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Music Video Monday: “Back Bitah Sound” by Chinese Connection Dub Embassy featuring I-Sypha

Memphis reggae legends Chinese Connection Dub Embassy are back with another rock steady beat.

Keybaordist Joseph Higgins says “Back Bitah Sound” is all about betrayal. “The original muse for this song came from one of my favorite movies of all time, Juice with Tupac, Omar Epps and more,” he says. “It shows how, at one point, individuals can grow up together, and be the best of friends, but the decisions they make can split them up to become mortal enemies. But in David’s [Higgins] verse he points out individuals being gatekeepers and not wanting to see each other succeed because of ego-driven ideologies. Also, the second verse brings in Jamaica’s own I-Sypha, bringing that synergy when speaking on Babylon’s evil ways and how they hold us back but we are stronger than they think.”

David Yancy III directed the video, which is in stark black and white. Take a look.

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Now Playing In Memphis: The Fast and The Blackening

If you’re into box office handicapping, it’s the most competitive of the summer so far. (Just wait until Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer square off on July 21st!) For you, the film consumer, that’s good news.

DC enters the multiverse with their speediest character, The Flash. Star Ezra Miller, whose offscreen insanity and ensuing legal entanglements are bigger news than the film, plays multiple versions of Barry Allen, who uses his super-speed to travel back in time in an attempt to prevent his mother’s death. Is it a bad sign that Miller is being upstaged in his own solo movie by the return of Michael Keaton as Batman? To be fair, Keaton does that to everybody.

Pixar storms back into theaters with Elemental, a parable about earth, wind, fire, and water. Ember (Leah Lewis) is a no-nonsense fire elemental who falls in love with Wade (Mamoudou Athie), a “go-with-the-flow” water elemental. Can the two opposites make it work? Are little steam babies on the horizon? The Good Dinosaur’s Peter Sohn directs, and listen for a voice cameo from Adult Swim’s calmest Yooper Joe Pera. 

If you’ve watched a lot of horror movies, you know that the Black guy usually dies first. With The Blackening, director Tim Scott asks, what if it’s ALL Black people trapped in a cabin in the woods? Checkmate, knife-weilding maniac! Not so fast, says the killer, who attempts to rank his prey by degrees of Blackness, so he’ll know where to start. The Prisoner’s Dilemma meets Get Out in this horror parody. 

Indie Memphis presents Looking for Langston on Wednesday, June 21st at Studio on the Square. Video artist Issac Julien made this experimental feature in 1989, which uses a surrealist vision of Harlem as a backdrop for readings from Langston Hughes. Tickets are available at the Indie Memphis website.

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Dalíland

Dalíland begins with Salvador Dalí’s appearance on What’s My Line?, the classic game show where blindfolded contestants try to guess the identity of the mystery guest. “Are you a performer? Do you have something to do with the arts?” The contestants are baffled because Dalí answers “yes” to everything. What finally gives him away is a question about his famous waxed mustache.

Dalí wasn’t lying. He was an artist, one of the greatest of the 20th century — and he was also a performer. The character he played for most of his life was Salvador Dalí, the crazy artist who is also a super-genius. “Geniuses are not allowed to die,” he said near the end of his life. “The progress of the human race depends on us!”

Where the act ends and the man begins? Nobody really knows. Dalí really was a super-genius artist, the most famous of the Surrealists who terrorized the buttoned-up art world of the 1920s and 1930s. He was also his own best hype man. Ben Kingsley plays Salvador Dalí with more perfection than affection. Kingsley first came to prominence playing Gandhi in Richard Attenborough’s classic biopic, so he’s got experience with historical personages. Watching Kingsley apply his world-class chops to mimicking one of history’s great lunatics is, as you might expect, the fun part of Dalíland. The Surrealists learned the art of the high-profile stunt from the Dadaists. Dalí perfected it. At one point in Dalíland, he asks his assistant James Linton (Christopher Briney) to bring him live ants and a full suit of armor that must be Spanish in origin. “Is it for a painting?” James asks.

