Ahh, spring! It’s a time of renewal. It’s the season of flowers. It’s that brief window of time when Memphis weather is nice.
Alexis Grace‘s new music video “Golden” is suffused with seasonal energy. Edward Valibus conjures deep video magic to bring multiple Alexises together — each dressed for a different season — to breeze through her (their?) incredibly catchy new tune.
You can catch the singer/songwriter live at the Hyatt Centric on Sunday, May 7th, and at the GPAC Grove on June 29th. While you’re waiting for those shows, you can watch this video and imagine you’re dancing with Alexis in her amazing kitchen.
If you would like to see your new music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.
Perpetually controversial and long thought unfilmable, Judy Blume’s 1970 novel Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. finally gets a big screen adaptation courtesy of writer/director Kelly Fremon Craig. Margaret (Ant-Man‘s Abby Ryder Fortson) is the daughter of an interfaith marriage who rejects both of her parents’ religions while negotiating impending puberty. Rachel McAdams plays Margaret’s mother Barbara, and Memphian Kathy Bates co-stars as Margaret’s conservative Christian grandmother.
London-based screenwriter Nida Manzoor makes her directorial debut with Polite Society. Ria (Bridgerton‘s Priya Kansara) is an aspiring stunt performer whose sister Lena (Umbrella Academy‘s Ritu Arya) is about to get married. But fiancée Salim (Akshaye Khanna) has a family secret, and it ain’t pretty. This one’s giving off strong droll-British-comedy vibes, and I’m here for it.
The full title of our next one says it all, really. Big George Foreman: The Miraculous Story of the Once and Future Heavyweight Champion of the World. Khris Davis from Judas and the Black Messiah stars as the beloved fighter and grilling enthusiast.
It’s the 10th anniversary of the Time Warp Drive-In, the classic movie collaboration between Black Lodge, filmmaker Mike McCarthy, and Malco Theater’s Summer Drive-In. To celebrate, they’re bringing back of their most popular programs. This month, it’s Quintessential Quintin: The Early Films of the Tarantino Universe. That means the wound-up neo-noir Reservoir Dogs, the Tarantino-penned Tony Scott classic True Romance, and, of course, the 1994 Palme D’Or winner, Pulp Fiction. Check out the original trailer, which looks just as radical today as it did back then. The films roll at sundown (7:45 p.m.) at the drive-in.
This week marks the 40th anniversary of two completely different films. The first is British music video director Adrian Lyne’s feature film breakthrough Flashdance. Jennifer Beals manages to be convincing as a welder in a steel mill who dreams of becoming a dancer. She’s moonlighting as a cabaret dancer when she meets a cute guy named Nick (Michael Nouri) who also happens to be her boss. It was a huge hit in 1983, but many more people saw the music videos that it spawned than sat through it in a theater. Flashdance will screen at the Malco Paradiso on Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m.
Flashdance‘s competition that weekend was a little movie called Return of the Jedi. George Lucas’ original title was Revenge of the Jedi, before someone pointed out that seeking revenge was more of a Sith thing.
The new name was better suited to a film whose hero finally wins by negating the premise and refusing to fight any more Star Wars.
In Evil Dead Rise, maybe mother doesn’t always know best.
The release of Evil Dead Rise, the big screen reboot of Sam Raimi’s influential horror-comedy franchise, makes it obvious that the general public is woefully unprepared for the eldritch horrors which surround us.
In writer/director Lee Cronin’s wildly fun film, residents of a condemned Los Angeles apartment building make many avoidable errors in their dealings with demonic undead forces and face fatal consequences. If you or someone you know is a Person Experiencing Demonic Infestation (PEDI), these nine safety tips could save your life — or at least make your death more entertaining.
1. Satanic troves: Whether you are exploring the dark, twisted forests of Tennessee or, like Danny (Morgan Davies), entering a deserted bank vault underneath your haunted apartment building whose existence was discovered thanks to a mysterious earthquake that only seemed to affect your block, be respectful of any Satanic or necromantic ritual objects you may encounter. A good rule of thumb is, if you didn’t bring it in, don’t take it out.
2. Infernal literature: Signs the book you just found in the Satanic trove may be infernal include: A. Its cover and binding are made from human flesh. B. It is covered in insects of unknown species. C. It contains horrifying illustrations in red ink that looks like human blood. D. It has a mouth and tries to bite you. If you find any tome exhibiting one or more of these traits, return it to its putrid canvas sack and rebury it. Remember: They call it The Book of the Dead for a reason.
