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The Best New Hip-Hop This Week

The best new hip-hop this week includes albums, videos, and songs from Coi Leray, Fivio Foreign, Vince Staple, and more.

Friday saw the releases of BIA’s “London” featuring J. Cole, Doechii’s “Crazy,” Guapdad 4000’s “Black Iverson,” Jack Harlow’s “First Class,” IDK’s “Taco” produced by Kaytranada, Lil Baby’s “In A Minute” and “Right On,” Rowdy Rebel’s “Rowdy Vs. Rebel,” and Tyga’s “Lifetime,” along with the releases listed below.

Here is the best of hip-hop this week ending April 8, 2021.

Albums/EPs/Mixtapes

42 Dugg & EST Gee — Last Ones Left

42 dugg est gee last ones left
42 Dugg & EST Gee

These guys have proven that they have bulletproof chemistry over the course of several appearances on each other’s projects and tag-team performances on other rappers’ posse cuts, so it’s only natural that they would team up for a full album showcasing that chemistry. With standout cuts like “Thump Sh*t,” “Everybody Shooters Too,” and “Free The Shiners” setting the stage, they get the point across with streetwise panache.

Coi Leray — Trendsetter

coi leray trendsetter
Coi Leray

The XXL Freshman has made a name for herself with her unique approach to rap over the past few months and with her debut, she cashes in that credit to explore even more eclectic sounds. The release received high praise from “Blick Blick” collaborator Nicki Minaj and certainly has the potential to live up to its title.

Fivio Foreign — B.I.B.L.E.

fivio foreign bible
Fivio Foreign

Brooklyn rapper Fivio Foreign is among the most successful members of the New York drill rap wave and finally carries the flag across the border to the mainstream. Rather than adjusting his approach to suit the radio-friendly styles of his guests, he instead pushes them to tackle his home form, establishing himself as a leader worth following for the underground scene in Brooklyn.

Vince Staples — Ramona Park Broke My Heart

vince staples ramona park broke my heart
Vince Staples

Long Beach native Vince Staples delivers his magnum opus with his new album, finally delivering an album that challenges listeners emotionally as much as it does aurally. Delivering his most accessible production yet allows Vince to put the focus decidedly on his gut-wrenching storytelling and unflappable delivery.

Wiz Khalifa, Big KRIT, Smoke DZA & Girl Talk — Full Court Press

wiz khalifa big krit smoke dza girl talk full court press
Asylum/Taylor Gang

If you asked me to put together a more unexpected supergroup lineup, I’d have to really, really think about it. Yet, despite the seemingly disparate sounds and personalities of each of this album’s contributors, it works, creating more than the sum of its parts.

Singles/Videos

Bankrol Hayden — “F*ck Love”

Bankrol Hayden has become a consistent million-view creator on YouTube, and it’s easy to see why here. He’s kind of a master of using the prevailing modern style to make relatable pop-rap that appeals to younger fans, yet distinguishes him from similar acts like 24KGolden.

Blac Youngsta — “Can’t Spell”

Memphis standout drops a combative trunk thumper for the streets. He doesn’t cover much new ground, but he keeps it as consistent as ever, delivering exactly the vibe his longtime fans look to him for.

Rexx Life Raj — “Jerry Curl” Feat. Larry June

Two of the Bay Area’s smoothest rappers make for one clean collaboration.

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

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Nicki Minaj Wants The Lawyer Of Her Husband’s Rape Accuser’s To Be ‘Punished’ For Making False Accusations

Back in October, a lawyer for Jennifer Hough, who filed a lawsuit against Nicki Minaj and her husband Kenneth Petty, filed a motion for default judgment. Hough’s lawsuit is based on her allegation that Minaj and Petty intimidated and harassed her in hopes that she would “recant her legitimate claim that defendant Petty raped her.” At the beginning of this year, Hough voluntarily dismissed her lawsuit (only to refile it in California), but the default judgment motion has Minaj calling for Hough’s lawyer to be “severely punished.”

