Showing posts sorted by relevance for query midsommar. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query midsommar. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, July 02, 2020

If It Bleeds It Leads

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It's funny -- as I write up this post, the one you are reading right now, I have in another tab on my desktop a new piece at Vox from trans writer Emily VanDerWerff about reading Ari Aster's film Midsommar as a stealth trans-narrative. And that reading aside it does strike me that Midsommar and Andrzej Zulawski's 1981 masterpiece Possession, which I wrote up for this week's edition of my "Great Moments in Horror Actressing" series, do have some weird overlaps! They're both about the central heterosexual relationship failing spectacularly, as the woman decides to choose chaos over the almond-paste cuck-boy she's partnered with when the movie starts...

You might read this as a failing of my person but I've seen Possession three, maybe four times now, and I never once got that Sam Neill's character is supposed to be playing a spy? It's a piece that makes sense in the narrative, which has its characters sneaking around along the Berlin Wall and play-acting out Film Noir plots that grow more and more ludicrous as the film's grasp on any sense of sanity slips. (By the time a row of cars are spontaneously exploding and Margit Carstensen's poor dead body is ejecting itself from a trunk you'd be forgiven for thinking of the absurd climax of American Psycho, where Patrick Bateman's fantasies have got over the top too.

My point is that I never got that Sam Neill's character is a spy because he's pudding -- person pudding, tapioca pathetic, impossible to love, and you one hundred percent get why Isabelle Adjani is so frantically scratching to get away into the arms, excuse me the tentacles, of another... uhh, man? Just like with Midsommar you one hundred percent get why Dani chooses to light Christian up in that bear suit. And both films were directed by heterosexual men (although truth be told the jury's still out on Ari Aster, if you ask me) detailing the recent dissolves of their relationships. Both films clearly, I think, take the woman's side in the break-ups, and showcase their leading men as poisonous. 

Anyway I wouldn't have immediately thought of Possession and Midsommar as a good bed-fellows but now that the double-feature has presented itself by random way of my brower-tabs I don't think I'll ever think of anything else. They work! Alright so go read my new piece on Isabelle Adjani and Zulawski's film over at The Film Experience... and in summation, Sam Neill has a rooster named Michael Fassbender.

Friday, June 28, 2019

Vacation, Meant To Be Spent Alone

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Charles Manson is often credited with being the violent punctuation mark at the end of the hippie movement -- he revealed the sour intestinal underbelly of free love and poisoned the sippy cups that the Jonestown folks would drink from nine years later, with that near-decade in between being nothing but the death knells of idealism, one fly dropping after the next. The bright pop futurism of 60s design turned into matted rugs the color of snot, crocheted plant holders like clumps of rotted flesh dangling from the rafters, Cronenbergian slabs of pus-hued formica closing in on all sides. 

Somewhere in the middle of that John Waters squeezed suburbia like a fetid zit, happily popping hot goo in our faces, and Alejandro Jodorowsky blew up elaborately outfitted lizards lining religious shrines of his own making -- walls so candy-colored and tall they seemed without end or sanity or reason. You could feel the hallucinogens pulsing through your veins just by looking directly at it -- you were damp with sweat and viscous, seeing gods tumbling out of every crumbling orifice.

Every age has its own sways, its own ups and downs, and the art that comes to represent each new temporal form of madness, but I know I'm not the only one feeling a mid-70s vibe these days -- just turn on the news and hold your breath until you hear the name Richard Nixon, I promise you won't have to pass out for it. Manson's getting his own explicit revision soon from Quentin Tarantino, but Ari Aster's horrific day dream of Midsommar out this week is for my buck the blast of Jodorowskian psychosis this moment in present tense truly calls for. We're all mad these times, and here's just the movie for us.

Last year Aster staked his claim as the high priest of grief with Hereditary, tossing Toni Collette into the pits of hell and poking her with a stick for good measure -- this time around it's Florence Pugh, her bright round pink face beatific from her own bed of flames and flowers. When we first meet Dani (Pugh) she's in a panic that Things Aren't Right, a feeling I think we're all familiar with upon waking every day -- sure enough they ain't, and once again Aster knows well enough that leaning into our horrible suspicions about everything, absolutely everything, is the stuff of horror movie magic. Now I look upon the sun and the sun itself is corrupted.

There's been an earthy folksiness to a lot of pop culture for some time now -- childish drawings dot our advertisements and movie titles, ukulele Zooeys grin their sly grins in sitcom embellishment, hand-stitched dresses and Warby Parker onesies. The Brooklyn ethos of White People Shit, tied in pink ribbons and seriously overpriced. Midsommar is Ari Aster gutting Etsy like a fish, its cutesy cotton innards splatting on the sage dusted floor. Curlicued doodles of creatures and their lopsided genitals engulfed, undone; the obscenity of A-frames. 

