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  • SXSW Releases List of Curtain Raisers, and It’s Got Us Hyped | The Mary Sue

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    It’s officially just a little over a month until SXSW, and we couldn’t be more excited! The festival just released a new list of new list of premieres, from festival to world premieres, was just released, and it’s a stacked lineup. The genre-spanning slate has a little something for everybody, so mentally mark your calendars for when these will be released. The Mary Sue will be on the ground in Austin, so be prepared for our reactions, coverage, and more!

    Check out the list of premieres below.

    FORBIDDEN FRUITS (Independent Film Company & Shudder) – World Premiere

    Synopsis: At a mall store, Apple leads a secret witch cult with coworkers Cherry and Fig. New hire Pumpkin questions their sisterhood, forcing them to confront inner darkness or meet violent ends.

    Director: Meredith Alloway
    Writer: Meredith Alloway, Lily Houghton
    Produced by: Mason Novick, Mary Anne Waterhouse, Diablo Cody, Trent Hubbard
    Cast: Lili Reinhart, Lola Tung, Victoria Pedretti, Alexandra Shipp, Emma Chamberlain, Gabrielle Union
    Screening Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    HOKUM (NEON) – World Premiere

    Synopsis: When novelist Ohm Bauman retreats to a remote inn to scatter his parents’ ashes, he is consumed by tales of a witch haunting the honeymoon suite. Disturbing visions and a shocking disappearance forces him to confront dark corners of his past.

    Director: Damian McCarthy
    Writer: Damian McCarthy
    Produced by: Roy Lee, Steven Schneider, Derek Dauchy, Ruth Treacy, Julianne Forde, Mairtín de Barra
    Cast: Adam Scott, Peter Coonan, David Wilmot, Florence Ordesh, Will O’Connell, Michael Patric, Siox C, Brendan Conroy, Austin Amelio, Ezra Carlisle
    Screening Section: Midnighter
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    I LOVE BOOSTERS (NEON) – World Premiere

    Synopsis: A crew of professional shoplifters take aim at a cutthroat fashion maven. It’s like community service.

    Director: Boots Riley
    Writer: Boots Riley
    Produced by: Aaron Ryder, Andrew Swett, Allison Rose Carter, Jon Read, and Boots Riley
    Cast: Keke Palmer, Naomi Ackie, Taylour Paige, Poppy Liu, Eiza González, LaKeith Stanfield, Will Poulter, and Demi Moore
    Screening Section: Headliner
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    IMPOSTERS (Blue Finch Film Releasing)  World Premiere

    Synopsis: After a couple’s baby boy is taken, the desperate mother learns of a way to bring him back. However, her husband begins to suspect that what she returned with isn’t their son.

    Studio: N/A *Seeking Distribution
    Director: Caleb Phillips
    Writer: Caleb Phillips
    Produced by: Thomas Bond, Sara Seligman, Joe Bandelli
    Cast: Jessica Rothe, Charlie Barnett, Yul Vazquez, Bates Wilder, Luisina Quarleri, Thomas Parobek, Ian Lyons, Taylor Karin, Lee Bennett, Declan Bennett
    Screening Section: Midnighter
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    MILE END KICKS (Sumerian Pictures) – Texas Premiere

    Synopsis: After a couple’s baby boy is taken, the desperate mother learns of a way to bring him back. However, her husband begins to suspect that what she returned with isn’t their son.

    Studio: N/A *Seeking Distribution
    Director: Caleb Phillips
    Writer: Caleb Phillips
    Produced by: Thomas Bond, Sara Seligman, Joe Bandelli
    Cast: Jessica Rothe, Charlie Barnett, Yul Vazquez, Bates Wilder, Luisina Quarleri, Thomas Parobek, Ian Lyons, Taylor Karin, Lee Bennett, Declan Bennett
    Screening Section: Midnighter
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    LEVITICUS (NEON) – Texas Premiere

    Synopsis: Two teenage boys must escape a violent entity that takes the form of the person they desire most — each other.

    Director: Adrian Chiarella
    Writer: Adrian Chiarella
    Produced by: Samantha Jennings, Kristina Ceyton, Hannah Ngo
    Cast: Joe Bird, Stacy Clausen, Mia Wasikowska, Jeremy Blewitt, Ewen Leslie, Davida McKenzie
    Screening Section: Festival Favorite
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    NORMAL (Magnolia Pictures) – U.S Premiere

    Synopsis: Director Ben Wheatley and John Wick creator Derek Kolstad pit a provisional sheriff against his constituents when the exposure of a small town’s sordid secret sparks a rip-roaring firefight

    Director: Ben Wheatley
    Writer: Derek Kolstad
    Produced by: Marc Provissiero, Derek Kolstad, Bob Odenkirk
    Cast: Bob Odenkirk, Henry Winkler, Lena Headey, Ryan Allen, Billy MacLellan, Brendan Fletcher, Reena Jolly, Peter Shinkoda, Jess McLeod, Derek Barnes
    Screening Section: Narrative Spotlight
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    OVER YOUR DEAD BODY (Independent Film Company) – World Premiere

    Synopsis: A dysfunctional couple head to a remote cabin to supposedly reconnect, but each has secret plans to kill the other.  

    Director: Jorma Taccone
    Writer: Nick Kocher, Brian McElhaney
    Produced by: Kelly McCormick, David Leitch, Lee Kim, Guy Danella, Nick Spicer, Aram Tertzakian
    Cast: Samara Weaving, Jason Segel, Timothy Olyphant, Juliette Lewis, Paul Guilfoyle, Keith Jardine
    Screening Section: Headliner
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    READY OR NOT 2: HERE I COME (Searchlight Pictures) – World Premiere

    Synopsis: Moments after surviving an all-out attack from the Le Domas family, Grace discovers she’s reached the next level of the nightmarish game — and this time with her estranged sister Faith at her side. Grace has one chance to survive, keep her sister alive, and claim the High Seat of the Council that controls the world. Four rival families are hunting her for the throne, and whoever wins rules it all.

    Director: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, Tyler Gillett
    Writer: Guy Busick, R. Christopher Murphy
    Produced by: Tripp Vinson, James Vanderbilt, William Sherak, Bradley J. Fischer
    Cast: Samara Weaving, Kathryn Newton, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Néstor Carbonell, David Cronenberg, Elijah Wood
    Screening Section: Headliner
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    THEY WILL KILL YOU (Warner Bros. Pictures) – North American Premiere

    Synopsis: “They Will Kill You” unleashes a blood-soaked, high-octane horror-action-comedy in which a young woman must survive the night at the Virgil, a demonic cult’s mysterious and twisted death-trap of a lair, before becoming their next offering in a uniquely brazen, big screen battle of epic kills and wickedly dark humor.

    Director: Kirill Sokolov
    Writer: Kirill Sokolov, Alex Litvak
    Produced by: Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti, Dan Kagan
    Cast: Zazie Beetz, Myha’La, Paterson Joseph, Tom Felton, Heather Graham, Patricia Arquette
    Screening Section: Headliner
    Screening Category: Narrative Feature

    (Featured image by Magnolia Pictures)

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    Rachel Tolleson

    Rachel (she/her) is a freelancer at The Mary Sue. She has been freelancing since 2013 in various forms, but has been an entertainment freelancer since 2016. When not writing her thoughts on film and television, she can also be found writing screenplays, fiction, and poetry. She currently lives in Brooklyn with her cats Carla and Thorin Oakenshield but is a Midwesterner at heart. She is also a tried and true emo kid and the epitome of “it was never a phase, Mom,” but with a dual affinity for dad rock. She also co-hosts the Hazbin Hotel Pod, which can be found on TikTok and YouTube.

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    Rachel Tolleson

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  • A New Robert Christgau Documentary Will Feature Randy Newman, Thurston Moore, and Boots Riley

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    A new documentary on Robert Christgau, The Last Critic, will premiere at SXSW Film Festival this March. Randy Newman, Boots Riley, and Village Voice writer-turned-novelist Colson Whitehead have signed up to tell the story of the self-appointed Dean of American Rock Critics. Naturally, having penned “I Killed Christgau With My Big Fucking Dick,” Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore also chips in to help immortalize his onetime foe.

    Matty Wishnow directed the doc, which features music from Newman, Yo la Tengo, the Feelies, and Gina Birch. A murderer’s row of critics also contributed, including Greil Marcus, Ann Powers, Rob Sheffield, Amanda Petrusich, and Kelefa Sanneh. A synopsis on the film’s Instagram page notes that Christgau, whose work “has inspired & infuriated readers for sixty years, is still at it in his eighties—grading records, interrogating commas & listening to absolutely everything (except metal & prog).” Its SXSW premiere will be in the Documentary Feature Competition.

    Revisit Pitchfork’s interview with author Devon Powers about how Christgau and his Village Voice colleague Richard Goldstein helped create rock journalism:

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    Jazz Monroe

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  • How ‘Idiotka’ Landed Its Buzzy Cast of Comedy Standouts for Fashion-World Send-Up

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    A first-time filmmaker managed to collect an impressive roster of prominent comedy stars for Idiotka, offering a satirical look at the fashion industry and reality television.

    Writer-director Nastasya Popov’s movie debuted at last year’s SXSW and has since been playing the festival circuit ahead of its planned theatrical release later this year from Utopia. Anna Baryshnikov stars as Margarita, who lives in her Russian family’s crowded home in a less glamorous section of West Hollywood and considers competing on a reality show for aspiring fashion designers.

    Baryshnikov, who is known for the series Dickinson and is the daughter of famed ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov, leads a cast that includes such prominent performers as Camila Mendes, Mark Ivanir (Emilia Pérez) and Galina Jovovich, a Russian star whose daughter is Milla Jovovich. Additionally, the film features a supporting cast of rising comedic talent, including Julia Fox (Uncut Gems), Benito Skinner (Overcompensating), Owen Thiele (Adults) and rapper Saweetie.

    During an onstage conversation following Idiotka’s screening at the Palm Springs Film Festival on Sunday, Popov offered insight into how the indie project scored such a notable cast for her directorial feature debut. Popov, who grew up with Russian immigrant parents, enlisted a mutual friend to pass along an early draft of the script to Baryshnikov, with the actress then involved in further shaping the lead character. After Baryshnikov filmed a sizzle reel to help the project land funding, Mendes signed on to produce and star.

    “Camila was friendly with Benny [Skinner], and he’s of course amazing,” Popov said. “And then I showed up at Julia Fox’s book talk and handed her a letter. It was very DIY and grassroots, but I think our approach was always, ‘We’re making a movie in L.A. What’s the worst they’ll do? They’ll say no to us. So let’s try to get every cool, funny person that we can.’ Enough said yes that then it just became this gorgeous ensemble.”

    Nastasya Popov attends the SXSW premiere of Idiotka. Nicola Gell/Getty Images

    Popov noted that she shot the film in part at her grandmother’s apartment in Los Angeles. While the movie features dramatic scenes as Margarita navigates her challenging family baggage, it also takes advantage of the comedy that arises from poking fun at reality TV tropes, particularly the onscreen judges and their outsized personalities. Popov cited Project Runway and HBO’s streetwear-focused competition series The Hype as helping to inspire the narrative and comedy.

    “It was funny to me to see the evolution of the fashion reality show, and then also think about reality TV as an engine for how artists these days are all expected to just basically bare our soul on a platter,” Popov said. “That’s just right for comedy and also very true to our world and was fun to explore.”

    In her review of Idiotka for The Hollywood Reporter, critic Angie Han wrote, “Popov has a great feel for the easy warmth coursing between every member of the family, even in moments of strife, and the cast share a fun and comfortable chemistry.”

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  • SXSW London Confirmed For Second Year As Submissions Open For Session Proposals

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    A second edition of SXSW London has been confirmed, running from June 1 to 6, 2026, with the organizers opening submissions for session proposals for the event’s three verticals of conference, music and screen.

    Confirmation of the event, which will run once again in East London, follows this year’s inaugural edition, featuring more than 400 talks, 1,067 speakers, 562 music performances and 114  film and TV screenings.

    Alongside the expert curation of the SXSW London programming, the open submissions process plays an integral role in the festival. It received an 9,868 submissions across its three verticals for the first edition.

    As was the case for the 2025 edition, the winning selections for the conference program will be made available for review by the public before being considered by an advisory group and editorial team for inclusion in the festival. There were 40,000 public votes on the strand last year.

    The organizers have put forward 15 strands exploring topics with resonance for the creative industries today for the conference proposals.

    They include “AI and The New Human Experience”, looking at the transformative impact of AI on business, creative ecosystems and human experience; “Frontier Technologies”, exploring the latest advancements redefining industry landscapes and human potential; “Society Rewired”, unpicking how a convergence of technology, geopolitics and society is shaping a new era of global connectivity and engagement, and “London 2050”,  an exploration of innovation, policy and technology shaping the future of the host city.