3. Magic words:Should I say them? In general, no, you should not say aloud magic words written in infernal literature. Precautions like recording the words backwards on a 78 rpm record which is then buried in a bank vault until years after your death from demonic possession are useless if the person recovering the record is, like Danny, an aspiring DJ. However, if you or a PEDI nearby has already read some magic words, it may be necessary to read other magic words to undo the resulting demonic infestation and/or time travel. In this case, it is vitally important that you enunciate clearly. Remember: Magical incantation is best left to the experts, and they died a long time ago.
4. Interacting with the formerly deceased: Studies agree that coming back from the dead may sound fun, but in practice, it’s extremely dangerous. If you see someone you are certain was recently dead, like single mom Ellie (Alyssa Sutherland), who is now ambulatory, DO NOT ENGAGE. What if, like Beth (Lily Sullivan), it’s your sister; or like Danny, Kassie (Nell Fisher), and Bridget (Gabrielle Echols), it’s your mother? Again, DO NOT ENGAGE. It’s not them, it’s a demon driving their hideously reanimated corpse like a rental car. Remember the safety phrase: “Mommy’s with the maggots now.”
5. Beware of contagion danger: While the initial rending of the veil between the worlds of the living and the dead requires magical intervention, demonic possession, once unleashed, can spread like a disease. Signs of impending PEDI status may include wounds that turn black and sprout spiderweb-like growths, excessive vomiting, and blood spurting from the eyes. Avoid contact with all fluids discharged from a PEDI.
6. Clear your escape route: When entering an abandoned cabin or haunted apartment building, always scope out an escape route, as you will inevitably need to flee. Make sure the path of your retreat is free from tripping hazards.
7. When in doubt, destroy the brain: Normal violence will not be enough to stop the undead, as they are technically dead already. Depending on what level of undead you’re dealing with, a solid headshot may or may not solve the problem, but it will usually slow them down enough to give you time to run.
8. Don’t stick around: Look, the dead are taunting you and trying to infect you with their evil. It doesn’t matter if they’re in your house, it’s their house now. Get the hell out! If you land a successful attack, don’t stick around to see what effect it will have on the PEDI. Just run.
9. Wood chippers:Friend or foe? It depends on who is at the controls. For advanced PEDI, mere dismemberment or immolation may not be enough to neutralize the threat. Complete bodily disruption, such as that provided by an industrial grinder, may be required. But be warned that total liquidation carries significant risk of cross contamination and, thus, the potential for further sequels.
Shoegazers Cloudland Canyon know a thing or two about bad decisions. They’re often the most fun part of growing up, but the truth is, you never really grow out of them. “Future Perfect (Bad Decision)” is the first single from their new album, out June 2nd on Medical Records. Lahna Deering joins vocalist Kip Uhlhorn on this song that’s about the joy and pain of messin’ up real bad, and having only yourself to blame.
Graham Burks Jr., who recently joined Uhlhorn’s long-running project, also directed the video. “‘Future Perfect (Bad Decision)’ was created during a period where I had intensely overcommitted myself to multiple creative projects. I found myself context-switching from project to project, while depriving myself of a healthy amount of sleep. I wanted the video to reflect that dissociative haze, pulling myself out of one mindset and snapping into another, while losing track of continuity from one creative spark to the next.”
The video features the collage art of Cloudlander Corbin Linebarier, whom Memphians know from General Labor. “We deconstructed the collages into three-dimensional environments we could weave in and out of,” says Burks. “Kip Uhlhorn’s chorus loops throughout the song as the viewer regresses through a maze of multiple realities.”
If you would like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.
Lilly Sullivan cuts to the chase in Evil Dead Rise.
I know I say this a lot, but this time I really mean it: It’s a big weekend at the movies. While The Super Mario Bros. Movie continues to stack coins, there’s a whole slew of new releases, and a bunch of them look good.
