Our current situation has led to months-long shutdowns for almost every place a crowd can gather, including concerts, restaurants, and movie theaters. In the case of the latter, the in-person experience can’t be entirely replicated at home, but movies like Trolls World Tour have proven that people are more than willing to give it a go (with AMC Theaters reacting with a Universal ban). Now the largest U.S. theater chain is declaring “substantial doubt” that it can continue operations after months of closures for over 1,000 multiplexes.
The theater chain’s public regulatory filings were noted by CNN, which reports that AMC Theaters will have lost up to $2.4 billion in this year’s first quarter. Continuing for months with “effectively no revenue” this quarter could lead to bankruptcy and eventual closure for the company. Although U.S. states are lifting restrictions in stages right now, and theaters are allowed to open in many places, the company still faces another great challenge — a barren release schedule:
“Even if governmental operating restrictions are lifted in certain jurisdictions, distributors may delay the release of new films until such time that operating restrictions are eased more broadly domestically and internationally, which may further limit our operations,” the company said.
The release-schedule issue won’t be solvable overnight, given that when tentpoles like Fast and Furious 9 began pushing back nearly a year on the calendar, other moneymakers soon followed suit. At this point, a few big titles (a Russell Crowe road-rage movie, along with Tenet and Wonder Woman 1984) still appear to be holding firm on release dates for summer, but will audiences return to theaters before fall? Hollywood Reporter quotes an analyst (Wedbush Securities’ Michael Pachter) that notes previous doubt about the theater chain’s liquidity, and he predicts that the company will “have to restructure completely” if the situation doesn’t dramatically improve by November. Many high-profile movies are lined up for fall, when the ball will be in theatergoers’ courts.
While protests are one way to bring about change, another is by voting in local and national elections. There are a lot of those happening this month, so Lizzo, Rihanna, and Camila Cabello (among others) are encouraging fans to make their voices heard via the ballot box.
Tapping out a beat on a drum machine, Lizzo offered a simple rap about voting, and as she rapped, text on the screen read, “Hey you! Do you know how you can help make a change today? Vote! Presidential primaries today. DC. Iowa. South Dakota. Rhode Island. Maryland. New Mexico. Indiana. Montana. Pennsylvania. There are many ways to protest. Find your voice and use it. We need you.”
Rihanna shared a similar message, taking to Instagram to share the same list of states and write, “VOTE. Ya ain’t got sh*t else to do man! Get yo ass off the couch and go vote!!! I don’t wanna hear another excuse!! Stop believing that your vote and voice don’t matter! This the illest way to protest…vote for the change you want!!!”
Somebody wrote in the comments, “Voting ain’t gon change sh*t,” and Rihanna was having none of that. She responded, “sick of hearing this. Ya know what ain’t gon change sh*t? not doing sh*t!!!!”
Camila Cabello also hopped on Instagram and shared a message, in both English and Spanish, about voting, writing, “We promised to use this time to prepare for ACTION – so one of the most important things you can do right now is VOTE. 23 states have elections this month. Your vote has the power to create lasting change and you’re voting for more than just the president. Don’t let this moment pass you by. Verify your voter registration, get vote-by-mail info, know your ballot: headcount.org.”
While the elections mentioned took place yesterday (June 2), as Cabello alluded to, there are still plenty of others coming up this month. In June, states that will be holding state primary and/or presidential primary elections include Georgia, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, West Virginia, Kentucky, New York, Virginia, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Utah.
Those three weren’t the only music figures to implore their fans to explore their right to vote, so check out posts from Ariana Grande, Snoop Dogg, and others below.
speechless…
nine states have primary elections on june 2nd. if u live in one of these states, please take things one step further by voting out the corrupt officials (not just the president) that are encouraging systematic racism and discrimination. https://t.co/FtxrFwOxINpic.twitter.com/BvakqJFfg4
Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of all the new albums coming out in June 2020. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.
