Some Art with Your Indie Rock?
This weekend is The L Magazine's massive art and music extravaganza the Northside Festival, and to accompany the copious music coverage I've written an art preview discussing some of the biggest art events taking place at galleries in Williamsburg over the weekend. Click here to read the whole preview.
Pelham 123: The Slow Train to Nowhere
In this week's edition of Henry Stewart and I's feature Blockbluster we look at Tony Scott's remake of beloved 70s heist movie The Taking of Pelham 123, a very dull reboot with very little action and even then it's of the most arbitrary and forced sort. The original offered a look at a city in the midst of an economic crisis, and though Scott attempts something similar it's painfully clear that we're being addressed by an Angeleno. Denzel Washington and John Travolta are fairly innefectual in the lead roles, though James Gandolfini clocks the best performance as a nameless mayor very obviously ment to connote Mike Bloomberg. Click here to read the whole discussion.
(photo credit: © 2009 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
"The Ecstatic" by Mos Def
(Downtown Records)
This week Mos Def released his fourth solo album The Ecstatic. In my review I discussed how this marked a promising return to something closer to the promise that he showed on his solo debut Black on Both Sides (1999), while also leaving something to be desired for his next projects. On The Ecstatic Mos balances the rock interests that dominated his second album The New Danger with his true-school hip hop style. There were times when his habit of singing his way out of a song sapped the album's energy, and hopefully he'll soon abandon such third rate Andre 3000 imitations. Still, The Ecstatic is easily Mos' second-best album, and proves that he's still capable of terrific hip hop (something that his last album, the atrocious True Magic, had left me doubting). Click here to read the whole review.
This week Mos Def released his fourth solo album The Ecstatic. In my review I discussed how this marked a promising return to something closer to the promise that he showed on his solo debut Black on Both Sides (1999), while also leaving something to be desired for his next projects. On The Ecstatic Mos balances the rock interests that dominated his second album The New Danger with his true-school hip hop style. There were times when his habit of singing his way out of a song sapped the album's energy, and hopefully he'll soon abandon such third rate Andre 3000 imitations. Still, The Ecstatic is easily Mos' second-best album, and proves that he's still capable of terrific hip hop (something that his last album, the atrocious True Magic, had left me doubting). Click here to read the whole review.
Betty Blue: The Director's Cut
I recently reviewed the outstanding 1986 film Betty Blue by Jean-Jacques Beineix (known best for his post-French New Wave bellewether Diva). More epic than that work, Betty Blue (which I reviewed in its 3-hour director's cut) is both a curious product of the 80s and a fairly timeless love epic with all manner of classical tragic theme and Quixotic digressions. Beautifully composed, packed full of striking colors and elegant compositions, Beineix never loses our attention and interest during frequent asides about French essentialism and unexpected slapstick. Click here to read the whole review.
The Hangover
In a recent edition of Henry Stewart and I's weekly feature Blockbluster we took a moralistic look at the latest Todd Phillips bromance The Hangover. Though it was extremely funny, its also followed a typically offensive, racist, classist, misogynist and juvenile bachelor-party-in-Vegas formula – with the mildly inventive difference that the action is glossed over via an ellipsis, and the actual comedy is in the piecing together of the events that transpired on that wild evening. Click here to read our whole discussion.
(photo credit: Frank Masi, Warner Bros.)
Séraphine
In his new film about the untrained post-impressionist painter Séraphine de Senlis (Yolande Moreau), director Martin Provost crafted a beautiful, fair and beautifully restrained portrait of the poor, troubled woman. Though she worked most of her life as a maid, Séraphine's work is now in the collections of some of the most important museum collections in the world. Séraphine balances the familiar biopic inclination towards excessive drama and embellished heroism with terrific restrained and a very honest portrayal of the painter's problematic actions. Throughout, Moreau invests the awkward but determined spinster with such organic warmth that even in her worst moments we can't help but feel for her. Click here to read my whole review.
Drag Me to Hell: The Ultimate Eviction
In a recent edition of our weekly film discussion Blockbluster, Henry Stewart and I looked at Sam Raimi's recent return to the horror genre, Drag Me To Hell. Though we both enjoyed the film, its fairly offensive gender and racial politics were problematic. Meanwhile, it was an interesting, entertaining and supremely genre-literate exercise in class identity and anxiety, and seemed appropriate for a culture that seems paralized by the prospect of downward socio-economic mobility. Click here to read our whole discussion.