Midsommar feels like what would happen if you or I -- you know, relatively normal people, all things considered -- suddenly and accidentally by no fault of our own wandered into a Jodorowsky picture at its drug-bent nastiest. Dani finds herself on a bad trip, a bad trip indeed, as she heads off to the middle of nowhere, specifically Somewhere Scandinavia, with her asshole boyfriend Christian (Jack Reynor) and his asshole friends in tow to where the sun never sets and the plant-life pulses, inhales, wheezes, coughs up a lung or two. And there in the center of this anti-Eden stands one of those A-frames, its unholy black heart, yellow as a Caution Sign, a school-bus skidding right off a cliff. 

Hereditary was rich with this form too -- Aster loves an attic, a spiked trinity shape of symbolic strength and fortitude, closed to outsiders and self-fulfilling, self-sustaining, feeding itself forever; a three-tiered commune without start or finish. The word "family" written in severed fingers pointing in every direction. That film ends with one defiled attic space, clotted with flies and naked sagging flesh, replaced by another -- the outside playhouse where little Charlie took refuge from the world; a peak-roofed miniature poised upon stilts. A ghost face hovering over the lack of a house. It was nothing but attic, the heat-blackened brain of a home, severed and floating just underneath the blank blot of outer space -- the middle-placed absence, thick with fate, where we all end up.

With Midsommar Aster again drags us kicking and screaming towards that everything and nothing of intrepid triangular architecture -- human beings perverting the lines of the divine, father and son and the pretend holy spirit, in wood mud and always bone, singed and soft singing turned to sacrificial screams. The bright sun, our best reminder of utter godlessness and contempt, sits at its upper most point, never blinking, burning down our eyeballs to ashen pits of their own. Wailing I woke up with a fright the morning after seeing this movie, and might well greet each day after with a knowing smile of reinvigorated madness -- freshly pleased with my punch-drunkenness, perchance to dream again of an insane Ever After tucked softly, warmly, away from it all.


Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Smile Sunshine Smile

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The best movie of 2019 so far is Ari Aster's Midsommar, and it looks like Ari Aster's Midsommar is getting re-released in some movie theaters this weekend, but not the version you know -- this is the version that me and a few hundred other lucky buttholes who got to see the "Director's Cut" screened in NYC two weekends ago. 
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Still dunno if A24 plans on ever releasing this 25 minute longer cut of the film -- it will definitely NOT be on the blu-ray that they're dropping in October. So perhaps a Special Edition is in our future, or perhaps you need to get your ass to the theater this weekend to see this cut now. If you loved the movie the original way...

... I really recommend catching the longer version. I know I never wrote up my thoughts on it properly (you can and should click here for MNPP pal Kristy Puchko's take on the differences though) but it's all a net gain, says me -- the cut scenes fill out moments the original left a mite too vague, and really properly allow us to live and breathe and soak and trip our balls off in the world Aster's artfully created for us. ETA you can see where the film's playing and buy your tickets right at this link!
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Tuesday, June 30, 2020

More Midsommar Than Any Man Can Stomach

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Urgh my wallet is taking a wallop today, what with the new Sufjan album getting announced this morning and now this this THISSSS -- A24 has just announced they're releasing a super fancy schmancy blu-ray edition of Ari Aster's director's cut of his most recent horror film Midsommar, which played some theaters late last year; I talked about it a little here. I don't hate the longer version! I know the film felt long to some people already but I was not one of them, and I found the extra footage fascinating. And when I say this edition is "fancy schmancy" I mean "fancy schmancy" -- here's how they describe it:

"The first Collector's Edition from A24, Ari Aster's 171-minute director's cut will look as crisp on your bookshelf as it does in 4K Ultra HD. Blu-ray disc comes enclosed in a clothbound, Hรฅrga-yellow slipcase, accompanied by an illustrated 62-page booklet featuring original artworks from the film by Ragnar Persson and a foreword by Martin Scorsese."

See? Fancy schmancy. This sucker will run you fifty bucks, including shipping, but perhaps it will fill the hole in your heart where that Midsommar "Bear in a Cage" once would have fit. Sigh. Every time I think of the 50 people who scored one of those I get furious all over again. Fuck you people! I'm gonna go look at Jack Reynor's penis and make myself feel better. (Click here for my review of the film, if you never read that.)


