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‘Priscilla’ Costume Designer Stacey Battat On Capturing Reality Through The Style Of Two Cultural Icons

Priscilla Movie Elvis Jacob Elordi
A24

With her recognizable beehive hair and dark eye makeup, the early photos of Priscilla Presley are inescapable when it comes to American history. Over the past few years, the Presley inspiration has seen a resurgence in pop culture, whether it’s Lana Del Rey emulating some of Pris’ well-known looks, Riley Keough honoring her grandfather in Daisy Jones & The Six, or a chaotic biopic about The King himself.

So, when Sofia Coppola received Priscilla’s approval to adapt her memoir, Elvis And Me, she wanted to take a gentle but real approach to her life story, as it painted a darker portrait of their time together — beyond the picture-perfect one that the general public has seen. This started by assembling an impeccable cast and crew that allowed actors Cailee Spaeny (The Craft: Legacy) and Jacob Elordi (Euphoria) to transform into Priscilla and Elvis completely.

“I thought Priscilla’s story encapsulated something we all go through, but in such a heightened, glamorous way,” Coppola previously told Vogue. “I really wanted to capture how overwhelming that first brush with love is and how confusing it can be trying to understand a man who’s so hot and cold.”

Coppola also enlisted the help of her longtime collaborator, costume designer Stacey Battat, to craft the style as a symbol of Priscilla’s changes — from adolescence and beyond. According to W Mag, Battat, who had previously become friends with the director while working at Marc Jacobs, first started working with her on the costuming for 2010’s Somewhere. Since then, the two have collaborated on Coppola’s films, including The Bling Ring and The Beguiled, which was Battat’s first period-era work.

In total, Priscilla marks their sixth project together. A challenging one, to be sure. After all, transforming two historical icons on the screen is no small feat. According our conversation with Battat, there were six weeks of prep time ahead of the six-week shoot with Coppola providing a mood board for the entire film and the script.

As the film recently released in theaters, we sat down with Battat to speak to some of the key looks — and how they add to the grander portrayal of Priscilla and Elvis.

Priscilla’s First Encounters With Elvis

During Priscilla’s first encounter at Graceland, she witnesses the stripped-down version of Elvis. Instead of portraying him at first as the on-stage icon, he is just a man, softened by the option to put him in knitwear. “I really wanted to make sure that he felt regular, like an intimate, not in lace shirts,” she says of the choice. “And he wasn’t performing that, that he looked non-performative. He looked vulnerable.”

However, this created a challenge for Battat during the prep time. Valentino made many of Elvis’ sweaters for the film, which took about a month through hand-knitting — as “there’s not companies that just manufacture one sweater.” Despite the time crunch, she feels it elevates Jacob Elordi’s take as Elvis the most.

Priscilla Was Stylized To Stand Out From The Party

As for Priscilla, who was still a teenager at the time, the fashion also makes note of just how out of place she is to those surrounding her.

At Elvis’ party, the other attendees are all older. The women sit around, gossiping, as they wear watches and high-quality jewelry. Priscilla is, as they put it in the film, looking like a child. And this was exactly what Battat was aiming to achieve.

“The thing is, 1959, we’re actually closer to the ’60s, so we’re getting into a slimmer silhouette,” Battat shares. “We’re getting away from that kind of puffy petty coat that you see in the ’50s… I wanted to make sure that in the late ’50s when we first meet Priscilla and we first meet Elvis, that she does have a silhouette that reads as younger, younger than the other girls, also younger than she reads later on in the film.”

Elvis’ Controlling Influence On Priscilla’s Style

Throughout the film, fashion continues to serve as a throughline — whether it’s explicitly stated or implicitly delivered in subtle moments, both of which add up to the clothes being a means of control. During one moment, Elvis asks Priscilla if she’d like to go shopping, which she gleefully accepts.

The scene then shifts to Priscilla parading various dresses in a room filled with Elvis and his older male friends. She expresses her discomfort with one feeling too low-cut and grown-up. “I think these clothes are too sophisticated for me,” Spaeny-as-Priscilla says, as the guys encourage her to buy them. “Now, what is that dress?” Elvis asks in another part, when he wakes up to Priscilla wearing a printed dress she picked that he feels is distracting.

In turn, Priscilla becomes a doll of Elvis’ design — being stripped of her identity in the process. She is modeled after the beauty ideals he holds for himself rather than, it seems, what he actually is attracted to in women. Their relationship is dotted with accusations of infidelity: with his co-stars (Nancy Sinatra and Ann-Margret), with a flirty new woman in California, and more. The ones we do see Elvis’ attraction to are all blonde, while he wanted Priscilla’s hair to be jet black.