According to Rolling Stone, Minaj and her lawyer Judd Burstein are seeking fees and costs as well as a referral to the federal court’s Attorney Disciplinary Committee against Hough’s lawyer, Tyrone Blackburn. Minaj’s team says Blackburn pursued “frivolous” and “extortionate” litigation against her “in such a reprehensible manner.” In the motion that was filed in October, which Minaj won, Blackburn alleged that Minaj was a member of the “Makk Ballers,” a street gang in Queens.

“Given that Mr. Blackburn had no evidence in his possession that would have remotely supported even an inference that Ms. Maraj belonged to the gang, and the allegation was entirely irrelevant to the issue of whether a default judgment should be entered against Mr. Petty,” the motion reads, according to documents obtained by Rolling Stone. Mr. Blackburn surely acted in a bad faith effort to generate extremely negative media coverage about Ms. Maraj which also depicted Mr. Blackburn as a lawyer who was seeking to bring her to justice.”

Minaj and her team also claim that Blackburn falsely accused his former plaintiff’s co-counsel, Steven N. Gordon, of working as a “double agent” with Burstein to help Minaj. Furthermore, Minaj and Burstein were able to obtain a sworn statement from Gordon about Blackburn’s behavior. In it, Gordon claims Blackburn made “harrowing, slanderous, false and misleading personal allegations about me that are entirely irrelevant to the motion for sanctions.”

“He regularly and shamefully attempts to use personal information — or purported personal information — to disparage, insult, harass and intimidate other,” Gordon adds. “I will be seeking to the court’s permission to intervene in this matter to move to strike the Blackburn Declaration and for sanctions against him.”

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Sorry, But David Lynch Doesn’t Have A Surprise New Film Debuting At Cannes After All, Despite Earlier Reports

David Lynch hasn’t directed a movie in over 15 years. Yes, some have argued Twin Peaks: The Return, which bowed over the summer of 2017, is a 17-hour film, but if you’re being technical, his last film-film was Inland Empire — and that was a bonkers experimental epic that only played during special engagements. (And before that he hadn’t made a movie since 2001’s Mulholland Dr.) So when word spread Monday that a super secret new Lynch motion picture was headed for the Cannes Film Festival in May, people freaked out. Alas, it was not to be.

During a chat with The A.V. Club, the filmmaker, transcendental meditationist, and amateur weather reporter was asked to confirm a report by Variety that a new Lynch feature film, which had somehow eluded all reportage, and which featured regular Laura Dern in some capacity, might be on the lineup for the world’s most prestigious film festival. No so, Lynch replied.

“I have no film at Cannes, no,” Lynch said. “In fact, no one has ever even asked me that. You’re the first person that’s actually asked me, ‘David, do you have a film at Cannes?’ I say no, I don’t have a film at Cannes.”

When asked if he actually had something else due for Cannes, he again responded in the negative. “I’m not trying to trick you, I have nothing at Cannes,” Lynch replied, then added, cryptically, “But there’ll be something new from somebody else. It wasn’t me, though. It isn’t me.”

What could that mean? Is it a strange slip of the tongue? Was he simply saying that the festival will have other film by other auteurs? It’s both hard to parse and charmingly playful, much like some of his movies and TV shows. But even if you may not see another Lynch movie any time soon, at least you’ll definitely be seeing him act for Steven Spielberg.

(Via AV Club)

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Another PlayStation Exclusive, ‘Bugsnax,’ Is Going Multi-Platform

One of the defining traits of this console generation so far has been formerly-exclusive games breaking away from their exclusivity and becoming multiplatform titles. The PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5, in particular, have seen a handful of its games move away from being exclusive and moved over to PC, the most notable of these being God of War.

On Tuesday, we saw a game that was originally a PlayStation exclusive not only announce it was going to soon be available on the PC, but also on the Xbox and Nintendo Switch. Bugsnax, a game that was a PlayStation 5 launch title, is going multiplatform. Not only that, but it’s coming to other consoles with a free DLC update that will add about three hours worth of new content to the game.

Bugsnax going multiplatform is a bit of a surprise, as a PlayStation launch title is jumping away from exclusivity so soon. It helps fuel the theory that permanent exclusivity is soon going to be a thing of the past. With places like Steam and Game Pass having huge user base potential, it doesn’t make sense for a third-party developer like Young Horses to remain on one console permanently. We’re even seeing PlayStation itself embrace this idea by putting more of its games on PC.

