Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

The Friday Article Roundup

Take a professional interest in the FAR

Let the pros show you the best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, get professional takes on:

  • Non-professional actors
  • Resilient record stores
  • Country disco
  • Shitpost cinema
  • Stagnant Zoomers

Send (anonymously or not) articles throughout the next week to magpiesmedia [at] gmail, post articles from the past week below for discussion and Have a Happy Friday!


For the New Yorker, Richard Brody considers the history of non-professional actors, and what their presence in Oscar nominees means:
The paradox of this quartet of movies up for the new casting Oscar, all boldly peopled with nonprofessionals, is that this very practice has become professionalized. Maybe the extreme pliability of modern digital editing makes it possible to smooth out the rough edges of untrained performers, and it surely helps that viewers are now so used to watching nonprofessionals act outside of movies. But, whatever the reasons, the nonprofessional performances donโ€™t so much disrupt the films as slot into them. Itโ€™s all to the credit of viewers that it takes more to shake them, to the credit of the performers that they learn fast while remaining themselves, and to the credit of directors that their methods are free and capacious enough to blend a disjunctive range of acting styles.

Itzel Luna writes in the LA Times about record store In The Midnight Hour as a locus for community and resistance in California:
The storefront doubles as a concert venue, often for hardcore and pop punk shows. Other days, itโ€™s an art gallery or a pop-up market. When the city is in crisis, the building becomes an activist headquarters. Its business model can be unconventional. The couple donโ€™t charge small vendors to sell at the store during events and doesnโ€™t take a cut of the merchandise that bands sell while playing at the venue. โ€œEverythingโ€™s political and everythingโ€™s connected,โ€ (co-owner Sergio) Amalfitano said. โ€œWe live out of the motto of community over commodity. We want our community to thrive, and the only way that the community can thrive is if we all come up, right?โ€

Chris Richards is not impressed with Sturgill Simpson’s new album:
Lyrics about the national sex deficit (โ€œMake America fuck againโ€) rub up against rightful vilifications of the ICE gestapo (โ€œHow the hell you gonna protect the peace running round looking like youโ€™re going to war?), and it doesnโ€™t get much better from there. Iโ€™m not trying to referee anyoneโ€™s horniness while pop musicโ€™s sexual imagination slumps toward an all-time low, but if Taylor Swift isnโ€™t allowed to sing โ€œRedwood tree, it ainโ€™t hard to see his love was the key that opened my thighs,โ€ then Simpson isnโ€™t allowed to sing, โ€œLet me be the wood, baby, and you can be the glue.โ€

At Filmmaker Magazine, Dylan Adamson interviews the creators of The Napa Boys, a “combination of dissertation and shitpost” that is also a fake franchise comedy with real laughs:
Itโ€™s difficult to explain how a scene showing Jack Jr. โ€œshitting and cummingโ€ into a barrel of wine after mixing up his psychedelics with laxatives and prophylactics demonstrates a forgotten respect for audiences, but The Napa Boys configures such setups and payoffs, however puerile, as eternal tenets of storytelling. Itโ€™s mall-moviemaking not as it is, but as it once was, and as it still could be.

And at Default Blog, Sam Buntz makes the case that access to all culture is stagnating all culture:
Zoomers, you see, live inside the Archive. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that they are imprisoned inside the Archiveโ€”a Borgesian labyrinth. Everything that has ever happened exists at their fingertips, assigned equal weight (or assigned whatever weight the fickle algorithm happens to be assigning on that particular day). This is also why they are a uniquely anxious generation, paralyzed by an inability to choose. They are confronted with too many options, unstuck in time.