“No, it’s for a party.”

Dalí’s wife and muse was Gala (Barbara Sukowa), the quintessential muse and “art wife,” the reasonably sane member of the relationship who keeps the books and interfaces with the “real” world. To say they had a strange relationship is a massive understatement. Gala appeared in several of Dalí’s most famous paintings, often in the guise of the Virgin Mary. According to Dalí hanger-on Ginesta (Suki Waterhouse), they rarely, if ever, had sex — at least with each other. Gala had a fiery temper, and after one particularly intense tirade, Dalí turns to James and declares, “Isn’t she magnificent?”

There’s a lot for a filmmaker like American Psycho’s Mary Harron to work with — the story of some of the greatest visual masterpieces of the last century, the legendary eccentric who created them, and the weirdly functional, dysfunctional relationship that sustained him. Which is why it’s so puzzling that Dalíland feels like such a damp squib.

The problem (one of them, anyway) is the point of view. Dalíland is not Dalí’s story, but James’, who we meet as a gallery owner in 1985, when Dalí was denying he was dying. Then James flashes back to the early 1970s, when he was Dalí’s assistant for a few very eventful months. He first meets the Dalís in New York, where the painter is holed up in a luxury hotel, creating a new batch of paintings for an upcoming opening. The Dalís live in a constant state of cocktail party, with artists, models, and assorted rich people hungry for clout, drinking champagne and snorting coke on Dalí’s dime. The film works best when Harron gives in to the chaos: Watching Ben Kingsley trying to disco dance as 70-year-old Dalí is a particular highlight.

The Dalís only operated on a cash basis, and James becomes their bagman — which means he sees both the people who are stealing from the artist, and the extreme, often fraudulent methods Gala uses to keep the money flowing. It would be nice if Briney could have summoned some kind of recognizable emotional reaction to that or anything else. Briney was apparently a last-minute replacement for Ezra Miller, who now appears as Young Dalí in flashbacks. While the guy who will appear as The Flash in a few weeks is apparently a malevolent weirdo in real life, at least he can kinda act. Briney drags down everyone around him, killing any momentum the film builds up from Kingsley and Sukowa’s terrifying love story.

The biggest problem with Dalíland is that you never get to see the artist’s paintings, only his eccentricities. Other people tell you how brilliant he is. Even though he was past his prime when James meets him, Dalí was the real deal. But unless you’re familiar with his work, and his biography, you won’t find that out from Dalíland.

Dalíland is playing at Malco Studio on the Square through June 15th and is available on VOD.

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Music Video Monday: “A Box of Porn in the Woods” by HEELS

Don’t get too excited about today’s Music Video Monday.

Memphis punk agitators HEELS new music video does not actually include the mythical box of girly mags your father and/or older brother hid in the woods instead of throwing it out like your mom told them to. In fact, the video, written and directed by PJ Huot and Ben Pierce, contains no porn whatsoever. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.

What it does contain is a whole lotta rock. Huot and Pierce made the video as a short film for the 48 Hour Film Project, where new filmmakers cut their teeth by creating an entire short film from start to finish in a single weekend. They used “A Box Of Porn in the Woods” as the big payoff in the plot, because, as you will soon discover, it freakin’ rocks.

If you want to see HEELS rock in person, they’re playing with Ben Abney & The Hurts at DKDC this Saturday, June 16th.

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Now Playing in Memphis: Robots and Boogeymen

Optimus Prime (voiced by 81-year-old legend of the VO game Peter Cullen) is back for yet another sequel of questionable necessity, Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. This one has O.P. leading his robots in disguise in defense of the Maxmials, who are robots disguised as animals, against the Terrorcons, who are also robots in disguise, only bad. Good news: Michael Bay isn’t directing! 

 Adapted from one of the early 1970s Stephen King short stories that earned him the reputation as a master of horror, The Boogeyman stars Sophie Thatcher (of Yellowjackets fame) as a teenager whose home is invaded by a creature who hides under the bed, comes out at night, and feeds on fear. If you’re afraid of the dark, this is not the film for you. If you’re into classic horror, turn me on! 