Bugsnax and its DLC will be available on PlayStation, PC, Xbox, and Switch on April 28. Game Pass subscribers will have access to the game on April 28 as well.

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‘Ambulance’ Is 136 Minutes Of Pure, Uncut Bayhem

Michael Bay, director of Armageddon, The Rock, the Transformers movies, and that Aaron Burr “Got Milk” commercial from the 90s (probably still his finest work) has, shall we say, a recognizable style. So recognizable in fact, that it even has a name: “Bayhem,” (possibly coined by Bay himself) which UrbanDictionary (in an entry dating to 2007) defines as “The cinematic conceit of blowing shit up on a large scale, in slow motion and (usually) at sunset.”

Bay’s persona has followed the general arc of anyone similarly parody-ready: from initial fame to oversaturation, to the general stink of uncoolness that attaches to anyone or anything with tics familiar enough to be identified and quantified (see: Nicolas Cage, the mullet), followed by brief quiet period followed by the inevitable renaissance that comes when people realize that they’ve missed that person or thing. Someone cool grows an ironic mullet and soon enough, the irony disappears. (Remember how hilarious the idea of anyone having a mustache was in the late aughts?) The tongue-in-cheek aspect of Michael Bay appreciation has been slowly evaporating for at least five years now.

Ambulance might be the earnestness inflection point. Our cinematic era feels analogous to the one Norma Desmond describes in Sunset Boulevard, when she says “it was the pictures that got small.” Michael Bay, with his penchant for explosions and outsized persona, seems like the perfect guy to re-embiggen them.

We don’t really have big movies anymore, only big “properties.” Like glorified NFT schemes, even the biggest movies these days seem more like flashy commercials for that studio’s “IP” (intellectual property). The purpose of Eternals was to raise the value of the Eternals characters much more so than it was to create a huge movie in its own right. As an artistic gesture it feels more like Paris Hilton pumping her Bored Ape on Jimmy Fallon than “cinema.”

In that sense, it’s refreshing to see Bay lending his personal grandiosity to something like Ambulance, the kind of mid-budget ($40 million, reportedly) action blockbuster that filmmakers frequently lament don’t get made anymore. It’s actually a remake of a 2005 Danish movie if you want to get technical, and Bay is determined to make it look like it cost $200 million dollars. It’s got car chases, explosions, and hot people; it’s fairly stupid and very exciting. In many ways, it’s the movie the last Fast/Furious should’ve been. (But couldn’t be, because the Fast/Furious “movies” shoulder the burden of being property).

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II plays Will Sharp, a down-on-his-luck Marine whose wife needs an unnamed surgery he can’t afford. He goes to his adopted brother Danny (Jake Gyllenhaal) for the loan, but instead gets roped into bank robbery that just so happens to be going down later that afternoon. And wouldn’t you know it, they still need a driver. And Will just so happens to be the best driver. Bet you haven’t seen that plot point in a movie before.

The robbery, borrowing heavily from Heat and the 1997 North Hollywood shootout, goes sideways, putting the fleeing Sharp brothers on a collision course with Cam Thompson (Eiza González), a no-nonsense EMT about whom her colleagues say “she can keep anyone alive for 20 minutes but no one wants to be her partner.”

The Sharp brothers end up commandeering Cam’s ambulance (the Cambulance, I call it) on the run from the entire LAPD and eventually, a Fed played by Garret Dillahunt. Imagine if the robbery in Heat had turned into Speed and Michael Bay shot the entire thing like he was trying to make his own version of Uncut Gems and you have something like Ambulance. (With a brief, delightfully weird late second act sojourn into Robert Rodriguez territory).

Yes, Ambulance‘s Sharp brothers — and especially Danny, who Gyllenhaal plays like Bay was three feet away screaming “I need to see more neck vein!” the whole time — keep making poor decisions. Which somehow leads to a shootout with a helicopter, an impromptu surgery, and one wild scene involving what I can only describe as a cholo-built chain gun.