    SXSW London is a spin-of South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, which since 1987 has brought creatives together across film, interactive media and music, and explored the impact of the convergence of technology, business and creativity through its conference program.

    “Bringing SXSW to London has always been about creating a platform for convergence across technology, business and creativity. Now in our second year, that mission is more alive than ever and the SXSW London open submissions allows us to build the Festival around what is most current and vital in these sectors,” said Katy Arnander, Director of Programming for SXSW London.

    Submissions for the conference programme will close on December 7, and the public will be able to view and vote on them from December 8. Submissions for music and screen will close on November 24, and December 31 respectively.

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    Melanie Goodfellow

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  • South by Southwest Announces First Artist Lineup for 2025

    South by Southwest Announces First Artist Lineup for 2025

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    South by Southwest (SXSW) has announced a huge slate of international artists set to perform at its 2025 edition. Yasmin Williams, Twin Shadow, La Sécurité, Shiho Yabuki, Justin Morales, Ali, Delivery, and Gurriers are among the names on the bill, along with the debut show from Immersion, a new, post-Githead duo comprising Wire’s Colin Newman and Malka Spigel of Minimal Compact. Check out the full list over at BrooklynVegan. SXSW Music Festival takes place from March 10 to 15 in Austin, Texas.

    Last year’s SXSW became mired in controversy when multiple artists dropped out due to the festival’s links to the U.S. Army and defense contractor RTX Corporation, particularly in light of their complicity in Israel’s bombardment of Gaza. Squirrel Flower, Mamalarky, Shalom, and Irish rap trio Kneecap were among the artists to spearhead the successful boycott, prompting the festival to cut ties with the U.S. Army and weapons makers.

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    Jazz Monroe

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  • SXSW Will No Longer Work With the U.S. Army or Defense Contractors

    SXSW Will No Longer Work With the U.S. Army or Defense Contractors

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    Photo: Hutton Supancic/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images

    SXSW is ending its partnerships with the U.S. Army and defense contractors after pro-Palestine protests this year. “After careful consideration, we are revising our sponsorship model,” the festival said after opening applications for 2025. “As a result, the U.S. Army, and companies who engage in weapons manufacturing, will not be sponsors of SXSW 2025.” More than 60 artists and participants boycotted this year’s festival over SXSW’s ties to defense groups that supply Israeli weapons in the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. The U.S. Army was a “super-sponsor” of the 2024 festival, and Collins Aerospace, a company under defense conglomerate RTX Corporation (f.k.a. Raytheon), also participated. “A music festival should not include war profiteers,” said Squirrel Flower, one of the first artists to boycott. “I refuse to be complicit in this and withdraw my art and labor in protest.”

    SXSW previously defended its military ties amid this year’s controversy. The festival called the defense industry “a proving ground” for new technology and said working with the Army “is part of our commitment to bring forward ideas that shape our world.” The Army said it was “proud” to sponsor SXSW, which it called “a unique opportunity.”

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    Justin Curto

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  • What’s Going on With Ayo Edebiri?

    What’s Going on With Ayo Edebiri?

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    Not just anyone can earn the title “People’s Princess.” I mean, the moniker was first used to describe Princess Diana, so the bar is high. It describes someone who isn’t just iconic but feels relatable. But this is a tough balance to reach — especially for celebrities who are, by definition, not relatable. And many a female celeb — think Jennifer Lawrence and Anne Hathaway every 5 business years — has earned this title just to have the world turn on her and suddenly hate her for no reason. It’s called being
    woman’d, and it’s the flip side to being the people’s princess.


    So, this title doesn’t come without its risks. But my god, the rewards are worth it. Everyone loves you. You book job after job. No one can get enough of you.

    In the music world, the people’s princess is currently Sabrina Carpenter. You can’t go anywhere without hearing either “Espresso” or “
    Please, Please, Please” — and surprisingly, you don’t want to. If I don’t get my daily dose of “Espresso,” my mental health suffers. She’s also dominating the festival circuit and just wrapped up an opening spot for Taylor Swift’s Eras tour. And her album Short and Sweet is on the way and I’ve already pre-saved it to Spotify and am mentally preparing for the Ticketmaster queue for her solo tour.

    Somehow even more ubiquitous than our Pop Princess is the preeminent Ayo Edebiri. Across demographics, fan bases, and generations, everybody loves her. She seemingly arrived out of nowhere with a refreshingly relatable persona backed with earnestness and raw talent. She has the wide-eyed charm of
    Call Me By Your Name-era Timothee Chalamet. The viral interview acumen of early-career Jennifer Lawrence. And the infectious grin of a young Julia Roberts. How could she not be the people’s princess?

    Over the last two years, she went from being a niche comedian [Popdust named her as one of the best
    comedians to watch in 2019] to a household name. And while it might seem like she’s everywhere now, she’s been working for years behind the scenes as a writer, basement comedian, and voice actor before finally getting the recognition she deserves. It doesn’t hurt that she’s a master of press tours. Combined with her It-girl style (lots of Loewe, naturally), her witty answers to interview questions often go viral and become memes and ongoing jokes. Making us feel like we’re in on the joke with her is a classic people’s princess move.

    If you’re still wondering where she came from and where she’s going, we’ve got the full scoop.

    What has Ayo Edebiri written for?

    Before she was one of Hollywood’s most in-demand actors, Edebiri was making a name for herself behind the scenes as a writer. Or versatile queen, she did it all. She was also a comedy writer on one-season (not) wonders like
    The Rundown with Robin Thede and Sunnyside on NBC. She also joined the writing staff of Big Mouth for the show’s fourth season, where she eventually became the voice of Missy in 2020 — replacing Jenny Slate amidst the Black Lives Matter Movement.

    After a few uncredited acting roles and small roles from 2014 -2020, she started with comedy sets on Comedy Central which eventually led to a show with frequent collaborator Rachel Sennott. Their scripted digital series
    Ayo and Rachel Are Single aired on Comedy Central in May 2020. Amongst people in the industry, this was her breakthrough. But her major breakout role came two years later in The Bear.

    What is Ayo Edebiri in?

    When everything happens, it all happens at once. In 2020, though she’d had scripts floating around development offices and stints in writers’ rooms before, Ayo started booking jobs, both as a writer and as an actress. And those jobs often ended in more jobs — and even awards.

    It started with the show
    Dickinson. This underrated AppleTV+ dramedy stars Hailee Steinfeld as a young Emily Dickinson in an anachronistic rendition of the writer’s young life. And in the second season, a surprise: a guest appearance by Ayo Edebiri herself. Edebiri was a writer on the show when she appeared as an actress. There, she first worked with director Christopher Storer, who is best known for creating The Bear.

    Storer, a Chicago native, based
    The Bear on a sandwich shop called Mr. Beef and its owner Chris Zucchero. The Bear was already cooking by the time he met Edebiri, so to speak. So when he imagined the casting for Sydney, he imagined Ayo. She submitted a self-tape for the role and the fit was just right. Audiences thought so, too. The Bear was an instant hit, and Ayo its breakout star.

    It’s hard to eclipse the attention of a
    White Boy of the Month. So, while the internet was infatuated with Jeremy Allen White and his chef-boy tattoos (this was before the now-infamous Calvin Klein ad), it’s a wonder they had room to fawn over anyone else. Yet, Ayo’s charm cut through the noise, and she became one of the most talked about young actors — in and outside of Hollywood casting rooms and voting rooms.

    For her first season of
    The Bear, Edebiri was nominated for a bevy of awards, including the Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Performance in a New Series, the Critics’ Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, and the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series. She also won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Performance in a New Scripted Series.

    After that, she was everywhere. You might have seen her in a recurring role in the beloved
    Abbott Elementary, a too-small role in niche Indie comedy Theater Camp alongside Molly Gordon, who would go on to be in The Bear, and in an episode of Black Mirror.

    2023 was a giant year for Ayo in movies. She was in the
    definitive queer movie of the year, Bottoms (also the best dressed menswear film of the year), alongside Rachel Sennott. But that wasn’t enough. She starred in The Sweet East — a bizarre indie drama alongside Talia Ryder, Jacob Elordi, and Jeremy O’Harris — and lent her voice in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem.

    She’ll be making another turn as a voice actor alongside Maya Hawke in this summer’s
    Inside Out 2 and premiered her latest movie role in Omni Loop at SXSW this year in Austin, Texas.

    But one movie she wasn’t in?
    Banshees of Inisherin, the 2022 Martin McDonagh film starring Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson that earned Barry Keoghan an Oscar nomination (pre-Saltburn). Yet, it’s the reason behind the running joke that she’s Irish (she is). Let’s get into it.

    Why do people say Ayo Edebiri is Irish?

    It all started, as many things do, on a red carpet. Before
    Bottoms finally made it the cinemas worldwide to raucous, roaring, lesbian applause, it was a strange indie film premiering at SXSW 2023. This was the beginning of Ayo’s rise to People’s Princess-dom, and co-stars Rachel Sennott and Nicholas Galitzine were beginning to get some attention, too.

    But instead of talking about
    Bottoms on the red carpet, Ayo took that time to talk about something nearer and dearer to her heart: the proud and gorgeous nation of Ireland. In an Irish accent and straight face, she joked that she had played the role of Jenny the donkey in Banshees. Thus, an Irish queen was born.

    “I lived in Ireland for about four months, and I got really in character, and I was on all fours for four months, and it was really painful — but beautiful as well,” she said.

    Since then, she — and the proud and gorgeous nation of Ireland — have run with the bit. She thanked Ireland in an award acceptance speech. She celebrated St. Paddy’s with Paul Mescal. She’s been embraced by Irish publications. God bless the Irish. I just need her to do an Actors to Actors Series conversation with
    Bridgerton’s Nicola Coughlan.

    Is Ayo Edebiri dating Jeremy Allen White?

    Alongside the speculation around her Irishness, Ayo, like every famous woman, has received a lot of interest in her dating life. Rumors abounded that she had a short fling with fellow Irish icon Paul Mescal, and if it’s not true, don’t tell me. But lately, fans are hoping real life imitates fiction and that Ayo Edebiri is dating Jeremy Allen White.

    The rumor began in Chicago. While on location for
    The Bear, the cast has become a Chicago tourist attraction. You don’t pay rent in Chicago if you haven’t seen White in his Nike Cortez sneakers or Matty Matheson enjoying some local fare. So it’s no surprise a video went viral of the cast hanging out at a Chigaco baseball game. But a curious moment in the footage sparked some attention. For a second, White seems to rub Edebiri’s back. That’s it. That’s the proof. But fans are convinced it was more than friendly.

    Who knows? Maybe they are dating, or maybe they’re just playing the press tour game like all movie stars playing love interests do these days. Their characters also have a will-they-won’t-they dynamic, and I’ll be sitting waiting for
    Season 3 to reveal their fates.

    When is The Bear Season 3 coming out?

    The Bear Season 3 will be released on June 27, 2024. If you’re anything like me, you’re counting down the days to get your fix of Ayo Edebiri at her best. The People’s Princess surely can do no wrong in my eyes. I can’t wait for a new season of her as Sydney — including her directorial debut in one of the episodes. Stay tuned for our full review on the Season!

    Watch the trailer here:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHiwdDFPsZY

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    Langa Chinyoka

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  • Akira Galaxy: Rockstar, Poet

    Akira Galaxy: Rockstar, Poet

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    Akira Galaxy is a romantic. You can hear it in her music. You can see it in her music videos as she runs across Normandy in a glittering bodysuit. Even when she’s on stage in a vintage nightgown, strumming a glittering silver guitar. I encountered it firsthand in Austin, Texas, while she sat in between SXSW sets, telling me how she’s been reading Eros: The Bittersweet in her spare time.


    “It’s just a lot of reflection of love and loss and sitting with yourself,” she said of her debut EP, What’s Inside You. “And a lot of desire.” Akira’s distinct vocals, her poetic lyricism, the gut-pulling guitar riffs — they all add up pure palpable desire.

    Although What’s Inside You came into the world earlier this year, much of it was written during the height of the pandemic. And while many of us were making sourdough, Akira was falling in love.

    “I fell in love with someone through a computer and through my phone,” she told me. “It was really romantic. It reminded me of back when people would send letters to each other and that was your only way of communicating. And that’s something that will never fully happen again. It was a point in time where that was the only option to connect with people. This person was across the world, the borders were closed. So we fell in love with each other through our minds.”

    Though it wasn’t only this relationship that inspired her EP, the ache for connection reverberates through her music. Inspired by conversations with old friends during lockdown, her hometown of Seattle, and a whole lot of poetry, What’s Inside You is a tapestry threaded together by deep reflection and devastating hooks. It’s vulnerable, but never saccharine. Lyrics like “Give me your impossible devotion” (“Virtual Eyes”) and “No one’s gonna love you like I do,” (“Silver Shoes”) are grounded by poetic details that deftly traverse both the personal and the universal.

