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The Friday Article Roundup

Get off the FAR’s lawn!

It's the best pop culture writing of the week, you darn whippersnappers.

This week, you (or your interest) will be piqued by:

  • A meme metal mercenary
  • A horny Wuthering Heights
  • A smarmy star
  • A director under the influence
  • A true cinematic hero

Send articles throughout the next week to magpiesmedia [at] gmail, post articles from the past week below for discussion and Have a Happy Friday!


Eli Enis tries to get some perspective on meme metal performer Bilmuri:
Bilmuri is the apotheosis of the wider genre’s trend toward embracing pop over metal. Not just musically, although his songs are extremely pop-forward, but also visually and rhetorically, in terms of how his artistic persona is steeped in the pop culture of memes. He’s looking around at the rise of Jelly Roll, Morgan Wallen, and Post Malone’s country pivot; at the prominence of camo pants, trucker hats, and Nascar t-shirts; at the increased tolerance in metal for music that only qualifies as such by having a few djenty guitar riffs and occasional unclean screams in songs that could otherwise โ€“ and might anyways โ€“ play on mainstream rock or pop radio, and he’s correctly recognizing that there’s an untapped audience at this meme/music crossroads. One that consists of A Day to Remember fans who mostly listen to country and teenagers who think the word “hog” is funny, which sadly encompasses a lot of fucking people.

At Crooked Marquee, Kayleigh Donaldson looks at a florid adaptation of Wuthering Heights — Luis Buรฑuelโ€™s Abismos de pasiรณn:
โ€œLike all surrealists, I was deeply moved by this novel,โ€ wrote Buรฑuel. He was drawn to โ€œits climate of passion, for lโ€™amour fou that destroys everything.โ€ His decision to cut out the childhood scenes is understandable โ€“ thereโ€™s a reason so few versions take on the entire text โ€“ but we could have used more backstory for Alejandro and Catalina. That lack of origin for these characters is compensated through sheer emotion, at least; Abismos de pasiรณn certainly has a lot of passion. It feels like it could slot comfortably into Mexicoโ€™s history of heightened telenovelas and swoon-heavy romances where bosoms are heaving at a record pace. Outside of the control of the Hays Code, which left William Wylerโ€™s Wuthering Heights feeling a tad inert, Buรฑuel gets to revel in some real messy heat with the doomed lovers.

For The AV Club, Jacob Oller makes a killing of How To Make A Killing and star Glen Powell:
At the center of it all is Powell, making the same face for an hour and 45 minutes, too unflappable to root for, too smug to magnetize as an inhuman American Psycho. And How To Make A Killing needed to pick a side, either of clownish class comedy or of bitter sociopathic satire. Its split-difference approach certainly racks up a sizable body count, but its most battered and bruised victim is the truism it keeps hitting: In America, there are no consequences for the rich, unless other rich people desire it. Thatโ€™s almost funny, in an empty and respectable way, like how a New Yorker cartoon is almost funny, or how Glen Powell is almost a leading man.

Isaac Feldberg interviews Steven Soderbergh about his influences for Letterboxd:
When Iโ€™m on set or thinking about a story, making sure that the audience is engaged and that Iโ€™m also excited, I have to fight through the sensation of, โ€œOh my god, another fucking over-the-shoulder shot.โ€ I have to push through that and go, โ€œYouโ€™re building a sentence. Getting upset when you have to shoot an over-the-shoulder shot is like getting upset at using the word โ€˜andโ€™ or โ€˜theโ€™ in a sentence. It has to be done. Itโ€™s part of the grammar.โ€ I thought about this as I was contemplating this series and what each of these filmmakers is contributing to cinema grammarโ€”and the fact that Iโ€™ve never done anything first.

And Tom Meek memorializes Frederick Wiseman in his hometown paper, the Cambridge Day:
[Wiseman] didnโ€™t need to or want to prove anything to anyone. I saw in him an innate refusal to simplify or conform. He trusted his viewers to sit inside the complexity of his films long enough to discover meaning themselves….In Cambridge, where debate and observation are civic habits, Wiseman was an institution himself โ€” a quiet presence reminding us that attention is a form of respect.