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  • A Refreshing ‘Bachelorette’ Episode! Plus, ‘Love Island USA’ Updates and Olympic Recommendations.

    A Refreshing ‘Bachelorette’ Episode! Plus, ‘Love Island USA’ Updates and Olympic Recommendations.

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    Juliet and Callie are back to cover Episode 4 of The Bachelorette! First, they discuss Jenn’s ex flying from Colombia to try to win her back (04:25). They bond over their mutual distaste for Sam N. (08:48) and talk about the entertaining rugby date (12:28). They discuss Devin’s social media presence not being what they would expect (16:55) and pity Jenn for the torturous dates they are making her go on (22:44). Finally, they give predictions on the show before sharing Love Island USA updates and Olympic documentaries they like (46:04).

    Host: Juliet Litman and Callie Curry
    Producer: Olivia Crerie
    Theme Music: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Juliet Litman

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  • ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2, Episode 7 Reactions

    ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2, Episode 7 Reactions

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    They’re not Rhaenyra’s newest dragonriders, but Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin are back to break down the seventh episode of House of the Dragon! Daemon is getting some pushback, Alicent is going camping, Jace is unhappy, and so much more for our trio of lords to get through.

    Hosts: Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin
    Production: Jack Wilson, Felipe Guilhermino, Chris Wohlers, Kevin Cureghian, Bobby Gibbons, Jonathan Frias, Ryan Todd, Tony Perry, Cory McConnell, Aleya Zenieris, Arjuna Ramgopal, Steve Ahlman, Jomi Adeniran, Abreanna Corrales, and Yvonne Wang

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

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  • Give Shannon’s Trainer an Orange! Plus, ‘New Jersey’ and ‘Dubai.’

    Give Shannon’s Trainer an Orange! Plus, ‘New Jersey’ and ‘Dubai.’

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    Bravo

    Rachel Lindsay, Callie Curry, and Chelsea Stark-Jones break down the week in Bravo news

    Rachel Lindsay and Callie Curry begin today’s Morally Corrupt with a breakdown of the lackluster Real Housewives of New Jersey Season 14, Episode 11 (10:20). They then dive headfirst into a discussion about the disappearance and reappearance of Caroline Brooks in The Real Housewives of Dubai Season 2, Episode 8 (19:02). Later, Chelsea Stark-Jones joins the pod to recap Alexis’s best Single White Female impression from The Real Housewives of OC Season 18, Episode 3 (33:44).

    Host: Rachel Lindsay
    Guests: Callie Curry and Chelsea Stark-Jones
    Producer: Devon Baroldi
    Theme: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Rachel Lindsay

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  • ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Instant Reactions With ‘The Midnight Boys’ and ‘The Big Picture’

    ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Instant Reactions With ‘The Midnight Boys’ and ‘The Big Picture’

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    The Midnight Boys are here to talk all things Deadpool & Wolverine, the summer’s most anticipated alliance in the comic book world, so they decided to make an alliance of their own! Joining them on the pod today are Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins from The Big Pic (07:14), and together they discuss comic book lore, Wolverine’s wardrobe changes, and Van’s vitamin supplements.

    Hosts: Van Lathan, Charles Holmes, and Jomi Adeniran
    Guests: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins
    Producers: Aleya Zenieris and Jonathan Kermah
    Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

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    Van Lathan

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  • A ‘Bachelorette’ Pick-Me-Up

    A ‘Bachelorette’ Pick-Me-Up

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    Juliet welcomes Jared Freid back to the pod for an attitude reversal. They talk about a wide range of topics related to The Bachelorette, including who Jenn has a genuine connection with, ideal dates if Jared were the Bachelor, how to feel about Devin, and predictions for the final two. They also talk about a lot of real-world dating topics, including dating in your 30s, why Charlotte could be a good dating city, dating apps and Jared’s return to Hinge, and the language of dating. Jared is always a Bachelor Nation pick-me-up!

    Host: Juliet Litman
    Guest: Jared Freid
    Producer: Olivia Crerie
    Theme Music: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Juliet Litman

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  • ‘Presumed Innocent’ Season 1 Finale: Closing Arguments

    ‘Presumed Innocent’ Season 1 Finale: Closing Arguments

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    Jo and Rob await the jury’s decision to recap the Season 1 finale of Presumed Innocent. They open by discussing why the episode felt unsatisfying, the shocking revelation that [redacted] is the killer, and how the ending affects the season as a whole (8:39). Along the way, they talk about what they want out of Season 2 (16:45). Later, they compare the show’s conclusion to that of its cinematic and literary counterparts (24:19).

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producer: Kai Grady
    Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • Into the Ringer-Verse Live Show!

    Into the Ringer-Verse Live Show!

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    Did you miss our live show in L.A. this summer? We got you! Here is all of the fun The Midnight Boys (00:00) and House of R (30:12) had with the Bad Babies and the Midnight Mafia.

    Hosts: Van Lathan, Charles Holmes, Jomi Adeniran, Mallory Rubin, and Joanna Robinson

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

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    Van Lathan

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  • ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 8 Deep Dive

    ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 8 Deep Dive

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    It’s time to bleed the crystal, as Jo and Mal are here to dive deep into the season finale of The Acolyte. They begin with their opening snapshot on this episode and their thoughts on the season in general (06:54). Then they get into the nitty gritty of revelations and surprise cameos that make up this divisive season of TV (17:02).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

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    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2, Episode 5 Instant Reactions

    ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2, Episode 5 Instant Reactions

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    Dragon meat’s back on the menu as the Midnight Boys get into HotD with reactions to the latest episode of Season 2 (05:03). Later, listen as the guys discuss their initial feelings about Captain America: Brave New World after watching the trailer (01:18:00).