If you’re looking for an escape from summer blockbusters, Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ new comedy with director Nicole Holofcener You Hurt My Feelings is here for you. Beth’s (Louis-Dreyfus) husband Don (Tobias Menzies) is a therapist, so you’d think he would know better than to admit he doesn’t like the new book she’s been writing. Guess not. Surely, that one little slip up can’t have life-altering consequences? Oops again! 

John Waters’ transgressive, but radically inclusive, cinema increasingly looks ahead of its time. With 1988’s Hairspray, he came the closest to the mainstream he ever would. Future talk show host Ricki Lake stars as Tracy Turnblad, a typical ’50s teenager who loves to dance. She wants to be a regular on local a local TV teen show, but first she must overcome her arch rival, Amber (Colleen Ann Fitzpatrick), and the close-minded, racist establishment. Debbie Harry, Sonny Bono, Jerry Stiller, and of course, drag legend Divine round out the cast of this fever dream of rock and roll and racial integration. On Sunday, June 11, it’s coming back for a 35th anniversary screening at several Malco theaters.

On Tuesaday at Crosstown Theater, Indie Memphis’ Microcinema series presents A Tribute to Barbara Hammer. The avant-garde filmmaker who died in 2019 was a pioneer of queer cinema, creating more than 80 films in the course of her career. The 1982 short film “Audience” shows the dynamic interaction between the artist and the viewer that was at the core of her cinema. Nitrate Kisses from 1992 was her first feature-length work, a experimental documentary about the lives of queer people living on the margins of social acceptability. Microcinema begins at 7:00 p.m.

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Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

Citizen Kane rightly has a reputation as a landmark of filmic innovation. But what Orson Welles did was not so much invent new techniques as push existing technologies to their full potential. Gregg Toland, the cinematographer whose work was so integral to Kane’s aesthetic that Welles insisted their credits appear together on-screen, had been working in Hollywood for a decade; writer Herman Mankiewicz had been punching up scripts since the silent era. Welles’ genius was synthesis. He saw new ways to put the pieces together.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is not Citizen Kane, but producers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller have seen a new way to put the pieces together.

They have a lot of pieces to play with. There are officially three directors: Portuguese animator Joaquim Dos Santos, who cut his teeth on Avatar: The Last Airbender; Justin K. Thompson, a veteran production designer; and Kemp Powers, the playwright behind One Night in Miami and co-director of Pixar’s Soul. The animation team is by far the largest ever assembled. 2018’s Into the Spider-Verse’s credits boasted a then-unprecedented 140 animators — for the sequel, it’s more than 1,000. Pity the poor payroll people! The battalion of artists takes the audience on a 140-minute tour of everything that is possible with digital animation in 2023. The film is a nonstop flurry of visual styles, all mashed up together. The miracle at the heart of Across the Spider-Verse is that it all meshes, and somehow makes sense.

The first line spoken in Across the Spider-Verse comes from Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld). “Let’s do things differently this time,” she says, before the film blasts through your defenses with a thundering drum solo and a visually dazzling sequence that imparts more plot information than most M. Night Shyamalan movies. I briefly thought, “They can’t possibly keep up this pace,” but they hadn’t even floored the gas pedal yet.

Ostensibly, Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) is the lead spider, but this is Gwen Stacy’s movie as much as it is anybody’s. She comes from Earth-65, a reality where she was bitten by the radioactive spider, and her love interest Peter Parker (Jack Quaid) died in her arms. Her father George (Shea Whigham) is a police captain who thinks Spider-Woman killed Peter Parker (which is kind of true, but he had turned into a giant lizard at the time. It’s complicated). Alienated from her family, Gwen is recruited by the Spider-Society. Different versions of the same dimensionally disastrous accident at the Alchemax particle collider from Into the Spider-Verse played out in different ways over the countless realities of the multiverse. Many of the Spider-Man variants, now alerted to the possibility of multiverse travel, have banded together to address existential threats to reality. The most pressing of which is The Spot (Jason Schwartzman), a former Alchemax tech who accidentally gained quantum powers in the explosion.