Tuesday, July 02, 2019

Far From Midsommar

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I probably should have seen this coming and prepared for it but I've just found out I've got an extra bonus day of vacation this week, i.e. tomorrow, and so it seems MNPP will be probably mostly totally closed from right now this minute through Monday? Oh I suppose I might be inspired to write something by Spider-Man: Far From Home after seeing it tomorrow and peek back in for that, but my track record writing up Marvel movies isn't great so we'll have to see whether Jake's presence breaks that bad streak or not.

Anyway right here and right now this minute I'm off to see Ari Aster's masterful Midsommar a third time -- read my review here when you've seen it yourselves -- and I can and do recommend that. Indeed I could see more of a chance of me popping back in here to write even more about that movie this week than I could see that happening for anything else...
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Friday, December 11, 2020

Good Morning, World


Aww look at Vilhelm Blomgren, you guys! That snap's off his Insta and is supposedly from his latest project Gรถsta, a Swedish comedy that streams on HBO Max -- anybody seen it? I know nothing about it save what Vilhelm's Insta said (which was, you know, the title) but if you tell me to watch it I will watch it. I'm easy! 

And if you're all "Vil-who? Blom-what?" Vilhelm Blomgren played the terrifyingly sweet and terrifyingly brainwashed Pelle in Ari Aster's masterpiece Midsommar last year -- I don't believe I mentioned it here on blog but I just re-watched Midsommar on Thanksgiving night (yes it's a spring movie but it's also a feast movie so it fit) and that movie, y'all, that movie continues to fuck.

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Will Poulter Five Times


Unless I accidentally skipped over a passage I feel as if the interview with Will Poulter in The Cut that goes along with these photos is weirdly brief? Like they talk a little about burning duck breasts and his diet and then it's over? Whatever we're here for the photos per usual, but he does seem like a good chap, newfound beefcake aside. And why do I keep forgetting he's in Midsommar? And so good and funny in it too! I keep feeling like I've seen him in very little while totally forgetting Midsommar, argh. Anyway I'm seeing the new Guardians tomorrow night so perhaps I'll report back with something. Until then make due with the photos after the jump...

Tuesday, October 08, 2019

Tonight, Romance Comes Home!

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Heads and Flower Crowns up y'all, my second favorite movie of 2019 so far -- well I think anyway; I haven't actually tabulated my rankings yet so this is off the top of my head -- Ari Aster's Midsommar is hitting blu-ray today! Read my review of this incredible nightmare in daylight right here. I know a lot of you have already seen it -- I think after a slow-roll A24 eventually got this into a lot of theaters across the country? Well there's never a better time to watch Midsommar twice, thrice, and so forth. I saw it in the theaters four times myself -- three times the normal cut and once the Director's Cut, which frustratingly is not on this disc. There's honestly nothing wrong with the Original Cut but all of the scenes that got added in the longer version have become part of my idea of the film now, so I'm going to need that one on disc dammit. But for now this will have to do...


Tuesday, March 05, 2019

Bright Young Things

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I don't really know how A24 can get away with calling this trailer a "teaser" when in its 100 seconds of footage it's way more information than I needed to sell me on Ari Aster's latest called Midsommar -- we shared the poster and a real teaser last week -- but then I'm perhaps not the best judge...

... since I was on board with this a full year back after seeing Hereditary the first time. I am on board with Ari Aster for the rest of my life, more or less. So perhaps y'all will be better judges. But there's a lot to see in here, at least in flashes, so only watch it if you really feel the itch...
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Midsommar is out on August 9th.
Breathe it in deep, y'all...


Monday, July 08, 2019

Jack Reynor Four Times

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I hope y'all went and saw Midsommar this weekend -- although judging by the box office some of you probably did not! If you were one of the smart people though please share your insights with me in the comments. Actually share your insights over on the comments of my review of the film, once you've also read my review. Or "review" I suppose since I'm up to my usual rambling bullshit, or whatever. Anyway these pictures of Every Gay Man's New Crush Jack Reynor are from the new issue of Esquire, where they also interview him -- there are a couple of spoilers discussed but the most interesting piece came from director Ari Aster, I thought, because they asked him about the topic of race in relation to the movie and if you ask me the movie is a lot about race, and I was interested in what he'd say. Here's that exchange:

"There's also the question of the predominate whiteness of Midsommar. As my allotted time with Aster nears its end, I make sure to ask about the whiteness of the film, of which there are only three people of color. Aster chooses to be late to his next appointment to chat about what's a pretty blaring asterisk hanging over the film.