The beauty of Ambulance is that with all that going on, Michael Bay doesn’t have the time to fill space with his usual brand of creakingly stilted improv (I’ve always said that Bay could be our greatest action director if only someone could talk him out of thinking he’s the funny guy). There is one scene where a pair of cops discuss the movie The Rock, famously directed by Michael Bay, but for the most part, Bay has his hands too full trying to sell this ornate script to shoot much that would end up on a blooper reel during the credits.

Ambulance careens breathlessly from one massive set-piece to the next, with nary a CGI alien in sight, and Bay manages it all beautifully, with claustrophobic closeups, amber-tinted pyrotechnics, and a script (by Chris Fedak) that deftly rides the line between just-believably-enough and so-hilariously-stupid-that-you-won’t-care.

In classic Bay fashion, basically all of the non-name actors feel like police and military consultants Bay gifted speaking roles. I used to joke that Bay divides the world into two essential types, sluts and clowns, and in characteristic fashion, all of Ambulance‘s characters either have great hair and chiseled features or a character gimmick obvious from the first instant they appear on screen and hammered home in every subsequent second thereafter. “Randazzo,” for instance, played by Marc Randazzo, was such an Italian-face parody that I was tempted to call the Anti-Italian-American Defamation League.

At this point, certain Bay tics are part of his charm. And by building the story around Abdul-Mateen’s in-over-his-head Marine and Gonzalez’s toughgirl EMT, Bay mostly avoids the momentarily unfashionable “copaganda” upon which he built a substantial portion of his career. You can sense his newfound restraint in the single, brief shot of a fluttering American flag, which in the past would’ve lingered for at least five more seconds. Bay, ever the canny propagandist, seems to have shifted seamlessly into “healthcare workers are the real heroes.” EMTs are the new troops! Look, if it wears boots and requires a uniform, Michael Bay can make it look cool and sexy.

Exploitation has always been Bay’s foremost skill, and in this era when movies have begun to seem chintzy and distinctly unglorious, Bay’s talents as a hype man and product pornographer seem oddly refreshing. If anyone was going to make a mid-budget action movie feel like the biggest, coolest, sexiest thing in the world, it was Michael Bay.

‘Ambulance’ is currently in theaters. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. More reviews here.

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People Are Remembering How Great Gilbert Gottfried Was At Trolling Contestants On ‘Hollywood Squares’

On Tuesday, news broke that legendary comedian Gilbert Gottfried had passed away. He was 67. A king of insults with arguably comedy’s most distinctive voice, the performer died, his family said, after a “long illness.” They also told people that, while it’s a “sad day for all of us,” people should “please keep laughing as loud as possible in honor.” And so they did. Tributes poured in, as did copious sharing of his prolific stand-up work and his countless TV appearances, from awards shows to hosting gigs to game show stints.

One of them was a particularly wild appearance on the late ‘90s revival of Hollywood Squares. In an episode that aired on October 1, 1999, Gottfried, who was a recurring guest on the show, occupied the top right square. At one point, his spot became the deciding square in a showdown in which whichever contestant nabbed it won the round.

But Gottfried made it difficult for them. For five full minutes, Gottfried kept feeding them incorrect but right-seeming answers. For example: When asked what piece of women’s clothing a French designer called “the atom” due to its small size, Gottfried replied, “The tube top.” (The correct answer is the bikini.) Nine times Gottfried gave trolling answers and each time the contestant in question thought they were right, meaning they were wrong.

Gottfried eventually starts shouting “You fool!” when they agreed with him — a line that had previously been used by Penn and Teller, perched in the box next to him. After five minutes, he finally took pity and fed one of them a correct answer.

Upon news of Gottfried’s passing — and a time when game show contestants keep flubbing answers, too — the clip was among the most shared clips featuring his special brand of funny.

You can watch Gottfried’s most famous Hollywood Squares bit in the video above.

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Ted Cruz Dodged The Question When Asked If He Would ‘Fellate Another Man’ If Doing So Would End World Hunger

Plenty of politicians like to make “ending world hunger” part of their platform, but not Senator Ted Cruz. At least, not when you really get down to it.

