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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR recognizes greatness when it sees it

Only the best of the week's pop culture writing.

Acknowledge the awesomeness of:

  • The trust of a long-running actor/director collaboration
  • The vision of a peerless author
  • The ennui of a decade’s films
  • The immediacy of an urgent documentary
  • The hooks of an overqualified wedding singer

You know who’s great? FAR contributors John Anderson and Guillermo Jimรฉnez! Send articles throughout the next week to magpiesfar [at] gmail, post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion, and have a Happy Friday!


At The AV Club, Jesse Hassenger takes a look at the collaborations of Delroy Lindo and Spike Lee:
The core of the Lindo/Lee collaboration, though, comes through in Leeโ€™s Malcolm X follow-ups. The Brooklyn-set Crooklyn (1994) and Clockers (1995)โ€”something of a homecoming after the location-hopping epic that preceded themโ€”werenโ€™t received all that rapturously in their day, despite the way they develop Leeโ€™s talent for zooming in on New York neighborhoods as a means of exploring Black communities and social dynamics. Lindo plays a father figure in both movies, creating a compare-and-contrast exercise so vivid it borders on obvious. Maybe it escaped some notice at the time because Lindo simply wasnโ€™t attracting as much attention as he deserved; at very least, Crooklyn may have arrived too early for viewers to understand how much range Lindo was showing in it. In the greater context of his career, where heโ€™s since become more familiar playing men of authority or menace, his warmth as the father to five kids growing up in 1970s Bedford-Stuyvesant feels revelatory.

For BookPage, Alden Mudge interviews Susana M. Morris about her new biography of Octavia E. Butler:
Exploring the genesis of these novels and others, like her own personal favorite, Wild Seed (1980), has led Morris to view Butler as not only a great writer, but also one of the foremost intellectuals of the 20th century, one who, Morris writes, โ€œroutinely envisioned futures with Black women at the center, changing the course of human life and culture, modeling how those who are often dismissed and erased have the knowledge to shift the landscape of our world.โ€

Jake Cole examines the dissipation and dissolution displayed by 70s movies for Indiewire:
Nicholson, hair prematurely thinning but possessed of a boyish spark he retained well into his elder years, is perhaps the ultimate symbol of a certain kind of developmental stasis among the Boomer generation. And while he would ultimately come to be seen as a rebellious figure on-screen, itโ€™s here that one gets the clearest view of the underlying secret of so many of his most famous characters: Their refusal to conform or obey is ultimately an impotent gesture against forces larger than themselves.

Alex Lei reviews My Undesirable Friends: Part I โ€” Last Air in Moscow for Screen Slate:
[Director Julia] Loktev and co-editor Michael Taylor quietly tighten the coil of her iPhone footage until it bursts into pure thriller territory when the war starts. For a documentary shot in such a candid manner, Loktevโ€™s cinematic eye pops in contrast to the staid conventions and formalities of TV journalism. Pushing in on the characterโ€™s faces at once treats them like movie stars, while also peeling back their professional veneer and revealing them as people.

At the New York Times, Tim Teeman profiles a collaboration between novelist David Levithan and Magpies-approved musician Jens Lekman:
What makes the book unique is signaled by a QR code at its beginning, which gives the reader access to the 10 songs that [its lead character] sings. They were composed by the acclaimed Swedish singer-songwriter Jens Lekman, who, while releasing five wry, melancholy albums and many EPs, has had a longtime side gig as a wedding singer. His co-author, the award-winning Y.A. novelist David Levithan, has written the book’s main narrative. Lekman dedicates the novel to ”the 132 couples whose weddings I’ve played at over the years,” adding, ”I hope my presence turned out to be a blessing and not a curse.”