    Hosts: Van Lathan, Charles Holmes, Jomi Adeniran, and Steve Ahlman
    Producers: Aleya Zenieris, Cory McConnell, Jonathan Kermah, and Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

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    Van Lathan

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  • Does Hollywood Need Deregulation?

    Does Hollywood Need Deregulation?

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    Matt is joined by Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw to discuss Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav’s latest comments from the Sun Valley conference, during which he advocated for less regulation in Hollywood. They unpack his statement and speculate how the election results might affect the regulatory environment for media companies, which companies would benefit the most from M&A possibilities, and why a company like Netflix might not mind consolidation (03:07). We finish the show with a mid-year check-in of the 2024 Box Office Draft (23:16).

    For a 20 percent discount on Matt’s Hollywood insider newsletter, What I’m Hearing …, click here.

    Email us your thoughts!

    Host: Matt Belloni
    Guest: Lucas Shaw
    Producers: Craig Horlbeck and Jessie Lopez
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Matthew Belloni

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  • ‘The Blair Witch Project’ and Other Must-See Found Footage Films

    ‘The Blair Witch Project’ and Other Must-See Found Footage Films

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    Adam Nayman takes a look at some must-see found footage films

    ‌To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the release of The Blair Witch Project, Ringer contributor Adam Nayman takes a look at some must-see found footage films.

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    Adam Nayman

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  • Lindsay’s Boyfriend and Phaedra’s Return and Rachel’s Court Date! Plus, ‘Orange County’ and ‘Dubai.’

    Lindsay’s Boyfriend and Phaedra’s Return and Rachel’s Court Date! Plus, ‘Orange County’ and ‘Dubai.’

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    Bravo

    And later, they debate what the hell is going on with Caroline Brooks

    Rachel Lindsay welcomes Chelsea Stark-Jones back to the podcast to break down all of the Bravo news from the past two weeks (2:27) before they launch into a recap of the promising Season 18 premiere of The Real Housewives of Orange County (17:39). Then, Rachel is joined by Callie Curry to discuss Season 2, Episode 6 of The Real Housewives of Dubai and debate what the hell is going on with Caroline Brooks (42:06).

    Host: Rachel Lindsay
    Guests: Chelsea Stark-Jones and Callie Curry
    Producer: Devon Baroldi
    Theme: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Rachel Lindsay

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  • Sal’s Pals With Jimmy Kimmel, Joel McHale, and Guillermo Rodriguez

    Sal’s Pals With Jimmy Kimmel, Joel McHale, and Guillermo Rodriguez

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    In this week’s episode, we replay Sal’s interviews with Jimmy Kimmel and Joel McHale, then Guillermo Rodriguez of Jimmy Kimmel Live! joins.

    Host: Cousin Sal
    Guests: Jimmy Kimmel, Joel McHale, Guillermo Rodriguez
    Producers: Michael Szokoli, Joel Solomon, Jack Wilson, Chris Wohlers, Jonathan Frias

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Cousin Sal Iacono

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  • ‘Below Deck’ Deep Dive With Jodi Walker

    ‘Below Deck’ Deep Dive With Jodi Walker

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    Juliet is back this week with friend and Ringer colleague Jodi Walker to talk about one of the most underrated Bravo shows, Below Deck. The ladies discuss the franchise, their favorite characters, the current season (Below Deck Mediterranean Season 9), the drama, their favorite captains, their favorite chefs, and more!

    Host: Juliet Litman
    Guest: Jodi Walker
    Producer: Jade Whaley
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

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    Juliet Litman

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  • ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 7 Recap: The Jedi Blame Game

    ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 7 Recap: The Jedi Blame Game

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    Boy, that escalated quickly. I mean, that really got out of hand fast.

    One day you’re doing some surveying, gathering moss samples, and searching for a Force hot spot with your metal vergence detector on a seemingly uninhabited planet. The next day, you discover that the planet has inhabitants after all. And the day after that, it goes right back to being almost uninhabited, because you kinda killed your new acquaintances. Oops! What a whirlwind.

    After Episode 3 of The Acolyte gave us Osha’s side of what went down on Brendok 16 years before the series’ present, we knew another flashback was coming. As expected, it arrived in Episode 7, “Choice,” which featured the same director (Kogonada) and one of the same writers (Jasmyne Flournoy, along with Charmaine DeGraté and Jen Richards) as the first flashback. And wouldn’t you know it: While nothing we saw in Episode 3 was strictly false, most of it was true only from a certain point of view.

    The series took its sweet time getting to the big Brendok reveal—and I’ll take my sweet time getting to the part of this piece where I discuss the season’s structure—but now that we’ve watched a more comprehensive account of the coven’s demise, we can finally play the blame game. The Jedi did indeed behave badly, but they weren’t the only ones. Let’s assign responsibility, via bullet points and percentages:

    Sol: 51 percent (a symbolic majority share)