The Spot’s motivation is similar to Jobu Tupaki’s in Everything Everywhere All At Once: They want to collapse the diverse existences of the multiverse into a singularity contained within themselves. It’s kind of an ultimate, all-encompassing narcissism that stands in contrast to Marvel’s wisecracking, everyman hero. There’s enough Spidey for everyone to identify with, from Pavitr Prabhakar (Karan Soni), aka Spider-Man India, to Jessica Drew (Issa Rae), a Black, no-nonsense, motorcycle-riding Spider-Woman.

Each Spider-person is drawn in their own style, which they maintain even as they travel from world to world. Spider-Punk (Daniel Kaluuya) is especially striking, with his cut-and-paste aesthetic. The collage effect isn’t just for show; it helps build emotion. During Gwen’s emotional confrontation with her father, her watercolor world weeps with her.

Across the Spider-Verse will be viewed as a landmark in animation, and rightfully so. In the future, it may also be seen as a standard bearer for a new artistic movement. Like Rick and Morty and Everything Everywhere All At Once, it is a multiverse story, featuring different versions of the same characters interacting over a sprawling variety of settings. But there’s something deeper going on, too; a maximalist reaction to decades of minimalism and primitivism. As seen in Moonage Daydream, Brett Morgen’s experimental biography of David Bowie, it embraces post-modernist remix, while pointedly rejecting PoMo’s nihilist tendencies in favor of an effusive humanism. I’m not sure this nascent movement has a name yet, but it’s awesome, and I want more of it. While I’m waiting, I’ll go watch Across the Spider-Verse again.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
Now playing
Multiple locations

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Music Video Monday: “Electric Truck” by JD Graffam

The Ford BlueOval City manufacturing complex in Haywood County is the storied car company’s biggest capital investment in recent memory. Its first mission is to turn out the F-150 Lightning as quickly as corporately possible. The electric vehilcle is the hottest ticket on the American road right now, and songwriter JD Graffam is experiencing acute truck envy. “I’m asked quite often if ‘Electric Truck’ is supposed to be fun or serious, so I want to answer that question directly,” he says. “It’s very serious — I’ve always been a pickup man, and as much as I love fast cars, I can’t wait to buy me an electric truck.”

In the tradition of automotive odes like “My Little GTO,” “Electric Truck” is about hitting the road in a hopped-up ride. “One of the most rewarding aspects of songwriting is collaboration,” says Graffam. “Bringing this song to life collaboratively has given me the chance not just to share in the end result, but to learn and grow as an artist. Working with Josh Threlkeld was inspiring. He’s not just a talented musician but a good friend I’ve made through music. And he helped make this song better. When it came time to create a music video for “Electric Truck,” I again leaned on this community and ultimately reconnected with my old friends, Sarah Fleming and Christopher Reyes. They are talented; their vision for the arts in Memphis is what’s inspiring about them. It is always wonderful to work with smart people to bring a vision to life.”

This video has everything from backyard barbecues to a street gang of cute kids in their own electric vehicles. Let’s go!

If you’d like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Now Playing in Memphis: Across the Multiverse

One film looks set to dominate the weekend, but there’s a lot more to choose from on the big screen.

Spider-Man: Across the Spiderverse is the sequel to the acclaimed 2018 animated superhero picture, and sees Miles Morales once again sucked into multiversal mayhem. Does this one include Peter Parker, Mary Jane, Gwen Stacy, Spider-Woman, Vulture, Spider-Noir, or Yamashito the Japanese Spider-Man? The answer is yes to all of the above and more. That’s right, we’re going full Rick and Morty, and the advance word is good. Look for eye-popping visuals with an inclusive spirit. 