By the time the film depicts Elvis and Priscilla’s wedding, the two are nearly identical. Valentino once again played an “immeasurable” role in the costumes, using an “elegant black fabric” to model the rock star’s tuxedo, rather than his paisley original. For Priscilla’s dress, Battat looked at laces with Chanel’s creative director, Virginie Viard, from an earlier collection, using it for a recreation “within the same vibe,” with the silhouette modeled for Spaeny specifically.

How The Real Life Priscilla Informed The Costume Design

With how spot-on the costume design is in the film, it left questions on whether the real Priscilla had any input on the fashion. After divorcing Elvis, she owned a Los Angeles boutique called Bis & Beau, stemming from her love of style. She also serves as an executive producer on Coppola’s film. Although Battat didn’t have direct conversations with her, she was able to pass on questions through Coppola and Spaeny — whether it was about her fashion evolution or how to style Elordi’s Elvis.

“She helped us kind of to understand when she stopped wearing stockings, and what Elvis would wear between shows when he went to his dressing room,” Battat recalls. “So, all of that kind of came from her. And also, just that Elvis never left his bedroom without being fully dressed. And obviously, the stuff that’s in the script comes from her, that he didn’t like her in prints.”

Priscilla Finds Her Own Sense Of Style And Self

Upon watching Priscilla, viewers are struck by the final transformation that Spaeny goes through. Gone are the eyelashes and eyeliner, and her hair noticeably shifts into a ’70s-inspired straightened look. She washes out the black dye for a gentler, natural-looking honey color, seemingly mirroring the inspiration that Los Angeles had on her. And, she starts incorporating prints and jeans into her wardrobe. In real life, Priscilla divorced Elvis around the age of 27, six years after he married her at 21 and met her at 14. We’re then left with the same question she likely would’ve had at the time: Who are you when you’re alone?

It’s around this period, too, when the film starts to depict pieces of the staged Elvis as he tries on various jumpsuits in the living room of the Graceland house or is seen performing on stage in the well-known white ensemble. These were made between the film’s in-house tailor, and a company called B&K Enterprises Costume Company, which is known for making “a lot of that iconic Elvis stuff.”

“They work with the original patterns, and they were able to make the jumpsuit for us and the blue suit that he wears in the photo shoot,” she adds about B&K, revealing that these were some of the first items she tried on Elordi. “It’s a small company. It takes about six months to make one of those jumpsuits.”

By using these extravagant jumpsuits to contrast Priscilla’s new laidback style, it becomes visually clear just how disconnected the two have become. During the first half of Priscilla, Spaeny and Elordi feel coordinated in their style, typically through similar color palettes, like Priscilla’s polka-dot two-piece matching Elvis’ B&W suit when leaving their Las Vegas bender. Priscilla’s adolescence is also marked by bows being present on most of her outfits, being “indicative of the time” and Battat tied it to the Southern phrase, “The bigger the bow, the closer to God.”

However, much like Priscilla’s beehive look, the bows also “tapered out as she got older,” much like her willingness to remain in the marriage.

Battat reflects on an image from a photoshoot she encountered of Elvis and Priscilla, taken shortly before they got divorced — which is recreated in the film. “I think that photo really informed how far they’d come apart, in a visual way,” she points out. In one still from it, Elvis takes a power stance of sorts, as he wears an all-blue suit, and is the one sitting in the chair with a cigar and a staff. Priscilla is in a lavender outfit, posing beside him from the carpet.

“I remember looking at that photo early on with Sofia and us noticing that she was really uncomfortable,” she says. “There’s one photo where he’s kind of gripping her arm, and the real Priscilla looks very uncomfortable.”

“I think there was also more to that photo that felt disconnected, which is, he’s so embellished,” Battat adds. “He’s got a staff and a giant collar and jewelry and eye makeup, and she is pared down, she’s lost the eye makeup, she’s wearing a simple outfit.”


Battat’s costume design work captures not only this disconnect, but also the way that fashion is used as a form of control on Priscilla. Early on in the film, Priscilla wants to work part-time at a clothing store while Elvis is away — a notion he swiftly shuts down. She is meant to be there for him.

In turn, we see her rewarded with extravagance, whether it’s the dresses, a watch, a ring, or any other gift Elvis provides to keep her complacent. Reflecting back to Coppola’s earlier quote, Priscilla does a tremendous job of capturing the relatability, before driving home the eventual message through a collaboration of Battat’s costuming, Coppola’s directorial vision, and the acting work of Spaeny and Elordi: it’s okay to leave Graceland when you find yourself.

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‘Act like you’re my mom’: 10-year-old cleverly escapes a woman who was following him home

A quick-thinking 10-year-old boy escaped a woman trying to lure him by pretending that a local store clerk was his mother. ABC 6 reports that Sammy Green was walking home from school in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, on Friday, November 11, when a strange woman started following him.