    • Bizarrely obsessed with saving twins from imagined danger, an impulse that ends up placing them in danger.
    • Contradicts the Council’s instructions to stop meddling in the coven’s affairs: major main character syndrome. Shows no respect for the chain of command, family relationships, or private property.
    • Kills Aniseya, who was seemingly just trying to whisk Mae away. (After this episode, can anyone explain why Mae suddenly decided to turn herself over to the Jedi in Episode 4?) Granted, it’s easy to misinterpret intent when the witch standing next to you starts making like the smoke monster from Lost, but still: He started it. Aniseya appears to have been unarmed; is that why Mae’s master demanded that Mae kill an unarmed Jedi to complete her mission of vengeance? (Or did he demand that she kill a Jedi without being armed? It’s still tough to say for certain.)
    • Mistakes Mae for Osha, just as he does on Khofar 16 years later. His whole “I feel a connection to Osha; … I feel she is meant to be my Padawan” stance would be a bit more persuasive if he could tell the twins apart. (In fairness to Sol, because the twins are two halves of the same consciousness—hence their creepy rhyme—they’re even more alike than regular twins or clones.)
    • Showed piss-poor telekinesis skills in maxing out at one twin saved from the falling bridge. For Sol, size seems to matter very much. (This is the guy who goes on to train the next generation of Jedi?) But, hey, it’s OK: You don’t have to hold the whole bridge up. Just grab the twins! How hard can that be for someone who’s reputed to be as powerful as Sol—even a younger Sol who hasn’t made master? Are you telling me this man’s max lift is one little girl? (I get that this is a stressful situation, Jedi abilities vary, there could be complications from proximity to the vergence, etc., but it would be nice if Star Wars stories were slightly more consistent about what their space wizards can and can’t do.)
    • It wasn’t his idea to lie about what happened, but he didn’t mount much of a protest. (That goes for Kelnacca and Torbin, too.)

    Indara: 10 percent

    • Sure, she wasn’t the instigator—if Sol and Torbin had followed her lead, all would’ve been well—but she let herself be swayed by Sol at first. As the ranking Jedi on the expedition, the buck stops with her. She’s the one who’ll have to file the very vague incident reports.
    • Her “That’s why I have a Padawan and you do not” crack apparently put Sol on tilt.
    • Waited seven weeks to tell her Padawan why he was wandering around Brendok saving seed samples. Which was handy for the writers of The Acolyte, who got to treat Torbin as an audience proxy as they explained the concept of a vergence, but seemed inconsiderate otherwise. I guess that was part of “teach[ing] him to seek the answers for himself.” No wonder he wanted out.
    • I don’t think she meant to kill almost the entire coven when she forced the witches from Kelnacca’s mind, but, well, that’s what happened. Which, on the witches’ end, seems like a serious flaw in that particular Force power. Excuse me, Thread power. Speaking of which, what happened to that “the Thread is not a power you wield” rhetoric from Episode 3? Desperate times, desperate measures, but maybe the witches would’ve been better off practicing what they preached. Or, you know, not practicing. I suppose it’s possible that the witches died not when they were booted from Kelnacca’s brain but in the subsequent explosion, but regardless, the result is the same: carnage of the kind the Nightsisters suffered at the hands—er, mechanical claws?—of General Grievous.
    • She’s the one who perpetrates the cover-up—ostensibly because Osha, who’s already lost everything else, won’t get to fulfill her dream of training to be a Jedi if the unvarnished truth comes out—but we can’t take this quartet at their word when it comes to their “noble intentions.” In this case, the crime is worse than the cover-up, but both are bad.

    Mother Aniseya: 10 percent

    • In an attempt to drive the Jedi away from Brendok, turns Torbin’s desire to get back to the bright lights and big city into a pressing need, which backfires when he comes to see the twins as his ticket home.
    • Like Sol, puts her emotional attachment over what’s good for the group—though at least the girl she’s emotionally attached to is her daughter, as opposed to someone else’s daughter whom she met yesterday.
    • It’s good to give your kid some autonomy. But if she’s still a minor—even a Force-sensitive minor whose consciousness was split into two identical bodies by a vergence—you don’t have to let her leave to be “raised by an institution instead of a family.” Especially when you’ve foreseen—maybe through the vergence’s vision-granting power—the destruction of “every Jedi in the galaxy.”
    • In the midst of a tense standoff, a heads-up about the smoke monster transformation probably would’ve been wise.

    Torbin: 10 percent

    • Dangerously homesick for Coruscant. Torbin, buddy, I know the feeling of wanting to head home after an interminable business trip, but I draw the line at trespassing. Of course, Torbin might have too, if he’d been in his right mind. Honestly, Torbin is sort of a scapegoat and pays a disproportionate price. Not only was he the only Jedi not to escape physically unscathed, but he also had the decency to withdraw from the world in penance (after he made master, anyway). Though now that we’ve seen what part he played, the decade-long Barash Vow, followed by a poison snack, seems like literal overkill. You were just a Padawan, acting under the influence of a Force witch. These are major extenuating circumstances! Give yourself a break!

    Koril: 10 percent

    • Clearly spoiling for a fight from the start; flouts Aniseya’s prohibition of violence. Definitely not trained in de-escalation techniques.
    • Tells Mae to “get angry,” which helps spark (so to speak) the catastrophic outcome. I must have skipped that page in the parenting playbook.
    • Suspiciously absent after the brief, one-way melee with Sol—“Fight me!,” she screams, anticipating Mae’s “Attack me with all your strength!”—and thus seemingly the lone member of the coven to survive, aside from the twins.

    Mae: 5 percent

    • So, no, she didn’t mean to start a fire, but she did practice poor fire safety after locking her sister in her room and seemingly sealing everyone else inside the base.
    • Also, all those midi-chlorians and much-ballyhooed blocking abilities, and you can’t extinguish a tiny fire before it mysteriously rages through a stone settlement and blows up a big generator? (By the way: The Jedi frame Force potential in terms of “M-count.” Does the coven call it Thread count?)

    Kelnacca: 4 percent

    • He sliced the coven’s elevator. Indara told him to, but still, rude.
    • He allowed his head to get hijacked by the coven, even after seeing the same thing happen to Torbin. Amateur move.