    Gaining such craft and skill as a songwriter and musician didn’t happen overnight. Or even over the pandemic. Galaxy has spent the past few years honing her craft — polishing her sound and even studying the art of mime (find her in LA mime classes) to bring intention to her performances.

    And now, with What’s Inside You, she’s finally arrived. “It’s been such a long time coming,” says Akira. I spoke to her about her sound, her stage presence, and her style at SXSW 2024.

    Pet Shop DaysAkira Galaxy

    POPDUST: Your debut EP, What’s Inside You, just released. How did you find your sound?

    AKIRA: I had just moved to LA and was writing a ton. And then COVID hit so I went home to Seattle. I still hadn’t figured out my sound. I hadn’t found a song where I was like, this is fully me. I want to share this with the world. When human physical touch and one-on-one connection were stripped away, it really fucked with my hardware, like anyone. It made me look inward and I was scheduling these Zoom meetings with people I went to school with — like first grade. I hadn’t talked to them in like 10 years. I just wanted to get in touch with all these people who had drifted to the back of my mind. I was really able to reflect on another version of myself. So that’s when I figured out my sound and then the first song I wrote was “What’s Inside You.” And I also bought my first acoustic guitar learned a bunch of Bob Dylan covers like “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright.” That’s the first song I learned how to do vibrato with my voice on. So a combination of everything — especially reflection of the past and also accepting this new way of living — blossomed this EP. And that’s when I discovered my sound.

    POPDUST: Now that physical touch is back, is that yearning still there?

    AKIRA: I’ve been reading a lot of Greek mythology recently. Like Eros the Bittersweet by Anne Carson. And there are a lot of themes about desire and yearning. Especially when someone’s away and how that distance creates desire. I just think it’s really interesting to go back in time and see how other people were describing things. That was like their Bible, right? And it’s a really romantic way of describing things that we feel today. Like, the bittersweet taste of honey melting on my tongue. Or an ice cube melting the palm of my hand. Or the veil between us while we’re sleeping in a bed. I’m really into that kind of stuff. And into the origin of colors, and different ways to really describe the things that we’re feeling and try and understand the way we’re feeling.

    POPDUST: It’s interesting that the details that appeal to you the most are from something so fantastical as mythology.

    AKIRA: I feel like maybe I’m just used to picking out that kind of stuff because I read poetry so often to get inspired for my lyrics. So I’ll read a poem and see the big picture of it, but a lot of the time, I’m finding words that really stand out to me and make me feel something. So I’ve learned to look for things like that.

    POPDUST: Your songwriting is similar. A lot of your peers are leaning into the confessional style but your lyrics are more abstract.

    AKIRA: So it’s really interesting that you bring that up because I’ve kind of been struggling with that myself. Because with so much of the lyric writing today, what you hear is what you get. There’s a quote that someone said to me once: The music will make you like an artist, the lyrics will make you fall in love with an artist. I feel that so heavily. For me, if I see lyrics that I love, it’s a spiral where I have to look at all their other lyrics. And a lot of the time, maybe I won’t fully understand what they’re saying at first, but I have to put the puzzle pieces together. And in my own way. I don’t know if maybe what I think the song is about will change a year from then. But to me, that’s what’s really interesting.

    POPDUST: The potential for transformation is there.

    AKIRA: Totally. Like Bob Dylan. He’s very simplistic with his writing in some capacity, but it’s a way that the words are formed together. That’s what I’m aiming for with my lyric writing in the future — aiming to get somewhere near that guy. You can say the simplest thing, but it can be the most profound thing in the world.

    POPDUST: And that’s something that comes from poetry, right? Precision and diction and transformation are such poetic features.

    AKIRA: Yeah. And I’m struggling with that. Because I really like abstract writing. But sometimes I’m like, I don’t know if this is going to make sense to everyone. But it makes so much sense to me in the most profound way. So maybe that’s enough. And maybe it becomes a completely different story for another person. And it’s constantly evolving with time.

    POPDUST: That timelessness is present in “Virtual Eyes.” It has the echoes of COVID and falling in love virtually. But it’s so rooted in the sensation of desire that it transcends the literal meaning and feels like its own thing.

    AKIRA: I wrote that in a day. Actually, I wrote the chorus lyrics about six months prior and then everything else was written in the span of a day. I just remember being in tears. Like, tears on the— on the like, page.

    I was going through one of the most painful times in my life and it was the only thing I could do to feel okay. And I think that’s a really beautiful thing about being a creative person or being an artist is you can pull life out of anything. And you can actually benefit other people too by doing that. So it’s funny because the easiest moments for me to write in are, I think a perfect combination of feeling really happy about a situation — but there being a bit of a tragedy in it as well. In the sense of, like, things are so bad that I have no other choice but to write. Because it’s the only way that I am going to not feel like everything’s in black and white.

    POPDUST: Do you think that’s the only way to write? With — or within — that extreme emotion?

    AKIRA: I think there’s something to be said about just constantly being aware of the smallest little romantic thing. Picking up on little romantic gestures or moments that can easily make their way into a song if you’re seeing all these things all the time. And for me, a really good way to be in tune is constantly like keeping the wheels turning. With everything. Watching films, reading, listening to music, hearing little weird sounds, and new songs, and constantly having that creative flow. And being around other creative people and talking about this stuff.

    POPDUST: I think that’s also what makes your persona — Akira Galaxy, the artist — seem so strong. It’s made up of so many details, from how you show up on stage to lyrics to your visuals. How did you carve that out?

    AKIRA: It’s gonna sound so simple and boring, but it’s just what I like. And it’s just what feels right. Like when I was creating visuals, I mean, the people I was working with were a huge part of it. But when I started thinking about visuals for the song, I just wanted really hyper-realistic landscapes. So I pulled from all the films that I like and, you know, Pinterest was a really good source for me.

    POPDUST: What were the inspirations for the “Virtual Eyes” video?

    AKIRA: I wanted to go to France and I found a bunch of locations in Europe, mostly in France, and in Italy. So I was like, Do you guys want to come to France with me? I need to do this. I need the first visuals to be amazing. And I think a lot of the reason why I felt that way was because it had been such a long time coming. I’ve been wanting to release something since I was like 16 years old. And then I wrote a lot of this EP when I was 20 and 21. So it had been a year or two in the making, and I was like, alright, well, because it’s been so long it has to be exactly the way I want it to be. And it has to be a full representation of myself.

    POPDUST: Many young artists, especially with the immediacy of TikTok, feel pressure to release music as fast and as often as possible. Do you ever feel that pressure?

    AKIRA: Right. If I had released the song that I wrote when I was 16 years old, I probably would have had a really different trajectory. So there’s some beauty in really making sure that it was the right moment. Because there’s that saying that you have your whole life to make your first album. But also, at some point, you gotta let it out and, like, let go of shit a bit.

    POPDUST: Do you have a sense of what the first album is going to be?

    AKIRA: I’m figuring that out in real-time. I have a good chunk of songs that I definitely want to go on an album or an EP and one of them’s my favorite I’ve written — even over “Virtual Eyes.” So I’m pretty excited. But I think it might sound a little more minimal or spacey. I love that, tied in with visuals like Sofia Coppola’s stuff. I mean The Virgin Suicides soundtrack is one of my favorite records of all time.

    POPDUST: And will you draw from all those little moments you’re always cataloging?

    AKIRA: For sure. Yeah. And it’s, interesting, a lot of this newer stuff is gonna be in real time. The past EP was a lot of reflecting and now it’s present Akira. A lot of it has to do with picking up on the little romantic details and life and just being consumed with what’s going on. I mean, I find it really interesting when artists write about things in the third person or from a weird perspective. I think a lot of artists today are like — and I think this is appropriate in some moments — but are only saying “me,” “you,” “I.” I’m trying to refrain from that and get more into the abstract.

    POPDUST: Speaking of doing the unexpected, I heard you studied mime for your performances. How did you get into that?

    AKIRA: It was around the time I wrote “Virtual Eyes.” It was during that period when I was in a really dark time. And I was like, Okay, I need to perform and I need to be intentional about it. So I looked at mime classes in LA and found this guy, Lorin Eric Salm, who’s part of this thing called Mime Theater and he was taught by Marcel Marceau for years in Paris. So he’s the real deal. Initially, we started by just doing core mime stuff. A lot of it was kind of just the way that you stand. It’s called suspension. It’s about how you hold your placement of every part of your body. I think a striking performance can be in the subtlest details, like the way that you look at the audience. It can be in your eyes. It can be in just the way you stand there. But it’s important to have intention. People want to come to a show and see something interesting, They want to try and understand what you’re trying to convey to the audience, even more so than just the song. So, I think that’s what I wanted. How do I express what I’m trying to say to the audience in the most real way?

    Watch the “Virtual Eyes” video here:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvp5nShIJXU

    Stream What’s Inside You HERE:

    https://open.spotify.com/album/2MuLsccIzQmcny5aMtpNM3?si=tr66ELGXSwK6tVZiwbWWsg

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Rolling Stone Future of Music Recap: Meet the Artists Shaping The Music Scene Today

    Rolling Stone Future of Music Recap: Meet the Artists Shaping The Music Scene Today

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    It seems like there’s a new “emerging artist” every day. TikTok viral hits become international earworms overnight, propelling artists to instant, but fleeting, fame. It makes sense then, that artists with staying power have often toiled away for years before achieving mainstream success.


    It’s easy to believe that, these days, the music industry values virality above all. But the artists shaping music as we know it rarely emerge from nowhere.

    Just look at the
    2024 Grammy Award Winner for Best New Artist, Victoria Monét. Monét released five EPs before her debut studio album, Jaguar II (2023), and its lead single, “On My Mama,” gave her commercial success. But before Monét’s solo career took off, she was a frequent collaborator of Ariana Grande. She’s also worked on songs and albums for artists like Nas, Travis Scott, Blackpink, Fifth Harmony, T.I., Lupe Fiasco, Chrisette Michele, Brandy, Coco Jones, Chloe x Halle, and more. Over a decade in the industry prepared her to become the verifiable star she is now.

    Some of our other
    artists to watch for 2024 have experienced similar tenures in the industry before finally garnering long-term success. Sabrina Carpenter started her career with Disney and has finally become the popstar she was born to be with Emails I Can’t Send — her fifth studio album. Same with queer trailblazer Renee Rapp, who starred in Mean Girls: The Musical on Broadway before landing the role in the film adaptation and bursting onto the music scene with her debut album Snow Angel.

    What sets these artists apart from the bright but brief flames sparked on TikTok is their dedication to their artistry and self-image. Years of learning how to perform, sharpen their sound, and crafting their public persona prime them for impact and longevity. It takes time to hone lasting talent. And time makes it more satisfying when a musician or a band finally punches through to the mainstream.

    Many artists thrive in niche subcultures playing to curated crowds. Those are some of my favorites — there’s nothing like a basement show packed shoulder-to-shoulder with a small group of people who share your private music obsession. But the artists that shape music as we know it today are coming from all genres. They manage to transcend their niches and add to the collective conversation in a fresh way. But how do they do it? And how do we know which artists are changing music in real-time?

    What is the Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase?

    Everyone fancies themselves a music critic these days. I’m not immune to this. I watch deep dives on my favorite artists on TikTok, curate my
    Spotify playlists like they’re museums, and wax poetic about why my favorite albums deserved Grammys.

    Here at Popdust, we know a thing or two about emerging artists. Which is why we went down South to Austin, Texas for SXSW to catch some of this year’s most exciting acts in person.

    SXSW 2024 was bigger and better than ever. Its crowning jewel is the Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase, which brings together the buzziest and best music acts across genres. The four-night event caps off each evening at SX, bringing an array of artists and audiences together in Austin, Texas.

    What an ideal compliment to the dive bar shows and daytime music showcases. But this high-octane event is more than just a flashy festival. It’s a great predictor of the artists who will prove themselves influential in the coming years. “Artists of tomorrow,” as
    Rolling Stone likes to call them.

    Last year’s performers included artists like Coco Jones, Remi Wolf, Chlöe Bailey, Blondshell, and others who have only become even bigger stars over the past year.

    After this year’s lineup, wiill
    Rolling Stone’s penchant for successful predictions be proven again? Given the record-level excitement for the event, all signs point to yes.

    Emerging Artists to Watch From the Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase 2024

    With 40,000 fans RSVP’ing for the ACL Live event, Austin’s iconic Moody Theater was packed. Each night, fans lined up for hours for a chance to make it into the venue — some for over 14 hours — with the line for Música Mexicana superstar Peso Pluma stretching for blocks and blocks. Sponsors like StockX, ~Pourri, and Bacardi also put on activations and events to celebrate the music and the fans.

    With this much fan excitement, the lineup simply
    had to deliver. Genres included urbano, Southern rock, Afrobeats, hip-hop, amapiano, soul, funk, and good old indie-alt.