The woman “started walking with him and asking him where his family was, asking where his dad was,” Sam Green, the boy’s father, told ABC6. The boy didn’t know the woman but she insisted that she knew his family.

She tried to lure him into going with her by promising she’d buy him “anything he wanted” at Wawa, a local convenience store that sells shakes, sandwiches and other treats.

“She was like, ‘I’m going to Wawa, are you going there? What are you getting from Wawa? Where’s your family at?'” Sammy told CBS.


“She said she probably knew me and was going to Wawa and that he was supposed to go with her and he could get anything he wanted,” Sam Green said.

In an attempt to flee the suspicious woman, Sammy walked into Dani Bee Funky, an unconventional gift shop, where he went straight to 17-year-old Hannah who was working the register. “He was like, ‘Pretend like you’re my mom,'” Hannah told CBS, “and I was just like, ‘all right go to the back.’ He didn’t want to leave my side.”

Security footage shows that Hannah then calmly walked up to the store’s front door and locked it, preventing the woman from coming inside. After she was locked out, the woman walked away. “I was still shaking when I was in here,” Sammy said.

The security camera footage is hard for Sammy’s dad to watch. “When we were watching that video, I cried every time I saw it,” said Green.

The shop’s owner has nothing but praise for Hannah’s calm way of handling the dangerous situation. “I am very proud of her. Hannah is a 17-year-old young lady. She did everything correctly,” Small said.

This story is a great reminder for parents to talk to their kids about what to do if they are approached by a suspicious person. The first thing they should know is that it’s OK to say “No!” as loudly as possible to a suspicious person. They should then scream, “Help! This is not my mom or my dad!” to alert the adults around them and then run. If they are grabbed by the person they should bite, punch and kick as hard as they can until they can get free.

Sammy’s dad is proud that his son remembered what he told him to do when confronted by a suspicious stranger. “Think of every scenario and make sure that children know and also practice it,” he reminded parents. “Practice your situations and scenarios just like fire drills.”

For the time being, Sammy is going to have a family friend walk him to and from school. The Pottstown Police have spoken with the woman and she is now getting help for mental health issues.

This article originally appeared on 11.17.22

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‘The View’s Joy Behar Dares Donald Trump To Come After The Show For Criticizing Him: ‘Try It’

Joy Behar threw down a direct challenge to Donald Trump on Friday morning’s episode of The View. The former president recently gave an interview where he seemingly threatened to bring the full-power of the government down on his opponents.

“If I happen to be president and I see somebody who’s doing well and beating me very badly, I say go down and indict them,” Trump told Univision during a rambling answer about the Biden administration allegedly doing the same to him. The rant did not sit well with The View panel.

“Don’t his supporters see that he turns on people who are in his corner? If you dare to go against him, even this much, he goes bananas on you,” Behar said via Entertainment Weekly before co-host Ana Navarro called it “weaponizing governments against his opponents.”

Alyssa Farah Griffin, who actually worked for the Trump White House, took things even further.

“Donald Trump is running for president for two reasons, to get out of jail and to get revenge on his enemies, and when he speaks, we should listen,” Griffin said. “Frankly, it’s scary.”

That’s when Behar noted that The View has routinely criticized Trump, prompting her to flat-out dare Trump to come after the show.

“Us. What about us?” Behar said. “Try it! Go ahead, try it. We have this show every day, okay, Donald?”

(Via Entertainment Weekly)

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‘New York Times’ Connections: Here Are Hints & Answers For The November 10 Puzzle

New York Times Connection
The New York Times

The latest puzzle craze from those twisted minds at The New York Times is Connections, a word association game. Sorry, Wordle, your 15 minutes are long gone.

If you don’t know how Connections works, it’s pretty neat. Each puzzle shows 16 words and the goal is to group the words with a common theme. Some of them are trickier than others, of course, and a few words might seem like they fit together but don’t. You have to try to group them all together without messing up (you only get a few amounts of tries). The topics vary in difficulty, with some meant to trick you. It’s a game, after all.

Just like Wordle, the puzzles are new every day, which means that you need to get it done ASAP in order to prove to your friends that you are, in fact, better and cooler than them. If you have yet to figure it out but need to beat out the rest of your friend group, check out the answers to the latest puzzle.

