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Film Features Film/TV

Will & Harper

Harper Steele and Will Ferrell started working on Saturday Night Live on the same day in 1995. They soon learned that their senses of humor were very compatible. Steele wrote many of the sketches that made Ferrell SNL’s standout star of the ’90s. Years in the SNL pressure cooker at 30 Rock built their camaraderie, and their friendship continued after 2002, when Ferrell left the show to pursue his movie career and Steele became the show’s head writer. They went on to collaborate on several films, including 2020’s Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga

During this time, Steele had a secret. She was constantly battling gender dysphoria. After going through a messy divorce in the mid-2010s, Steele started journaling about the persistent feelings. Then the pandemic hit and like many people during that time of turmoil, Steele came to the realization that when it was all over, something would have to change. In 2022, Steele started writing emails to her family and friends announcing that she would be transitioning. The new name she chose for herself was Harper, after novelist Harper Lee. 

The revelation was less than shocking for many people who had known Steele for a long time. Soon after Ferrell received his email, while he was on the set of a movie, an idea was born. Steele was notorious among friends for going on long, meandering road trips, stopping at greasy spoons, roadside attractions, and small-town dive bars. Steele was fearless, but now as a trans woman, America looked quite different. The small towns Steele loved to visit aren’t exactly known as beacons of tolerance for transgender people. So the two friends decided to embark on an epic, 16-day, 3,000-mile cross-country road-trip from New York City to Los Angeles to introduce the newly transitioned Harper Steele to the country, with Will Ferrell along as moral support. 

Production-wise, Will & Harper is a bare-bones affair. It’s just the two stars in a vintage Jeep Grand Wagoneer, followed by a production van captained by director Josh Greenbaum. Originally, the idea was to do comedy sketches at various points along the way, but that plan was pretty much instantly abandoned. Instead, the two friends just have deep conversations in the car and visit the kinds of places they had gone to many times before while going amok in America. Along the way, they cover topics that are familiar to anyone who has ever had a friend come out as trans. Ferrell asks questions about what it’s like to suddenly have boobs (it’s awesome, according to Steele) and whether she’s going to date men or women (at age 61, Steele is ambivalent about it). 

Greenbaum’s direction is clean, focused, and often subtle, picking up on little moments like the time when the two friends are chilling with some cheap beer in a West Virginia Walmart parking lot, and a passerby yells, “Will! You’re still the man!” 

“And she’s the woman!” Ferrell yells back. 

Surprisingly, the pair encounter very little overt transphobia in real life, even when Steele goes alone into an Oklahoma dive bar with “Fuck Biden” signs on the wall. They go to an Indiana Pacers game, where they sit courtside and meet Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb. He is friendly, as a politician normally is, but later they learn that he has signed a bill banning gender-affirming treatment for minors. In Peoria, Illinois, they meet a trans woman named Dana, who has lived openly in the small town for years and recounts a mixture of acceptance and fear among her neighbors. In Steele’s Iowa hometown, they visit her sister, who was immediately accepting, and Steele rides a unicycle while wearing heels. But their luck runs out in Amarillo, Texas, where they stop at the Big Texan steakhouse. As they eat their meal, the patrons crowd around and take pictures with their phones. Later, Steele reads off a litany of hateful online comments the pics generated. 

And that, to me, is one of the lessons of Will & Harper. Social media makes it easy to hate. It transforms flesh and blood people into images and archetypes. It makes dehumanization into a sport and reduces identity to demographic categories to be pitted against each other. This increases platform engagement at the cost of our sanity. Of course, transphobia has always existed in real life, but it’s harder to hate someone in person. That’s why this election season, with its constant background of transphobia designed to activate Republican voters, has been so awful and dispiriting. Will & Harper is a great documentary that proves the way to defeat hate is through courage, love, and a liberal dose of laughs. 

Will & Harper is now streaming on Netflix.

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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Ira Sachs’ Passages, Wesley Snipes Strips, and a Double Shot of Tiffany Haddish

It’s a crowded weekend for new releases, so let’s get right to it. Blue Beetle is almost as old as Batman — so old, he once starred in a radio serial — but he never took off like the Bats. His current incarnation is Jamie Reyes, a Mexican-American undergrad who finds an alien robot scarab, and, well, just watch.