    The tragedy on Brendok doesn’t directly implicate the order itself: The Council actually rebukes the quartet for meddling too much even before the body count climbs. One could chalk this disaster up to the actions of a couple of rogue Jedi, and one wouldn’t be wrong. But the roots of the conflict extend deeper.

    Because of their past wars with the Sith and their present primacy among Force users, the Jedi are both wary and dismissive of other Force-sensitive sects. Hence Sol’s instant suspicion of the witches and concern for the twins, even though there’s no real evidence that the latter are in any trouble. (Granted, the two quotes from Mae’s mom that Mae cites at her entrance exam—“Everyone must walk through fear” and “Everyone must be sacrificed to fulfill their destiny”—might raise an eyebrow over at CPS also. And then there’s the virgin vergence birth.)

    Likewise, while we still haven’t learned the coven’s origin story, we’ve known since the third episode that they were “hunted, persecuted, [and] forced into hiding” because “some would consider [their] power dark.” No wonder they’re on high alert when the Jedi show up. The Jedi and the witches on the scene started the fire, yes, but this is more of an “It was always burning since the world’s been turning” scenario; the powder kegs were pre-supplied.

    A lot of ill-advised actions have to be taken for this worst-case outcome to occur, but then, a lot of real-life disasters do arise from dumb mistakes. And it’s not as if there’s no reason for these characters to make missteps like these. Although there’s been some speculation that the Sith may have masterminded this confrontation and conflagration, there was no sign of them this week. Nor were they needed. Bias, bad blood, and intergenerational trauma could have caused these tragic misunderstandings without Sith assistance.

    In Episode 3, we saw the same events through Osha’s eyes. This time, we seem to be seeing a wider-ranging version of events—perhaps some amalgamation of the content contained in Sol’s confession to Mae and Osha’s vision in Qimir’s cortosis helmet. If so, it’s possible that we won’t actually see him come clean to the twins next week. But we’ll certainly see the aftermath. When Sol said “I got you” and pulled Osha up from the edge of an abyss in Episode 3, it seemed like a rescue. This time, it seems like a capture. When we reunite with Osha next week, she’ll probably be viewing her whole history with Sol in a new light, too.

    Next week, by the way, is the season finale. (Though not the series finale, Leslye Headland hopes.) We can’t fully assess the season’s structure until we see how it ends, but so far, I can’t say it’s working that well for me. I give The Acolyte’s creators kudos for trying something nonstandard for Star Wars—not a shocker, coming from the cocreator and Season 1 showrunner of Russian Doll—but the pacing, timeline hopping, and hoarding of reveals have hurt the spectator experience, at least as a week-to-week watch.

    The first full-episode flashback came when we were still familiarizing ourselves with the world of the show, and it didn’t add a lot to our understanding of the present time frame. Saving other big beats for the penultimate episode forced the writers to stall in the interim, withholding or parceling out morsels of information in ways that sometimes seemed contrived. Worse, it meant that we watched most of this season knowing that we didn’t really know the main characters: Our foreknowledge of a deep, dark secret that was due to be unveiled prevented us both from bonding with anyone in the interim and from being surprised when we learned what the storytellers had been holding back. Thus, I’ve watched much of The Acolyte at an emotional remove—which, if nothing else, simulates the Jedi lifestyle. Throw in the abrupt endings to episodes that seemed like they could have been trimmed and combined (especially Episodes 4 and 5) and the momentum-killing absences of core characters during the protracted flashbacks—this week, Manny Jacinto’s mesmerizing “Stranger” remains one to us—and the overall flow seems disjointed.

    Let’s hope next week’s big finish smooths it out. But for now, let’s also end in a disjointed fashion: with some stray observations.