    Here is each day’s lineup:

    • Day 1 (Tuesday, March 12) — Teezo Touchdown, Veeze, Lola Brooke, and Chase Shakur
    • Day 2 (Wednesday, March 13) — Peso Pluma, Young Miko, Kevin Kaarl, J Noa, and Pink Pablo
    • Day 3 (Thursday, March 14) — Flo Milli, Pheelz, Preacher, Uncle Waffles, Black Sherif, and Flyana Boss
    • Day 4 (Friday, March 15) — Faye Webster, Red Clay Strays, Scowl, Dylan Gossett, and Jackie Venson

    Take note — you’ll be seeing these names everywhere soon.

    Recap: Everything you missed at Rolling Stone’s SXSW Showcase

    While all of the artists highlighted at this year’s
    Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase are sure to be somewhat influential, we’re most excited to see the trajectory of the headliners who are changing the game right now.

    Here’s a recap of their performances and why, if you’re not already a fan, you will be soon.

    Teezo Touchdown

    Texas’s own Teezo Touchdown headlined opening night. You’ve probably heard him on “RunItUp” by Tyler, the Creator; “Modern Jam” by Travis Scott; or “Amen” by Drake. After years of high-level features, he finally released his debut album
    How Do You Sleep at Night? in September 2023. On stage at SXSW, it’s clear that Teezo’s experience opening for Tyler, the Creator in 2022, and Travis Scott last year has contributed mightily to his magnetic stage presence. Running across the stage brandishing a microphone wrapped in a flower bouquet, Teezo’s energy was infectious. And the crowd ate it up.

    His blend of rock, rap, and pop music is telling of his generation — one who resists genres and embraces the fluidity of form. He also shared a heartwarming story about how he busked at SXSW in 2018. Look at him now! He recently announced a single “MASC” with Doja Cat and A$AP Rocky for Doja’s
    Scarlet 2 Claude Deluxe album. Touchdown’s only getting hotter and hotter.

    Peso Pluma

    Mexico’s favorite rockstar headlined Night 2. After earning the longest lines in SXSW history, his performance proved well worth the wait. Peso Pluma’s signature brand of “música mexicana,” took the crowd to exciting heights. His youthful energy filled the theater — especially when he joined the audience in the pit. It was a sight to behold.

    Dubbed the “Mexican Mick Jagger,” the Gen Z star will release his new album this summer. His undeniable charisma is embedded in his music, earning him a fanatic base of loyal listeners and a chokehold on the music scene. Just wait, he’ll soon transcend boundaries beyond Latinx Pop and hit everyone’s speakers this summer.

    Flo Milli

    Flo Milli had a lot to celebrate as she headlined Night 3 literally as her second album dropped. Iconic behavior. She took the crowd through familiar favorites, her new songs, and premiered a new remix featuring Cardi B and SZA — not bad co-signs for an emerging artist.

    I saw Flo Milli perform in 2020, and watching her on the giant Moody Theater stage was like watching her come alive on a whole new level. After her song “Never Lose Me” got massive attention last year, Flo Milli is poised to be one of music’s next It-Girls. Her versatility is thrilling and admirable, so is her personality and signature tag — if you know, you know.

    Faye Webster

    Like Flo Milli, I’ve seen Faye Webster before. Not once, not twice, but three times. The first was in 2017 — how can it be six and a half years ago? My penchant for “sad girl music” drew me to Webster’s artfully whiny voice and nostalgic yearning. But the Atlanta native is more than another girl whining about her breakups (even though, from Taylor Swift to Olivia Rodrigo, I eat them all up).

    Webster was signed to a rap label and takes lyrical influence from hip-hop and blues artists. She has an energetic stage presence that matches her quirky sound that kept the crowd moving all throughout her set.

    From the sultry sweetness of her TikTok viral hit “Kingston” to the high kicks and guitar riffs pulled off during songs like “I Think I’m Funny Ha Ha” and “In A Good Way,” Faye proves herself to be music’s ultimate cool girl. Rockstar and cry-inducing crooner in one? It’s giving Billie Eilish.

    What to learn from the Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase 2024

    The future of music, according to Rolling Stone, is genre-fluid, youthful, and packed with energy. It also has one important factor: the ability to connect to an audience. Whether it’s on stage of through headphones, all the emerging artists have managed to connect with their ideal audiences and stay there thanks to their dedicated artistry and unique perspectives.

    I’m excited to see what all these acts have in store for us next. And for
    Rolling Stone Future of Music Showcase at SXSW 2025!

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Sorry Oppie – ‘Civil War’ is the Movie That Made Me Believe in IMAX

    Sorry Oppie – ‘Civil War’ is the Movie That Made Me Believe in IMAX

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    Imagine a film about war. Then, imagine a film about journalists. Somehow, Ex Machina’s Alex Garland fashioned one of the most compelling stories of the year by marrying these unlikely premises. Even more unlikely? He convinced A24 to make an action film. Don’t worry, this is not a souped-up Marvel movie. It’s exactly what you’d expect from our favorite indie studio’s first venture into the action genre: subversive, thrilling, and intrepid.


    After wowing audiences with films like
    Ex Machina and 28 Days Later, it’s no surprise that director Alex Garland’s latest dystopian effort is unsettling and awe-inspiring. The highly anticipated film is already rated 93% on Rotten Tomatoes after premiering at SXSW 2024.

    At a SXSW panel, Garland gave some insights into what it means to make a movie about the dystopian future that feels so close to being real. While movies like
    Contagion and Garland’s own 28 Days Later felt prescient at the height of the pandemic, no one could have predicted that. But Civil War feels like a nightmare we’ve all been having for the past decade. It’s comforting, in a way, to know others are experiencing this nightmare too. But it’s dread-inducing to see it play out on screen and think: this is us. This will be us. Soon.

    And that’s precisely the state of anxiety Garland wants us in.

    “Cinema is inclined towards whatever it’s presenting itself, and it’s inclined to not being anti-war,” Garland told the panel at SXSW. “To accurately present the action, it contains adrenaline. And if you add music to that, and you add a certain kind of imagery to that, essentially, it becomes seductive.”

    Garland didn’t want to make a sexy war movie. He didn’t want to give us an easy watch.

    His solution: making it as disorienting as possible. Unexpected musical moments, atrociously violent cuts of brutality, and gore abound.

    “That De La Soul track [that plays during a pivotal scene] had a particular function which was to be jarring and aggressive and speak somehow to the perverse pleasure in what was happening,” Garland explained.

    From the score to the cinematography, Garland has managed to make a war movie that does not, in any way, glamorize war. To do that, he had to keep the audience anxious and tense The product: the most stressful watching experience I’ve ever endured. But my god, it was worth it.

    What is Civil War (2023) about?

    @moviesaretherapy Civil War review #fyp #foryou #movies ♬ original sound – Kit Lazer

    Civil War is set in a not-too-distant future when California and Texas have seceded, and the ensuing civil war has caused chaos across the United States. A team of war photographers and journalists make a dangerous journey to Washington DC with the goal of interviewing the President before American democracy falls.

    It stars Kirsten Dunst in a career-best performance as jaded photojournalist Lee, alongside Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Nick Offerman, and Jesse Plemons.

    It’s a war movie. An action movie. A morbid road trip movie. But above all, it’s a nuanced ode to journalists. “I wanted to make journalists the hero,” said Garland. “In any kind of free country or, let’s say, democracy, journalists are not a luxury, they’re a necessity. They are absolutely as important as the judiciary, the executive, or the legislature, and they are literally as important as a free press that is respected and trusted. Now, journalists have done some of the work to be distrusted themselves. But a lot of other interested parties have been complicit in making them untrusted. And I think it’s unhealthy. And I think it’s wrong. So I wanted to put journalism at the heart of it.”

    Though the characters are complex and flawed, we spend enough time with them in a van to cause us to not just love them, but respect them. We believe in them. We believe in their work. If the film’s action doesn’t manage to seduce us, we are seduced by the characters’ prevailing idealism in such dire times.

    It’s prescient, too, to be celebrating war journalists — people with nothing to protect them but cameras and press vests — in the current global climate. Garland could not have anticipated
    Civil War would be released at a time when many of us are quite familiar with the names of press journalists across the world — Motaz, Bisan, Plestia. Outfitted with far less ego and equipment than the journalists in this film, the reality of journalists in Palestine is impossible not to recall while watching Civil War. It adds another thread of reality to the film that makes it all the more effective.

    Is Civil War (2023) good?

    Civil War pulls off Garland’s intended feat of creating an unequivocally anti-war war movie. But it’s by no means flat or didactic. The tapestry of scenes the characters encounter keeps the film moving. With each stop they make and each new character we meet, we learn something new about this world — and about ourselves.

    This is perhaps the most impressive accomplishment of Civil War. It tells us about ourselves.

    Garland shows us ourselves in the characters, in the polarized nation, and in the scenes of atrocity, the film never shies away from. “The first season of
    The Handmaid’s Tale did something very interesting, which was it had bits of imagery that would seem shocking. But as you’re watching them, you realize there was a real-world allegory or parallel. We basically did the same thing,” revealed Garland.

    “The scenes are referencing moments from the real world. But not, it’s important to say, exceptional moments. Moments that you would expect in any war. And in a way, that’s part of the point. I think it was necessary to do that if one is going to be anti-war. Some of the sanitizing might pollute the message.”

    The film is also tremendously evocative emotionally because it is so immersive. The film offers the audience the chance to feel like it’s
    behind the camera by following the photographers and revealing the shots the characters “take” during the film. And to get the shot, we go with them into the line of fire.

    This is where I make my plea: you must watch
    Civil War in IMAX. Wrapped in the giant screen and surrounded by the full power of a fantastic soundtrack, this was the most immersive watching experience of my life — even more than any 3D film I’ve ever seen or Oppenheimer … sorry, Christopher Nolan. As if we needed the movie to feel more real, IMAX puts you right in the thick of it.

    Ultimately,
    Civil War isn’t really a warning — it doesn’t make political moralizations. But it’s a call to action. Or a call to remembering. It urges us to appreciate, above all, perspective and truth.

    Civil War has its wide release on April 12, 2024. Prepare your nerves. Watch the trailer here:

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    LKC

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  • ‘The Gutter’ Review: Susan Sarandon and Shameik Moore Face Off in a Boisterous Bowling Comedy

    ‘The Gutter’ Review: Susan Sarandon and Shameik Moore Face Off in a Boisterous Bowling Comedy

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    AlleyCatz, an unassuming bowling alley in a fictional California town, isn’t compelling to passersby or potential customers from the outside. The venue run by Mozell (Sister Sister’s Jackée Harry) has a drab brick exterior, a monument to the sad architecture of suburban shopping centers. It doesn’t offer much when you walk inside either. The lanes need waxing, the bar requires tending and the equipment is in various stages of disrepair. Some people might take one look at AlleyCatz and run, but Walt (Shameik Moore), the silly protagonist of Yassir and Isaiah Lester’s boisterous directorial debut The Gutter, doesn’t have a choice. He needs a job. 

    The young man, who prefers to live life without a shirt, has been fired from more gigs than he can count. In a particularly amusing early sequence, Walt recounts his shoddy employment history to Mozell, whose face becomes increasingly disturbed with each revelation. But like Walt, Mozell has no options. AlleyCatz is falling apart and the intrepid entrepreneur needs help. Compelled by glimmers of Walt’s charm and her own desperation, Mozell hires him to tend the bar and de-roach the bowling shoes.

    The Gutter

    The Bottom Line

    A comedic win, if not a perfect strike.

    Venue: SXSW Film Festival (Narrative Spotlight)
    Cast: Shameik Moore, Susan Sarandon, D’Arcy Carden, Jay Ellis, Jackée Harry, Paul Reiser
    Directors: Yassir Lester, Isaiah Lester
    Screenwriter: Yassir Lester

    1 hour 29 minutes

    The Gutter, an exciting feature that premiered at SXSW, is a nervy comedy that follows Walt as he goes from tending the AlleyCatz bar to breaking records as a dynamite bowler. The film is a passion project that riffs on different comedic genres — satire, physical and sketch — to create an absurdist adventure. Even when the narrative falters, demanding more than the screenplay (written by Yassir) can offer in a brisk 89 minutes, The Gutter’s humor rarely misses. The Lester brothers deploy jokes with precision, taking aim at everything and everyone. Their plucky abrasiveness might rub against mainstream sensibilities, but The Gutter — like an early Paul Beatty novel — seems destined to be a cult classic. 

    On his first day, Walt meets a set of characters that make one wonder if The Gutter might have worked better as a sitcom. Stationed at the bar is Skunk (D’Arcy Carden), a former pro-bowler champion whose alcoholism has all but tanked her legacy. Brotha Candy (Rell Battle), a smarmy “hotep” pulled right of The Boondocks, has made a camp outside, where he spews conspiratorial ideas through a megaphone. And in his brief appearance as a city health inspector, Adam Brody trades his slick-talking producer persona from American Fiction for a more Seth Cohen-coded deadpan. 