Answers for the November 10th Connections puzzle:

If you can’t get it on your own (no shame), then here are the answers for the November 10th puzzle.
Blue- SPICES: ANISE, DILL, NUTMEG, SAGE
Yellow- INTELLIGENT: BRIGHT, QUICK, SHARP, SMART
Green- DEODORANTS: AXE, DEGREE, OLD SPICE, SECRET
Purple- MEDIEVAL WEAPONS: CLUB, MACE, SPEAR, SWORD

(Via NYT Connections)

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The Biggest Surprises/Snubs Of The 2024 Grammy Nominations

Grammy Snubs 2024
Getty Image/Merle Cooper

The 2024 Grammy Awards nominations have been announced, and as usual, there are plenty of surprises and snubs to discuss. Although the Recording Academy added some new categories this year to accommodate the emergence of Afropop as a global force, it looks like another growing genre was left out in the cold. Meanwhile, as country music experiences a resurgence, some of the genre’s most dominant stars missed out on the biggest looks of the year. And even though the Grammys have taken huge steps in addressing the awards’ shortcomings in rap and R&B, they appear to have overlooked some of the year’s most talked-about projects and artists.

Here are the biggest surprises and snubs of the 2024 Grammy nominations.

PinkPantheress Wasn’t Nominated Despite A Breakout Year

“Boy’s A Liar” was one of the biggest hits of the past year, sticking its index finger directly on the pulse of the zeitgeist. From predicting the resurgence of the 2-step/garage sounds that shaped huge hits like “Seven” and “Super Shy” (more on them later) to introducing the non-rap-fan population to the pop culture juggernaut that is Ice Spice, “Boy’s A Liar” was an inescapable phenomenon and the fact that PinkPantheress couldn’t get a record, song, or Best New Artist nomination speaks to both how competitive the field was this year and how much further the Academy has to go in bridging that pesky generation gap.

Barbie Took Over

Here’s how dominant the Barbie soundtrack was this year: the Best Song Written For Visual Media category only features ONE non-Barbie song (Rihanna’s “Lift Me Up” from Wakanda Forever) and a Barbie song is nominated in both eligible Big Four categories, as well as for Rap Song of the Year. The doll who does it all is practically guaranteed at least one win at this year’s awards — even at the cost of me and my editor’s bet about “Peaches” from Mario and “Dear Alien” from Asteroid City. And Across The Spider-Verse deserved more.

Foo Fighters Weren’t Nominated For Album Of The Year

In somewhat of a break from Grammy tradition, Foo Fighters’ But Here We Are wasn’t nominated for Album Of The Year, despite the recent death of drummer Taylor Hawkins and the album’s emotional material. It’s grim to think about, but in past years, you could reliably expect a consolation posthumous nomination. It’s downright disheartening to think that this time the Grammys ignored the macabre tradition.

Country Dominated The Charts But Got (Mostly) Shut Out Of The Big Four

The general awards are always controversial but there’s an argument to be made here. While the Big Four are almost never actually tied to commercial achievement — hello Esperanza Spalding — Zach Bryan, Luke Combs, and Morgan Wallen all utterly dominated the charts this year, yet it appears that if this was taken into consideration, it wasn’t enough to lift them out of their respective niches. Perhaps the ideological fractures in that fanbase had an effect. At least there is Jelly Roll.

Where Are The K-Pop Stars?

During the eligibility period this past year, a bunch of songs from K-pop acts took over the American charts. Fifty Fifty’s “Cupid” has been impossible to get away from (I may or may not have tried), New Jeans’ “Super Shy” became a mall P.A. mainstay, and Jung Kook’s solo hit “Seven” peaked at No. 1 on the Hot 100. What makes K-pop’s absence from this year’s nominations stranger is how ubiquitous K-pop has been at the Grammys for the past handful of years, with BTS performing “Dynamite” in 2021 and “Yet To Come” earning a history-making nomination in 2022.

Reggaeton And Latin Trap Were Locked Out Of The Big Awards, Too

Take everything said about K-pop above and translate it into Spanish. Sure, there’s a Latin Grammys, but that smells suspiciously of “separate but equal,” you know? You’d think Peso Pluma or Karol G would warrant a nod, even if Grammys voters could hardly be expected to tunnel all the way down to discover newer breakout artists like Myke Towers or Rauw Alejandro. Again, with the Latin Grammys coming just a few weeks after the “standard issue” ceremony, perhaps interested voters were just too distracted to manage both sets of ballots. Still, it’s a black mark for sure.

Gunna Didn’t Make The Cut For Best Rap Album

Yes, awards nominations are subjective, but there’s a general consensus among rap fans online — corroborated by chart performance — that Gunna had one of the standout albums of the year, if not the only one with any real staying power. Yet, it seems Grammy voters went for the lowest-hanging fruit: Killer Mike and Nas are obvious “prestige” picks for the Gen X hip-hop heads that mostly make up the part of the Academy most well-versed in rap (heyo), while Drake and Travis Scott are brand-friendly pop mainstays. However, Utopia only spent four weeks on the Billboard 200 — a massive drop off from his last two projects, and reception was largely lukewarm. Metro Boomin is a nice addition, but again, for the wrong album (Across The Spider-Verse getting snubbed is going to give me heartburn for the rest of the year).

