91st year in operation trying one tactic after another to keep some kind of revenue flowing in even as its two auditoriums sat empty. And, like other theaters, the Music Box never saw the pandemic coming and had to think on the fly. “We were in the middle of our 70mm festival, which we had had on the books for six months,” senior operations manager Buck LePard recalls. “We got through the first weekend of the festival and there were rumblings that this thing is bigger than people were anticipating and adjustments might need to be made.” Instead of adjustments, however, the theater faced a total shutdown.

To keep operations rolling, they tried a bit of everything. Virtual cinema screenings, drive-in events (including turning the annual Music Box of Horrors event into an October-long drive-in series with new film selections each night), and concession sales. For Music Box regulars, a package deal that included a bag of popcorn, a six-pack of beer, and some movie theater candy — with seasonally appropriate upgrades for Halloween, Christmas, and other special events — became a weekly treat that made movie nights at home feel a little more like the way things used to be.

So what happens next? We’re now entering the second year of the pandemic, but as infection rates drop (or at least level) and vaccination rates rise, theaters have cautiously begun the process of reopening. The Mayfair, Plaza, and Music Box have reopened with limited-capacity screenings and the Burns is preparing to resume operations in the weeks ahead. But some of the changes forced by the pandemic seem as if they might stick around, at least for a while. The Plaza’s drive-ins remain open, for instance. The Music Box’s virtual theater allows it to host more movies than its two screens could allow and regulars still show up for popcorn and concessions on the weekend, including those who won’t feel safe returning to theaters until after they’ve been vaccinated.

The past few years have prompted a lot of hand-wringing over the future of movie theaters as home-viewing options become the default. That hand-wringing has grown more intense over the course of the pandemic thanks to the bleak financial outlook for multiplexes and developments like Warner Bros.’ decision to release its feature slate simultaneously to theaters and HBO Max. But the calculus for arthouses, which have always relied on smaller releases and audiences dedicated to the theatrical experience, looks different. “We don’t have 5,000 seats in our cinema,” Stafford notes. “We have 325. So if we sell half as many of that for a show, that’s great.”

Beyond the numbers, the pandemic experience has only confirmed and maybe strengthened, arthouse moviegoers’ attachment to their favorite theaters, a connection that goes beyond seeing them as convenient places to watch movies. “It was a very, It’s a Wonderful Life kind of thing where people just wanted to help people [and] wanted to throw money at us,” Stafford remembers of the first months of the pandemic. Williams echoes those thoughts while emphasizing the work the Plaza needed to put in to survive.

“Our community immediately supported us,” he says, before adding, “I think half of it was because we were trying so hard. We were just continuously showing that we’re not closing. We’re not lying down. We’re trying to soldier on no matter what. I think that also helped our community come support us. A lot of people like that hustler’s ambition people show sometimes: Oh yeah, I have to figure out a way to make this work no matter what.”

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The First ‘Godzilla Vs. Kong’ Reactions Are Stomping In: ‘It’s Like Fast & Furious But With Giant Monsters’

The first social media reactions to Godzilla Vs. Kong are rolling in, and so far, the critics agree that the film gets the most important thing right: giant monsters punching giant monsters. While there are some quibbles over the “human scenes,” for the most part, the early reactions are practically unanimous in declaring that the fight scenes are why people are going to watch this latest installment in the franchise, and it absolutely delivers in that department.

Brandon Davis from Comic Book writes:

I watched #GodzillaVsKong on a big IMAX screen and it was AWESOME. The movie is a blast. It’s like Fast & Furious but with giant monsters. It’s exactly what I wanted it to be. Giant fights and they’re just SO MUCH FUN to watch. It’s a big, ridiculous, awesome movie.

Germain Lussier from io9 had a more tempered reaction where he enjoyed the film’s bombastic fight scenes, but he couldn’t get past some of the non-punchy scenes:

Godzilla vs. Kong has excellent action and effects. The story is crazy ambitious and at times achieves some unique sci-fi-coolness. I’d watch it again for that stuff but most of the human angles are so overstuffed, illogical and pointless, it constantly took me out of it.

But for the most part, critics were in alignment with Uproxx‘s Mike Ryan, who praised the film for delivering incredible fight scenes that you can actually see, which hasn’t always been the case with this franchise:

I absolutely hated the prior Godzilla movie. So here’s the utmost praise I can give a movie like GODZILLA V. KONG: it is a coherent movie with daytime fights and I could always see what was going on. I truly mean that as a compliment.