Friday, June 5
Baauer — Planet’s Mad (Mad Decent)
Black Rainbows — Cosmic Ritual Supertrip (Heavy Psych Sounds)
Blanco White — On The Other Side (Yucatan Records)
Bruce Brubaker And Max Cooper — Glassforms (InFiné)
Bruno Major — To Let A Good Thing Die (AWAL Recordings)
C. Diab — White Whale (Injazero)
Camille Delean — Cold House Burning (E-Tron Rec)
Corey Harper — Overcast EP (AWAL Recordings)
Currents — The Way It Ends (SharpTone Records)
Discovery Zone — Remote Control (Mansions And Millions)
Eben — Honeydew EP (Atlantic Records)
Ebonivory — The Long Dream I (Wild Thing Records)
Emilie Nicolas — Let Her Breathe (Mouchiouse Music)
Flatbush Zombies — Now More Than Ever EP (Glorious Dead)
The Fox Sisters — Bust Out! (Dive Records)
Fuck Yeah, Dinosaurs! — 65 Million Beers Ago (self-released)
G-Eazy — Everything’s Strange Here (RCA Records)
The Gay Agenda — Penetrating (La Escalara Records)
The Ghost Inside — The Ghost Inside (Epitaph Records)
GoGo Penguin — GoGo Penguin (Gondwana Records)
Gordon Koang — Unity (Music In Exile)
Gorlvsh — New City Vibe (Ancient Temple Recordings)
The Harmed Brothers — Across The Waves (Lackpro Records)
Hinds — The Prettiest Curse (Mom & Pop)
Iann Dior — I’m Gone EP (10K Projects/Caroline Australia)
JayDaYoungan — Baby23 (Atlantic Records)
Jennifer Touch — Behind The Wall (FatCat Records)
Jockstrap — Wicked City EP (Warp)
Joe Louis Walker — Blues Comin’ On (Cleopatra Blues)
Kaleo — Surface Sounds (Atlantic Records)
Katie Malco — Failures (6131 Records)
Leifur James — Angel In Disguise (Late Night Tales)
Mare Berger — The Moon Is Always Full (self-released)
Matt Lovell — Nobody Cries Today (Daddy Kool Records)
Michael McDermott — What In The World (Continental Record Services)
Molly Joyce — Breaking And Entering (New Amsterdam)
Momma — Two Of Me (Danger Collective Records)
Mr Eazi — One Day You Will Understand EP (Empawa Africa Limited)
Mt. Joy — Rearrange Us (Dualtone Music)
Muzz — Muzz (Matador)
Natalie Slade — Control (Eglo Records)
Nick Lowe with Los Straitjackets — Lay It On Me EP (Yep Roc Records)
Nicole Mercedes — Look Out Where You’re Going (self-released)
No Age — Goons Be Gone (Drag City)
Paisley Fields — Electric Park Ballroom (Don Giovanni Records)
Paul Kalkbrenner — Speak Up EP (B1 Recordings)
The Prison Music Project — Long Time Gone (Righteous Babe Records)
RMR — Drug Dealing Is A Lost Art EP (Warner Records)
Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever — Sideways To New Italy (Sub Pop)
Roxy Girls — A Wealth Of Information EP (Moshi Moshi Records)
Run The Jewels — Run The Jewels 4 (BMG Rights Management)
Sarah Jarosz — World On The Ground (Rounder Records)
Soft Plastics — 5 Dreams (Paper Bag Records)
Sondre Lerche — Patience (PLZ)
Stepson — Help Me Help You (SharpTone Records)
Tenci — My Heart Is An Open Field (Keeled Scales)
Trash Talk — Squalor EP (Trash Talk)
Trickfinger — She Smiles Because She Presses The Button (AcidTest)
Vinyl Williams — Azure (Requiem Pour Un Twister)
Working Men’s Club — Working Men’s Club (Heavenly Recordings)
