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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR Ventures Into the Woods

Watching The Village is nice, but is nice the same is good?

Welcome to the Friday Article Roundup, a weekly collection and discussion of great pop culture articles from around the Internet.

This week we have:

  • Olde Thyme Shyamalan
  • Serialized Storytelling
  • Comedy vs. Drama
  • Law, Order & Victims
  • Movie Ratings

Special thanks to Bridgett and Casper for contributing this week. If you see a pop culture article to share for next week’s FAR, email the link to ploughmanplods [at] gmail. You’re invited to post articles from the past week in the comments below for discussion, and Have a Happy Friday!


Defector‘s Nicholas Russell revisits the 2004 thriller The Village and finds new things awaiting in its woods:

Even now, amidst a second wind in his career, itโ€™s a mistake to hang too much anticipation or importance on Shyamalanโ€™s twists. They are integral to many of his films, but they arenโ€™t the point. For one thing, the secret that Ebert derides inย The Villageย is unlike any in the filmmakerโ€™s other work. Itโ€™s one deliberately kept out of sight, a lie fabricated by the founders of the community that, like the American obsession with maintaining freedom at the cost of someone elseโ€™s liberty, papers over an inability to face reality as it is. For another, like any good narrative that stands up to the scrutiny of multiple viewings, to know whatโ€™s actually going on inย The Villageย is to watch an entirely different, and in this case, more absurd, more disturbing and melancholic movie.ย 

In the Los Angeles Review of Books, Lauren Eriks Cline looks back at the shifting serialization tactics of Lost:

Whenย Lostย first aired, much of the buzz it generatedโ€”and much of the criticism it attracted with its divisive series finaleโ€”resulted from audiencesโ€™ attachment to the proleptic narrative mode. Viewers were drawn to the prospect of an apparently incomprehensible set of contradictions that might be resolved through careful detective work. But over its six seasons,ย Lostย adapted to a series of developments in its conditions of storytellingโ€”a change in creative direction, a studio renegotiation, and ongoing US military operations in Afghanistan and Iraqโ€”that shifted the showโ€™s focus away from planting clues and toward staging the slower, more cyclical process of grief. As early as the first season, and to an increasing degree,ย Lostย was less interested in resolving the paradoxes it introduced than in renewing and expanding their resonance.

Samantha Bergeson at Indiewire reports on the response by Ryan Reynolds on his inclusion in a roundtable of actors:

โ€œAnd yes I am Deadpool. BUT I will take a second and speak up in defense of comedy. Dramatic work is difficult. And weโ€™re also meant to SEE itโ€™s difficult which is one of the reasons it feels visceral and effective. Comedy is also very difficult. But has an added dimension in that itโ€™s meant to look and feel effortless.โ€ Reynolds continued, โ€œYou intentionally hide the stitching and unstitching. I think both disciplines are beautiful. And both work beautifully together. Comedy and drama subsist on tension.ย Both thrive when subverting expectation. Both thrive backstopped by real emotion. And both are deeply subjective.โ€ He concluded, โ€œYour favorite comedy might be โ€˜Anchorman.โ€™ Mine might be Lars Von Trierโ€™s โ€˜Melancholia.’โ€

At Slate, Laura Marshall recounts seeing her own assault fictionalized on Law & Order: SVU [CW: discussion of sexual assault]:

As the episode progressed, I watched Sarah walk through a messy crime scene and wonder aloud why her apartment had been trashed by CSI, like I had; put on a performative face to fulfill her commitments, like I had; kiss her older boyfriend who was a musician and piano instructor, just like mine was; and reassure her concerned out-of-town parents who knew the big city would commit some sort of evil eventually, also like mine had. I still tried to convince myself that this was coincidental. But then Sarah went to have a drink at her regular barโ€”a scene filmed in theย actualย bar I frequented with my classmates after rehearsals that ran late into the night. Then everyone elseโ€™sย SVUย became myย Black Mirror.

For Tedium, Ernie Smith looks into the strange life – and possible imminent death – of the MPAA’s “G” rating:

But less discussed is the G-rated system, which initially represented films that in the Hays Code era would have gone through without changes. But as the system began to firm up, that standard eventually evolved into a self-selecting system, where essentially โ€œG-ratedโ€ means the film is specifically for kids, rather than just being safe for everyone. To highlight how dramatic the change was, itโ€™s worth noting that one early film to receive the G rating wasย 2001: A Space Odyssey, a Stanley Kubrick film that, if released today, would have most certainly been a PG-13 title. But because norms had not been formalized around MPAA ratings, it led to wiggle room that treated the iconic film as one safe for 8-year-olds to consume.