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

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‘Succession’ Star Brian Cox Now Says He Took The Gig Hosting The New James Bond Reality Show By Mistake

Last month, Brian Cox surprised Succession fans by revealing that his follow-up to the critically-acclaimed series is a James Bond reality show. Seemingly out of nowhere, the actor appeared in the 007: Road to a Million trailer where he’ll play The Controller, the show’s game-master who tasks the contestants with a series of Bond-esque tasks to complete for the chance to win a million pounds.

When asked by Variety why he would do a reality show after locking down an Emmy nomination for his role as Logan Roy in Succession, Cox couldn’t help but give a blunt response as he so often does. “They paid me an enormous amount of money. And that’s always very attractive,” Cox said.

However, the actor has since changed his tune. While appearing on The Tonight Show, Cox told Jimmy Fallon that the whole thing was a mix-up. He mistakenly thought the reality TV role was for a new Bond movie and jumped at the chance to meet with legendary Bond producer Barbara Broccoli.

“For years, I thought, you know, I would love to be in James Bond,” Cox told Fallon via Decider. “It would be really interesting. And I thought, ‘This is my moment,’ but it wasn’t.’”

Despite learning that he would not be the next Bond villain, Cox stuck around and still had fun on the reality series. “You know, I love bossing people around,” he joked to Fallon.

007: Road to a Million starts streaming November 10 on Amazon Prime Video.

(Via Decider)

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Iceland Airwaves Festival Is For Music Lovers Consumed By Wanderlust

Iceland Airwaves DADI FREYR
Photo by Sjana

For a country whose entire population is roughly half that of a midsize American city like Dayton, Ohio, there’s a surprising amount of music within Iceland’s borders. Sure, there are big names like Björk and Sigur Rós, but in recent years, the country has produced a two-time Grammy Award-winning composer (Hildur Guðnadóttir), a chart-topping folk rock band (Of Monsters And Men), and a Eurovision Song Contest finalist (Daði Freyr). While the country’s stunning, mossy pastoral landscapes and breathtaking waterfalls offer endless creative inspiration, Reykjavík’s annual music festival Iceland Airwaves gives insight into why the country has so many creatives making waves globally.

Reykjavík is a city that’s no stranger to tourism. At any given time, one-third of the people in Reykjavík are international travelers keen to get a glimpse of the Northern Lights or take a dip in one of the city’s hangover-curing geothermal pools. But for one weekend every November, the city prioritizes a different kind of tourism: Music tourism. Iceland Airwaves, which took place the weekend of November 2nd through 4th 2023, invited over 100 musicians from around the world to take over the city’s downtown venues.

Those who have visited SXSW in Austin would be familiar with Iceland Airwaves’ setup. Rather than cramming thousands of attendees into a stadium or filling up a local park with a few stages, Iceland Airwaves is sprawled across the city in a handful of different venues of all shapes and sizes. That way, attendees are able to experience the city, its culture, and its music in a unique way.

Nanna Iceland Airwaves
Photo by Florian Trykowski

All of Iceland Airwaves’ scheduled performances take place after sunset, opening attendees up to playing tourist in the daytime. Before shifting into festival mode, I was able to peruse the shops (and gawk at the price of authentic Icelandic wool sweaters) in Reykjavík’s Rainbow Street shopping district. I stopped by the picturesque church Hallgrímskirkja and climbed its tower to see stunning 360-degree views of the quaint city before picking up the best cinnamon roll of my life at Braud & Co (I promise TikTok influencers are not overhyping this one), and warmed myself up after a day of meandering with a traditional Icelandic lobster bisque.

While I made music discovery a prime objective of the weekend, catching a few of my favorite North American artists in an Icelandic setting was a highlight. Indie darlings Blondshell brought their early aughts-inspired sound to a sizeable crowd at Reykjavík’s art museum, Andy Shauf delivered a stripped-down version of his latest album Norm and some of his early fan favorites to dedicated listeners at an opera house, Ghostly Kisses performed their haunting tunes to an intimate show at a lit-up church, and Anjimile closed out a packed hostel living room with their arresting tunes.

My personal music tastes had me prioritizing sets by indie artists, but the Icelandic musicians I caught made it clear there’s not just one genre of music the country specializes in. I saw everyone from the industrial electro-house trio Ex.Girls, which had an entire crowd dancing even after a long day, alt-rock group Tilbury, which sounded like they could have headlined Shaky Knees Festival, and singer-songwriter Nanna (of Of Monsters And Men fame) who brought a crowd to tears with her moving melodies. I even got the chance to see folk songwriter Elín Hall deliver a breathtaking acoustic set inside the Raufarhólshellir lava tunnel.

