What to Watch: An icon bids farewell, two popes collide and a musical behemoth hits the big screen
Stepping out on a movie date this weekend? Netflix and chillin? Whatever your entertainment needs, we got your back (and hopefully your mind) with Queerty’s weekly “Culture Club” column with some of the highlights of new releases, streaming shows, classics worth revisiting, and what to drink while you watch.
The Inevitable: Star Wars – The Rise of Skywalker
The Skywalker saga, which has spanned more than 40 years and three film trilogies finally comes to an end…allegedly. We’ve heard that line before. In any case, this finale of finales is the most uneven Star Wars outing since Attack of the Clones. It plays like a Jackson Pollack hodgepodge of plots, characters, special effects, and pathetic fan service. Some of it is pretty great: Daisy Ridley commands in her grand heroine role, a lightsaber fight in the ruins of the Death Star makes the heart pound, and the movie does feature the first on-screen same-sex kiss in the saga’s history. It’s also a pleasure to see Carrie Fisher’s Jedi master Leia one last time. On the other hand, Rise of Skywalker has too many characters, plots, dubious coincidences, reversals, and retcons for its own good. Characters like Maz, Rose, Lando, and even the Emperor are wasted, a death meant to serve as the film’s emotional climax got laughs at the screening we saw. The film also indulges so many fan theories that the story feels like it was workshopped on Reddit. All that said, it’s worth seeing once, if for no other reason but to wish for a new hope to revive a series that used to be fun, but now feels oh so tired.
In cinemas December 20.
The Alternative: Cats
If lightsabers and space battles don’t trip your trigger, go see the other CGI behemoth this weekend: Andrew Lloyd Weber’s Cats. Of course, Cats on stage has endured many of the same criticisms that Rise of Skywalker is now getting: too many characters, too much spectacle, not enough substance. Here’s hoping that Academy Award-winning director Tom Hooper and a cast that includes Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, Idris Elba, Jason Derulo, Taylor Swift and James Corden can bring some lucidity for the proceedings. If nothing else, we long to savor Jennifer Hudson’s thundering rendition of “Memory,” the song that helped Cats become the longest-running musical in Broadway history at one point. We’re not sure Cats really called out for the cinematic treatment, especially in motion-capture form. Then again, that also means we get to see individual songs pop up on YouTube at showtunes night at the bar. We may need a drink to get through it.
In cinemas December 20.
The Stream: The Two Popes
Anyone wanting to avoid the crazy holiday blockbusters at the multiplex this weekend—or just craving something a bit more adult—look no further than The Two Popes. As directed by Fernando Meirelles (The Constant Gardner), the film fictionalizes a meeting between the hyper-conservative Pope Benedict XVI (Anthony Hopkins) and Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, who would go on to become Pope Francis after Benedict’s resignation. It’s a thoughtful and empathetic look at a church too old to understand the modern age, and too vital to history to fold. What could have been a dull & dry affair is elevated by some beautiful scenery and the film’s leads. Pryce gives one of the year’s best performances as Pope Francis, and Hopkins captures the Sith like cool of Benedict.
Streams on Netflix December 20.
The Binge: The Morning Show
The finale of AppleTV’s The Morning Show arrives this week, and we’d like to think ourselves fashionably late to the party. The show combines the talents of Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon, Steve Carell and Billy Crudup for a behind the scenes look at the rivalries of a network morning news show. At its best, The Morning Show recalls Network and the more recent Bombshell in the way it portrays broadcast politics, egos, and rivalries of TV news. The show starts strong with gritty ruminations on the media, #MeToo, dating in the workplace, gender roles and celebrity ego before it gets a bit too soapy for its own good. That said, Crudup is fantastic as a manic TV exec, and Aniston has never been better than in her role as an out-of-touch host. The Morning Show also features out actor Desean Terry as an out-gay co-anchor, though the show could have used more of his sincere presence. The Morning Show doesn’t qualify as a classic for the ages, but it sure does entertain.
Streams on AppleTV. Finale drops December 20.
The Requisite: Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
Is Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer the gayest of all Christmas specials? We’re not sure…though we’re also not opposed to the idea. With Christmas just a week away, why not settle in for the perennial classic, complete with all it’s coded references to queer life. Rudolph and Hermie the elf both suffer persecution for being different. Yukon Cornelius looks like a guy we once met at a bear bar. We’re also pretty sure that we’ve seen the residents of the Island of Mistfit Toys out in the Castro. Beyond the queer subtext though, Rudolph offers unforgettable music, animation and heartwarming joy for the season. Grab an egg nog and enjoy.
Streams on Amazon & Vudu.