The MAGA cheerleader gave a talk to the student body at Yale University while filming a live episode of his podcast Verdict with co-host and conservative political pundit Michael Knowles. During the chat — which spanned everything from Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Supreme Court appointment to intellectual diversity — one student bravely asked the question on everyone’s mind: Would Cruz fellate another man if it meant ending world hunger?

As the audience laughed, Cruz was visibly stumped, eventually passing the question onto his co-host after some awkward laughter. Knowles has an answer ready though. He accused the student of being a “typical left-wing undergraduate” and “engaging in consequentialist ethics.” (Though, weirdly enough, Knowles is a Yale graduate.)

Eventually, Cruz’s pal adamantly refused to give another man oral, no matter the cause, labeling the act “immoral.”

“You’re attempting to justify flagrantly immoral behavior to achieve a good end,” Knowles told the kid. “And I tell you, my friend, the ends do not justify the means. Absolutely, absolutely not.”

We’re not really sure what’s so immoral about fellatio, but Cruz took the opportunity to finally speak up. Though he didn’t actually answer whether he’d fellate another man, he posed a similar ethical dilemma — in his mind at least — to the young man.

“I am curious with that young fellow. If it would solve world hunger, would you vote for Donald Trump?”

You know who wouldn’t have had any trouble answering such a fairly straightforward hypothetical scenario? This guy:

andy-king-fyre-netflix-grid.jpg
Netflix

Your move, Cruz.

(Via Mediaite)

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‘Father Stu’ Is Mark Wahlberg’s Two-Hour Sales Pitch For Catholicism

It’s safe to say that I didn’t know what I was in for when I sat down for Father Stu. I hadn’t seen a trailer, and my only impression of the film was the poster image, of Mark Wahlberg playing a boxer and also a priest, along with a few half-remembered, scrolled-past headlines concerning his disturbing weight gain. I don’t know exactly what I was expecting; maybe some kind of Sister Act, but with boxing? I don’t know how that makes sense but it was vaguely intriguing.

Father Stu, distributed by Sony Pictures, definitely has the tone of that kind of lighthearted romp, so it was with considerable surprise that I discovered, about 20 minutes in, that I was watching a religious movie. Not just a movie with some Catholicism in it, but a full-on hard sell for Papism itself, complete with a near-death experience and a protagonist’s religious awakening. Father Stu is essentially Heaven is for Real for TradCaths.

In retrospect, there should’ve been clues. Like the fact that Mel Gibson is in Father Stu, playing Mark Wahlberg’s father. What’s the connection between Mel Gibson and Mark Wahlberg? The more astute among us might’ve noted a certain flavor of fervent Catholicism — Gibson’s illustrated by his having directed The Passion Of The Christ (still far and away the most successful religious movie ever made, a massive bet Gibson placed on himself that paid off beyond his wildest dreams, essentially the faith-based Avatar), Wahlberg’s in more cryptic clues, like telling the world he’d become religious and quit masturbating, all the way back in 2012 (during the same interview in which he famously said he would’ve stopped 9/11).

Another connection is Gibson’s 30-year-old girlfriend, Rosalind Ross, who wrote and directed Father Stu. A champion equestrian (“the most decorated American vaulter of all time“) turned screenwriter who reportedly started dating Gibson in 2014, Ross told the OC Register recently that Wahlberg had been attached to a script she’d written (a blind submission, she noted), and through that association, eventually sold her on writing and directing his idea for a biopic about Stuart Long, a boxer-turned-priest whose life Wahlberg had been trying to make into a movie for years.

Anyway, this is all the backstory of which I was completely ignorant when I sat down for the film. Wahlberg plays Stu Long, a squirrely ne’er-do-well we first meet as a child, when he’s lip-synching along to Elvis*. His stereotypically crotchety father, Bill, played by Mel Gibson, is unimpressed with the exuberant boy, muttering, “Kid, the only thing you got in common with The King is hrbble burbblbe berrgghh.”

I’m not exactly sure what the second half of the sentence was, but it was delivered like some kind of coarse punchline. It sets the tone for the ensuing film, which seems to consist almost entirely of opaque aphorisms that are only about 80% intelligible, thanks to a combination of poor sound mixing, odd writing, and confusing acting choices.