First up is Evil Dead Rise. Sam Raimi’s 1983 horror film The Evil Dead slowly revolutionized the genre as its cult spread via VHS. In the 2000’s, the director would revolutionize the superhero genre with his still-undefeated Spider-Man trilogy. Now, Raimi has passed the reins to Irish director Lee Cronin for Evil Dead Rise, which has caught a lot of buzz in horror circles. In true Evil Dead fashion, it’s cheap ($15 million) and nasty. This is the Flyer, so I’m linking to the Red Band trailer.
Coming off an Indie Memphis preview screening, How To Blow Up A Pipeline is only playing on one screen in Cordova, but it may be the most consequential movie of the year. Director Daniel Goldhaber and actor Ariela Barer adapted author Andreas Malm’s 2021 nonfiction book about radical eco-activists. A diverse group of people, radicalized by different things, band together to destroy an oil pipeline in West Texas.
Ari Aster is nothing if not divisive, and his latest is no different. Hereditary was a startling adrenaline rush with an all-time great performance from Toni Collette. Midsomer was a super creepy folk horror riff that helped make Florence Pugh an A-list actor. With Beau Is Afraid, Aster is again teaming up with an actor willing to do anything: Joaquin Phoenix plays Beau, who exists in a constant state of low- to medium-level panic attack. Co-starring as people causing Beau discomfort are Patti Lupone, Nathan Lane, Amy Ryan, and Parker Posey.
Chevalier de Saint-Georges was a French musician widely regarded as the first African-descended person to achieve musical success in Europe. He fought racism in the aristocratic circles where he played, then put down his violin and picked up a sword to fight in the French Revolution. Kevin Harrison, Jr. stars as Chevalier and Lucy Boynton as Marie Antoinette.
On Wednesday, April 26th, at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis is throwing a benefit for OUTMemphis. Dressed In Blue is a groundbreaking 1983 film from Spain about six trans women who were feeling out the new world after the country had just emerged from decades of fascism under Franco. Vestida de Azul, as it is known in Spain, was directed by Antonio Giménez-Rico, and was unseen in the English speaking world for decades.
Alexander Sidding as Bashir and Avery Brooks Captain Sisko in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine "Past Tense."
[This is the text of the speech I delivered at Shelby County Star Trek Day 2023. It is posted here at the request of the Memphis Trekkies in attendance, and with the indulgence of the Memphis Flyer.]
In some ways, all science fiction is about time travel. The basic trick of the sci-fi writer is to look around at the world, and image how it could be changed. At its simplest, that means changing one thing — usually, introducing some kind of new technology — and trying to figure out how that would change society. As the old saying goes, a good science fiction writer could have predicted the automobile, but a great science fiction writer would have predicted the traffic jam.
That means that science fiction is always looking to the future, which is what we all love about Star Trek. It’s the chance to have crazy adventures in space, but it’s also a chance to envision living in a world where all of the problems of our current world have been solved. These days, that’s more comforting than ever.
Usually, Star Trek is about being brave and going to new worlds. But on occasion, Trek has traveled into the past — or at least, “the past” from the point of view of the 24th century. Usually, when our space explorers become time travelers, the results are mixed. Star Trek: First Contact, for example, has its moments — I love James Cromwell’s drunken genius routine as Zefram Cochrane — but it’s not the best Trek that has ever been on the big screen. And as my friend Zack Parks said about Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, “It’s my favorite Trek, not the best Trek.”
But there are two time travel episodes, made 28 years apart, that are not only the best of Trek but some of the best television ever made.
The first is “The City on the Edge of Forever,” which first aired on April 6, 1967. The episode was written by science fiction legend Harlan Ellison. The crew finds a time portal, the Guardian of Forever, created by a now-extinct advanced race. Doctor McCoy, who has been driven crazy by an accidental drug overdose, jumps through it and changes the timeline so that the Federation never developed.
Kirk and Spock prepare to travel through time in “The City on the Edge of Forever.”
Kirk and Spock follow McCoy back to the New York City of the 1930s. America is in the grips of the Great Depression. People are on the streets, desperate for work and food. Kirk and Spock stumble into a soup kitchen run by Edith Keeler, played memorably by Joan Collins. Keeler is a social reformer who preaches a message of compassion towards all and peace among the nations. Spock discovers that Keeler’s message will spark a social movement that spreads widely, and as a result when Nazi Germany invades Poland in 1939, the United States stays neutral. Pearl Harbor never happens, and the authoritarians win World War II because the newly pacifist nation won’t go to war to stop them.