Memphis expat auteur Ira Sachs’ latest is his most controversial work to date. Passages is a film about a love triangle between a charismatic rogue film director (Franz Rogowski), his longsuffering printmaker husband (Ben Whishaw) and a meek school teacher (Adèle Exarchopoulos) that earned an NC-17 rating from the MPA for reasons that Ira Sachs explains in this interview I did with his for this week’s Memphis Flyer. This is one of the year’s best films so far, so don’t sleep on it.

Sure, dogs are great. But wouldn’t they be greater if they could talk? Sure they would. But let me up the ante for you: What if dogs could talk, and they talked dirty?

Uh huh. Now I got your attention. Will Ferrell, Will Forte, Jamie Foxx (that’s Academy Award-winning actor Jamie Foxx to you), and Randall Park are dirty, dirty dogs that talk in Strays. Since this is the Flyer, we’re running the red band trailer, so put on your headphones unless you want your boss to overhear and fire you.

Wesley Snipes is a national treasure who doesn’t get enough work because most Hollywood producers are weak and fearful. That’s why he’s producing his own joint with fellow under-appreciated talent Tiffany Haddish. Back on the Strip brings together a crackerjack cast, including JB Smoove and Bill Bellamy, to tell the story of Merlin (Spence Moore II), a wannabe magician who discovers his real talent is as a male stripper. Snipes co-stars as “Mr. Big.”

In a shocking twist, Tiffany Haddish’s film is opening against a film co-starring Tiffany Haddish. This one is Landscape With Invisible Hand, based on the science fiction novel by M.T. Anderson. When aliens come to earth, things go on pretty much as normal. A new social media niche opens up because the aliens don’t understand human emotion. They will pay people who are in love to livestream their lives, which are apparently very entertaining to the loveless blobs. But what happens when two livestreamers fall out of love? Litigation, apparently.

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Film Features Film/TV

Barbie

When it was announced that a Barbie movie was in the works, it’s safe to say that one of the questions that crossed everyone’s mind was “Why?”

Barbie’s dream universe has covered everything from nutcrackers to mermaid lore, and it seemed like Barbara Millicent Roberts was past her prime. The Y2K aesthetic only made room for Bratz dolls, and the meme-ification of American Girl dolls transformed them from status symbols to internet mainstays. Meanwhile, the opinion of feminist scholars who had long criticized Barbie for the outrageous beauty standards she perpetuated had gone mainstream. Girls still love their dolls, but Barbie’s star has burned out.

My interest was piqued when I heard Greta Gerwig would be tasked with telling Barbie’s story. The plot has been kept tightly under wraps, with rumors ranging from a Wizard of Oz-esque storyline to something like The Truman Show. Those rumors were not entirely wrong, but Barbie exists as its own film.

From the beginning, it’s evident that the film is a meta-narrative, which adds to the satirical charm. Helen Mirren narrates Barbie’s zeitgeist origin story in a 2001 Space Odyssey-themed sequence, in which she explains that the Barbie doll was created for girls to aspire to something other than motherhood. Barbie is aware of her existence in the world, and aware of the impact that she has had on society as a trailblazing role model for career-minded women. As Mirren notes in her narration, Barbie has solved all the problems of feminism and equality – or at least, that’s the lore in Barbieland.

Margot Robbie stars as the Stereotypical Barbie. She lives in Barbieland with an endless array of Barbie variants, such as Doctor Barbie (Hari Nef), Writer Barbie (Alexandra Shipp) and President Barbie (Issa Rae), who preside over this matriarchal democracy.

Many Barbies live in Barbieland. But only Margot Robbie’s Stereotypical Barbie has flat feet.

Then we meet the Kens, who are just as varied as the Barbies, only less cool. Ryan Gosling’s iteration of Barbie’s companion lists “beach” as his profession. But it’s not easy being a Ken. Mirren explains that while Barbie has a great day every day, Ken has a great day only if Barbie looks at him.

Barbie’s perpetual string of great days takes a turn for the worse when she brings one of her nightly blowout parties/soundstage musical numbers to a record-scratch halt when she blurts out, “Do you ever think about dying?” The next morning, she wakes up with bad breath, falls out of her dream house, and discovers that her feet have gone flat. Realizing that something is wrong, she pays a visit to Weird Barbie (Kate McKinnon), who explains that the only way for Barbie to restore her perfect tiptoe and avoid cellulite is to trade in her heels for Birkenstocks and take a trip to the real world. Since Ken only exists as an ornamental addition to Barbie’s iconography, he joins her on the journey to reality, where they make discoveries that pose an existential threat to Barbieland’s women-run utopia.