Yoste — A Few Brief Moments EP (Spinnin’ Records)
Friday, June 12
The Aces — Under My Influence (Red Bull Records)
Becky And The Birds — Trasslig EP (4AD)
Bibio — Sleep On The Wing (Warp)
BPMD — American Made (Napalm Records)
Connie Han — Iron Starlet (Mack Avenue)
Cory Smythe — Accelerate Every Voice (Pyroclastic Records)
Death Valley Girls — Breakthrough EP (Suicide Squeeze Records)
DJ Boring — Like Water EP (Technicolour)
Dougie Poole — The Freelancer’s Blues (Wharf Cat Records)
Drab City — Good Songs For Bad People (Bella Union)
Electric Mob — Discharge (Frontiers Music)
Ellen Allien — Aurra (BPitch)
Ellie Goulding — Brightest Blue (Interscope)
Elliott Waits For No One — Elliott Waits For No One (Dark Star Records)
Eric Hutchinson — Class Of ’98 (Let’s Break Records)
fish narc — WiLDFiRE (Gothboiclique Records)
Flying Horseman — Mothership (Unday Records)
The France — Indie Kate EP (Fear Records)
Francesa Blanchard — Make It Better (Tone Tree Music)
Healing Potpourri — Blanket Of Calm (Run For Cover Records)
John Craigie — Asterisk The Universe (Thirty Tigers)
Larkin Poe — Self Made Man (Tricki-Woo Records)
Leah Senior — The Passing Scene (Flightless Records)
Liam Gallagher — MTV Unplugged (Warner Records)
Louis The Child — Here For Now (Interscope)
Louise Goffin — Two Different Movies (Majority Of One Records)
Melody — Teachers Pet EP (Lauren Records)
Mondo Cozmo — New Medicine (Last Gang Records)
Nate Lee — Wings Of A Jetliner (Adverb Records)
Norah Jones — Pick Me Up Off The Floor (Blue Note Records)
Oliver Tree — Ugly Is Beautiful (Atlantic Records)
Orville Peck — Show Pony EP (Columbia)
Paper Idol — Money For Flowers EP (Lowly)
Paul Weller — On Sunset (Polydor Records)
Photay — Waking Hours (Mexican Summer)
Retro Color — Arcadian (Daddy Kool Records)
Sammy Brue — Crash Test Kid (New West Records)
Shape Of Water — Great Illusions (Eclipse Records)
The Silver Field — Sing High! Sing Low! (Crossness Records)
The Sounds — Things We Do For Love (Arnioki Records)
Spacey Jane — Sunlight (AWAL Recordings)
Unwed Sailor — Look Alive (Old Bear Records)
Video Dave — Week 1560 (AutoReverse Records)
Wargirl — Dancing Gold (Clouds Hill)
Wild — Goin’ Back EP (Nettwerk)
Friday, June 19
Angela Muñoz — Introspection (Linear Labs)
Bad Touch — Kiss The Sky (Marshall Records)
Becca Mancari — The Greatest Part (Captured Tracks)
Bob Dylan — Rough And Rowdy Ways (Columbia Records)
Braids — Shadow Offering (Secret City)
Cat Clyde — Good Bones (Cinematic Music Group)
Chew — Darque Tan (Stolen Body Records)
Clint Black — Out Of Sane (Black Top Records)
Commonwealth Choir — No End EP (Know Hope Records)
Constant Smiles — Control (Sacred Bones Records)
Don Bryant — You Make Me Feel (Fat Possum)
Etuk Ubong — Africa Today (Night Dreamer)
Fran Lobo — Brave EP (Slow Dance Records)
Gabby Barrett — Goldmine (Warner Music Nashville)
Gordi — Two Skins (Jagjaguwar)
Gum Country — Somewhere (Burger Records)
Imaginary Tricks — Art Flakey EP (Park The Van)
Japandroids — Massey Fucking Hall (Anti-)
Jenny O. — Truth (Mama Bird Recording Co.)