The Sip: Egg Nog
Speaking of egg nog, if ever there was a time to sip some…try the delicious if decadent holiday favorite whilst watching any of the aforementioned. With that in mind, one glass is probably enough. Don’t let what happened to grandma happen to you!
4 egg yolks
1/3 cup sugar
1 pint milk
1 cup heavy cream
3 ounces bourbon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
Add eggs to large bowl. Mix with an electric mixer. Add sugar and mix some more. Add milk, cream, bourbon and mix even more. Chill & serve.
Author J.K. Rowling Rushes to the Defense of Transphobe
After a judge ruled a think tank was in its rights to fire a tax expert tweeting TERF views, the children’s book writer defended the transphobe for “stating that sex is real.”
The year in theatre was marked by daring artists who took big risks and stuck the landing.* For every jukebox recycling bin, there was a dark chamber musical set at the mouth of hell, or another gleefully circling the mind of its own maker.
New York also welcomed back artists decades ahead of their time, from foremothers of the downtown avant garde who finally received landmark revivals to pop musicians whose distinct voices once dominated radio, back when radio was a thing.
They made us laugh to keep from crying, and showed us worlds beyond and beneath our own. Here are Towleroad’s top 10 shows of 2019.
10. David Byrne’s American Utopia Despite his signature shock of grey hair, the Talking Heads singer doesn’t seem to have aged since the 1970s, when his voice became one of the 20th century’s most wildly original. Barefoot and clad in a sharp gray suit, he leads a journey through his music that’s part interior exploration, part political incitement, and wholly rapturous. He’s joined on stage by a dexterous 11-person band whose expert musicianship is transfixing.
9. Jagged Little Pill Alanis Morissette’s 1995 album serves as inspiration and score for this new musical about darkness lurking behind the sheen of American suburbia. The too-muchness of Morissette’s songs perfectly suits the genre, and book writer Diablo Cody deftly weaves together a family drama that touches on a litany of current woes — opioid addiction and rape culture chief among them — while drawing distinct, believable characters. Don’t check emotional baggage at the door, rifling through it is strongly encouraged.
8. A Strange Loop Michael R. Jackson’s semi-autobiographical meta musical about a playwright struggling to write a “big, Black, and queer-ass American Broadway show” is as layered with pleasures as provocations. Larry Owens gave an exuberant, full-body performance as an artist trying to claim space for his vision while sorting out what’s going on in his head. Raw, revelatory and filled with personal and political insights set to irresistible song, A Strange Loop is everything its protagonist is trying to write and more.
7. Ain’t No Mo Another thrilling new voice to emerge in 2019 — which also happened to be big, Black, and queer — was Jordan E. Cooper, who wrote and performed in Ain’t No Mo. Cooper took as his premise an African American exodus from the U.S. to craft a series of riotous scenes traversing questions of Black identity, racism, belonging, and most impressively, why living in a post-Obama America isn’t what some may have hoped or dared to imagine. Stevie Walker-Webb’s production for the Public was a vibrant testament to theatre’s ability to electrify.
6. Heroes of the Fourth Turning Will Arbery’s journey into the heart of darkness (i.e. the minds and souls of the Catholic far-right) approaches its subjects with a ruthless sensitivity. Director Danya Taymor’s production for Playwrights Horizons resembled a painting by Caravaggio in more than just the weight of its shadows. Casting harsh light on souls grappling in the dark with their best intentions is the stuff of visceral art. In the end, whose side you happen to be on is beside the point.
5. Hadestown There’s a reason myths are so often timeless. But this modern musical retelling of Orpheus and Eurydice speaks so directly to the present moment, it makes the hairs on your neck stand at attention. Birthed from a concept album by singer-songwriter Anaïs Mitchell and ingeniously imagined for the stage by director Rachel Chavin, Hadestown is a story about greed and despair and lost love — and hope despite it all. The Best Musical winner also features two of the year’s most magnetic performances, from André De Shields (who won a Tony for his) and Amber Gray.
4. Fleabag In the midst of her ascent to Hollywood royalty (which now includes a jaw-dropping stop on the cover of Vogue), Phoebe Waller-Bridge reprised the one-woman show that became her hit Amazon series. We already knew she was a brilliant, dirty, and mordantly funny actor and writer, but performing the play in New York for the first time, Waller-Bridge also proved herself a master of intimacy and character. Assuming every role in the story that became season one of Fleabag, her elastic face became a canvas with which it seemed she could paint the whole world.