Both Wahlberg and Gibson seem to have modeled their Father Stu accents on Danny McBride, which is slightly confusing given that McBride has a soft-consonant North Carolina drawl, and Stuart Long grew up in Montana**. Whatever the case, a decent portion Father Stu‘s dialogue reminds me of an old Patton Oswalt bit in which he describes an open mic comedian nodding off on heroin during his set, who would set up jokes, fall asleep in the middle, and come to later in the bit, slurring impenetrable punchlines like “Man, you couldn’ give a cripple crab a crutch.”

Anyway, the young Elvis impersonator grows up to become a boxer, an affable journeyman brutalized in a series of bloody bouts delivered in montage, culminating in a trip to the doctor-assisted by his mother, played by the great Jackie Weaver. Mama Long, gently at first and then more strenuously, tries to suggest to her increasingly over-the-hill son that he should probably have a better life plan than getting punched in the face.

“But Mama, I just got paid!” Stu tells her.

“And then what, you’re gonna go pro? Son, you’re at the age when most guys start thinking about retiring.”

Which is another weird sequence of dialogue, since the defining feature of “amateur boxing” is not getting paid. As Bill Murray’s character in The French Dispatch tells his writers, “whatever you do, just try to make it seem like you did it on purpose.” Father Stu is chock full of dramatic wrinkles whose intentionality is impossible to divine.

Stu is forced to retire from boxing for some vaguely sketched out medical reasons and decides to move to Hollywood to try to make it as an actor. Refusing to give a creepy propositioning agent a blowjob in order to get ahead, Stu ends up working at a supermarket (shades of Mickey Rourke working the deli counter in The Wrestler). It’s there he meets Father Stu‘s love interest, Carmen (Teresa Ruiz from Narcos Mexico, who looks a little like Latina Latoya Jackson), a strict Catholic who Stu attempts to woo by becoming a fixture at church. This clearly a ruse, since he still loves drinkin’, cussin’, and raisin’ hell a lot more than the Lord.

It’s during this period that Stu gets drunk one night and takes off on his motorcycle. He gets hit by a car in Father Stu‘s best-choreographed sequence, putting him into a coma, a near-death experience followed by a miraculous recovery that becomes Stu’s conversion event.

Much like Heaven Is For Real protagonist Colton Burpo, Stu returns from the white light with newfound wisdom and religious fervor. It makes for an interesting point of comparison, the inherently Catholic vision of Father Stu contrasted with Heaven Is For Real‘s protestant take on this same basic framework. Whereas protestant faith is flowery and abstract — with Burpo learning that, well, Heaven is for real — Catholicism is far more concerned with the physical, corporeal form of Jesus himself. The Passion was hyperfocused on the brutality and gore of the crucifixion itself. Likewise, when Jesus appears to Stu, he does so in physical form, as a scarred barfly who tries to tell Stu to stay off his motorcycle that night. “Sheesh, what was that guy drinking?” Stu asks the bartender.

“Just water,” the bartender says, portentously.

Likewise, Stu doesn’t just enter the pearly gates and reconnect with his dead brother (Father Stu borrows the “the wrong kid died!” trope from Walk Hard, with basically zero payoff). Instead, Stu meets the actual Virgin Mary. Catholic Jesus isn’t just a metaphor for love, he’s a man with blood and guts, who has a mother (who, post-acension comes to function a bit like Jesus’s publicist).

What the films share is an utterly unconvincing adversarial worldview. Militantly atheist psychologists try to convince the Burpos that their son hadn’t actually been to Heaven. Sneering townsfolk shout things like “Hey, Burpo! We heard your brother got to ride Jesus’s pony,” at Colton’s sister (an actual line from Heaven Is For Real).

Playing the role of sneering townsfolk in Father Stu are Stu’s parents, who aren’t just bemused by Stu’s deathbed conversion but actively hostile to it. Upon hearing that Stu plans to become a priest, Stu’s father hands Stu his revolver, saying “I’d rather you put me in the ground than suffer the shame of having my son be a priest!” (Or something like that, it was delivered in the form of yet another garbled aphorism.)