Vicaria (Laya Deleon Hayes) has a nice, suburban life until her older brother (Denzel Whitaker) is killed, as so many other Black youths have been, by gun violence. She becomes obsessed with bringing him back to life, which, as all available literature on the subject suggests, is a terrible idea. But who knows? Maybe it will work out fine in The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster. Writer/director Bomani J. Story updates Frankenstein for our era of senseless shootings. 

 Before Stephen King was a literary superstar, he was a struggling writer of short stories for men’s magazines like Cavalier and Penthouse (and, to be fair, also Cosmopolitan). After his novel Carrie was an unexpected hit, the best of these stories were collected in Night Shift, which has since provided fodder for film and television that has been great, like Salem’s Lot, and Children of the Corn, and not-so-great, like Lawnmower Man and Maximum Overdrive. “The Boogeyman” has seen several short film adaptations, thanks to King’s standing policy of licensing his short stories for $1 to budding filmmakers, and now director Rob Savage and the writers of A Quiet Place are giving it the feature treatment. This looks really scary.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus stars in Nicole Holofcener’s latest comedy as an author whose reasonably successful marriage is thrown into chaos when her husband (Tobias Menzies) admits he doesn’t like her latest book. This rookie married-guy mistake haunts everyone in You Hurt My Feelings.

Ahead of Harrison Ford’s final fedora fitting in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the original returns to theaters for two special engagements on Sunday, June 4th and Wednesday, June 7th. With Raiders of the Lost Ark, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas created the ultimate summer blockbuster in 1981, and while there have been many films that tried to recapture that magic, none has ever achieved this level of perfection. Watch for future movie star Alfred Molina in his debut role as Indy’s “Throw me the idol!” betrayer. 

At Crosstown Theater on June 8th, get a full frontal look at Brian De Palma’s gonzo rock opera from 1974, Phantom of the Paradise. I can’t really describe the “plot”, but Paul Williams’ music and De Palma’s visuals bring the glam rock weirdness that would later power The Rocky Horror Picture Show to cult immortality. “Life at Last!”

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The Little Mermaid

Ever since roughly 2016, when Disney company man Jon Favreau helmed the live-action remake of The Jungle Book, the question on my mind has been, “Why?” What, exactly, is the point of trying to redo masterpieces from the golden age of Disney animation with modern CGI tech? A live-action Cinderella that uses the 2,000-year-old fairy tale as a jumping off point, sure. Go for it. But no audience ever said, “The problem with Dumbo is that the elephants weren’t realistic enough.”

The real answer is that executives who are terminally infested with late-stage capitalist brain worms want to reuse these free intellectual properties Walt Disney appropriated from the public domain because they have a whole lot of capital invested in theme park attractions based on these stories. They want the goose to lay some more golden eggs without properly feeding the goose with new stories.

But just because you’re bringing new film technology to bear on an old story doesn’t mean that the results are going to look better. Look no further than Flounder, the best friend of Ariel in The Little Mermaid. In the 1989 Disney animated film, Flounder is a pretty simple yellow and blue fish with a friendly, humanlike face that fits his bubbly middle-schooler personality. In the 2023 version of The Little Mermaid, Flounder is an actual fish. His colors are now silver on black. His face is as impassive and free of human emotion as, well, a flounder. When he is scooped from the ocean by a passing fishing boat along with Ariel (Halle Bailey), he flops around on deck like an actual fish out of water. There’s nothing young kids like more than watching the character they’re supposed to identify with suffocate slowly!

Did the suits at Disney who have been shepherding this $250-million behemoth since 2017 think the “kids these days” don’t like hand-drawn animation? Anime is all the kids want to talk about! Disney would have been better off poaching some Japanese animators from one of Tokyo’s notoriously thrifty anime houses and turning them loose on the story of the mermaid princess who lives “Under the Sea” and wants to be “Part of Your World.” Instead, we got something that cost as much as Avatar: The Way of Water but looks like crap.