Elín Hall at Iceland Airwaves
Photo by Cat Gundry

Though they might not share a genre, the real throughline of Icelandic artists is how the country uplifts them. As Reykjavík mayor Dagur Bergþóruson Eggertsson put it at a welcome party, “Music gave Reykjavík the confidence to stand up and be who we are.” It’s a way for Icelanders to “find their voice, even if it’s not in the mainstream.” It’s clear the city puts an emphasis on the arts, whether it’s the countless murals you see walking throughout the city, the feature-length Icelandic films screening in their theaters, or the fact that a country with a relatively small population produces such a wide variety of musicians. Iceland has a dedicated music export office, which helps their artists earn grants and put them on the map globally. They even incentivize artists to record music in their country through a program aptly called Record In Iceland, which uses funding from the State Treasury to reimburse 25 percent of the recording costs for music incurred in Iceland.

Like most festivals, getting there is the hard part. Thankfully, Icelandair teams up with the festival each year to offer packages that include flights, festival passes, and airport transportation, so the “getting there” portion of the trip is actually pretty seamless. Unlike most festivals, though, there are no lengthy security lines to get in, and you won’t find yourself queuing up to use a Porta Potty that hasn’t been cleaned in three days (In fact, there wasn’t a single Porta Potty in sight). The venues are clustered around Reykjavík’s city center, allowing for natural crowd control that results in shows actually feeling intimate. One moment, I was seated in the pews of Fríkirkjan, a 124-year-old church adorned with fading frescos that transformed the concert into a spiritual experience. Then, a short walk had me seated at a show at the ornate opera house Gamla Bíó.

The downside of the spaced-out venues is that it’s easy to find yourself on a 20-minute trek back and forth if set times put your favorite artists at opposite ends of the city center (and when it’s 30 degrees outside with icy wind that gives Chicago a run for its money, this Los Angeles resident felt like she was in an arctic spinoff of Survivor). Another tip for future Iceland Airwaves travelers: Plan your arrival several days before the music starts. I took a red-eye flight that had me touching down in Reykjavík the day the music started, which meant I was so jet lagged I had to miss a handful of performances I was really looking forward to.

One weekend and many fish and chips meals later, I boarded my flight back to the US inspired by the stunning natural surroundings I witnessed, the kind people I met, and the moving music I heard. Overall, Iceland Airwaves is the perfect festival for adventurous travelers who want to discover new music and culture in a unique way. It pulls back the curtain on how a country is able to foster such a wide variety of music and the arts and offers a chance to witness performances you’d never be able to see stateside.

Uproxx was hosted by Iceland Airwaves for this story. However, they did not review or approve this story. You can read our press trip/hosting policy here.

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How Professional Killers Became Film’s Most Thoughtful, Unsettling Protagonists

Hitman Movies The Killer
Merle Cooper

Viewers of David Fincher’s The Killer (ready to stream now on Netflix) might find themselves experiencing a sense of deja vu in the film’s opening moments, though the feeling won’t last for long. The film’s opening scenes find star Michael Fassbender, playing a character credited simply as “The Killer,” preparing for his latest job. This involves sticking to a meticulous routine, maintaining a superhuman level of discipline, assembling the correct equipment, and waiting patiently while waxing thoughtful in voiceover, sometimes via observations about his job — “Stick to your plan. Anticipate, don’t improvise.”– and sometimes via facts and stats about life on Earth. He’s a cold-blooded killer who lives by a code and possesses a probing intelligence that sets him apart from the world.

He’s a movie hitman, in other words, a now familiar type. No wonder the character doesn’t have a name. But Fincher, working from a screenplay by Seven screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker adapting a French comic by Matz and Luc Jacamon, keeps short-circuiting expectations created by the hitman movies that preceded The Killer, just like the movie keeps muffling the many songs by The Smiths on its soundtrack just as they get to the good part. The Killer is good at his job, or so he says. But the moment that sets the film’s plot in motion (after many extended scenes of watching him wait for his moment) finds him blowing his shot. Why? Did he just choke or was there some sort of subliminal impulse at work? The movie never fully answers the question. In fact, it only complicates it with its cryptic final moments. But one thing is clear from this moment on: this guy is not to be taken at face value.

Fincher’s film plays with expectations set by decades of films treating hitmen as philosophical weirdos who operate by a code with implications beyond their chosen profession, and beyond the films containing them. They’re there to take out their targets, but also to serve as brutal vehicles by which films can explore some big questions — and most often return with uncomfortable answers. Movies have featured hitmen of one kind or another for as long as they’ve told crime stories— to say nothing of the assassins found in Westerns and other genres — but if there’s a ground zero for the philosophical hired killer it’s probably the 1958 film Murder by Contract.