    Just as Walt gets comfortable with his newfound employment, which might help him and his mother Vicki (Kim Fields) keep the lights on, he finds out AlleyCatz is at risk of permanent closure. That visit from Brody’s character, who goes unnamed, was a grim sign. If AlleyCatz doesn’t clean up its act and meet the health code, the city will shut down the venue. The transition from this disappointing news to Skunk’s outrageous plan happens in a blink of an eye, and it’s one of a handful of moments in the film that feels overly. 

    After Skunk witnesses Walt’s impressive bowling skills — no matter how he releases the ball down the lane, he bowls a perfect strike — she convinces him to play competitively. The money he wins from each game, she insists, can help Mozell with the AlleyCatz repairs. It’s a sound plan that, against the film’s own logic, Lester sidelines for whatever funny antics demand attention. 

    This isn’t a problem at first. Walt and Skunk hit the road, participating in competitions that yield some of The Gutter’s funniest jokes. Their success rate catches the attention of Angelo Powers (an ace Paul Reiser), a ratings-obsessed new anchor and a hater. He launches a segment called BLM (Bowl Lives Matter), which simultaneously capitalizes on Walt’s increased fame and denigrates the former bartender. Walt’s record-shattering wins also brings bowling champion Linda Curson (an equally sharp Susan Sarandon) back from retirement. Meanwhile, Walt’s friends and family (played by Langston Kerman and Jay Ellis) cheer him on. 

    The Gutter is strongest and most refreshing tracing the early part of Walt’s success. Getting the job at AlleyCatz, winning his first games and scoring a series of hilarious sponsorships fuel the film’s humor and our investment in these characters. But the narrative loses some steam when it’s faced with fulfilling the emotional stakes. Just as Walt is most unstoppable, his winning streak comes to a mysterious end. Here, The Gutter requires a few dramatic turns that the performers struggle to land. The film doesn’t navigate the fallout between Skunk and Walt and other subsequent revelations with the same confidence as it does establishing Walt’s world. This shortcoming doesn’t undo the fine work of these promising filmmakers, but it does mean that The Gutter doesn’t quite hit all the pins. 

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    Lovia Gyarkye

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  • Q&A With Patreon CEO Jack Conte: Social Media Giants Are Getting the Creator Economy Wrong

    Q&A With Patreon CEO Jack Conte: Social Media Giants Are Getting the Creator Economy Wrong

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    Patreon CEO Jack Conte in Austin, Texas for SXSW 2024. Hutton Supancic for SXSW

    As social media platforms grow into profit machines, many of them have stopped building up their content creators, according to Jack Conte, the co-founder and CEO of Patreon, a creator-focused subscription and membership platform that seeks to change that.

    Conte closed out this week’s SXSW conference with a keynote presentation today (Mar. 15) about how social media companies are working against creators in favor of profitability. Conte spoke about how major platforms like Facebook began ranking posts based on user engagement, which eventually changed the nature of these sites from a place to discover creators to a recommendation machine that only promotes content that the ranking algorithm thinks users should see. As a result, creators now have a harder time gaining a following and building a dedicated fanbase.

    “We only saw it in retrospect, but now I think of the 2010s as the decade of ranking, the decade when the original promise of the creator-led community, the true follow, was broken for the first time,” Conte said during his keynote today.  

    Patreon provides a platform for creators to sell subscriptions to audio and video content. Conte, a musician in two bands named Scary Pockets and Pomplamoose, co-founded the platform in 2013 with developer Sam Yam as a way to monetize his own videos.

    Earlier this week (March 12), Observer spoke with Conte about his thoughts on the problematic trends in the creator economy and how his company is working to build a better future for content creators. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

    Observer: The title of your keynote is “Death of the Follower and the Future of Creativity. What do you mean by the “Death of the Follower?”

    Jack Conte: TikTok was one of the first platforms that came around and basically said, “We’re not even going to worry about follows and subscriptions aren’t a thing we care about or work on. And that’s why I think you see creators on TikTok getting millions of views with one video and then a thousand views the next video. And you sort of bounce up and down like that because you don’t really have a direct relationship with your fans on that platform. 

    Your distribution is up to the whims of the platform and the distribution algorithms that govern it. So the shift that happened was toward that style of content feed. Specifically, YouTube followed with Shorts, and Instagram followed with Reels. But it wasn’t just short-form vertical video, it was an emphasis on recommendations and algorithmic curation because that drove really strong engagement on the platforms.

    If you look at the way the internet is organized, it’s shifted from a follower-based, creator-led community based organization to curation and recommendations and personalization that I think is really bad for creative people. It’s harder to build a business, it’s harder to energize your fan base, it’s harder to have a community, it’s hard to manage your community. It’s hard to tell your community new things that’s happening in your life. 

    It doesn’t have to be like that. The shift to curation and personalization is not the way it must go down. There needs to be a way to reach those people and build an energized community as opposed to just having communities die off as the shift to personalization precipitates across the web. 

    Have you talked to creators lately? What kinds of things have they expressed that they need from these platforms? 

    I can’t think of a creator that I know through Patreon or just in my personal life who hasn’t felt this shift over the last four years. It started even before that with post ranking. Ranking algorithms were focused on engagement and ad revenue, which was great for their business and the right decision. But what it meant for creators was our posts are getting pushed all the way down to the bottom of the feed and we’re not able to talk to our fans anymore.

    There was a group of creators whom I met with once a week for 12 weeks as part of a creator club that I did where we just talked about what’s working and what’s not. One of those creators emailed me a year later and was like, “I’m hanging up my hat. Overnight changes to the way Facebook distributes content, reduced traffic to my pages by 80 percent, and I have to sell my house.” I wish that was an exception to the rule, but that’s actually what’s happening now. 

    What is the argument for these companies as to why they should care how well creators do on their platforms as long as people are still visiting their sites and they’re getting ad dollars?

    I don’t think they do, and I don’t think they have a business reason to, and that bothers me as a creator. Their customer is the advertiser, so why should they prioritize creative people and their work? Well, because it’s the right freaking thing to do. But is that their job as corporations? Clearly it isn’t. 

    I think they are making the right business decisions for their revenue models. The vast majority of their revenue, 90 plus percent of it, is coming from advertisers, and they have to maximize engagement on their platforms to sell ads. It just so happens that that’s not the best thing for creators. I think the argument is that there ought to be a better way for creators to build communities and fandoms. 

    Do you see a parallel to creators in the media landscape, like Big Media or corporate media? 

    Yes, the parallel between creators and media companies is real. Actually creators and media companies want similar things, which is to provide utility to the audience they’re serving. Big Media feels kind of thrashed around by social media platforms over the last four years. That’s how creators feel, too: it’s hard to reach people.

    What is Patreon doing to solve this problem?

    Patreon is a media community and business platform for fandoms and creators as opposed to just a membership platform. Not all creators want to do memberships, and not all fans want to pay for memberships. So we started to expand outside of membership into more holistic media and community and business tools for creators.

    A lot of fans aren’t yet ready to pay, but they consider themselves true fans of the creator. They want to see what the creator has to say and they want to have a tight-knit relationship with the creator in that community. And so we’ve found a way to do that. We call it free membership: It’s kind of like a follow, but it’s gated behind an email. What that does is it puts the control in the creator’s hands and they can build a community of free members that they have a direct line of communication to. 

    We also built a community product called Chats, which allows creators to set up a community where fans can talk with each other and with the creator, in an effort to help creators build what we call energized fandoms. I think the problem with the way it exists on other platforms is the fandom doesn’t get energy as the fandom gets older. The fandom is sort of zapped of its energy as it progresses through time, because those fans aren’t seeing the work of the creator. Those posts aren’t rising to the top and they’re not getting a chance to hang out with other fans and build their enthusiasm.

    Do you think that we are past the days of online public forums, especially now as individual or group creators can kind of create these spaces for themselves? 

    I don’t know if those days are over, but it’s certainly changed and it certainly feels like we’re starting to break apart into smaller, more manageable, in my opinion, more healthful groups of people. I don’t think the big open spaces will go away. Those maximum broadcast channels will continue to be there, but I think people will likely want to spend more time with smaller groups of people that they have deeper connections with. 

    Why do you believe smaller groups are more “healthful?” Can you expand on that a bit?

    I think having a smaller group of people that we have really intimate deep relationships with is a much more pleasant experience as a human being. You can be more vulnerable, you can share more, you can be more of yourself without feeling worried that people are judging. You can find it’s easier to find belonging instead of constantly being subjected to people whose values you don’t share, yelling at you while you’re wrong. You’re among a group of like-minded people, which is how our brains are designed. So, something about all that feels a bit more healthy to me rather than just kind of being in the big mosh pit. 

    With all the changes and disruptions going on in the social media business, what do you think the future holds for creators?

    I actually think the future is very, very bright for creative people. If you look at over the last two decades of the internet, where we came from and where we are now, 11 years ago, there was no paying creators. There was no way to make money, no tipping, no subscriptions. Now, all of that stuff is like table stakes in the industry. If you’re a platform, there’s a cultural expectation that creators deserve to be paid for their work. But then there still needs to be the actual community building and business building that happens. 

    I think we’re moving into a world where there will literally be hundreds of millions of people as full-time professional creators building communities and businesses. And that’s the world I want to live in. 

    Q&A With Patreon CEO Jack Conte: Social Media Giants Are Getting the Creator Economy Wrong

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    Nhari Djan

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  • ‘Civil War’ Review: Alex Garland’s Dystopian Thriller Starring Kirsten Dunst Stimulates the Intellect, if Not the Emotions

    ‘Civil War’ Review: Alex Garland’s Dystopian Thriller Starring Kirsten Dunst Stimulates the Intellect, if Not the Emotions

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    The details of American politics do not concern Alex Garland in Civil War.

    Despite the controversy it’s already courted about its supposed prescience, the unsettling feature from the British filmmaker doesn’t predict a future based on the country’s current two-party system. Garland is far more interested in the United States’ self-regarding exceptionalism, its belief in its own safety from executive instability. He is fascinated by how factionalism instigates conflict and how no nation is immune to the results of its violence. 

    Civil War

    The Bottom Line

    A subversive and unsettling exercise.

    Venue: SXSW Film Festival (Headliner)
    Release date: Friday, April 12
    Cast: Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Sonoya Mizuno, Nick Offerman
    Director-screenwriter: Alex Garland

    1 hour 49 minutes

    Premiering at SXSW, Civil War explores these preoccupations from the perspective of a group of journalists as they chronicle life in their war-torn country while traveling to Washington, D.C. We meet the crew in New York, where they are covering a tense confrontation between civilians and police. Lee Smith (Kirsten Dunst) —  a conflict photographer whose success and abrasiveness are modeled on that of celebrated World War II correspondent Lee Miller — works quickly with her Reuters colleague Joel (Wagner Moura) to capture the scene before the percolating violence bubbles over. 

    When it eventually does, the pair crosses paths with Jessie (Priscilla‘s Cailee Spaeny), a freelance photographer who gets hurt in the police-instigated melee. The young documentarian is eager to express admiration for Lee after the veteran correspondent saves her life and gifts her a neon press vest. Later that evening, Jessie, through a winning combination of will and charm, convinces Joel to let her tag along on the road trip to D.C. This is already after they agreed to let Sammy (Stephen McKinley Henderson), a New York Times journalist, join them despite the risks. 

    The group hits the road the next morning despite Lee’s protestations over Jessie’s inclusion. (She, fairly, doesn’t want to be responsible for a stranger and an amateur.) Their roughly 800-mile journey to D.C., where Joel and Lee have been promised an interview with the president (Nick Offerman), takes the journalists through hostile tracts, military checkpoints and makeshift refugee camps.

    These scenes of America as an active war zone are some of Civil War’s most potent images. In a subversive move, Garland, partnering again with DP Rob Hardy, documents these conditions with the distant vérité style found in American films about international regional conflicts. The Ex Machina and Annihilation filmmaker juxtaposes images of displaced Americans, armed resistance fighters and other evidence of war with familiar shots of the nation’s pastoral landscape to create a sense of destabilization.

    As the crew drives south of New York, they come across abandoned and blown-up cars on interstates lined with vibrant, verdant trees. A football stadium is now an aid camp, which adds a melancholic layer to the graffitied messages (“Go Steelers,” one  says) that remind of life before. A winter wonderland dotted with statues of Santa Claus, for example, becomes an active conflict zone, and a small town that feels eerily distant from the destruction happening everywhere else turns out to be manned by an armed militia. 

    These sequences coupled with other nostalgia-loaded gestures — the use of country music needle drops, for example — effectively recast American iconography, implicitly questioning a nation’s tendency toward self-mythologizing. Garland also weaves in the snapshots captured by Lee and Jessie along the road, a technique that not only examines the ethics of war photography but also American expectations of what these images must be. As for the subject of race — the organizing principle of the nation — Civil War gestures but does not explicitly confront.  