You can see more early critical reactions to Godzilla Vs. Kong below:

Godzilla Vs. Kong hits theaters and HBO Max on March 31.

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Leslie Jones Live-Tweeted The “#LongAssMovie” (AKA ‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’), Which Obviously Means That Movies Are Officially Back

By now, you likely agree (from personal experience) that Zack Snyder’s Justice League cut was vastly superior to Joss Whedon’s theatrical cut. Yet the HBO Max-streamed upgrading did arrive with a price: four hours of viewers’ time. Many people felt that this runtime was worth it, given that character development was suddenly a thing (and Cyborg’s backstory functioned as the heart of the film), but still, this was, as former SNL cast member Leslie Jones put it, a #longassmovie.

Yep, Jones came through for everyone and did her usual epic superhero movie thing by live-tweeting the action. Her joyous reactions were infectious, and she was all of us while observing that while the action scenes worked well — “WARRIORS!! I’m losing my shit!” — her eye kept floating down to the runtime left on the movie: “And I still got 3 hours 30 minutes and forty-fiive seconds mfs!! #longassmovie”

As one might expect, Jones’ Twitter thread was long (four hours long), and we’d expect no less. A few of her tweets hit particularly hard, including her “What the fuck is happening?! #longassmovie” reaction to Jared Leto’s Joker scene.

The action scenes appeared to be Jones’ favorite moments, and the Wonder Woman fan did not let her audience down.

The result was a breath of fresh air on Twitter and signaled a return to movies as events (even in the comfort of one’s living room). People agreed that this live-tweeting session might be the best thing to happen to Twitter and comic book fans in a long time.

As the movie began to roll to a close, Jones predicted that this kind of runtime would happen again: “Soooooo we can expect another four hour movie cause they aint giving up on this life equation thang apparently!! #longassmovie”

Finally, though, “ITS OVAH!! #longassmovie.” Whew.

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‘I Am Proud To Be Asian’: Sandra Oh Gave A Passionate Speech At A ‘Stop Asian Hate’ Rally

Days after a white gunman killed eight people, including six Asian women, at three Atlanta-area spas, Sandra Oh gave an emotional speech at the “Stop Asian Hate” rally held near downtown Pittsburgh over the weekend.

“For many of us in our community, this is the first time we are even able to voice our fear and our anger, and I really am so grateful to everyone willing to listen,” the Killing Eve actress said. “One thing that I know is that many in our community are very scared, and I understand that. And one way to go through our fear is to reach out to our community.” Oh asked everyone in attendance (and beyond) to support “our sisters and brothers.”

“If you see something, will you help me? If you see one of our sisters and brothers in need, will you help us? We must understand, as Asian Americans, we just need to reach out our hand to our sisters and brothers and say, ‘Help me and I’m here.’”

Oh also led the crowd in a chant of, “I am proud to be Asian. I belong here.”

Stop Asian Hate rallies were held across the country over the weekend, including one in Atlanta, where Bee Nguyen (D-GA), the first Vietnamese American to serve in the Georgia House, lamented that the victims of the shootings “had no one in their community to watch their back, and we are left with deep rage and grief and sorrow.”

(Via the Hollywood Reporter)

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Thom Yorke Made A 9-Minute Acoustic Remix Of Radiohead’s ‘Creep’ For A Fashion Show

Many artists have offered their takes on Radiohead’s “Creep” over the years, and now Thom Yorke himself has revisited the track: He made a new nine-minute acoustic remix of the classic for Jun Takahashi’s “Undercover” as part of Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo 2021.

Takahashi told Vogue of the show, “The theme is of a person who is frail and weak but has a truly pure heart. I was expressing the worries and anxieties that individuals carry every day and the hope of what lies ahead. It probably doesn’t seem to directly link to clothing design, but I wanted to put the complicated emotional state of society into a physical form. This is what I considered while designing.”

Famously over the years, Yorke has expressed his disdain for the song, or at least his reluctance to perform it: The band has played it live on just a handful of occasions since the ’90s. At a Montreal concert in support of OK Computer, the audience called for the band to play the song and Yorke responded by shouting, “F*ck off, we’re tired of it.” In a 2017 interview, Yorke said of playing the song live, “It can be cool sometimes, but other times I want to stop halfway through and be like, ‘Nah, this isn’t happening.’”

Listen to Yorke’s “Creep” remix above.