Murder By Contract
Columbia Pictures

Vince Edwards stars as Claude, who gives up a steady day job for the life of a professional hitman, picking up a reputation as a consummate professional that makes him in great demand (even after he takes out the mobster who gives him his first big break after a rival meets his price). He brings this reputation to Los Angeles when he’s hired to take out a musician named Billie (Caprice Toriel) before she can testify against her mob boss ex-boyfriend. His handlers find his demands — like spending a day at the beach and refusing to check out the location of the hit — peculiar, but that doesn’t mean he’s not the right man for the job. Or at least it might not mean that.

A film about an outsider made by outsiders. Director Irving Lerner was blacklisted for leftist sympathies, as was uncredited co-writer Ben Maddow (The Asphalt Jungle). Claude’s success in a world where everything has its price and his inability to save enough to buy a home without becoming a killer echo their politics, but Claude’s identity issues run deeper. He begins the film waiting by the phone for the call that will offer him his big break, getting food delivered, and exercising to keep his body and mind in shape while he fights boredom. (You can bet Fincher knows this film, also a favorite of Martin Scorsese’s.) In the most literal sense, he has no life outside of work. He is his job.

Jean-Pierre Melville’s 1967 film Le Samouraï takes the philosophical implications raised by Murder by Contract and runs with them, creating a film as haunting as it is stylish. Like Claude, Paris hitman Jef Costello (Alain Delon) lives a pared-down existence defined by a strict routine. Unlike Claude (who despises women), Jef has found room for a lover (played by Delon’s wife Nathalie Delon) but even this aspect of his life is carefully controlled. Or so he believes: when a job goes wrong, the film depicts Jef’s system unraveling — and with it his sense of self. Who is he if he can’t perform his job? The final scene provides a definitive answer.

Stylish and hauntingly calm, Delon’s performance helps create a film that’s at once seductive and unsettling, romanticizing the life of the assassin as the ultimate outsider hero even as it glides toward a conclusion that depicts the cost of such a life. As such, it provided the blueprint for the protagonists of many films that followed. John Woo borrowed part of the plot of his 1989 film The Killer from Douglas Sirk’s Magnificent Obsession, but Chow Yun-fat’s Ah Jong is practically Jef reborn. Just as there would be no Ah Jong without Jef there would be no Vincent (John Travolta) and Jules (Samuel L. Jackson) in Pulp Fiction, who joined the coolness of their predecessors to Quentin Tarantino’s trademark verbosity. And without Tarantino, it’s hard to imagine everything from Martin McDonagh’s In Bruges to the John Wick movies taking quite the same shape, if they existed at all.

in-bruges-focus-features.jpeg
Focus Features

It’s the flexibility suggested by the span between In Bruges and John Wick that reveals why hitmen are such popular subjects. They can serve as superhuman badasses (see also The Professional, The Long Kiss Goodnight, etc.) But they can also anchor self-aware genre deconstructions (Jim Jarmusch’s Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai), turn professional codes into psychopathy (the Coens’ No Country for Old Men), or illustrate how easy it is to lose one’s soul in America (Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman).

The sheer number of cinematic hitmen might suggest a distressing cultural obsession, so perhaps it’s oddly comforting that most hitmen stories end in tragedy or disaffection. (Jules walks away and tries to be a “shepherd.” Vince meets a different fate.) If the life of a killer is in any way a life worth living, it’s not one that can be sustained. From Murder by Contract through The Killer (Fincher’s but also Woo’s), the most discomforting element of hitmen movies isn’t the violence or the glamorization but the sense that, without killing, these characters are nothing. That what they’ve built their lives around might be meaningless. That those lives might be a waste. That in spite of their skills they’ve focused on all the wrong things. And maybe, by extension, so have we.

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5 reasons savvy content creators are flocking to Pond5

In today’s digital age, content creators know the drill all too well. Finding the perfect stock media that’s high quality and affordable can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. But luckily, there’s Pond5, a platform where every click unveils a treasure trove of royalty-free assets tailored to meet the ever-evolving needs of modern creatives. From vibrant visuals to captivating sounds, Pond5 emerges not just as an answer but as the ultimate game-changer in the world of stock media.

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Ever felt stifled by limited choices? We’ve been there. But with Pond5, that’s ancient history. Boasting a jaw-dropping collection of over 35 million videos, it’s like walking into a filmmaker’s paradise. And in a world where originality is king, variety isn’t just the spice of life—it’s the very lifeblood of content creation. Whether you’re crafting a cinematic masterpiece or a snappy social media clip, Pond5 ensures lackluster options don’t confine your vision.