    All of these thoughts, considerations and questions — what does it mean to be American is one the film repeatedly asks — are experienced by the viewer on a largely intellectual level. Garland has always been a director of big ideas, and Civil War is no exception when it comes to that ambitiousness. But he’s also reaching for an intimacy here that his screenplay doesn’t quite deliver on. Despite strong turns from the cast, the American journalists at the center of the story feel emotionally sterile vis a vis the dissolution of their country, and their motivations for doing the work register as similarly remote. Of course war hardens, contorts and traumatizes, but Civil War presupposes that the press, in this distant future, can always see the forest for the trees. The film is wise to avoid big, melodramatic gestures, but characters sharing stories might have conjured a better sense of their depth. 

    Dunst makes Lee an incredibly compelling figure whose faith and ability to stomach the demands of the job unravel slowly over the course of the film. But a lack of detail keeps her character in the shadows. The same goes for Jessie, whose youth offers insights into her risky behavior, and Joel, who is Latino and from Florida (a state that here has its own faction separate from the alliance between Texas and California). 

    With the precision and length of its violent battle sequences, it’s clear Civil War operates as a clarion call. Garland wrote the film in 2020 as he watched cogs on America’s self-mythologizing exceptionalist machine turn, propelling the nation into a nightmare. With this latest film, he sounds the alarm, wondering less about how a country walks blindly into its own destruction and more about what happens when it does.

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    Lovia Gyarkye

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  • Comedic actor Paul Scheer talks books and broken homes – SXSW 2024

    Comedic actor Paul Scheer talks books and broken homes – SXSW 2024

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    Actor, comedian, podcaster, and now author, Paul Scheer took the stage at SXSW to talk about his new autobiography. You may recognize Paul from his podcast, How Did This Get Made? or from his role as Andre – the Rascal Flatts-loving, fedora-wearing nerd in FX’s The League.

    His book, aptly titled, Joyful Recollections of Trauma is set to be released on May 21st.

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    Zach Nading

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  • Why Influencers Like Remi Bader Are Unfazed By Another Potential TikTok Ban

    Why Influencers Like Remi Bader Are Unfazed By Another Potential TikTok Ban

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    Remi Bader spoke about the potential TikTok ban at SXSW. Brynn Osborn/WWD via Getty Images

    With the election year upon us, a TikTok ban is looming (again), leading all members of the creator economy—content creators themselves to the people who run social media platforms—to wonder what comes next for the industry if the short-form video platform were to disappear from the U.S. market. 

    President Joe Biden said yesterday (Mar. 9) that, if a bill to ban TikTok in the U.S. comes to his desk, he would sign it. The president recently joined the app himself (in February) as part of his re-election campaign strategy to reach young voters. This is not the first time the U.S. government has entertained a ban of the app, and industry experts want creators to be ready for any outcome. 

    Jason Newman, founder of the talent agency Untitled Entertainment, has a piece of advice for creators: “Be prepared to move your content and what you create and what you do to another platform.”

    At a SXSW panel yesterday (March 9), Newman was joined by Remi Bader, a fashion influencer with 2.3 million followers on TikTok, Megan Bycel, Meta (META)’s director of entertainment partnerships, and Brent Weinstein, chief development officer at Candle Media, in a discussion about the future of the creator economy.

    Bader started her creator career on TikTok in 2020, ironically at a time when former president Donald Trump was threatening to ban the app through an executive order. Bader said in a way the regulatory threat prompted her to sign up on TikTok in case she wouldn’t be able to access the app one day. She thinks many content creators are unmoved by another potential TikTok ban and successful creators are already on multiple platforms. 

    “I think a lot of creators are probably ignoring that right now because we’ve heard it so many times and it is possible that it can happen,” Bader said. “Build your brand out, think about every platform. Once I got bigger on TikTok, I right away was like, okay, it’s time to start on Instagram. What can I do next?”

    Meta’s Bycel She said her team wants to help creators develop strategies across social platforms beyond Meta’s Facebook, Instagram and Threads. “If TikTok goes away and they most likely there’ll be another platform that’s going to pop up,” Bycel said. “And our hope is obviously that Instagram and some of our other platforms are going to help fill that void.”

    Why Influencers Like Remi Bader Are Unfazed By Another Potential TikTok Ban

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    Nhari Djan

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  • ‘High Tide’ Review: An Undocumented Immigrant Finds a Reprieve From His Lonely Limbo in Tender Queer Drama

    ‘High Tide’ Review: An Undocumented Immigrant Finds a Reprieve From His Lonely Limbo in Tender Queer Drama

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    A haunting lead performance from Marco Pigossi, steeped in melancholy and raw pain but also in moments of openness, optimism and even joy, helps make High Tide an affecting portrait of untethered gay men seeking meaningful connections. Writer-director Marco Calvani’s sensitively observed first feature draws parallels between the isolation of an undocumented Brazilian, nearing the end of his visa and disinclined to return home, and that of a Black American, secure in his tight friendship circle but very much aware he’s the minority in a predominantly white queer tourist mecca — and in the country at large.

    About that setting — for anyone who loves Provincetown, this film and its enveloping sense of place will evoke fond associations with the historic fishing village and art colony on the tip of Cape Cod.

    High Tide

    The Bottom Line

    Intimate and emotionally involving.

    Venue: SXSW Film Festival (Narrative Spotlight)
    Cast: Marco Pigossi, James Bland, Marisa Tomei, Bill Irwin, Mya Taylor, Seán Mahon, Bryan Batt, Todd Flaherty, Karl Gregory, João Santos
    Director-screenwriter: Marco Calvani

    1 hour 41 minutes

    The physical beauty of the landscape and the caressing softness of the light help both to define and contrast the principal characters’ emotional states. The informally dubbed “Boy Beach” plays a significant role, but so too does the half-hour trek on foot from the bike racks to get there, sometimes called the “gay migration.” Local businesses on or just off the main drag, Commercial Street, opened their doors to the small-scale indie production, from the Red Inn restaurant to Angel Foods deli to popular dance club A-House.

    The well-acted minor-key drama benefits substantially from its full immersion in this very specific milieu. Also lending texture to the film is the characteristic Brazilian feeling of longing known as suadade, present not only in the sorrowful introspection of Pigossi’s Lourenço but also in the poetry of Oswald de Andrade, heard over the opening shots of Lourenço plunging naked into the waters of Cape Cod Bay.

    Lourenço rents a rustic cottage from the kindly owner Scott (Bill Irwin), who lives across the street and is always eager for company. The Brazilian funds his Ptown stay by cleaning vacation rentals and doing temporary jobs for the brusquely unfriendly Bob (Seán Mahon). Lourenço’s heartache is apparent every time his calls to an unseen Joe go to voicemail; we gradually learn that he was dumped earlier in the summer and has been trying, without much success, to figure out his next steps ever since.

    The thematic core of High Tide, which takes place over just a few days, is Lourenço oscillating between despair and hope. The latter is represented chiefly by a friendship that sparks up on the beach with Maurice (James Bland), a nurse in town for the week from New York with his posse of druggy queer friends — which includes Mya Taylor, the revelation from Sean Baker’s Tangerine, as Crystal. Calvani lets the mutual attraction between Lourenço and Maurice evolve gently into romance and sex, allowing breathing space for unguarded conversations on the beach under a full moon.

    But there are factors preventing Lourenço from completely relaxing into the comfort even of temporary intimacy. A house-painting job in Truro brings warmth in the form of Marisa Tomei’s mellow artist Miriam, but also friction with Bob, still angry because she broke his heart. And Scott’s efforts to connect Lourenço with a lawyer that might be able to help with his immigration status, Todd (Bryan Batt), leave a sour taste when the latter’s obnoxious privilege becomes evident over dinner.

    While the narrative is lean but always engaging, Calvani perhaps overstretches by attempting to touch on the shifting economics altering the fabric of Provincetown life. Scott is one of a vanishing generation of gay men who went there “to heal or to die” during the AIDS crisis, which took the life of his partner. Longtime residents like him have little in common with moneyed power gays like Todd who have jacked up the price of real estate, buying multimillion dollar homes that sit unoccupied for all but a week or two a year.

    It’s a subject worth exploring, but too fleetingly mentioned here to carry much weight; Calvani makes only a tenuous connection between that demographic change and Lourenço’s limbo, even if it’s clear which side of the growing divide between the haves and have-nots he lands on. The director’s control also falters a little, late in the action, when Lourenço gets wasted at A-House and rejects Maurice, spinning out after hearing news about Joe that shatters any fragile illusions of reconciliation he has left.

    But the film gets back on track in its satisfying final stretch, notably in the tender goodbye between Lourenço and Maurice, an exchange so nervous but loaded with feeling that it’s easy to forgive the visual cliché of Oscar Ignacio Jiménez’s camera whirling around them over and over in an extended arc shot. It’s a slightly flashy flourish in a film otherwise characterized by the graceful simplicity of its visuals, which are complemented by Sebastian Plano’s elegant string score.

    There’s no big false epiphany, no magic solution to Lourenço’s gnawing visa worries, just an internal awakening conveyed with great subtlety by Pigossi as the character reclaims a sense of himself that was slipping out of his grip. It provides a lovely open ending to a modest but effective movie that speaks from the heart.

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    David Rooney

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  • What to Watch at SXSW 2024

    What to Watch at SXSW 2024

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    All the cool film girlies just came back from Berlin. Specifically, they are fresh from the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, and they still smell like cigarettes to prove it. Between anecdotes about how Berghain is ruined, they’re telling me how they watched Cillian Murphy (my father, emotionally) give another masterful, award-worthy performance in the Enda Walsh adaptation of Claire Keegan’s novel Small Things Like These. This is apropos of nothing, except that I was not in Berlin, so I will have to wait alongside everyone else to see one of my favorite books on screen later this year.

    But how can I be bitter? This week, half of Los Angeles will flock to Texas for South By Southwest in Austin, and I’ll be delightfully distracted by a whole new slate of upcoming releases premiering at this year’s festival. There are so many new films to be excited about premiering at the festival — even without Cillian Murphy’s cheekbones.

    Let’s get into it.


    What is SXSW?

    I’m in for a week of acronyms: SXSW in ATX FTW – LFG!! South By Southwest (aka SXSW or SX or South By) is a film festival, music festival, and industry conference all rolled into one. Fueled by Texas BBQ and Torchy’s Tacos, creative people in the tech, film, music, education, and culture industries swarm from theater to concert hall and conference room networking (allegedly), writing pretentious reviews about the future of culture (guilty), and being menaces to the residents of Austin by causing even worse traffic jams than the city is used to— and I can’t wait.

    When is SXSW 2024?

    SXSW 2024 will be held from March 8 – 16 2024. Highly anticipated events include Rolling Stone’s Future of Music Series (my artists to watch are Flo Milli and Faye Webster), and the SXSW Music Festival (which, this year, includes The Black Keys, Bootsy Collins, and many more). Of course, the highlight is the insane 2024 SXSW movie lineup. I can’t wait to laugh, cry, and contemplate my very existence while staring up at a screen at SXSW. In the words of Nicole Kidman, “We come to this place to dream.” And this week, the dreamers are all in Austin, Texas.

    Here are the films at SXSW 2024 we’re most excited about – starring an assortment of all our favorite actors (even though Cilian won’t be making an appearance). Still, we’re excited to see new performances from faves like Ayo Edebiri, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Gosling, Aaron Taylor Johnson, Jonathan Groff, Hunter Schafer, Rachel Zegler, Anne Hathaway, Nicholas Galitzine, and a whole lot more.

    SXSW 2024 Official Opening Night Selection

    Road House

    This is not Patrick Swayze’s Road House (1989) — but by the time Jake Gyllenhaal is done with you, you’ll love it as much as the original. Gyllenhaal stars as an ex-UFC fighter-turned-bouncer at a Florida Keys roadhouse, owned by Frankie (Jessica Williams). Facing threats from a criminal gang led by Brandt (Billy Magnussen), Dalton’s violent past emerges. When he is confronted by Knox (Conor McGregor), a lethal gun-for-hire, the escalating brawls and bloodshed become more dangerous than his days in the Octagon. Fans of real-life, ex-UFC fighter Conor McGregor are excited to see him in this film, even if he is the villain. Road House is coming to Prime Video on March 21st.

    SXSW 2024 Official Closing Night Selection

    ​The Idea of You

    This film is like if your mom stole your Wattpad moment. Created by two-time SXSW Audience Award Winner Michael Showalter, it’s his great return to SXSW and it’s sure to be a riot. Allegedly based on Harry Styles (and a little bit of Prince Harry, too), The Idea of You is the salacious story of a 40-year-old single mom who begins an unexpected romance with her daughter’s favorite popstar. She goes from begrudgingly chaperoning her daughter to Coachella to meeting, and falling for, 24-year-old Hayes Campbell, the lead singer of a band based on One Direction. This odd couple romance promises to be more than meets the eye. The couple is played by Red White & Royal Blue’s Nicholas Galitzine alongside Anne Hathaway so I am ready and willing to go on this ride. I’m expecting something that feels like a mix of After, A Star is Born, and How Stella Got Her Groove Back. Watch the trailer HERE. And listen to the first song from the Original Soundtrack by fictional boy band August Moon HERE.

