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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR is a Bit Snippy Today

A catty roundup of great pop culture writing from the past week.

Forgive a sleep-deprived FAR of being a little snide about:

  • queer cinema
  • fantasy costuming
  • pop biography
  • summer reading
  • dramatic… actors!

No terse things to say about the wonderful Casper who contributes this week! Send articles throughout the next week to ploughmanplods [at] gmail, post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion, and Have a Happy Friday!


If you haven’t already, drop whatever you’re doing and read this charming as hell Hollywood Reporter actors roundtable where Magpie favorite Walton Goggins holds court with other favs Diego Luna, Adam Scott, Jeffrey Wright! Also Eddie Redmayne and someone named Cooper Koch:

GOGGINSย Oh, Iโ€™m just leaning in to it with a childlike abandon. I suppose some people would take the opportunity to redefine how people see them and maybe become a little more aloof or a little more cool. Iโ€™m just leaning more in to who I am as a person, and Iโ€™m not walking into it, Iโ€™m fucking running straight at it. (Laughter.) And, yeah, Iโ€™m getting to read some really cool things now, but the work doesnโ€™t change. The attitude doesnโ€™t change. You donโ€™t change. Iโ€™ve been doing what Iโ€™ve been doing for 30 years. And Iโ€™m still filled with anxiety and I canโ€™t sleep the night before a job, but at this stage in my life, I know that once Iโ€™m there, Iโ€™ll figure it out. And thatโ€™s a place that all of us can get to, that weย willย get to.

None of you punks seems able to stop talking about Andor, so here’s an interview with costume designer Michael Wilkinson about the costuming by Maggie Lovitt at Collider:

I think what’s central to this idea of worldbuilding and establishing palettes for different planets is the idea of working with a production designer and really looking at what each of these cultures stand for. What are we saying from them in our entire story? And how is that different from another planet? So, Luke Hull, the production designer, and I sit down, we talk about what the planet represents, and then we go right down to basics. We’re like, โ€œWell, what materials are available to these cultures to build their buildings, to make their clothing? Where do they come from? Is it very high tech? Is it very rustic? What are these people’s beliefs and cultures? How do they feel about each other? How do they want to portray themselves to other people? What climate do they live in?โ€ So, all of these things affect textures, colors, and materials.

At Paste, Tim Grierson talks to Jonathan Gould about his new book about the Talking Heads with the oh-so-great title Burning Down the House:

I love the fact that while they were preparing to make [Stop Making Sense],ย Rob Reiner was preparing to releaseย This Is Spinal Tap, which to my way of thinking put an end to that whole genre of rock performance documentaries. Itโ€™s very hard for me to watch a standard rock documentary in the aftermath ofย This Is Spinal Tapโ€”it threw off all of the affectations. But the affectations that [Stop Making Sense] threw off were the affectations of authenticity. Talking Heads began with this commitment to throwing off all affectationsโ€”and then, at a certain point, as David Byrne got more deeply and deeply into performing, he came to understand thatย authenticityย is a pose. It may be the greatest pose of them all.ย Stop Making Senseย gives itself over totally to the idea โ€œThis is a performance, this is theater, this is a show. Weโ€™re not going to try to convince you who we are or what itโ€™d be like to have a drink or a joint or a cup of coffee with us. This is just what we do.โ€ Thereโ€™s a kind of purity to the aesthetics of it, which has weathered extraordinarily well.

The staff of The Defector puts together a summer reading list, but one that doesn’t require the book to be new and categorizes recommendations very specifically. Also unlike other reading lists of major publications, all of the titles refer to books that actually exist:

When Itโ€™s So Hot You Canโ€™t Leave Your House and Have to Sit in Front of the AC: Easy Riders, Raging Bullsย – Peter Biskind What better way to ignore a hot summer day than to drown yourself in the X-rated exploits of the film industry at the end of the studio system and the beginning of a youth movement? Biskindโ€™s book is full of great gossip, deplorable behavior, and egos absolutely run amok. And drugs, so many drugs. Itโ€™s the best kind of summer read.

What calms us down? Some nice Pride Month content, like Steve Erickson’s article at Crooked Marquee a-boot an unsung Canadian landmark of queer cinema, 1968’s Winter Kept Us Warm:

The first English-language Canadian film to screen at Cannes,ย Winter Kept Us Warmย defies stereotypes about gay menโ€™s lives before Stonewall. Depicting a college student who falls in love with his male friend, it does keep their exact relationship inexplicit, while expressing it as something larger than subtext. More surprisingly, it avoids the notes of desperation and tragedy still common in films about queer men. Its protagonistย goes through a fairly manageable degree of loneliness and repression, without risking the destruction of their lives. Made for only 8,000 Canadian dollars by a 22-year-old director,ย Winter Kept Us Warmย sticks to campus life, except for a few scenes at Torontoโ€™s nightclubs and streets. Many scenes play out without dialogue, as the dancing vibraphones of Paul Hoffertโ€™s score plays out over the images. The new 4K restoration looks crystal-clear, but the soundtrack remains muddy in places. Still, the filmโ€™s modest scale and meat-and-potatoes sensibility were a perfect fit for the resources with which it was made.