"You will notice that the white members of the visiting community are used for more than just their bodies to be sacrificed, whereas the others are thrown aside… It’s in the margins of the film and it’s kind of consistently in the periphery, so I don’t want to talk too explicitly about it because the film is not a polemic, although there are politics strewn in. But, yes, there are illusions to Swedish history, especially the last century,” Aster says. There is a Nazi book on prominent display in an early scene. The banner that you see in the trailer as the group travels to the village says, “Stoppa Massinvandringer till Hรคlsingland,” Stop Mass Immigration to Hรคlsingland. “That’s definitely there,” Aster says. “I’m glad people are catching it. It’s an important part.”"
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Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Jack Reynor’s Cinemania

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While I distract myself from the fact that I'm not getting into any early press screenings of Ari Aster's new horror film Midsommar and it's making me fucking nuts let's take a look at something happy regarding that movie I want inside of me so very hard -- the movie's star Jack Reynor, who you should recognize from Free Fire or the Fassy Macbeth or On the Basis of Sex or one of those Transformers movies I think, point being you should recognize him, has been uncovered as an online cinema buff! He's got an Instagram account, totally separate from his normal Insta, where he reviews movies and judging by a glance through he's got stellar taste, talking lots of giallo and Ken Russell and such; basically he's nerding out over every movie I too love, and I am very much here for it. And so is Armie Hammer, it seems....
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They co-starred in Free Fire On the Basis of Sex, of course...

... so some familiarity is warranted. But according to one of the Midsommar quick takes I saw on Twitter last night it sounds like Armie (and all the rest of us) is getting his wish...
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Monday, February 10, 2020

Monsters Wanna Costume Too

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As I mentioned earlier there wasn't a lot that stuck in my craw during last night's Oscars, since they got a lot right -- or you know, right with the limited options they had presented themselves with, nomination-wise, anyway. But there was one big thing I found myself annoyed about, and that was the way they used costumes from both Midsommar and Us as dancing props for the opening musical number even though neither of those movies got nominated. If you follow me on Twitter you saw this happen in real time:
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Wow -- riveting Twitter feed, Jason. Anyway I turned that tweet into action and today over at The Film Experience I wrote a little bit about the Oscars' truly lackluster history with the genre's endlessly iconic costuming. When I really started thinking about all of the egregious oversights over the years it really piled up! Even just this past year there are two hands worth of examples!

I know it's just one of many, many examples of the Academy hardly ever allowing themselves outside of the box, but it seems like all we ever talk about with regards to that are the bigger categories when, if you dive into the smaller crafts that make up our shared movie history, you see it's just as infuriating. As much as I loved Greta Gerwig's Little Women -- and I deeply deeply did -- who's going to remember anything Florence Pugh wore in that movie more than they'll remember her day-mare floral May Queen extravaganza?


Monday, April 03, 2023

Pics of the Day



On Saturday I went to a screening of the director's cut of Midsommar at the Alamo Drafthouse in Brooklyn -- only turns out that Saturday also happened to be April 1st aka April Fool's Day and they pulled a switcheroo on us! Twasn't Midsommar at all, but actually Ari Aster's new movie Beau is Afraid that they screened! I am usually violently anti-prank (to this degree captured here by the always effervescent Chris Farley) but this one was okay with me. And anyway it was not a huge surprise -- one had a feeling this might happen beforehand, especially once I got to the theater and the Alamo's hallways were lined with Beau is Afraid posters haha. 

Anyway! As seen above I shared some photos and videos from the Q&A, which saw no less than the actress and delight Emma Stone asking Ari Aster wtf is wrong with him, so check those out. The Q&A has been summed up on various sites, like here. I will be reviewing the movie but not yet, so stay tuned for my thorough opinion closer to the film's release date on April 21st. (And I am totally going to need a second screening myself before that -- let's just say the movie is a lot and leave it at that understatement of the century.) Here's the trailer in case you missed it:

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Heathen Paradise

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Well there's the poster! A24 has been teasing us all week with hints and bits of Ari Aster's next film, his follow-up to Hereditary (aka my third favorite movie of 2018) called Midsommar which we told you about last July -- well we told you that it was going to star Florence Pugh and Will Poulter and Jack Reynor and that it was going to be his spin on a pagan cult a la The Wicker Man. It looks very Wicker Man already! I like the brightness, the fecundity of it -- Hereditary was so dark this Easter-y palette was probably a relief for Ari. Midsommar is out on August 9th. I wouldn't be surprised if we got a trailer shortly, too.
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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Who Wore It Best?


I've spent the past two days, ever since Jai Courtney posted a photo of himself celebrating Midsommar over the weekend, weighing whether to do a "Who wore it best?" post that pitted his flower crown against Florence Pugh's flower-crown in Ari Aster's film named after said same holiday. What kept me from doing the poll was I figured it would be a blow-out for original May Queen Florence...