    Other films to watch at SXSW 2024

    ​I Wish You All The Best

    I am unspeakably excited for Tommy Dorfman’s queer coming-of-age drama. Written and directed by Dorfman and starring Corey Fogelmanis, Miles Gutierrez-Riley, Alexandra Daddario, Cole Sprouse, Lena Dunham, Amy Landecker, Lexi Underwood, and more (wow!) it’s an adaptation of Mason Deaver’s novel of the same name. A queer tale of chosen family, it follows Ben DeBacker, a non-binary teen who is thrown out of their house and forced to move in with their estranged older sister, Hannah, and her husband, Thomas. Struggling with anxiety, they come out only to Hannah, Thomas, and their art teacher, Ms. Lyons, while trying to keep a low profile at their new school. Ben’s attempts to survive junior year unnoticed are thwarted when Nathan, a funny and charismatic student, decides to take Ben under his wing. With the help of Nathan, and his friends Sophie and Mel, Ben discovers themselves, and what started as a disastrous turn of events looks like it might just be a chance to start a happier new life.

    ​A Nice Indian Boy

    A Nice Indian Boy

    I’ll watch Jonathan Groff in anything — and this original odd-couple comedic drama would have taken me no convincing anyway. Self-effacing doctor Naveen Gavaskar meets Jay Kurundkar, a white man adopted by two Indian parents, when Jay takes his picture at the hospital. Despite initial skepticism on Naveen’s part, the two quickly fall in love. Naveen avoids telling his traditional family—parents Megha & Archit and sister Arundhathi—who accepted his sexuality years earlier and are close to him but increasingly don’t know much about his life. Eventually, inevitably, Jay, with no family of his own, has to meet the Gavaskars, who have never met a boyfriend of Naveen’s.

    ​The Fall Guy

    The Fall Guy

    Don’t fret, Barbie fever is over, but Ryan Gosling will be back on your screens soon enough with this comedic action blockbuster. Ryan Gosling stars as Colt, a stuntman who, after a near-career-ending accident, is drafted back into service when the star of a mega-budget movie—being directed by his ex, Jody (Emily Blunt)—goes missing. Now, this working-class hero has to solve a conspiracy and try to win back the love of his life while still doing his day job. Certified heartthrob Aaron Taylor Johnson is also in this — giving me something to look forward to as I wait patiently for his role in Kraven: The Hunter later this year. I’m sat.

    ​Omni Loop

    Omni Loop

    The more Ayo Edebiri in the zeitgeist, the better. Alongside Mary Louise Parker, Steven Maier, Eddie Cahill, and more, she stars in this existential sci-fi feature. Zoya Lowe, a 55 year old woman from Miami, FL, has been diagnosed with a black hole inside her chest and given a week to live. But what the doctors and her family don’t know is that she has already lived this week before. She’s lived it so many times, in fact, that she doesn’t even know how long it’s been. Until one day she meets Paula, a young woman studying time at a lab in the local university, and together they decide to try and solve time travel so Zoya can actually go back— back into her past, back to a time before she settled, back to when her whole future was still wide open in front of her—back so she can do it all over again, and finally be the person she always wanted to be. It’s this year’s Everything Everywhere All At Once so I have high hopes.

    The Greatest Hits

    The Greatest Hits

    Harriet (Lucy Boynton) finds art imitating life when she discovers certain songs can transport her back in time – literally. While she relives the past through romantic memories of her former boyfriend (David Corenswet), her time-traveling collides with a burgeoning new love interest in the present (Justin H. Min). As she takes her journey through the hypnotic connection between music and memory, she wonders if she can change the past. Think Yesterday, but … no, pretty much just exactly Yesterday.

    Y2K

    Y2K A24 Movie

    ​The children are our future! This A24 disaster comedy, Y2K, stars Rachel Zegler, Jaeden Martell, Julian Dennison, Lachlan Watson, Daniel Zolghadri, Mason Gooding, The Kid Laroi (yes, from that Justin Bieber song), and more as high schoolers who crash a NYE party in 1999 and end up fighting for their lives. But doesn’t all high school feel like that?

    ​I Love You Forever

    I Love You Forever

    Directed and written by Cazzie David and Elisa Kalani and starring Sofia Black-D’Elia, Ray Nicholson, Jon Rudnitsky, Cazzie David, and Raymond Cham Jr, this film portrays the sad reality of the dating landscape. It follows Mackenzie, a disillusioned 25-year old law student tired of the apps — because who isn’t. When she has a “real life meet-cute” with a charming journalist who makes her believe true love may actually exist. Ultimately, it starts to go left and Mackenzie finds herself trapped in a tumultuous and depleting cycle of emotional abuse.

    Doin It

    Doin It

    Starring internet sensation-turned-host-turned-actor Lilly Singh, Doin It is a comedy of errors about an Indian woman trying to lose her virginity. Fans of Never Have I Ever, which also starts with that premise, should flock to this film. After teenage Maya is caught in a sexually compromising position, her mom moves the family back to India so Maya can learn proper discipline. Years later, she returns to the US to find funding for her teen-focused app, and gets a job as a substitute high school teacher so she can research her target demo. But when the principal assigns her to teach sex ed, Maya —who’s still a virgin— sets out on a quest with her best friend to make up for the high school experience she lost out on. It also stars Ana Gasteyer, Sabrina Jalees, Stephanie Beatriz, Mary Holland, Utkarsh Ambudkar, and Sonia Dhillon Tully.

    ​Civil War

    Civil War

    No, not the Marvel film. Much more chilling and dystopian — especially since it’s set in a plausible, near-future. It stars Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Sonoya Mizuno, and Nick Offerman taking us on an adrenaline-fueled thrill ride through a fractured America balanced on the razor’s edge, going through a civil war.

    ​Birdeater

    Birdeater

    A bride-to-be is invited to join her own fiancé’s bachelor party on a remote property in the Australian outback. But as the festivities spiral into beer-soaked chaos, uncomfortable details about their relationship are exposed, and the celebration soon becomes a feral nightmare. I’m imagining part Saltburn and part Get Out from this feature debut.

    Babes

    Babes

    After becoming pregnant from a one-night stand, Eden leans on her married best friend and mother of two, Dawn, to guide her through gestation and beyond. Starring lana Glazer, Michelle Buteau, John Carroll Lynch, and Hasan Minhaj, this comedy about friendship and motherhood is sure to be both belly-busting and heartwarming

    ​Musica

    Musica

    Based on writer, director and star Rudy Mancuso, Música is a coming-of-age love story that follows an aspiring creator with synesthesia, who must come to terms with an uncertain future, while navigating the pressures of love, family and his Brazilian culture. Alongside Mancuso are Camila Mendes, Francesca Reale, Maria Mancuso, and J.B. Smoove.

    ​Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told

    Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told

    If anyone else has heard about Freaknik endlessly without hearing about Freaknik, your time has come. This documentary feature is a celebratory exploration of the boisterous times of Freaknik, the iconic Atlanta street party that drew hundreds of thousands of people in the 80s and 90s, helping put Atlanta on the map culturally. At its height, Freaknik was a traffic-stopping, city-shuttering, juggernaut that has since become a cult classic. This documentary will, too.

    ​The Black Sea

    The Black Sea

    Immersive and inspired by Derrick B. Harden’s travels to Bulgaria, The Black Sea details the transformative journey of a man who finds unexpected connections in a small coastal Eastern European town even as he finds himself to be the only black person around.

    ​Pet Shop Days

    Pet Shop Days

    I love a very serious thriller with a whimsical title. Starring Jack Irv, Darío Yazeb Bernal, Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, and more, you know this one’s going to be good. In an act of desperation, impulsive black sheep Alejandro flees his home in Mexico. On the run from his unforgiving father, Alejandro finds himself in New York City where he meets Jack, a college age pet store employee with similar parental baggage. Together the two enter a whirlwind romance sending them down the rabbit hole of drugs and depravity in Manhattan’s underworld.

    ​Toll

    Toll

    This Brazilian feature is definitely going to chill me to my core, I’m calling it now. Suellen, a Brazilian toll booth attendant and mother, falls in with a gang of thieves in an attempt to keep her family afloat. In doing so, she realizes she can use her job to raise some extra money illegally for a so-called noble cause: to send her son to an expensive gay conversion workshop led by a renowned foreign priest.

    ​My Dead Friend Zoe

    My Dead Friend Zoe

    My Dead Friend Zoe follows the journey of Merit, a U.S. Army Afghanistan veteran who is at odds with her family thanks to the presence of Zoe, her dead best friend from the Army. Despite the persistence of her VA group counselor, the tough love of her mother and the levity of an unexpected love interest, Merit’s cozy-dysfunctional friendship with Zoe keeps the duo insulated from the world. That is until Merit’s estranged grandfather—holed up at the family’s ancestral lake house—begins to lose his way and is in need of the one thing he refuses… help. It stars Sonequa Martin-Green, Natalie Morales, Ed Harris, Morgan Freeman, Utkarsh Ambudkar, and Gloria Reuben.

    A House Is Not a Disco

    A House Is Not a Disco

    Directed by Brian J. Smith, this documentary shows a year-in-the-life in the world’s most iconic “homo-normative” community: Fire Island Pines. Situated fifty miles from New York City, this storied queer beach town finds itself in the midst of a renaissance as a new generation of Millennial homeowners reimagine The Pines for a new, more inclusive era. Filmed like a Wiseman movie on magic mushrooms, a large cast of unforgettable eccentrics, activists, drifters, and first-timers reflect on the legacy of The Pines while preparing their beloved village for the biggest challenge it has faced since the AIDS crisis: rising seas caused by climate change.

    Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion

    Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion

    My eighth-grade self, experiencing all the stages of grief in the Brandy Melville changing room, is ready for this expose. It examines how Brandy Melville developed a cult-like following despite its controversial “one size fits all” tagline. Hiding behind its shiny Instagram façade is a shockingly toxic world, a reflection of the global fast fashion industry. Fast fashion isn’t all glitz and glamor – it’s a business that sacrifices humanity and pollutes the planet for the sake of profit.

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  • Several universities to experiment with micro nuclear power

    Several universities to experiment with micro nuclear power

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    If your image of nuclear power is giant, cylindrical concrete cooling towers pouring out steam on a site that takes up hundreds of acres of land, soon there will be an alternative: tiny nuclear reactors that produce only one-hundredth the electricity and can even be delivered on a truck.

    Small but meaningful amounts of electricity — nearly enough to run a small campus, a hospital or a military complex, for example — will pulse from a new generation of micronuclear reactors. Now, some universities are taking interest.

    “What we see is these advanced reactor technologies having a real future in decarbonizing the energy landscape in the U.S. and around the world,” said Caleb Brooks, a nuclear engineering professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

    The tiny reactors carry some of the same challenges as large-scale nuclear, such as how to dispose of radioactive waste and how to make sure they are secure. Supporters say those issues can be managed and the benefits outweigh any risks.

    Universities are interested in the technology not just to power their buildings but to see how far it can go in replacing the coal and gas-fired energy that causes climate change. The University of Illinois hopes to advance the technology as part of a clean energy future, Brooks said. The school plans to apply for a construction permit for a high-temperature, gas-cooled reactor developed by the Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation, and aims to start operating it by early 2028. Brooks is the project lead.

    Microreactors will be “transformative” because they can be built in factories and hooked up on site in a plug-and-play way, said Jacopo Buongiorno, professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Buongiorno studies the role of nuclear energy in a clean energy world.

    “That’s what we want to see, nuclear energy on demand as a product, not as a big mega project,” he said.

    Both Buongiorno and Marc Nichol, senior director for new reactors at the Nuclear Energy Institute, view the interest by schools as the start of a trend.

    Last year, Penn State University signed a memorandum of understanding with Westinghouse to collaborate on microreactor technology. Mike Shaqqo, the company’s senior vice president for advanced reactor programs, said universities are going to be “one of our key early adopters for this technology.”

    Penn State wants to prove the technology so that Appalachian industries, such as steel and cement manufacturers, may be able to use it, said Professor Jean Paul Allain, head of the nuclear engineering department. Those two industries tend to burn dirty fuels and have very high emissions. Using a microreactor also could be one of several options to help the university use less natural gas and achieve its long-term carbon emissions goals, he said.

    “I do feel that microreactors can be a game-changer and revolutionize the way we think about energy,” Allain said.

    For Allain, microreactors can complement renewable energy by providing a large amount of power without taking up much land. A 10-megawatt microreactor could go on less than an acre, whereas windmills or a solar farm would need far more space to produce 10 megawatts, he added. The goal is to have one at Penn State by the end of the decade.