    • Well, we finally saw a live-action Wookiee swing a lightsaber on-screen, albeit for a less-than-heroic cause. I’m glad Kelnacca got to do some slashing and hacking, however misguidedly, which fulfilled a fan desire that George Lucas supposedly opposed. (Wookiee Jedi are scarce in the current canon, especially outside of The High Republic.) His fighting style is suitably brutal. But I still say Star Wars needs to let the Wookiees win—not by choking Torbin, but by speaking in an intelligible fashion. Why do Star Wars movies, shows, and comics subtitle the speech of crime lords and low-budget bounty hunters but not the most faithful and forceful of walking carpets? It may be tradition, but it ain’t right.
    • There’s such a stark disparity between the combat in The Acolyte and … well, almost everything else. That’s not to say the series has no other redeeming qualities, but the fight choreography is the one aspect we can confidently point to and pronounce The Acolyte the best in class in Star Wars during the Disney era. If that turns out to be the most lasting legacy of the series—and if some of its influence rubs off on future projects—there are worse ways to be remembered.
    • I’m still a little confused by an Indara line from Episode 3 that we hear again this week: “Mother Aniseya, you cannot deny the Jedi have a right to test potential Padawans. With your permission, of course.” Does this “right” extend to non-Republic worlds? And if it is a right that Aniseya “cannot deny,” then what good would withholding permission do? Presumably, the “permission” part is just a fig leaf obscuring the power dynamic that enables the Jedi to do what they want.
    • “A hundred years ago, this planet was cataloged as lifeless because of a hyperspace disaster,” Indara says about Brendok. That’s one of the series’ rare references to the High Republic books and comics—in this case, a shout-out to the aptly named Great Hyperspace Disaster, in which a freight transport ship broke apart in hyperspace, with devastating consequences. The pieces emerged from hyperspace unpredictably, bombarding various population centers as part of a terrorist plot by an enemy organization known as the Nihil. It’s an extremely long story.
    • Two of Sol’s lines from the Ascension ceremony in “Destiny” are missing in “Choice.” In Episode 3, between Mother Aniseya’s promise, “The scouts will bring Osha to your camp at midday,” and Indara’s response, “We appreciate your cooperation,” Sol interjects, “Both girls. Her sister, too.” In Episode 7, he doesn’t. This omission probably doesn’t reflect anything other than the creators’ desire to limit the amount of repeat material in this episode—which they did a decent job of, given that the format makes some rehashing inevitable—but it does reinforce the impression of unreliable narration. More obviously, Mae didn’t say “I’ll kill you!” to Osha this time. Memory is malleable!
    • Is Sol deluded in thinking that he and Osha are meant to be together, or will he turn out to be right, in a roundabout fashion? The Force works in mysterious ways; maybe Osha was meant to be Sol’s Padawan, despite all the pain their pairing has caused. Osha was seemingly created via vergence; Anakin Skywalker was a vergence. Obi-Wan Kenobi’s mentorship of Anakin didn’t have a happy ending, but as Qui-Gon Jinn anticipated, it worked out for the best for Anakin to leave his mother to join the Jedi, bringing-balance-to-the-Force-wise. (Just forget about the countless people killed by Darth Vader before balance was temporarily achieved.)
    • Now that the Jedi’s lies! and deceptions! have been laid bare, what’s the biggest remaining mystery and/or source of intrigue heading into the finale? Osha confronting Sol about how he misled her? Osha and Mae making up? Which one, if either, becomes the titular acolyte? The question of Sol’s survival, seeing as he may have to take his knowledge of the Sith’s existence to an early grave? The details of Mae’s survival on Brendok, and, relatedly, the whereabouts of Koril? More backstory about the Brendok witches, what the Ascension ceremony does, and whether Sol was right about the vibes being off? The potential for the Stranger to make clear how he fits into the history of the Sith and/or Knights of Ren? (Is that Darth Plagueis’s music?!) Vernestra confronting the Stranger, her possible Padawan of old? (We haven’t seen those characters interact at all, so I’m gonna go with “no” on that, though the prospect of Darth Teeth/Biceps vs. a lightwhip is tasty.) The potential for more of Jacinto to make it past the prudes at Disney? There are plenty of items of interest on this list, but Episode 7 didn’t do much to tee them up.
    • A pop song playing over Star Wars credits? Sure, why not? We’ll have the same song play us out today; take it away, Victoria Monét.

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    Ben Lindbergh

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  • Burning Questions About the Future of Paramount

    Burning Questions About the Future of Paramount

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    Matt is joined by Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw to look at what the future holds for Paramount now that David Ellison has purchased the legacy media company from Shari Redstone. They discuss what will happen to Paramount’s assets—including CBS, Pluto, Paramount+—their movie strategy, and ultimately whether a new, young, tech-focused CEO can not only keep Paramount alive, but help it flourish (02:22). Matt finishes the show with a prediction about the upcoming criminal trial of Alec Baldwin in the Rust case (25:57).

    For a 20 percent discount on Matt’s Hollywood insider newsletter, What I’m Hearing …, click this link: puck.news/thetown

    Email us your thoughts! thetown@spotify.com

    Host: Matt Belloni
    Guest: Lucas Shaw
    Producers: Craig Horlbeck and Jessie Lopez
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Matthew Belloni

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  • Brad Pitt’s Formula 1, and the Derek Blasberg Affair

    Brad Pitt’s Formula 1, and the Derek Blasberg Affair

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    This week, Juliet and Amanda dissect Brad Pitt’s presence and Tom Cruise’s absence at the F1 British Grand Prix (1:00), the way the rumors about Derek Blasberg surfaced in the media (11:35), the paparazzi at Ben Affleck’s place of work (20:20), and Michael Jordan’s elite yachting attire (23:40). Finally, they have a ton of fun analyzing the New York Times’ top-10 books of the century so far from notable people (29:15). Sarah Jessica Parker, we see you!

    Hosts: Juliet Litman and Amanda Dobbins
    Producers: Jade Whaley and Sasha Ashall

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

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    Juliet Litman

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  • Civil War in Westeros Is Hell

    Civil War in Westeros Is Hell

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    I expected to emerge from “The Red Dragon and the Gold,” the fourth episode of House of the Dragon’s second season, feeling exhilarated. Based on the episode’s title, last week’s preview, and book-reader knowledge of what transpires at Rook’s Rest, I anticipated thrills, adrenaline, and Loot Train Attack–level spectacle from the first mass dragon battle of this show.

    But an hour later, after the credits had rolled, the battle had ended, and at least one main character had died, I instead felt despondent. Not because the episode failed, to be clear—but because it succeeded in its effort to depict a different kind of warfare: chaotic, uncontrollable, and, above all, tragic for everyone involved. It’s as if Dragon were trying its best to prove Francois Truffaut’s “There’s no such thing as an anti-war film” sentiment wrong.

    For numerous episodes, characters have promised that war was coming; now, in the wake of Rhaenyra’s failed peace talks with Alicent in Episode 3, it’s finally, irrevocably here. Even the usurped queen knows it, stating, “Only one choice remains to me: Either I win my claim or die.”