Bushwick Is (Not) the New Soho
Last week the collective Arts in Bushwick threw a massive party, open studios and weekend-long festival, and I took the opportunity to interview two of the organizers about the event and the Bushwick arts scene. The Bushwick Open Studios & Arts Festival showcased the work of what is considered the latest of New York City's artist communities, and I was curious to understand how this new area would differ from similar places like Soho, the Lower East Side, Chelsea and Williamsburg. Click here to read the whole feature.
Vieux Carré
Last month I reviewed a production of Tennessee Williams' rarely-produced Vieux Carré at the Pearl Theatre. The production was adequate if a little uninspired, and did more to shed light on a terrific play that ought to be performed more frequently than it held succeeded in its own right. Still, the stage and lighting design were terrifically unusual, and a couple of actors kept the proceedings interesting. Mostly, the production seemed to be creating a tableau of Williams's work rather than turning the text into something new. Click here to read the whole review.
Painful Pop
In an art review last month I took a critical eye to three artists with shows in Chelsea who seemed to be using the language, lingo and mode of address of pop culture to mount more or less successful critique of visual and mainstream art. And though I enjoyed Jonathan Monk's critique of Jeff Koons' inflated animals at Casey Kaplan (pictured) and Gosha Ostretsov's comic book-inspired installation at Claire Oliver, I felt that Phil Collins' participatory photography exhibition and pitch-perfect Mexican soap opera at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery was the most successful. Click here to read the whole review.
Night at the Museum II: Stay Out of Washington
A few weeks back Henry Stewart and I reviewed Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian for our weekly feature Blockbluster at The L Magazine's website. It turned out to be much worse than either of us had expected because it not only lacked any decent action sequences, but also squandered its ridiculous cast of comedian superstars (Hank Azaria, Robin Williams, Luke Wilson, Steve Coogan, Christopher Guest, Ricky Gervais, etc.). The stubbornly unfunny movie at least featured some cool effects (a Jeff Koons balloon animal brought to life, for instance), and a terrific performance by Amy Adams as Amelia Earhart – though she was offensively recuperated by a kind of infantilist patriarchal substitution in the final scene. Read all of Henry and I's discussion here.
Lower East Psychedelic
In an article last month I discussed solo exhibitions by four artists at galleries on the Lower East Side whose work deploys psychedelic color palettes and alternately abstract or surreal forms to unveil completely mesmerizing visions for viewers. I enjoyed Marilyn Minter's surreal and brilliant photographs, paintings and videos of beauty and baking projects seen from so close that they become ugly (as seen in Green Pink Caviar above) at Salon 94 Freemans and David Shaw's strange rainbow sculptures extrapolated from branches and tree trunks at Feature Inc.
The delightfully colorful and creative cut-out sculptures, totems and masks of Michael Velliquette at DCKT Contemporary were a little less interesting, as they seemed caught up in their own cuteness. My favorite of the four, though, was Jen Stark's mesmirizing show of abstract sculptures and drawings at LMAKprojects. Click here to read the whole article.
The delightfully colorful and creative cut-out sculptures, totems and masks of Michael Velliquette at DCKT Contemporary were a little less interesting, as they seemed caught up in their own cuteness. My favorite of the four, though, was Jen Stark's mesmirizing show of abstract sculptures and drawings at LMAKprojects. Click here to read the whole article.
Goodbye 20th Century
Last month, four marquee rappers who were huge around the turn of the millennium dropped hugely anticipated albums on the same day. In my feature on the new albums from Eminem, Busta Rhymes and Method Man and Redman, I discuss how each is trying to adapt to a rap industry they don't really understand and haven't been competitive in for between five and ten years. While Eminem's Relapse comes off mostly as an empty parody of his former work, and Busta seems lost, over-the-hill cause on Back on My B.S. (making the album's title deeply ironic), Meth and Red manage to recreate the amazing chemistry that made their original Blackout! (1999) such a thrilling record. Blackout 2 comes off as the best of the lot, and though Eminem sold plenty well, it seems pretty clear that he, like Busta, are completely disconnected from their former audiences, unlike Meth and Red. Click here to read the whole feature.
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