Stu’s first application to the seminary even gets rejected (is that a thing?), by a disapproving Monsignor played by A Clockwork Orange‘s Malcolm McDowell (who previously played the devil in 2010’s faith-based indie Suing The Devil). He doesn’t get accepted until a surprise visit to the Monsignor’s office where Stu wins him over with more opaque aphorisms. Monsignor, you wouldn’ give a cripple crab a crutch…

These fake adversaries are unconvincing partly on account of the films’ pedigree: both notable collaborations between organized religion and the entertainment industry establishment, whom the former would very much like to convince us wouldn’t want you to see this. But the Lord works in mysterious ways, like through the profit motive.

Stu goes to the seminary, where his friends include the good cop Ham (Aaron Moten) and jealous hater Jacob (Cody Fern), the latter of whom seems to be gay-coded in almost every respect. Which eventually leads to a tearful confession late in the movie in which he admits… that he has daddy issues. What?? Is he not gay? Was he supposed to seem gay? It’s impossible to tell what parts of this movie were intentional.

Meanwhile, Stu gets fat for some reason. In a movie that Mark Wahlberg sold by giving interviews about how he drank olive oil to gain weight (the most Catholic of weight-gain strategies), the reasons for Stu’s weight gain remain, like so much else in Father Stu, mostly arcane. He joins the seminary and the next thing you know he has a potbelly, as if the Catechism operates on The Santa Clause rules.

There’s another late-second act twist that I won’t spoil here, but you can read all about if you look up the real Stuart Long. Suffice it to say, it allows Wahlberg, in some tremendously unconvincing fat-face makeup (why was he chugging Lucini if they were just going to put water balloons on his face anyway?!?) to deliver even more impenetrable nuggets of folk wisdom.

Whereas Colton Burpo, having found God, got to ride off into a sun-dappled wheat field of heartland prosperity, the OG Catholics understand that true grace comes from suffering. As personified (and vocalized) by Stu, every added misery brings Stu closer to God. Protestant Jesus makes you suffer then rewards you with cool stuff. For Catholic Jesus, the suffering is the cool stuff. (For the Italian-Americans in the audience, this may go a long way towards explaining why our Nonis are the way they are).

Father Stu is exactly this kind of intriguing mix, of illuminating religious philosophy and utterly baffling narrative choices. It’s vaguely inspiring, slightly tedious to sit through, and ultimately unknowable, like any good Catholic sermon.

‘Father Stu’ is available exclusively in theaters April 13th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. More reviews here.

*At least, Gibson’s character references “The King” — it sounded like the Chuck Berry version to me, but it could just be that’s the version I know the best.

**An entirely different-sounding accent, characterized by distinctive rounded R sounds, “squash” pronounced like “squarsh,” and unique vowel shifts rendering “creek” as “crick” and “bag” as “beg.”

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Hollywood Is Paying Tribute To Legendary Comedian Gilbert Gottfried After His Passing

Reactions from Hollywood are pouring in after the news of iconic comedian Gilbert Gottfried‘s death. With his unforgettable voice, Gottfried was a real comic’s comic on top of being one of the best voice actor’s in the biz (his performance in Aladdin being a big standout). In a surreal moment that Gottfried would’ve appreciated, his death was first announced by Seinfeld actor Jason Alexander, who famously played George Costanza on the hit sitcom.

“Gilbert Gottfried made me laugh at times when laughter did not come easily,” Alexander tweeted. “What a gift. I did not know him well but I loved what he shared with me. My best wishes and sympathy to his family.”

After a few confusing moments, the news was confirmed by Gottfried’s family kicking off a wave of tributes for the beloved comedian.

“RIP Gilbert. Opening for Gilbert Gottfried at Carolines and Princeton Catch was one of the great thrills of my early stand up life,” wrote Jon Stewart. “He could leave you gasping for breath… just indescribably unusually hilarious… Damn.”

“Rest In Peace Gilbert Gottfried!” Bill Burr tweeted. “First time I saw him live he did his Jackie Kennedy bit: ‘Jackie do you remember where you were…’ in front of drunk Bruins fans at Nicks.

“Sending love to @RealGilbert’s wife Dara, his family & fans. Gilbert Gottfried was never not funny,” wrote Dane Cook. “He was a lovely guy, always friendly & made many people happy.”