Jessie Ware — What’s Your Pleasure? (Interscope Records)
John Legend — Bigger Love (Columbia Records)
John Mulaney & The Sack Lunch Bunch — John Mulaney & The Sack Lunch Bunch OST (Drag City)
Jonah Yano — Souvenir (Innovative Leisure)
Juke Ross — Chapter 2 (RCA Records)
Kacy Hill — Is It Selfish If We Talk About Me Again (self-released)
Lamb Of God — Lamb Of God (Epic)
Llynks — Become The Root (584231 Records DK2)
Local Nomad — Local Nomad EP (Warner Music)
Mac DeMarco — Here Comes The Cowboy Demos (Mac’s Record Label)
Mac DeMarco — Other Here Comes The Cowboy Demos (Mac’s Record Label)
Maya Hawke — Blush (Mom + Pop)
Michael Franti & Spearhead — Work Hard And Be Nice (Boo Boo Wax)
The Microdance — Our Love Noire (Somewherecold Records)
Moon Panda — Make Well EP (Fierce Panda)
Mounika — I Need Space (MaJu Records)
Nana Grizol — South Somewhere Else (Arrowhawk Records)
Nasty Cherry — Season 2 EP (Vroom Vroom Recordings)
The National Parks — Wildflower (self-released)
Neil Young — Homegrown (Reprise)
Ocean Alley — Lonely Diamond (self-released)
Owen — The Avalanche (Polyvinyl Record Co)
Permanent Collection — Nothing Good Is Normal (Strangeway Studio)
Phoebe Bridgers — Punisher (Dead Oceans)
Protest The Hero — Palimpsest (Spinefarm Records)
R Beny — Seafoam & Dust (Dauw)
Riches Of The Poor — The Long Way Down (Crocodile Tears Records)
Ryan Langdon — Lit In The Sticks EP (Hidden Pony Records)
Scarlet Pleasure — Garden (Copenhagen)
Shirley King — Blues For A King (Cleopatra Blues)
Solaris — Un Paese di Musichette Mentre Fuori c’è la Morte (Bronson Recordings)
Sports Team — Deep Down Happy (Island Records)
Switchfoot — Covers EP (Fantasy Records)
Trapt — Shadow Work (The Label Group)
Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer & Chris Thile — Not Our First Goat Rodeo (Sony Classical)
After a week of violent protests following several high-profile deaths of Black people at the hands of police — and ex-cops — YG crystalizes the mood of the moment with his latest song, “FTP.” Following in the vein of his Compton predecessors NWA and his own protest of Donald Trump, YG chants “f*ck the police” over a sparse, piano driven, G Funk beat.
YG, who previously responded to criticisms of the ongoing protests with his typical blunt approach, gets straight to the point on the new track as well, advocating for self-defense in the face of a violent oppressor. “Fuck the police, that’s how I feel / Buy a Glock, break down the block, that’s how I feel,” he snarls, “Murder after murder after all these years / Buy a strap, bust back after all these tears.”
While the Compton-bred rapper may be primarily known as the heir to the torch of gangsta rap, he’s been known to address social issues in similar fashion in the past as well. On his 2016 album, Still Brazy, he spoke again on police brutality with “Police Get Away Wit Murder,” stressed the need for solidarity among minorities on “Blacks & Browns,” and famously expressed the feelings of many toward Donald Trump’s racist rhetoric on “FDT.”
One of the more interesting developments in the upcoming TV season is, what’s going to happen with Brooklyn Nine-Nine? Is anyone really in the mood for a wacky cop comedy? That’s a conversation I’m sure creators Dan Goor and Michael Schur, producer Andy Samberg, and the writers are currently having, but on Twitter, one of the show’s stars is asking other actors who have played cops to donate to help arrested protesters.
Stephanie Beatriz, who plays Rosa Diaz on B99, gave $11,000 to the Community Justice Exchange and shared the receipt on Twitter. “I’m an actor who plays a detective on TV. If you currently play a cop? If you make tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in residuals from playing a cop? I’ll let you do the math,” she tweeted, thanking The Tick star and Blank Check co-host Griffin Newman for the inspiration. “I’m an out-of-work actor who (improbably) played a detective on two episodes of BLUE BLOODS almost a decade ago,” he wrote. “If you currently play a cop? If you make tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in residuals from playing a cop? I’ll let you do the math.”
I’m an actor who plays a detective on tv.
If you currently play a cop?
If you make tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in residuals from playing a cop?
Others have joined in, from reasons ranging from “My wife loves Paul Blart” to “I’ve tweeted this meme twice where Al Pacino plays a member of the LAPD! I’m sorry!” to “I played Sgt. Fogarty in my high school’s production of Chicago. I did a *very* bad job.”
The rest of the Brooklyn Nine-Nine cast and Goor also chipped in with a $100,000 donation to the National Bail Fund Network. “The cast and showrunner of Brooklyn 99 condemn the murder of George Floyd and support the many people who are protesting police brutality nationally,” Goor wrote. “Together we have made a $100,000 donation to the National Bail Fund Network. We encourage you to look up your local bail fund: the National Bail Fund Network is an organization that can lead you to them. #blacklivesmatter.”