It’s a shame because Halle Bailey, half of a pop duo with her sister Chloe, gives 100 percent to the role of Ariel. She’s got vocal chops, passion, and a love for the material that shines through the crowded frames she shares with swarming sea life. But when she climbs up on a rock to recreate the poster image of “Part of Your World,” the epic wave that’s supposed to add an exclamation point to the climax evaporates like sea spray. It’s a metaphor for the entire production.

The film’s other bright spot is Melissa McCarthy as Ursula the Sea Witch. Like Bailey, she clearly understands the assignment better than her director. Her rendition of “Poor Unfortunate Souls” is the kind of camp romp you want from an over-the-top Disney villain.

Too bad director Rob Marshall treats The Little Mermaid’s music like he’s embarrassed of it. Did you think “Under the Sea,” the showstopper that earned Samuel E. Wright an Academy Award, was a little too edgy? You’re in luck, because Hamilton’s Daveed Diggs sucks all the life out of it. The new songs from Lin-Manuel Miranda, particularly the hip-hop flavored “The Scuttlebutt,” flop like a fish out of water.

The 1989 original is 83 minutes long; this one is 135 minutes long, but I’ll be damned if I can figure out what they did with the extra time. Marshall and screenwriter David Magee could have explored the tragic implications of Hans Christian Andersen’s original story of lovers trapped between worlds, which ends with Ariel sacrificing herself because she refuses the Sea Witch’s order to kill her Above World paramour Eric. Nope. Disney’s regressive ending, which celebrates Ariel’s decision to change everything that’s unique about herself to please a man, remains more or less intact.

Like The Jungle Book and The Lion King before it, this flabby, dull remake of The Little Mermaid will be forgotten by this time next year — just in time for the live action remake of Moana.

The Little Mermaid
Now playing
Multiple locations

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Now Playing in Memphis: Part of Your World

 What’s new this weekend? For starters, The Little Mermaid (2023). Including the year is important, because Disney’s latest live-action remake is a new version of the 1989 film which paved the way for the House of Mouse’s animation renaissance. Halle Bailey (not, as I thought, Halle Berry) stars as Ariel, mermaid princess of the undersea kingdom of Atlantica whose love for the human Eric (Jonah Hauer-King) causes her to defy her father King Triton (Javier Bardem) and make a deal with Ursula the Sea Witch (Melissa McCarthy) so she can walk on dry land. Given the sorry state of the Above World, it seems like a big mistake, especially since Ariel has her pick of all those nice fish-boys, but who am I to judge? 

Gerard Butler’s latest shoot-’em-up Kandahar takes him to Afghanistan during the American occupation, where he plays a CIA operative who has his cover is blown. He and his translator (Navid Negahban) must evade the war and hit squads to reach their extraction point in, you guessed it, Kandahar. Expect gun violence and monologs about courage and duty delivered through gritted teeth. 

Comedian Bert Kreischer, allegedly the real-life inspiration for National Lampoon’s Van Wilder, stars in The Machine as himself in this (presumably heavily) fictionalized version of his life from stories he told in the 2016 Showtime comedy special of the same name. He must escape after being kidnapped by people he pissed off twenty years ago while drunk. Mark Hamill is involved, as is YouTube star Jimmy Tatro. Expect gun violence and funny monologs delivered through gritted teeth. Since this is the Flyer, we’re running the Red Band trailer.

Memphis in May officially ends on Wednesday, May 31 with the Indie Memphis screening of Redha. Director Tunku Mona Riza is from Malaysia, the honoree country for this year’s festival; his film tells the story of Daniel (Harith Haziq), an 8-year-old with severe autism whose mother Alina (June Lojong) fights for his acceptance. In English, the title Redha means “Beautiful Pain.” The screening begins at 7:00 p.m. at Studio on the Square.

June 1 at Crosstown Theater is the 1993 neo-noir Suture, which was largely ignored on release but has gained a cult following due to it’s twisty plot and a crafty lead performance from Dennis Haysbert. Years before Face/Off, Scott McGehee and David Siegel were switching faces and taking names.