You can see more tributes to Gilbert Gottfried below:

(Via Jason Alexander on Twitter)

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Indigo De Souza Announces A Slew Of Fall Headlining Tour Dates

Released last year, Indigo De Souza’s Any Shape You Take proved to be a riveting breakthrough for the North Carolina singer. Released on Saddle Creek Records, the album is a well-rounded look at love in its many forms. With some tour dates supporting My Morning Jacket and a first batch of headlining dates already announced, De Souza has now added a full slate of headlining shows throughout the US and Europe.

Along with the tour announcement, De Souza also shared a new live video for “Real Pain” and holy cow is it explosive. Filmed at the Drop of Sun Studios in Asheville where Any Shape You Take was recorded, it’s a free-flowing performance. The drums are miked in a way that brings out her voice in a really magical way and it reaches a powerful crescendo at the end.

Watch the live video for “Real Pain” above.

Tickets for new tour dates go on sale 4/15 at 10 am local time here. A presale begins on 4/13 at 10 am local time as well with more info at the same link.

4/20 — Washington, DC @ Black Cat ~
4/21 — Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg ~
4/24 — Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg ~
4/25 — Boston, MA @ Royale ~
4/28 — South Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground~
4/29 — Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom ~
4/30 — Woodstock, NY @ Colony ~
5/2 — Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer ~
5/7 — Paris, FR @ Le Hasard Ludique
5/9 — Amsterdam, NL @ Paradiso
5/11 — Brussels, BE @ Les Nuits Botanique
5/12 — Margate, EN @ Elsewhere
5/13-14 — Brighton, EN @ The Great Escape Festival
5/15 — Manchester, EN @ SOUP
5/16 — Bristol, EN @ Rough Trade Bristol
5/17 — London, EN @ Electrowerkz
5/20 — Durham, NC @ Durham Bulls Ball Park +
5/22 — Raleigh, NC @ Artsplosure
5/24 — Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall %
5/25 — Charlotte, NC @ Amos’ Southend %
5/27 — Louisville, KY @ Forecastle Festival
6/14 — Charleston, SC @ The Charleston Pour House
6/15 — Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo
6/18 — Covington, KY @ Madison Live *
6/21 — Cleveland, OH @ Jacobs Pavilion *
6/24 — Montreal, QC @ L’Esco
6/25 — Toronto, ON @ Velvet Underground
6/28 — Rochester Hills, MI @ Meadow Brooke Ampitheatre *
6/29 — Columbus, OH @ KEMBA Live! *
7/1 — Madison, WI @ Breese Stevens Field *
7/2 — Chicago, IL @ Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island *
7/14 — Minneapolis, MN @ Surly Brewing Festival Field
7/15 — Chicago, IL @ Pitchfork Music Festival
7/30 — Omaha, NE @ Maha Festival
8/11-13 — Gothenburg, SE @ Way Out West
8/16-20 — Paredes de Coura, PT @ Bodafone Paredes de Coura
8/18-21 — Crickhowell, WS @ Green Man Festival
8/19-21 — Hamburg, DE @ MS Dockville Festival
8/20 — Haselt, BE @ Pukkelpop Festival
8/27-28 — Pasadena, CA @ This Ain’t No Picnic
8/28 — San Diego, CA @ Humphrey’s Concerts by the Bay $
8/31 — Dallas, TX @ The Factory in Deep Ellum $
9/1 — Austin, TX @ ACL Live at The Moody Theater $
9/2 — Houston, TX @ Secret Group
9/21 — Norfolk, VA @ Elevation 27
9/22-25 — Dover, DE @ Firefly Music Festival
9/24 — Charlottesville, VA @ The Southern
9/27 — Asbury Park, NJ @ Asbury Lanes ^
9/29 — New York, NY @ Webster Hall ^
11/17 — Birmingham, AL @ Saturn
11/19 — Asheville, nc @ Orange Peel

~ with Horse Jumper of Love & Friendship
+ with Sylvan Esso & Yo La Tengo
% with Truth Club
* with My Morning Jacket
$ Here and There Festival with Courtney Barnett
^ with Vundabar