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Let’s talk money. Every content creator has a budget. And let’s be honest: stretching those dollars can be a tightrope walk. That’s where Pond5 shines. Not only do they offer killer competitive pricing on premium assets, but they also sprinkle in some sweet deals and promotions. With Pond5, you’re not just investing in more than just top-tier media. You’re bagging the best bang for your buck.

High-Quality and Trustworthy Content

Alright, let’s cut to the chase: quality matters. Pond5 gets that. Every piece of media? Vetted. Every video clip? Reviewed for excellence. It’s like a curated gallery where only the best make the cut. And if you’re thinking, “Sure, but can I trust them?” let that stellar 4.8 Trustpilot rating answer your question. It’s not just a number; it’s the voice of thousands who’ve been there, done that, and left mighty impressed. With Pond5, you’re not just sourcing content. You’re embracing top-notch reliability.

Streamlined Search and User Experience

Have you ever felt lost in a maze of media? Pond5’s got the antidote. Their slick, user-friendly interface feels like a breath of fresh air in a stuffy room. And with search capabilities that are second to none, finding that perfect clip feels less like a wild goose chase and more like a breeze. After all, in the fast-paced world of content creation, time is gold. Pond5 ensures every second counts so you can focus on what you do best: creating magic.

Unique and Exclusive Content

In the media world, standing out is the name of the game. Enter Pond5’s treasure trove of exclusive footage and one-of-a-kind media pieces. It’s like having a VIP pass to a world where ordinary just doesn’t cut it. These aren’t your everyday stock offerings; they’re handpicked gems that elevate your content. With Pond5, you’re not just blending in with the crowd—you’re stepping into the spotlight, ready to dazzle.

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In a nutshell, Pond5 offers wide variety, unbeatable pricing, top-tier quality, seamless navigation, and exclusive content. Content creators, it’s time. Click here to dive into Pond5 and transform your vision!

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Airbnb host wakes his guest up in the middle of the night so she wouldn’t miss the northern lights

Seeing the northern lights is a common bucket list adventure for many people. After all, it ticks a lot of boxes—being a dazzling light show, rich historical experience and scientific phenomenon all rolled into one. Plus there’s the uncertainty of it all, never quite knowing if you’ll witness a vivid streak of otherworldly colors dance across the sky…or simply see an oddly colored cloud. It’s nature’s slot machine, if you will.

Traveler and content creator Pency Lucero was willing to take that gamble. After thorough research, she stumbled upon an Airbnb in Rörbäck, Sweden with an actual picture of the northern lights shining above the cabin in the listing. With that kind of photo evidence, she felt good about her odds.

However, as soon as she landed, snow began falling so hard that the entire sky was “barely visible,” she told Upworthy. Martin, the Airbnb host, was nonetheless determined to do everything he could to ensure his guests got to see the spectacle, even offering to wake Lucero up in the middle of the night if he saw anything.

Then one night, the knock came.


In a video Lucero posted to TikTok, which now has over 12 million views, we hear Martin ushering her out to take a peek. Then we see Lucero’s face light up just before seeing the sky do the same.

“I thought it was a prank,” the onscreen text reads in the clip. “And then I see it….”

Watch:

@penslucero

I’m on the verge of crying every time I watch this video I still cannot believe it. 📍 Rörbäck, Sweden

“I was mostly in awe of what this Earth is capable of,” Lucero recalled. “I never expected it to be THAT beautiful for the naked eye.” This is a hopeful sentiment against the widely accepted notion that the northern lights are often better looking in photos than they are in real life.

As Lucero asserted in a follow-up video, “Our video doesn’t do it justice at all…I would argue it’s even better for the naked eye.”

@penslucero Replying to @PatriotFamilyHomes ♬ Golden Hour: Piano Version – Andy Morris

Others were quick to back Lucero with anecdotes of their own experience.

“It’s definitely possible to see it like in the pics. I saw it this winter in Norway, there was bright green, purple and so much movement.”

“They’re so much better in person, the way they dance and move around is insane and beautiful.”

Of course, if you ask Martin, who everyone agreed was the best host ever, seeing guest reactions of pure wonder and joy is even “better than the lights themselves.” But still, he can’t deny that there’s a breathtaking magic to it all. He shared with Upworthy that “Sometimes it feels like it will pull you up in the sky like you are in the middle of it. I wish everyone would have the chance to witness it.”

northern lights

When it comes to tips for actually seeing the northern lights, Martin admits it still mostly comes down to being in the right place at the right time. Luckily, his Airbnb listing can help with that.

Nature has a great way of reminding us that beyond the distractions and distresses of modern life, there is sublime beauty waiting for the chance to capture our hearts.

This article originally appeared on 03.27.23