After the unprecedented, historical success of A Star Is Born — particularly the Grammy-winning single “Shallow” — Lady Gaga has never been better. So why did it still feel like she was still facing an uphill battle when it comes to pop itself? Well, fanatical, die-hard fans aside, Gaga’s pop music bonafides weren’t necessarily bolstered by the movie’s emotional, left-of-center ballad or ironic sell-out tracks. And after Joanne failed to get her back on top the way her camp hoped it would, the string of lackluster albums since the (unjust) flop of Artpop back in 2013 was only getting longer.
It’s not that her quick jazz standards follow-up a year later wasn’t another welcome example of her musical ambidexterity — Cheek To Cheek with Tony Bennett won a Grammy and debuted at No. 1 on the charts — it’s simply that amid all this pivoting, the monsters weren’t getting fed. They didn’t want family legacy-oriented anthems of self-discovery or, frankly, record-breaking soundtracks. They wanted dancefloor epics — needed them. And after an initial delay of Gaga’s album release due to the pandemic, it finally arrived last week.
Enter Chromatica, an album that constructs an entire world of glittering, pathos-driven bangers, each and every one of them ripe for both official and unofficial remixes, each and every one of them a full-blown, no-holds-barred pop song. Mother Monster knew her limit, a return to form was necessary, and the songs on Chromatica — which is apparently a new planet/universe she constructed to escape this one — still rely heavily on earth’s tried and true house music as a backbone. Even the orchestral interludes – not one, not two, but three — help showcase the bangers through elegant juxtaposition that, in the case of transitions like “Chromatica II” into “911,” enhance the whole listening process through dramatic effect.
Yet, Chromatica is not an easy listening album that immediately hits every sweet spot the first time through. In true Gaga fashion, some of the songs are remarkably sad, and in even truer Gaga fashion, plenty of them make absolutely no sense lyrically, sometimes venturing into a hodgepodge of symbols that are never fully fleshed out (See “Alice,” “1000 Doves,” and “Sine From Above,” to name a few). But if it manages to do anything, Chromatica creates a specific world and a distinct sound that’s the most cohesive sonic statement she’s released since 2011.
This cohesion can be credited, in some ways, to BloodPop, the producer who Gaga worked with most closely on the release. Of the sixteen songs, which includes three orchestral interludes as previously mentioned, the only tracks BloodPop doesn’t have a writing and producer credit on are the interludes and the track “Replay.” Though her earlier albums featured majority collaborations with producers like Fernando Garibay, RedOne (aka Nadir Khayat), and Paul Blair, never before has a Gaga album been dominated so completely by one collaborator.
Perhaps after years of wandering into jazz, movie soundtracks, country-pop and more, it was this kind of singular focus that brought her back to great heights as a pop queen — though it’s worth noting that BloodPop also produced nearly every song on Joanne, but most of those songs were Ronson co-writes and his influence came through stronger back then. In an interview with Paper magazine in March of this year, Gaga goes so far as to call BloodPop the “nucleus” of Chromatica, and like the emerging pop star-producer relationship between Charli XCX and A. G. Cook, the studio marriage of a pop icon/vocalist with a futuristic electronic producer is an excellent one.
The heart and soul of the record live in the first two singles, the ebullient, crackling lead single “Stupid Love,” followed up with the Ariana Grande-assisted “Rain On Me,” a flawless duet between one of pop’s veterans and a star just entering her imperial phase. Though plenty of other songs on Chromatica are excellent — and appearances from Blackpink (“Sour Candy”) and Elton John (“Sine From Above”) are just as notable — there’s a sense that Ariana can do no wrong at the moment, and her co-sign alone catapults “Rain On Me” to a rarefied realm. Paired with a dystopian dance video, it becomes the kind of hit Gaga needed to get back on top, and a song about survival and resilience sung by two female pop stars who have faced so much trauma is particularly powerful.
Exploring her experience with PTSD — the psychological result of her teenage rape, including the lingering physical pain of fibromyalgia, and later, a severe hip injury — Chromatica plays with Wonderland themes on “Alice,” aptly named after Lewis Carroll’s fearless — if clueless — heroine. The cyclical, escapist hit is the album’s de facto debut track (coming after the first interlude) and starts off a bit icy, making way for the warmer tones of another standout, “Free Woman,” which directly challenges the idea that singledom is a death sentence for a lady. Despite its name, “Fun Tonight” is about when things turn out just the opposite and is a potential low moment on the album, along with “Plastic Doll,” which hits a pretty empty trope of famous-woman-as-barbie-doll.