    As was the case with many of Game of Thrones’ most spectacular battle episodes, “The Red Dragon and the Gold” devotes time to characters talking in rooms before climaxing with fire and blood. This episode’s early scenes flesh out sundry plot points and character arcs: Daemon has a delightfully strange conversation with Alys Rivers in Harrenhal; Jace learns the secret “Song of Ice and Fire” prophecy; Alicent drinks moon tea to stave off a potential pregnancy with Criston Cole. But in the end, the shortest episode of Season 2 thus far is all about the battle.

    Last week, Dragon didn’t show the actual Battle of the Burning Mill, just the corpse-filled aftermath. That effective choice left Rook’s Rest as the site of Dragon’s first large-scale depiction of war—and a battle between dragons, at that, which hadn’t dueled in Westeros in more than 80 years. (Vhagar versus little Arrax in the Season 1 finale was less a pitched battle than a quick snack for the former.)

    A set of seemingly curious decisions by Criston Cole sets the stage for this clash. The lord commander of the Kingsguard and hand of the king chooses to march his army to Rook’s Rest—a “pathetic prize,” scoffs Aegon—instead of the more obvious target of Harrenhal, then attacks in broad daylight rather than waiting to lay siege at night. “Fucking madness!” Gwayne Hightower exclaims.

    But the hand hasn’t lost his wits; it’s a trap! By attacking Rook’s Rest, the mainland’s closest castle to Dragonstone, Cole can draw out one of the blacks’ dragons—and then Aemond and Vhagar, lying in wait in a nearby forest, can rise to meet the challenge.

    The first part of this design goes according to plan, as Rhaenys straps on her armor, hops aboard Meleys, and flies into the fray. But to Aemond and Criston’s surprise, so too does Aegon, still sulking after a dressing-down from his mother, who sneers at the king to “do simply what is needed of you: nothing.”

    Before flying off to war, both Rhaenys and Aegon partake in incredibly sweet reunions—or bittersweet ones, in retrospect, after seeing what becomes of the dragons and riders. Rhaenys greets Meleys and Aegon greets Sunfyre with affection, and both take a second to nuzzle their mounts, emphasizing the bond between dragon and rider. Aegon even grins as he sees his gorgeous golden steed, the only creature able to draw a smile from the king since the death of his son.

    But by doing something instead of nothing, Aegon disrupts the greens’ trap. Instead of a one-on-one battle between Meleys and Vhagar, it’s a three-way aerial brawl. Aemond first hangs back instead of going to his brother’s aid, and then, after joining the fray, orders a dracarys blast without compunction or fear for Aegon’s health. Hit full-on by the fire blast, Sunfyre drops like a stone to crash in the forest below.

    This betrayal—which notably does not occur in Fire & Blood, where Aegon and Aemond appear to intentionally team up against Rhaenys—receives the proper setup to slot into the story. Aegon rushes to battle because he resents his brother for “plotting without my authority,” while Aemond smarts from the king’s mockery at the brothel, and from the broader belief that he would serve as a superior leader. (When Aemond taunts Aegon with an impressive High Valyrian vocabulary, the king can only splutter “I can have to … make a … war” in response. Later, Aegon speaks to his dragon in the common tongue, while every other rider uses High Valyrian to give commands.)

    With Sunfyre out of commission, Rhaenys and Meleys pivot to take on Aemond and Vhagar. As the two dragons approach one another, the camera captures Vhagar and Meleys in silhouette from below, hauntingly beautiful as they dance.

    (The one major quibble I have with this episode is the inscrutability of Rhaenys’s decision to turn around to fight Vhagar, rather than fleeing on Meleys, whom Fire & Blood calls “as swift a dragon as Westeros had ever seen.” Did she go back to fight because of her roiling personal life, after she confronts Corlys over his indiscretions and bastard children? Did she believe her dragon had a chance against Vhagar? Did she want to salvage the battle, even facing long odds? This choice is especially confounding because Rhaenys did not take the opportunity to attack with Meleys during Aegon’s crowning in Season 1, when she could have ended the war before it began. “You should’ve burned them when you had the chance,” one of team black’s advisors tells Baela in this episode, referring to her chase of Criston and Gwayne. But that sentiment applies even more to Rhaenys at the dragonpit.)

    The resulting dragon duel is depicted like a tragedy for everyone on the battlefield. Earlier in the episode, Aemond notes, “This war will not be won with dragons alone, but with dragons flying behind armies of men.” That’s true in the context of a long war, but in the (literal) heat of battle, it’s difficult to imagine the men mattering all that much. The soldiers look like helpless little playthings the size of dolls, compared to the behemoths breathing fire above them. Vhagar is so massive that when she goes to the ground, the shockwave knocks Criston from his horse. Then the episode uses slow motion to emphasize the immense damage she casually wreaks, as she crushes two men with the single stomp of a claw.

    The soundscape contributes to this sense of overwhelming violence, from the panicked cries of anonymous foot soldiers to the dragons’ shrieks and squeals of pain. At various points in the battle, music and background sounds fade out to emphasize the central characters’ beleaguered breaths.

    Smoke fills the screen. Screams fill the air. And Meleys’s blood ultimately fills Vhagar’s belly, as Aemond’s mighty mount, the oldest living dragon in the known world, claims another scalp for her collection.

    This climactic death looks shocking in the moment, but how could a clash this intense not result in the death of at least one prominent character? Face clouded by soot, eyes rimmed red, Rhaenys looks out at the field of blood and fire she so wished to avoid—and that’s nearly the last thing she ever sees, because Vhagar rises up to capture Meleys’s neck in her jaws. The smaller dragon is unable to break free, and as the light leaves her eyes, she looks back at her rider—who’d ridden the Red Queen for half a century; who’d arrived at her wedding to Corlys on Meleys’s back—one final time. Then the head breaks free, and the headless dragon and her human plummet to the earth below.