    Purdue University in Indiana is working with Duke Energy on the feasibility of using advanced nuclear energy to meet its long-term energy needs.

    Nuclear reactors that are used for research are nothing new on campus. About two dozen U.S. universities have them. But using them as an energy source is new.

    Back at the University of Illinois, Brooks explains the microreactor would generate heat to make steam. While the excess heat from burning coal and gas to make electricity is often wasted, Brooks sees the steam production from the nuclear microreactor as a plus, because it’s a carbon-free way to deliver steam through the campus district heating system to radiators in buildings, a common heating method for large facilities in the Midwest and Northeast. The campus has hundreds of buildings.

    The 10-megawatt microreactor wouldn’t meet all of the demand, but it would serve to demonstrate the technology, as other communities and campuses look to transition away from fossil fuels, Brooks said.

    One company that is building microreactors that the public can get a look at today is Last Energy, based in Washington, D.C. It built a model reactor in Brookshire, Texas that’s housed in an edgy cube covered in reflective metal.

    Now it’s taking that apart to test how to transport the unit. A caravan of trucks is taking it to Austin, where company founder Bret Kugelmass is scheduled to speak at the South by Southwest conference and festival.

    Kugelmass, a technology entrepreneur and mechanical engineer, is talking with some universities, but his primary focus is on industrial customers. He’s working with licensing authorities in the United Kingdom, Poland and Romania to try to get his first reactor running in Europe in 2025.

    The urgency of the climate crisis means zero-carbon nuclear energy must be scaled up soon, he said.

    “It has to be a small, manufactured product as opposed to a large, bespoke construction project,” he said.

    Traditional nuclear power costs billions of dollars. An example is two additional reactors at a plant in Georgia that will end up costing more than $30 billion.

    The total cost of Last Energy’s microreactor, including module fabrication, assembly and site prep work, is under $100 million, the company says.

    Westinghouse, which has been a mainstay of the nuclear industry for over 70 years, is developing its “eVinci” microreactor, Shaqqo said, and is aiming to get the technology licensed by 2027.

    The Department of Defense is working on a microreactor too. Project Pele is a DOD prototype mobile nuclear reactor under design at the Idaho National Laboratory.

    Abilene Christian University in Texas is leading a group of three other universities with the company Natura Resources to design and build a research microreactor cooled by molten salt to allow for high temperature operations at low pressure, in part to help train the next generation nuclear workforce.

    But not everyone shares the enthusiasm. Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety at the Union of Concerned Scientists, called it “completely unjustified.”

    Microreactors in general will require much more uranium to be mined and enriched per unit of electricity generated than conventional reactors do, he said. He said he also expects fuel costs to be substantially higher and that more depleted uranium waste could be generated compared to conventional reactors.

    “I think those who are hoping that microreactors are going to be the silver bullet for solving the climate change crisis are simply betting on the wrong horse,” he said.

    Lyman also said he fears microreactors could be targeted for a terrorist attack, and some designs would use fuels that could be attractive to terrorists seeking to build crude nuclear weapons. The UCS does not oppose using nuclear power, but wants to make sure it’s safe.

    The United States does not have a national storage facility for storing spent nuclear fuel and it’s piling up. Microreactors would only compound the problem and spread the radioactive waste around, Lyman said.

    A 2022 Stanford-led study found that smaller modular reactors — the next size up from micro — will generate more waste than conventional reactors. Lead author Lindsay Krall said this week that the design of microreactors would make them subject to the same issue.

    Kugelmass sees only promise. Nuclear, he said, has been “totally misunderstood and under leveraged.” It will be “the key pillar of our energy transformation moving forward.”

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  • The Oscar nominee that says a lot just with its title

    The Oscar nominee that says a lot just with its title

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    NEW YORK — Long before a bemused Riz Ahmed read its name on Oscar nominations morning, the title of Pamela Ribon’s short film has tended to have an effect on those who hear it. Like when Ribon went to pick up her festival credential at SXSW in Austin, Texas, shortly before premiering her movie there.

    Guy at the desk: “What’s it called?”

    Ribon: “My Year of Dicks.”

    Guy at the desk, not missing a beat: “Hard same.”

    There is, to be sure, no Oscar nominee this year quite like “My Year of Dicks” — and not just because of a title that, as Ribon notes, “is tough on a spam filter.”

    The film, written and created by Ribon and directed by Sara Gunnarsdóttir, is one of the more hysterical, painful and sweet portraits of adolescence in all its awkwardness. It’s nominated for best animated short film at next month’s Academy Awards. Phil Lord (“Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse,” “The Lego Movie”) has called the 26-minute movie “one of the best films of the year of any length.”

    It’s based on Ribon’s 2014 memoir, “Notes to Boys (and Other Things I Shouldn’t Share in Public)” — particularly a chapter that documents 15-year-old Ribon’s resolution to lose her virginity in 1991 while growing up on the outskirts of Houston. It proceeds as five cringe-inducing chapters of intimate encounters with not-so-great guys, though — as damning as that title is — “My Year of Dicks” is less about judgment for Ribon’s far-from-ideal romantic partners than it is about recounting, and illuminating, the bumbling first steps of sex.

    “It’s cheeky but it isn’t mean,” Ribon said in a recent interview by Zoom from her home in Los Angeles. “It really was an inclusive feeling of: ‘We all got through that somehow, didn’t we?’”

    When they were starting out, Gunnarsdóttir, an Icelandic animator who crafted the vivid animations of “Diary of a Teenage Girl, ” wondered if “Notes to Boys” would be a better, less troublesome title. But Ribon sensed something relatable — nay, something universal — about “My Year of Dicks.”

    “Not everybody has sent a note to a boy but everybody’s had a year of dicks — academically or in business or dating. It has a lot of layers,” Ribon says. “So it has been a way to bring everyone in, unfortunately. Everyone’s like ‘Hard same.’”

    “My Year of Dicks,” which is streaming on Vimeo, has emerged, against the odds, as one of the most talked-about films at this year’s Oscars. Not only will much be riding on whether Ribon and Gunnarsdóttir can win on March 12, but perhaps even more eagerly awaited will be seeing which presenter, at the most dignified of awards shows, gets to utter the film’s name for an audience of millions, on live television.

    “Do you think they’ll bleep it?” anxiously wonders Ribon.

    For Ribon, 47, “My Year of Dicks” is an oddly appropriate culmination. Though her best known credits as a screenwriter are for more kid-friendly cartoons (“Moana,” “Ralph Breaks the Internet”), Ribon has, as an essayist, blogger and podcaster, long been an uncommonly open book. Her 2012 essay, “How I Might Have Just Become the Newest Urban Legend,” described a less than, um, sanitary trip to the masseuse parlor while she was many months pregnant.

    “People were like: ‘It just would never occur to me to share that story with people,’” Ribon says. “And I was like, ‘What would you do?’ They were like, ‘Never tell anyone ever for the rest of life my life what just happened to me.’ I was like, ‘Oh!’”

    “I do sometimes feel like a walking cautionary tale,” says Ribon.

    Even as a teen, Ribon was deeply aware of the tragicomedy of her coming of age. She didn’t keep a diary but she prodigiously wrote, either by typewriter or by hand, about her life. Holding up a thick green notebook, Ribon flips through the short stories, notes to boys and ticket stubs she accrued through those years.

    “I liked to have an audience from the beginning when I was processing my thoughts,” says Ribon. “I’m still that way. I much prefer writing an email about my day than keeping it to myself. It feels weird to talk to me.”

    Ribon dumped all of that material and more on Gunnarsdóttir, who, with a small team of indie animators, created a loose kind of rotoscoped version of young Pam intermixed with old footage of her from high school. Each of the five chapters has its own animation design to match, including an anime section and one styled as a vampire tale. For Gunnarsdóttir, the power of animation is take something naturalistic and add expressionism.

    “So you have this foundation that feels very real but the magic happens when you go away from it and go very abstract,” says Gunnarsdóttir, speaking from France.

    “That honesty, it comes from her,” Gunnarsdóttir adds. “I think she’s very brave.”

    Ribon is less convinced.

    “I don’t know if it’s brave as much as it’s ridiculous,” she says, laughing.

    Among the film’s most cringe-inducing moments is a lewdly frank sex talk from Ribon’s father. Ribon has had to insist to her mother it’s word-for-word accurate (Ribon’s father died years ago). After initially shielding her mom from the film, Ribon’s mother has become an ardent supporter — even if she initially couldn’t make it all the way through a public reading of “Notes to Boys.”

    “My Year of Dicks” began as a television project for FX Networks, but the filmmakers ultimately decided to try their luck on the festival circuit. Since the Walt Disney Co. owns FX, “My Year of Dicks” technically counts, ironically enough, as one of Disney’s Oscar nods, alongside the likes of “Avatar: The Way of Water” and “Turning Red.”

    As time went on, “My Year of Dicks” began to appear different, and more distant to Ribon. The overturning of Roe v. Wade made such sexual exploration far more perilous for young women. Texas law bans abortions after roughly six weeks of pregnancy and makes no exceptions for rape or incest. Ribon’s film, increasingly, looked like a time capsule of a bygone era.

    “In modern day Texas, this is the most dangerous thing a girl can do with her future. These people should not be responsible for lifelong decisions because of a party,” says Ribon. “At least I felt free to find out. Now, I would have been too scared to learn about myself. I’m grateful for the mistakes I was able to make. I didn’t have sex in any of those situations but it could have happened. And it could have happened with just one person being more a dick than here. It’s so much scarier to think about.”

    But Ribon believes animation offers “a tool to talk to someone’s unfiltered heart” — that even in an a very adult animated film, it’s possible to connect back to, as she says, “that part where we set out with the best intentions for ourselves.”

    “We’re thrown back into Saturday morning cartoon feelings,” she says.

    So, yes, “My Year of Dicks” might be the most giggle-inducing Oscar nominee this year. But it also may be the most nakedly heartfelt.

    “Maybe that’s my job in life, to help people know that you’re not alone and it could be worse. There is something very satisfying about knowing I officially have the worst sex talk of all time. It’s not just something that I say,” Ribon says, pausing to smile. “The academy has spoken.”

    ___

    Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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  • Sniffies Presents SXSW Panel on Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuaity

    Sniffies Presents SXSW Panel on Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuaity

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    Sniffies’ “Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuality” panel at SXSW 2022 will feature queer thought leaders and sex educators discussing our evolving sexual attitudes

    Press Release


    Mar 9, 2022

    Sniffies today announced their participation in SXSW 2022 with a panel titled “Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuality.”

    The panel will take place on March 17, at 11:30 a.m. at the Austin Marriott Downtown in the Waller Ballroom DEF as part of SXSW’s Culture Track. The session will feature panelists Jacob Tobia, Zachary Zane, and Alexander Cheves, and will be moderated by Sniffies CMO and Creative Director Eli Martin. 

    The percentage of U.S. adults who identify as LGBTQ has doubled in the past decade, and 1 in 5 members of Generation Z identify within the LGBTQ spectrum. We’re seeing a record level of queer representation in media, and platforms like TikTok and YouTube have helped shine a spotlight on gender and sexual expressions traditionally thought of as “alternative.” It’s never been more clear: the rigid boundaries we’ve constructed around masculinity are shifting.

    Sniffies is proud to partner with SXSW for this groundbreaking, culture-shifting panel that will further the work Sniffies has done to build and promote a dialogue about male sexual expression and exploration. Sniffies has assembled leaders in the field of gender and sexual thought, and is looking forward to challenging and adding to existing discussions about male sexual expression. 

    “Traditional models of masculinity are fading into obsolescence,” Martin said, “and the time has come to discover how we will redefine masculinity in a world where younger generations are increasingly identifying outside of heteronormativity.”

    Jacob Tobia (they/them) is an actor, writer, producer, and author of the national bestselling memoir Sissy: A Coming-of-Gender Story. From running across the Brooklyn Bridge in high heels to giving Trevor Noah an on-air makeover on The Daily Show, Jacob helps others embrace the full complexity of their gender, even (and especially) when it’s messy as h***. 

    Zachary Zane (he/him) is a Brooklyn-based columnist, sex expert, and activist whose work focuses on sexuality, culture, and the LGBTQ community. His work has been published in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Washington Post, GQ, Playboy, Cosmo, and many others. 

    Alexander Cheves (he/him) has been writing about sexual health, queer relationships, and LGBTQ+ culture for a decade. Cheves is a recipient of a 2021 Excellence in Journalism award from the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association and, in 2021, was named to the Out 100. 

    Eli Martin (he/him) is the CMO and Creative Director at Sniffies. Martin has spent the last two years building Sniffies through content forward marketing, influencer and social advertising and ground-up initiatives activating queer communities throughout the U.S. Martin’s vision for Sniffies imagines a world free of sexual judgment, censorship and full of boundless inclusion and fluidity.

    For more information on the panel, click here.

    MEDIA CONTACT

    Sam Stone

    Sam@sniffies.com

    Source: Sniffies

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