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Futurama Reviews: S10E04 -"The Numberland Gap"

As someone who has never comprehended the appeal of math, an episode like "The Numberland Gap" -which deals in formulas and equations- was always going to be a bit of a tough sell for me, regardless of its quality otherwise. Math jokes are part of the fabric of Futurama   though , given the educational calibre of the people behind it (they've joked they are the most overqualified writers' room in television), though I can't recall an episode where they have been this central a feature. The episode is credited to "Ken Walsh", but longtime fans of the show will recognize the distinctive hand of Ken Keeler a mile away (why he is still using a pseudonym remains a mystery), widely regarded as the show's nerdiest writer when it comes to math and quantum physics material. He eases the audience in via a dinner at the Krokers where Bender picks up the signal of a numbers station -real things as the show makes clear that exist for espionage purposes- and it is...
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Eleanor the Not Very Great

Scarlett Johansson finally steps behind the camera and what she produces is the Dear Evan Hansen  of Holocaust survivor dramas. I feel like it is important to acknowledge that upfront, as it speaks to exactly what to expect from such a stark misfire of a movie as Eleanor the Great . Just like with Dear Evan Hansen   it takes a very blunt and tone-deaf hand to difficult subject matter it is ill-equipped to reckon with and attempts to impart some meaningless moral arc for a pretty egregiously selfish protagonist by cloaking them in the stolen trauma of another person (a dead person at that). I can’t tell whether substituting suicide for the Holocaust is a worse or just lateral move, but making sweet old June Squibb the nexus of it feels like the crueler choice. She plays Eleanor Morgenstein, a woman in her nineties who moves back to New York from retirement in Florida when her roommate and best friend Bessie (Rita Zohar), a Holocaust survivor, passes away. Living now with her da...

A Graceful and Meditative if Opaque Ode to Communion with Nature

Silent Friend  is a movie that is utterly in love with plant life. Though I will admit to finding some of the slowness with which these processes are enacted and meditated upon exhausting, I can’t deny the intrigue of seeing in such detail the growth, evolution, and life of the trees and plants studied by Ildikó Enyedi’s new movie. Perhaps we’ve all seen those sped-up films of seeds blossoming into plants, or photosynthesis on a microscopic level, but there is a conscious grace with how this movie portrays them, as though wishing to emphasize to its audience the astonishing truth that it is. Rather than something mundane, it is something miraculous. We often tend to forget that plant life is indeed life, and Silent Friend  certainly makes several points to remind us. Across three spaces in time in conversation with each other, the plants the movie hones in on, specifically a geranium being grown in the 1970s and a great Ginkgo biloba tree being studied in 2020, the plants...

The Ramifications of Repression Are No Accident

I have admired Jafar Panahi from afar via his artistic reputation without having gotten around to seeing one of his movies. A shameful thing I know. Not only is he one of the critical figures of Iranian cinema but he might just be one of the bravest, most badass filmmakers around. His use of cinema as a statement is profound -it has led to many of his movies being banned in his home country. He has been arrested and imprisoned on several occasions -notably a sentence that he served under house arrest he flaunted by making the film This Is Not a Movie  -it’s own great act of rebellion. And though the sentence has ended, he has kept up his subversiveness since even at risk of further, perhaps harsher reprimand. With his latest titled It Was Just an Accident , it has all been justified and vindicated on the world stage -by winning the Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. It is yet another movie critical of the Iranian regime, financed by Luxembourg and France and filme...

Little Amélie is a Wondrous Child's Eye View

One thing missing from a lot of media that depicts very young children is an understanding of how relatively sophisticated their minds are -or at least as it feels to them. It is something that cartoons and comic strips occasionally get right -the infant who can think beyond their ability to act or process. It’s one of several things that is very refreshing about Mailys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han’s humble animated film Little Am é lie  based on the  semi-autobiographical novel The Character of Rain  by Amélie Nothomb. From before birth to the age of three, we are put in the multi-faceted head-space of this little girl beginning to define her reality. It is a reality of a very specific kind, as Amélie is born into a family of four expatriates, her father a Belgian diplomat in Japan in the 1950s. Amélie’s is actually a slow development, barely emoting, moving, or making a sound for her first two and a half years, until suddenly it all comes in a burst, coinciding with an ear...

One Battle After Another Answers the Zeitgeist to the Most Visceral, Enthralling Degree

It’s always another battle, isn’t it? Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another  was written, produced, and shot in an era when the fight and pressure had died down to do something about the American immigration crisis, to end the immoral detentions of so many migrants and families. The Biden years weren’t terribly distinct from the Trump years to those who paid attention and suffered through the horrors of ICE, which Biden never disbanded. But it was a moral battle not taken up, and it is perhaps for that reason the draconian crackdown we are living through currently was allowed to flourish. And this movie arrives in a moment where it feels so timely. It would always have been timely though -the fight does not end. Still it feels extremely pertinent. I’ve come across a lot of disbelief from critics that One Battle After Another  was allowed to be made in the context it was -a studio production with the highest budget Anderson has ever worked with in service of a st...

Futurama Reviews: S10E03 -"Fifty Shades of Green"

Fry and Leela have had their ups and downs as a couple or would-be couple over the years, but it’s been a while since an episode was entirely devoted to their relationship (and not in a poignant season finale kind of way). For the most part this Hulu run has been content to depict them as cute and stable; which is nice, but “Fifty Shades of Green” addressing their dynamic as a couple seriously was an important move. And though I wish it had done a little bit more and been a little more fresh in its themes, the acknowledgement is appreciated and the episode is a mild step up for this season so far. I like that the show didn’t feel obligated to do another XMas episode for the sake of it, beginning here at the end of XMas and the awkward week between it and New Years. The writers were clearly attentive of the fact that this is the twenty-fifth anniversary of the series and consequently in the show of Fry and Leela meeting -though Fry isn’t sure which anniversary (“Who knows” says the Prof...