    After Meleys and Rhaenys die, the camera finds Criston, who for a while is the only living person on screen; everyone else is a corpse or a pile of ash. At one point, he attempts to recruit a comrade to help him find Aegon, only for the armor he touches to fall to the ground as the body inside crumples to dust. Eventually, Criston staggers into view of the crater formed when Sunfyre smashed into the forest, but as the episode ends, it remains to be seen whether Aegon is still alive.

    From a plot perspective, it’s unclear—as was the case with the Battle of the Burning Mill—whether either side can claim victory at Rook’s Rest, given the untold carnage on both sides. The dragon is both the symbol of and reason for Targaryen rule in Westeros, so every dragon death serves as a strike against unified Targaryen hegemony. As Rhaenyra said in the show’s pilot episode, without the dragons, the royal family would be “just like everyone else.”

    Fire & Blood describes Viserys’s reign as “the apex of Targaryen power in Westeros,” with “more dragons than ever before.” But in the short span since Viserys’s death, that number has now dwindled by at least two (Arrax and Meleys), maybe three (Sunfyre). Vhagar and Aemond are the culprits in every death—proving their own dominance, surely, but simultaneously weakening the broader power that Aemond’s family wields. It’s no coincidence that, earlier in the episode, Alicent drops and breaks the dragon figurine she’d once repaired for Viserys.

    And from a storytelling perspective, that Dragon would stage its first full-scale (pun intended) battle like such a hopeless disaster story sets the tone for the rest of the series to come. This portrayal is unlike any previous dragon battle in the Thrones universe. During most dragon attacks in the original series, Daenerys and her children were the heroes, so audiences cheered on their rampages against the slave masters in Astapor, the Lannister troops on the Goldroad, and the wights beyond the Wall. Even as people burned alive, those scenes weren’t depicted as horrors; they were triumphs.

    But the Battle of Rook’s Rest brings only devastation, destruction, and death—the fulfillment of Rhaenys’s prediction that there is “no war so bloody as a war between dragons.” Other than Aemond and perhaps Vhagar, nobody escapes unscathed. Even Criston, an architect of the successful battle plan, is knocked out, injured, and witness to the potential demise of his king.

    “Now I’ve barely had the hours to grieve one tragedy before suffering the next,” Alicent laments in this episode, before one of her sons potentially kills another. That challenge might translate to viewers as well—because Dragon is positioning itself as a cinematic commentary on the horrors of war, and the war in question is just getting started.

    Have HotD questions? To appear in Zach’s weekly mailbag, message him @zachkram on Twitter/X or email him at zach.kram@theringer.com.

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    Zach Kram

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  • ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

    ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

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    Hold on to your hakama pants and get ready for a steamy deep dive into The Acolyte Episode 6. After Opening Snapshot (06:32), Mal and Jo rank Qimir’s horniest lines in an endowed installment of Thirst Trap Corner (18:01). Later, they check in with Detective Bazil (01:22:10) and discuss the potential shadiness of Vernestra. All that and so much more on the latest House of R!

    Also, be sure to get tickets for The Ringer-Verse live as part of the Ringer Residency this coming July 17 at the El Rey Theatre!

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Guest: Ben Lindbergh
    Producers: Steve Ahlman and John Richter
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

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    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘MaXXXine’ Is Punch-Drunk on Pastiche

    ‘MaXXXine’ Is Punch-Drunk on Pastiche

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    Give Ti West this: He’s completed the quickest trilogy in contemporary horror movie history. Barely two years after X introduced us to its gore-soaked version of the MCU—that’d be the Maxine Cinematic Universe, named for the ornery and resourceful would-be-porn-star-cum-Final-Girl embodied by Mia Goth—West has jerry-rigged a triptych whose conceptual sturdiness and artistic merit are, if far from certain, at least worthy of debate. With the release of MaXXXine, the question is whether West has truly succeeded in carving out a niche of his own or whether his series is just a (figuratively) bloodless exercise in received themes and aesthetics.

    To return to the initial film: There was plenty to like about X, which took a lurid, high-concept premise—i.e., what if Boogie Nights were drenched in more crimson bodily fluids?—and used it to limn the practical and spiritual overlap between two kindred and disreputable forms of cinema (that’d be horror and porn). Nostalgia and sleaze are a potent combination, and the spectacle of nubile, solipsistic exhibitionists being systematically eviscerated by the wizened, married homesteaders whose farm they’d commandeered for a skin-flick shoot nodded to vintage traditions. (For extra ’70s resonance, there was even a cover of “Landslide.”) The ace up West’s sleeve, meanwhile, was hidden in plain view: By casting Goth in a dual role as both a hard-edged starlet and a catatonic, knife-wielding crone—the latter of whom seems to envy her younger doppelgänger’s ripe flesh even as she’s stabbing at it—West tapped into a rich vein of grotesquerie that was also dripping with melancholy.

    The same ratio of sadism and anguish carried over to Pearl, which flashed back to the 1910s to document the eponymous villain’s formative years—as well as the roots of the adult film industry in an era of one-reel stag films. (Pearl, it seems, was born ready for her close-up.) Like its predecessor, West’s prequel was designed primarily as a showcase for Goth, whose elongated physicality and unsettling expressivity have made her a kind of It Girl for directors on (or near) the cutting edge of cinematic provocation. (In addition to West, she’s collaborated with Lars von Trier, Claire Denis, Luca Guadagnino, and Brandon Cronenberg.) None of these variously gifted filmmakers have given the actor as much to work with as West, who clearly loves putting his leading lady in outrageous situations—including molesting her own mirror image, cosplaying Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, and making out with a scarecrow—and watching her squirm, snarl, or slash her way out of them. To this end, Pearl also gifts its star with a late, barn-burning monologue that unfolds in a single take, a bravura piece of writing that could be used in the future by aspiring genre ingenues, even if it’s unlikely they could equal Goth’s rubber-faced aplomb.