Joan Collins as Edith Keeler in “The City on the Edge of Forever.”
But in our timeline, the one Star Trek was being produced in 1967, Edith Keeler died in an automobile accident before she could get her message of peace and universal love out. Kirk and Spock must then set the timeline right by allowing Keeler to die. The bad news is, not only is Keeler good to the point of saintliness, but Kirk has fallen in love with her. Now he must make a personal sacrifice to save the future.
Harlan Ellison was a notorious curmudgeon who hated what story editor D.C. Fontana and producer Gene L. Coon did to his script for “The City on the Edge of Forever.” Once, I met a writer who had been in the California sci-fi scene with Ellison. When I brought up Ellison’s temper, my writer friend vigorous defended him, saying Harlan was a prince of a guy who used his TV money to help out his fellow writers when they were down on their luck. My writer friend also told me the reason why Ellison was so mad at Trek. In the episode’s climactic scene, McCoy wakes from his delirium just in time to try to save Edith Keeler from the accident that is supposed to kill her. Kirk and Spock restrain him, and they watch her die. In Ellison’s script, it is McCoy and Spock who restrain Kirk. Even though the captain knows that saving her will destroy the future, he can’t bear to watch the woman he loves die. For a person in love, Ellison says, the needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many.
I can understand where Ellison is coming from. As it is, the episode ends much darker than most Trek episodes, with Shatner exclaiming, “Let’s get the hell out of here,” through gritted teeth. If Kirk knows he almost did the wrong thing, that he wanted to do the wrong thing, that line would hit a lot harder.
Joan Collins as Edith Keeler and William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk in “The City on the Edge of Forever.”
Sitting here in 2023, what’s interesting to me about “The City on the Edge of Forever” is its worldview. Pacifism is dangerous, it says. Not very Trek-like. But the worldview of Ellison and Gene Roddenberry in the late 1960s was that everything in the previous 30 years had pretty much worked out okay. World War II, with its enormous death toll and sacrifices on the population level, had been worth it. The belief that war was a necessary evil that helped to spur technological innovation was widespread in certain science fiction circles of the 1960s. Besides, the new liberal order of the West was ascendant, and people were freer and richer than they ever had been before.
At least, all the people that mattered. Three months after “The City on the Edge of Forever” aired, the Detroit Riots of 1967 began — also known as the “Detroit Rebellion.” It was the worst civil disturbance since the Civil War, with 43 dead, 1,100 injured, and entire neighborhoods burnt to the ground. The riots stared as a protest against police brutality stemming from a botched raid on a party where Black Vietnam veterans were celebrating their homecoming. The Black population of Detroit had long been the victims of housing discrimination, high unemployment, and systemic racism in general. People were fed up, and things spiraled out of control.
The Detroit Riots changed history. They sped up white flight from the city centers to the suburbs, influenced an entire generation of policing that came to view Black neighborhoods as potential powder kegs that must be kept down. After the riots that followed the King assassination the next year reinforced this view, the urban decline of the 1970s was inevitable.
Avery Brooks as Commander Benjamin Sisko sees his first homeless camp in “Past Tense, Part I.”
Fast forward to January 1995. Deep Space Nine is in its third season and is really finding its legs. Episodes 11 and 12 are a two-parter called “Past Tense,” written by Ira Steven Behr and Robert Hewitt Wolfe. It’s a time travel episode that definitely carries a stamp of influence from “The City on the Edge of Forever,” and but it comes to some radically different conclusions.
The big difference with “Past Tense” is that it attempts to predict the future in a much more direct way than Trek usually goes about it. Sisko and the crew of the Defiant are summoned to Earth to address a Starfleet symposium. But a transporter accident sends Sisko, Bashir, and Dax back to the San Francisco of 2024. In 1995, that was 29 years in the future. It’s pretty much our now, so we can evaluate how well the writers did in predicting it.
The answer is: pretty darn well. In the fictional 2024, seafloor mining is just getting underway. That’s true today. There are student riots in France. That’s happening right now. The San Francisco Sisko, Bashir, and Dax materialize in what looks like a shopping mall — which is what gentrified cities like New York resemble today. San Francisco is the playground of tech moguls, like Chris Brynner, played by Jim Metzler, who is apparently an internet entrepreneur involved in something like social media. Society is polarized. There is a very comfortable upper class, which Dax manages to find her way into. Brynner rescues Dax, and she smoothly assimilates into the culture.