But on a standout like “911,” Gaga manages to expertly balance her suffering and self-frustration with the dancefloor freedom that defines the album — “My biggest enemy is me / Pop a 911,” she sings, promoting the prescribed, productive pills that help so many of us regulate our mental health, rather than escapist, addictive drugs that can so quickly derail even the best and brightest. As a pop star who is intimately familiar with highs and lows, Lady Gaga is successful on Chromatica because she doesn’t flinch away from the darkest parts of the world, or herself, but instead drills down beneath the surface until she finds something bright and molten, something she can shape a new universe from.
Chromatica is out now via Interscope Records. Get it here.
A Law & Order: SVU spinoff starring Christopher Meloni in his long awaited return as Elliot Stabler is still coming, but it will do so without writer Craig Gore. Franchise creator and executive producer Dick Wolf has fired Gore from the law enforcement/procedural show after his social media remarks (and an incendiary photo) referencing George Floyd protests. “I will not tolerate this conduct, especially during our hour of national grief,” Wolf declared in a statement posted to Twitter. “I am terminating Craig Gore immediately.”
The remarks from Gore in question included his Facebook-penned threat to “light motherf***ers up who are trying to f*ck w/my property.” The remark followed a photo of himself (apparently geotagged from West Hollywood), posing with a firearm with the following caption: “Curfew…” The postings were screencapped and tweeted by Drew Janda (a producer of HBO’s Big Little Lies) with a shoutout in Meloni’s direction.
Prior to Wolf’s statement, the situation went down with some confusion. Janda previously labeled (before correcting himself) Gore as a showrunner, and Chris Meloni responded that, nope, Matt Olmstead (Chicago P.D) is his spinoff showrunner. Further, as Meloni stated, “I have no idea who this person is or what they do.”
It’s now clear that Gore’s not doing anything on this new spinoff, which shall be based in New York City and could potentially crossover with SVU. Once per season, perhaps? Make it so. The world’s been through a lot lately, and ongoing Olivia Benson-Stabler reunions would arrive as no small comfort. Regardless, it’ll be good to see an un-retired Stabler onscreen again.
Yesterday, social media was populated almost entirely by posts that only featured pure black images. This was of course because of Black Out Tuesday, a social media movement in support of George Floyd and Black Lives Matter. While this was well-meaning, Lizzo and Lil Nas X believe Black Out Tuesday actually had a negative unintended side-effect.
Lizzo noted in an Instagram video yesterday that those sharing Black Out Tuesday posts should not include the #blacklivesmatter hashtag, because a flood of black squares with the hashtag could prevent the spread of valuable information.
She said in her video, “Hey everybody: When you post your black square, please don’t use the hashtag #blacklivesmatter, because it is flooding the hashtag search with just black pictures instead of information. So, if you’re going to post a black square, just post a black square and say it, don’t hashtag it.” She also wrote alongside the video, “You can caption black lives matter, but don’t hashtag pls thnx. Hashtag #blackouttuesday instead.”
Lil Nas X shared a similar sentiment with a series of tweets yesterday, writing that Black Out Tuesday was slowing the momentum of the protests. He began, “i know y’all mean well but… bro saying stop posting for a day is the worst idea ever.” Replying to a response, he wrote, “it’s information that needs to be spread! the movement needs to be pushed forward! not silenced for a day.” He continued, “i just really think this is the time to push as hard as ever. i don’t think the movement has ever been this powerful. we don’t need to slow it down by posting nothing. we need to spread info and be as loud as ever.”
i know y’all mean well but… bro saying stop posting for a day is the worst idea ever
i just really think this is the time to push as hard as ever. i don’t think the movement has ever been this powerful. we don’t need to slow it down by posting nothing. we need to spread info and be as loud as ever. https://t.co/9nvy3HodjD
Dillon Francis responded to Lil Nas X with a screenshot of the all-black Instagram page for the #blacklivesmatter hashtag and wrote, “Yeah and now the hashtag is blank on Instagram because of everyone hashtagging black squares.” Lil Nas X replied to that, “this is not helping us. bro who the hell thought of this?? ppl need to see what’s going on.” He then wrote, “not tryna be announcing but what if we posted donation and petitions links on instagram all at the same time instead of pitch black images.”