3. Fefu and Her Friends It’s hard to believe that this Theatre for a New Audience production was the first New York revival since the 1977 premiere María Irene Fornés’ astonishing masterwork. Its promenade format, in which the audience rotates through a series of scenes in different rooms, makes staging a challenge, but director Lileana Blain-Cruz pulled it off exquisitely. The women whose fears, desires, and undoings spin the plot were brought to life in vivid detail by one of the best ensembles of the season. Hopefully, Fefu won’t wait another 40 years to return.
2. Marys Seacole Reclaimed history, inherited trauma, and the phantom limb of imperialism combine and combust in this pressure cooker of a play from Pulitzer-winner Jackie Sibblies Drury. The fluid and beautifully executed production, also directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz, bent and eventually broke conventions of time and space to reveal deeper truths that surpass both. A searing performance from Quincy Tyler Bernstine, playing both Mary Seacole the historical figure and a present-day incarnation of her legacy, was among the most memorable of the year.
1. For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/ When the Rainbow Is Enuf Ntozake Shange’s enchanting paean to Black womanhood, which the late playwright classified a ‘choreopoem,’ made a triumphant return to the Public Theater, where it was first performed in 1976. A collection of evocations that crack open like precious stones, Shange’s play deals in luminous insights, both joyous and devastating. Direction by Leah C. Gardiner and choreography from Camille A. Brown combined to create a kind of seance for the beauty and pain of lived history. It was the best of anything one can hope to experience in a theatre.
U.S. HOUSE VOTES TO IMPEACH PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: “The United States of America is a nation of laws, built upon the Constitutional promise that no one is beyond accountability — especially those elected to serve the American public. Donald Trump has proven time and again that he believes he is above the law and not beholden to the United States Constitution,” said HRC President Alphonso David (@AlphonsoDavid). “Trump’s ongoing efforts to undermine the 2020 election by soliciting foreign interference is unacceptable, deeply dangerous and an affront to the fundamental democratic principle of free and fair elections. Because of these troubling facts, the Human Rights Campaign supports the impeachment of Donald Trump.” More from HRC.
HRC MOURNS NIKKI KUHNHAUSEN, 17-YEAR-OLD TRANS GIRL MURDERED IN WASHINGTON: Kuhnhausen, 17, was last seen in June and her body was only found this month. David Bogdanov has been arrested and charged with her murder. Kuhnhausen’s cause of death is unknown at this time. She is at least the 24th known transgender or gender non-conforming person killed this year. She enjoyed sharing videos of her dancing and singing on her Facebook, and she often posted memes to entertain her friends. More from HRC.
This is horrific. Nikki Kuhnhausen was only 17 years old. She is at least the 24th transgender or gender non-conforming person killed this year in this country. t.co/7npld0Mecn
THROWBACK THURSDAY — HOW MARRIAGE EQUALITY EVOLVED OVER THE DECADE: At the start of 2010, five states and D.C. had marriage equality. Now, it’s the law of the land — largely due to the hard, dedicated work of LGBTQ advocates and pro-equality lawmakers who know that love is love. Learn more about this history from Vox.
For a deeper dive on how LGBTQ activism evolved in the 2010s, check out this oral history from Lucy Diavolo (@SatansJacuzzi) at Teen Vogue.
Watch below for a roundup of moments from Now This.
TRANS NURSE SETTLES DISCRIMINATION LAWSUIT AGAINST WASHINGTON HOSPITAL: Kaia Rasmussen, 49, alleges she was placed on “retaliatory administrative reassignment” when her supervisor told her that her transition was “no longer therapeutic to patients.” More from The News Tribune.
NEW DATA SHOWS SAN DIEGO POLICE MORE LIKELY TO STOP LGBTQ PEOPLE: The research comes from Voice of San Diego and the UC San Diego Extension Center for Research. More from Voice of San Diego.
GET CULTURED – Entertainment, arts and sports news!
FIGURE SKATER AMBER GLENN COMMS OUT AS BI/PAN: Team USA is now Team USA’s only openly LGBTQ female member. More from Advocate.
ZAMBIAN PRESIDENT WANTS U.S. AMBASSADOR TO LEAVE DUE TO HIS DEFENSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS FOR LGBTQ PEOPLE: Ambassador Daniel Foote said he was “personally horrified” by the harsh sentence imposed on a same-sexcouple. More from Pink News.
GERMAN CABINET APPROVES BILL TO PROTECT LGBTQ ADULTS, INCLUDING YOUNG ADULTS, FROM SO-CALLED “CONVERSION THERAPY”: More from DW.
READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!
Reuters reports that Bogota’s first openly gay mayor has married her partner; Junkee rounds up the LGBTQ women characters who made waves on television this decade; Reuters interviews a transwoman living in rural China