Terry Farrell as Jadzia Dax and Jim Metzler as Chris Brynner in “Past Tense, Part II.”
But there is also a huge lower class. The homeless, known as the “Gimmies,” and the mentally ill, known as the “Dims,” are herded into “Sanctuary Zones,” 20-block communities where the unwanted members of society are walled in to be forgotten. There’s a third group, the “Ghosts,” who are violent nihilists. Stuck in the past with no ID and no money, Sisko and Bashir are rounded up by private security contractors and thrown into a Sanctuary Zone. Welcome to the 21st century.
The vision of the future that 1995 Trek writers thought was bleak and dystopian came true in so many ways. The first thing that jumped out at me was that the police who were enforcing the separation between rich and poor were outfitted in paramilitary gear and appeared to be mostly private contractors. Yes, police carried guns in 1995, but it is still shocking to me to see police, or more often private security, dealing with civilians in full battle rattle. We shouldn’t get used to it.
Paramilitary police storm the Sanctuary Zone in “Past Tense, Part II.”
Indeed, the evils of “getting used to it” is the theme of the episode. The people of fictional 2024 understand that this economic aparthied is deeply messed up. But they are all beaten down with hopelessness. One security contractor, played by journeyman character actor Dick Miller, freely admits that they’re milking the situation for overtime pay. A social worker tries to help, but she’s buried under the weight of the poverty and hopelessness.
Sisko looks at the calendar on the wall and sees that they have landed a few days before the Bell Riots, a pivotal event in American history that sounds an awful lot like the Detroit Rebellion. But history expert Sisko knows that this time, due to the existence of the “net,” everyday people were able to see the suffering of their fellow citizens and instituted change. The biggest thing the “rioters” ask for is the reinstatement of a federal jobs guarantee that sounds like FDR’s Works Progress Administration.
Keeping with Starfleet temporal protocols that have gotten way too much use over way too many years, Sisko and Bashir try not to influence events. But despite their efforts, Gabriel Bell, destined to become the hero of the riot, is killed prematurely, and Sisko must assume his identity. Bell’s heroism involved giving his life to protect hostages taken by a Ghost named BC, thus proving the basic humanity of the rioters to the general public. When the riots kick off— an event signaled by the explosion of a Molotov cocktail — the episode goes somewhere no Trek script has gone before. Shot on the Paramount backlot, it’s a gritty, violent scene of rioting which transitions into a hostage situation that looks more like The Taking of Pelham 123 or Dog Day Afternoon than The Voyage Home.
Michael Webb, a former white-collar, middle-class family man who landed in the Sanctuary Zone, says, “Why do they act so surprised? When you treat people like animals, you’re going to get bit.”
Starfleet officers are Trek’s paragons of morality. What do they do in this situation, which looks very familiar to us? The utopia of the 24th century cheats. They have access to infinite energy, in the form of matter/antimatter reactors, and can transform energy into matter at will. That means there is, for all practical purposes, no scarcity and no economic exploitation. So no one has to go hungry.
But Sisko, Bashir, and Dax’s words and actions suggest there is a deeper reason why the Federation is a utopia. The people there care about each other. Avery Brooks is on fire in this episode, and his finest moment comes when he lectures the cynical cop Dick Miller, “Caring is a start.”
Dax, who has ensconced herself in privilege, abandons it to help those in need. Bashir can’t stop himself from rendering aid to injured people, and his good deeds are rewarded. In the end, Dax convinces her friend Chris to use his internet channels to get the word out about the conditions in the camps. Sisko assumes Bell’s identity; once he’s sure things will play out the way they’re supposed to, he fakes his death, and the future is saved.
This was some seriously radical TV for 1995, and its vision has only sharpened in retrospect. To me, the most subversive moment of “Past Tense” comes at the very beginning, when Sisko is on a call with Quark and cites the 112th Rule of Acquisition: “Treat people in your debt like family — exploit them.”
In our 2023, it’s certain that a lack of empathy and apathy about how hopeless the prospects of change seem is at the heart of our problems. One need only look at the videos of Tyre Nichols’ murder at the hands of Memphis police to see where a complete lack of empathy can lead. From the liberal meccas of Los Angeles and San Francisco to the mean streets of Memphis, homeless people are more visible than ever, and tent cities that bear a resemblance to the Sanctuary Zones are everywhere. The 2020 Black Lives Matter protests called attention to systemic racism and police violence. Word did indeed spread through the internet, much as it had during the Arab Spring and the Occupy Wall Street protests, and minds were changed.