... although perhaps I was underestimating y'all's Jai-thirstiness in my considerations. But today that query's moot, as we've been afforded a new option! Because it turns out that Jai's Suicide Squad co-star Jay Hernandez was also at his little party! So we can decide between them instead!

survey tool



Wednesday, July 10, 2019

10 Off My Head: The First Half of 2019

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This is coming a little later than most, my apologies, but making these lists give me panic attacks and you don't want that do you? To murder me right before my birthday? I thought so. It's not really the sorting out what I liked and what I didn't -- I know that, as that's what I'm bleating all day every day here from my itty bitty perch on the internet. I never stop with that nonsense. No what always stresses me out about this specific list is that, thanks to all the film festivals and press screenings, I can no longer suss out a good way to arrange the films I have seen already with the ones that haven't been properly released yet. I don't even know if or when several of the movies I've seen and loved this year will come out. And sorting that out makes me anxious. But I'm here, and I'm trying, and that's enough goddamnit. So now I give you, in alphabetical order and only consisting of the movies that I think have at this point gotten a proper release...

My 10 Favorite Movies of 2019, So Far

Gloria Bell (dir. Sebastian Lelio)
(read my review here)

Her Smell (dir. Alex Ross Perry)
(read my review here)

High Life (dir. Claire Denis)
(read my review here)

Knife+Heart (dir. Yann Gonzalez)
(read my review here)

The Last Black Man in San Francisco 
(dir. Joe Talbot) (read my review here)

Midsommar (dir. Ari Aster)
(read my review here)

The Mustang (dir. Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre)
(read my review here)

Sorry Angel (dir. Christophe Honorรฉ)
(read my review here)

To Dust (dir. Shawn Snyder)
(read my review here)

Us Us (dir. Jordan Peele)
(read my review here)

Runners-up: Woman at War, High Flying Bird, Piercing, 
Transit, Diane, Non-Fiction, Sauvage/Wild, Rocketman

What have been your fave movies of 2019 so far?
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Wednesday, July 08, 2020

Now Neon Apocalypse

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You know how Horror Cinema seems to come and go in waves? Waves that end up saying tons about the anxieties of their age? There are the Atomic Age giant monster movies of the 1950s, or the Slashers of the 80s, the J-Horror and Torture Porn of the 2000s. Well I think we need to come up with a new name for the ongoing wave of horror movies we're smack dab in the center of that are attempting to capture the apocalyptic madness of our current moment in time. A little while ago I reviewed The Beach House, which is out this weekend, and briefly compared it to Color Out of Space from earlier this year, and those are two terrific examples of what I'm talking about. And you could toss the creature-feature Underwater with Kristen Stewart onto that pile for a full Lovecraftian trilogy.

Then you should see also Cam, and Daniel Isn't Real, and The Lodge, and Platform, and Gretel & Hansel, and from last year The Girl on the Second Floor and even Midsommar and The Lighthouse -- hell go back even further to something like It Follows, The Neon Demon, The Invitation.

My point is there seems to be a concerted effort at meeting the unholy inexplicability  of our modern moment via a Phantasmagoria of reality-crumbling means in Horror Cinema. Surrealism, neon-saturated hallucinations, the concept of Doubles and oodles of Cronenbergian body-horror... ooh just wait until Brandon Cronenberg's film Possessor (which should hopefully come out later this year) -- that's yet another big one. 

My point is there is most definitely a Major Theme to the Horror Cinema of this period that we'll need to step back and digest in full when we're not, you know, on fire in the middle of this real-life nightmare, and the just-released poster and trailer for what appears to be another one of this ilk, called She Dies Tomorrow, is what got me realizing it today. Written and directed by the modern scream queen Amy Seimetz (actress in flicks like The Sacrament, You're Next, Alien Covenant, the Pet Sematary remake, and many more) She Dies Tomorrow is described thusly:

"After waking up convinced that she is going to die tomorrow, Amy’s carefully mended life begins to unravel. As her delusions of certain death become contagious to those around her, Amy and her friends’ lives spiral out of control in a tantalizing descent into madness."

Kate Lyn Sheil (who acted opposite Seimetz in several of those movies I listed above) plays the lead character of Amy, and she's surrounded by an amazing cast including Jane Adams (!!!) and Chris Messina (!!!) -- also supposedly Seimetz used her paycheck from the Pet Sematary remake to fund this movie of hers, which means something good came out of that truly forgettable thing. The film's playing drive-in theaters on July 31st and then it'l hit VOD on August 7th, and here's that first trailer!