this is not helping us. bro who the hell thought of this?? ppl need to see what’s going on https://t.co/fN492qsxaa
To complain that the “trailer gives too much away” is obvious to the point of cliché, but some filmmakers, who usually have nothing to do with the marketing, are beginning to speak out. The director of Vivarium, the suburban satire starring Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots, told his Twitter followers that the trailer for his movie “shows A LOT, so I recommend not watching it or any trailers and just going in cold,” while Rian Johnson “fully endorse[d] avoiding everything” related to Star Wars: The Last Jedi before it came out in December 2017. But Andrew Patterson can’t do that. His name alone won’t sell a movie, especially one with no recognizable actors, but after having seen his directorial debut The Vast of Night (out now), maybe his name should sell a movie.
Here’s what you should know about The Vast of Night: it’s good, at times very good.
End of the review. You don’t have to read anymore. Enjoy the rest of your week, stay safe. But if you wish to continue, because you’re one of those people who is interested in the, ugh, plot, I’ll make this as spoiler-free as possible: The Vast of Night takes place over one 1950s night in New Mexico; it follows switchboard operator Fay (played by the remarkable Sierra McCormick) and know-it-all radio DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) while the rest of the small town is at a basketball game; stuff happens. It’s a fun, genre-heavy, impressively acted, darkly-but-beautifully lit throwback that starts slow, but once you realize what going on, things begins to click like an old-fashioned remote control.
McCormick and Horowitz give splendidly lived-in performances, and writers James Montague and Craig W. Sanger are aware that you will likely figure out what’s happening before the characters do (hint: the radio call sign is “WOTW”), but the real MVP is Patterson. I was surprised to discover that The Vast of Night is the only credit on his IMDb — no other movies, TV gigs, music videos, nothing. “[With The Vast of Night], I think we have a pretty good feel for how to make something look good, even if even if we were still learning how to do 90 minutes worth,” he told io9. “Look good” is an understatement — this is a micro-budget indie that looks like tens of millions of bucks; one scene, in particular, is going to get Patterson’s numerous job offers. You’ll know it when you see it. But it’s not a show-off camera trick. His direction is precise, purposeful.
One of the film’s best scenes involves Fay hearing a strange noise come through the phone lines, and later the radio signal. It’s a “frequency caught between logic and myth,” as a Rod Serling-like voice puts it. (The Twilight Zone reference is not unintentional.) She gets in touch with Everett, who tells her to call back in 10 minutes. From there, we watch Fay work the switchboard for (nearly) 10 full minutes in an unbroken take, as her — and our — sense of unease begins to grow. It’s not flashy, but it’s captivating nonetheless, recalling both the eeriness of The X-Files and the detailed obsessiveness of Zodiac.
The Vast of Night isn’t interested in uncovering the mysteries of the universe, or anything like that; its ambitions are more modest. But you get the sense that Patterson, as well as Montague and Sanger and gifted cinematographer Miguel Ioann Littin Menz, were listening to the real Rod Serling when he said, “You’re traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind; a journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination.” The Vast of Night doesn’t take place in another dimension, but it’s a journey nonetheless. One that’s worth taking.
Amazon Prime will release ‘The Vast of Night’ on May 29.
Seth Rogen posted a Black Lives Matter logo on his Instagram on Monday with the caption, “If this is a remotely controversial statement to you, feel free to unfollow me.”
The comedian wasn’t kidding.
The post has (ironically) triggered a small number of the An American Pickle star’s followers. “I like All Lives Matter,” one person wrote, leading Rogen to respond, “I like f*ck you.” Another: “All lives matter. Because all life is precious. No life is more important than another.” Rogen: “Shut the f*ck up.” And another: “People making this only about blacks. When [it’s] about all races of color. Why do all these brutality videos only show the end? They don’t show wtf these people where doing to get in trouble in the first place.” Rogen: “F*ck off. You don’t deserve my movies anymore. Stop watching my sh*t.”
Rogen has been equally vocal on Twitter. “Always be more critical of the people upholding the racist system than the ones who are fighting against it,” he recently tweeted, while also matching Uncut Gems directors Josh and Benny Safdie’s donation to the Minnesota Freedom Fund, “and then much more.” If a stoner who once dressed as a rabbi Pikachu can understand the importance of Black Lives Matter, then you can, too.
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