But today, on the eve of Trek’s Bell Riots, progress seems precarious. One political answer to misery and the failure of the economic system that we see around us is to make our system more empathetic and responsive to the material needs of all of the people. Another political solution is for the economic elites to tighten their grip further into fascism. A regime willing to murder its populations wholesale — or to let them die from neglect, famine, and disease — uses the occasional riot as an excuse for more repression. It’s also worth noting that the way the writers resolved “Past Tense” was to persuade a tech billionaire to help use his social media assets to spread the world of social justice. Elon Musk just massively overpaid for Twitter in order to better control what messages break through. It’s a conceit of American movies and television, up to and including The West Wing and Star Trek, that once the word gets out, the people will do the right thing. As we have seen in real life, this is not always the case. But I’m a Trekkie, so I always remain optimistic.
Two acts with Bluff City roots made big impressions at the Coachella music festival this weekend. The first was Memphis meteor GloRilla whose Sunday afternoon set got buck. We’ll see her in a couple of weeks at the Beale Street Music Festival.
Expat Julien Baker’s arrival was announced in these pages in 2015. Three albums and an ink barrel’s worth of critical acclaim later, Baker is supplying Memphis muscle to the supergroup boygenius. Baker joined bandmates Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus on stage with MUNA to guest on her song “Silk Chffon” before playing an epic set that debuted selections from their new record, which is called The Record. It’s probably not a coincidence that the album just debuted at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The lead music video from The Record is, perhaps predictably, called “The Film.” Unpredictably, it is directed by superstar actor Kristen Stewart, who weaves three boygenius songs, each with a different lead singer, together into three intertwining short stories. It’s beautiful, complex, and generally shoots much higher than your average promo clip. It’s also 15 minutes long, so watch it on your lunch break.
If you would like to see your video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.
Nicolas Cage as Dracula in "Renfield." (Courtesy Universal PIctures)
It’s a big weekend at the movies in Memphis, so let’s jump right in.
Dracula’s faithful thrall R. M. Renfield has been with him since the beginning. But this relationship is starting to show its age, as Renfeld slowly realizes he doesn’t have to live like this. This horror comedy features the casting coup of the decade with the great Nicolas Cage as freakin’ Dracula. Read my review.
In The Pope’s Exorcist, Russell Crowe stars as Father Gabriele Amorth, the real life priest and founder of the International Association of Exorcists, who claimed to have vanquished infernal hordes during his 24-year-career as the Dioceses of Rome’s official demon fighter.
Speaking of Italians, one humble plumber turned video game hero just launched a blue shell at the box office. The Super Mario Bros. Movie raking in $204 million domestic in three days means we’re going to be seeing a lot more Nintendo characters in IMAX. Get in on the ground floor of the critical backlash today!
It’s official: More people play Mario Kart than D&D. And that’s OK, because Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is actually good! (Read my review here.) Chris Pine, the superior of the Chrises, brings movie star charisma to this inventive and fun fantasy heist romp.
The greatest concert film of all time, Stop Making Sense, just got a 4K remastering, courtesy of A24. Both Jonathan Demme and Talking Heads were at the height of their creative powers when the director shot three nights of the Talking Heads’ Speaking In Tongues tour on Hollywood Boulevard in December, 1983. On Sunday, April 16 at 7:00 p.m., Theaterworks in Overton Square will host a free screening of the film. The stage will be a dance floor for this fundraiser, so put on your big suits and sneakers and get ready to sweat. The original trailer looks just as radical now as it did in 1984.
Speaking of radical, on Tuesday, April 18 at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis presents the controversial thriller How To Blow Up A Pipeline. Director Daniel Goldhaber’s film loosely adapts Andreas Malm’s 2021 book with Runaways‘ Ariela Barer starring as a would-be radical who gathers a team to stop a West Texas oil pipline by any means necessary.
Nicholas Hoult in Renfield (Courtesy Universal Pictures)
Hear me out: Nicolas Cage deserves an Oscar nomination for his performance as Dracula in Renfield.