    With this in mind, MaXXXine begins with an audition piece—one that recalls Pearl’s centerpiece scene and that sutures its themes into an increasingly intricate franchise timeline. The setting is Los Angeles circa 1985, a half decade after the events of X, which, as we’re shown, have become mythological tabloid fodder. After fleeing the scene of the crime—and eluding both the authorities and her Bible-thumping father, glimpsed in X via a series of fire-and-brimstone PSAs—Maxine has dyed her hair blond, boned up on her VHS collection, and become the toast of the local porno circuit. What she really wants to do, though, is act with her clothes on: After scoring a reading for an upcoming religious horror movie, our heroine channels her trauma into the dialogue, Mulholland Drive style, impressing the self-consciously ball-breaking, would-be-artiste director (a deadpan Elizabeth Debicki) enough that she’s willing to take a chance on an unknown. No sooner has Maxine processed her triumph, however, than a mysterious figure with knowledge of her true identity emerges, wielding threats of blackmail (or worse).

    The mid-’80s backdrop gives West and his production designers a whole new set of textures to play with, and their re-creation of Los Angeles teems with vivid, eye-catching details. (The neon-drenched streets deliberately evoke Brian De Palma’s seminal Body Double from 1984.) The setting also coincides with the grisly crimes of “the Night Stalker”—the Bay Area and SoCal serial killer whose media-appointed nickname made him the perfect bogeyman for an era known colloquially as “Morning in America.” In a scene-setting montage comprising archival footage, West juxtaposes Richard Ramirez and Ronald Reagan, hinting not so subtly that, on some level, the president and the predator represented two sides of the same ideological coin, converging their energies in the so-called satanic panic that saw the Gipper’s evangelical base lashing out in reactionary furor against what they perceived as the demonic influence of popular culture.

    West has already made a movie set during this period: 2009’s skillful and scary The House of the Devil, which similarly luxuriated in period decor without sacrificing shock and intensity (including one of the greatest kills of all time, featuring a pre-superstardom Greta Gerwig). By contrast, the biggest problem with MaXXXine is that it’s completely punch-drunk on pastiche; by putting everything in scare quotes, West ensures that nothing is actually scary—a miscalculation that neuters the movie’s impact. The fake red-carpet protests organized for the movie’s premiere underline this problem; when a movie has to import its own scandalized, pearl-clutching detractors—as opposed to actually giving pious or censorious types something to scream about—it doesn’t bode well for any sort of real cult status.

    Speaking of which: It’s clear that one of West’s structural and tonal models is Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood, which isn’t a horror movie but still bristles with a sense of dread—think of the slow-burning Spahn Ranch sequence, which scrambles genre archetypes (it’s a menagerie of hippies, cowboys, and serial killers) but never telegraphs where it’s going. MaXXXine’s stalk-and-slash set pieces hit all the right marks—deep-red giallo lighting; close-ups of black-gloved hands; murky camcorder textures à la Lost Highway—but rarely transcend them. (One exception: a close encounter with a knife-wielding Buster Keaton impersonator who ends up getting his balls stomped on; I don’t know what West has against Keaton, but I didn’t see that coming.)

    If there’s a scene that emblematizes MaXXXine’s spoiled promise, it comes about halfway through: After injuring the private investigator (Kevin Bacon) hired by the unseen big bad to harass her, Maxine is shocked to see him on set, nose bandaged like Jake Gittes in Chinatown. He chases her through a series of faux period backdrops all the way to the front door of the Bates Motel, at which point … nothing happens. All that rich Hollywood iconography never coalesces into anything: It’s a hall of mirrors that reflects nothing except its maker’s frame of reference. (Although it is nice to see West’s mentor Larry Fessenden on hand as a benign security guard—probably the first time that the indie stalwart has ever been on a big studio lot.) Some horror movies thrive in incoherence, but if anything, MaXXXine is too lucid for its own good: It’s an almost entirely plot-based movie, and it doesn’t help that the central mystery—specifically the identity of the silent, faceless figure pursuing Maxine at every turn—is so thin. If the best horror movies make their climactic revelations feel simultaneously shocking and inevitable, MaXXXine’s resolution is merely predictable—and disappointing given the larger intimations of some grand narrative design.

    In light of these flaws, it almost doesn’t matter that Goth holds the screen as fully as she does—almost. MaXXXine is framed by a quote by Bette Davis that explains in show business, women have to be perceived as monsters before they can be held up as stars, and Goth—who’s closer to having Bette Davis eyes than most members of her generational cohort—conveys the right mix of righteous self-possession and sinister ambition to give the film’s coda a little bit of friction. The closing tableau, which calls back to Pearl’s boldly confrontational finale, is clever and ambivalent—enough so to make us wish that the movie attached was more worthy of it. At the same time, the final shots clarify something about the ultimate artificiality of West’s project, which amounts in the end to nothing more than a series of exquisite corpses—shapely but ersatz body doubles ready-made for dissection and then filed away in the crowded necropolis of genre cinema.

    Adam Nayman is a film critic, teacher, and author based in Toronto; his book The Coen Brothers: This Book Really Ties the Films Together is available now from Abrams.

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    Adam Nayman

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