Good morning, Barbieland!

The idea of a doll visiting the real world and learning to adjust to a life that’s not so fantastic was always in the cards for Barbie – the 2000 movie Life Size starring Tyra Banks walked so Robbie could run with Barbie. As she is catcalled by construction workers in Venice Beach, Barbie realizes misogyny did not end with Supreme Court Barbie. She suffers an existential crisis when she realizes that her very brand is determined by an all-male team led by Mr. Mattel (Will Ferrell.)  

Gerwig uses Barbie to explore the nuances of feminism, but the film never feels too heavy or takes itself too seriously. It helps that Mattel isn’t afraid to laugh at itself, like the recurring joke where Midge (Emerald Fennell), a pregnant version of Barbie that was deeply unpopular with kids, is banished to Skipper’s Treehouse. Gerwig’s attention to detail and dedication to the source material not only satiates a longing for nostalgia, but also showcases her intentionality. Since no child ever made a doll take the stairs in her Dream House, these Barbies float through the air from bedroom to dream car. Gerwig makes that floaty feeling last.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Freaky, Wolfwalkers, and Classic Holiday Comedy on Tap at Malco Theatres

Katheryn Newton in Freaky

If you’re tired of doomscrolling (or its newly-minted opposite, hopescrolling), and want to look at something different for a little while, there are plenty of options at the drive-in and other movie theaters this weekend. (You can review Malco Theatres’ COVID-19 safety protocols here.)

With major studio tentpoles on hold, the biggest release is Freaky. Remember Freaky Friday, the 1976 film where teenage Jodi Foster switched bodies with her mother, played by Nashville‘s Barbara Harris? Okay, how about the 2003 remake with Lindsey Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis?

Well, I have a confession. The plot, which was meant as light comedy, freaked me out really badly when I saw it as a kid. Maybe I just saw it at an impressionable age, but having your consciousness trapped inside someone else’s body is pure horror for me. Finally, someone else sees it my way — and that person is Christopher Landon, director of the Paranormal Activity sequels and Happy Death Day.

Produced by horror powerhouse Blumhouse, Freaky takes the premise to its logically awful conclusion. What if instead of your mom, you switched bodies with a serial killer? Even more horrible, what if that serial killer was Vince Vaughn? It’s chilling stuff, and its been getting great reviews. I’ll let you know how it is as soon as I can, so here’s the trailer.

Freaky, Wolfwalkers, and Classic Holiday Comedy on Tap at Malco Theatres (2)

If you’re not up for something quite so scary (and really, at this point, who can blame you?), there’s a new animated feature that looks spectacular. Wolfwalkers was created by Irish animator Tomm Moore, who has a 100-percent Oscar nomination rate for his films, but no wins yet. My eyebrows perked up with I saw Moore’s name attached to this one, as his 2014 Song of the Sea is a criminally underrated animated film. From the trailer, this story of friendly Celtic lycanthropes looks like another winner.

Freaky, Wolfwalkers, and Classic Holiday Comedy on Tap at Malco Theatres (4)

Now that we’re in November, with the sure-to-be-strange holidays bearing down on us, you might be developing an appetite for holiday movies. Among the other classic titles on offer at Malco (like the Nolan Batman movies, for example) is a pair of favorites. 1989’s National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, the third Chevy Chase vehicle of the decade, added a term to the collective lexicon. If you hear someone saying “He went full Clark Griswold on his Christmas decorations,” you know what that means — excessive lights, and possible catastrophic electrical malfunction.

Freaky, Wolfwalkers, and Classic Holiday Comedy on Tap at Malco Theatres

At the drive-in, Christmas Vacation is paired with the film that is probably Will Ferrell’s finest hour. Elf is a classic fish-out-of-water holiday comedy in the tradition of Miracle on 34th Street, only much stupider. And I mean that in a good way.

Freaky, Wolfwalkers, and Classic Holiday Comedy on Tap at Malco Theatres (3)

You can buy tickets to all these films at Malco.com