I know, I know. It’s Nic Cage, dude from Con Air and Kick Ass and a couple dozen direct-to-video cash-in schlockfests. And he’s playing Dracula in a cornball B picture directed by a former Robot Chicken animator named Chris McKay. But actors have gotten Oscar nominations for lazier performances in much crappier movies. And there’s nothing lazy about Cage’s Dracula — if anything, he put way too much effort into it! But as Penn Jillette said, “The only secret of magic is that I’m willing to work harder on it than you think it’s worth.”
It’s appropriate that, when Renfield finally got to be the star of his own story, Dracula steals the show. R. M. Renfield appears in Bram Stoker’s novel as a patient in an insane asylum who worships Dracula. He eats live bugs to gain their life force, like a vampire drinks the blood of living victims. (His doctor describes him as “zoophagous maniac,” proving they just don’t diagnose ’em like they used to.) Dracula gets Renfield to do his bidding by dangling the prospect of immortality, but never actually helping his thrall go full vamp.
Nicholas Hoult stars as Renfield, who we first meet in a group therapy session for people in codependent relationships. He recognizes the stories of abuse he hears from his own life with the big D. He and his bloodsucking boss have fallen into a pattern of dysfunction. They move to a new place, start to hunt in earnest, but Dracula gets too greedy, and the locals are tipped off. Then a vampire hunter, usually from the Catholic Church, arrives, and there’s a big fight in which Dracula is almost killed. Renfield has to pick up the pieces, move to a new town — this time, it’s New Orleans — and start collecting victims while Dracula convalesces.
Nicolas Cage kills as Dracula in Renfield. (Courtesy Universal Pictures)
With the encouragement of therapist Mark, Renfield takes the bold steps of getting his own apartment and wearing clothes that are not black. He still has to search for victims to feed his personal monster, but he decides to prioritize the abusers who are making his new friends’ lives hell. This leads to a confrontation with gangsters inside a Mardi Gras float warehouse where Tedward (Ben Schwartz), the scion of the Lobos crime family, sees Renfield’s magical murder talents first hand. When a beat cop named Rebecca (Awkwafina) investigates the bloody scene, she sees that the clues lead back to Renfield and Dracula, embroiling her in an escalating conflict between the drug cartel and the dark lord.
Hoult has plenty of choices for inspiration, from Klaus Kinski to Tom Waits. He has the haircut and bug eyes of Dwight Frye, who originated the character in 1931. But Hoult seems to be channeling Harvey Gullén’s Guillermo from What We Do In The Shadows. When he and Cage share the screen, sparks fly.
Cage is not a madman. He is an extraordinarily talented screen actor in the tradition of James Cagney. His approach to Dracula is downright scholarly, mixing bits of Bela Lugosi, Christopher Lee, and Gary Oldman with his own personae. His every gesture is perfectly calibrated for the moment. If you’re used to seeing a bored Cage vamp in roles that are frankly beneath him, watching him sink his teeth into Dracula will be a revelation.
Unfortunately, this movie is also beneath him. Awkwafina, bless her heart, is left completely at sea in a role that shouldn’t have existed. The whole crime family vs. corrupt cops subplot is stupid, disjointed, and unnecessary. It seemingly exists only to provide Marvel-esque moments of fight choreography — except the fights are the most boring part of the MCU movies! “Renfield tries to save his therapy group from an angry Dracula” is plenty of plot for a film where the real meat is a Nic v. Nicolas thespian cage match. Every second they’re not on screen is wasted.
Renfield is a must for Cage watchers, which are legion, and vampire obsessives who walk the night but could use a good chuckle to break up the gothic ennui. Others will find it a pleasant but ultimately bloodless diversion.
On today’s Music Video Monday, we have an ode to the wing. Memphis is famous for barbecue, of course, but I’ll put our hot wing culture up against any other city in the nation. Yeah, that’s right Buffalo, I’m throwing down the gauntlet!
PreauXX knows wings. His new song is a tribute to his favorite flavor, lemon pepper. Producer CmaJor is so inspired by the flavor onslaught he is composing a beat right there at the table! Better wipe that drum machine down when you’re done, because these wings are “Lemon Pepper Wet.”
Cooking up these tasty visuals is prolific genius 35Miles. Take a look, but be warned: You will get hungry.
If you’d like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.