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After COVID and turmoil, a female-led indie label reemerges as a safe space for noisy women

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The artists on the venerable L.A. heavy-rock label Sargent Home are identified for his or her clamor. However over the course of the pandemic, they discovered to understand whole quiet as effectively.

“We had been in search of properties to construct a studio, the place artists can write and chill, and stored not having any luck in L.A.,” mentioned Cathy Pellow, who based the label from her hilltop residence in Echo Park in 2006. Pellow offered the home and moved the label right into a rambling compound in Sunland-Tujunga in 2016, and though it took a while and financial savings to construct out (the label is “100% self-financed and has by no means had any buyers,” Pellow mentioned), by 2020 Sargent Home had “this magical, insane place that’s six acres on a mountain, an enormous transformed barn and a pool, visitor bungalows, beautiful gardens and the yard is mountains.”

It was an ideal COVID-19 hideout. The label’s roster of metallic and experimental acts like Chelsea Wolfe, Deafheaven, Emma Ruth Rundle and Lingua Ignota might come up for contemporary air. After 15 years of championing the harshest fringes in rock, the label discovered its stride at this bucolic haven, the place the wildest noises have been the howls of Pellow’s seven canine.

Sargent Home recording artist Chelsea Wolfe.

(Complete Guitar journal / Future through Getty Photographs)

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As touring returns after Omicron, Sargent Home’s acts, whose visceral reside performances are an enormous a part of their attraction, are coming again to a special scene. The experiences documented of their music — isolation, worry and rage — are all of the extra tangible after two years of the world falling aside.

Then this staunchly progressive label needed to reckon with abuse allegations in its close-knit neighborhood as effectively.

“The information was a traumatic expertise every single day,” Pellow mentioned, describing the final two years. “It was mentally exhausting to reside by means of all that. It affected us all. However in a wierd method, there have been silver linings for lot of individuals.”

Even from the label’s new exurban redoubt, Pellow stays each bit the cool Echo Park music mother (she has an grownup daughter who works within the movie business). In her 20s, she managed style photographers in New York and moved into movie manufacturing and making music movies for Island and Atlantic Data acts. She began Sargent Home in 2006, jaundiced about each main labels and independents the place artists signed away copyrights for close to nothing. “I bought so sick of taking a look at these horrible offers,” Pellow mentioned.

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She and enterprise accomplice Marc Jetton didn’t explicitly create a label for ladies in excessive music. However Sargent Home and its four-person workers ended up being an essential residence for them.

“I got here up in music as a single mother, so I gravitated to working with feminine artists and have a reasonably distinctive concept of what it’s wish to be a lady in that very male world,” Pellow mentioned. “It takes further effort. It’s at all times going to be robust to place out heavy bands with no pink state attraction as a result of we’re not bro-rock.”

The sort of acts she wished to champion — too heavy or bizarre for mainstream rock, too songwriter-y for a lot of the metallic circuit — didn’t match into straightforward niches or harbor clear business attraction. However for artists just like the L.A.-based Wolfe, who might be savagely heavy however had ambitions to do extra, it was the one place to be.

“Sargent Home helped me to embrace each my weirder facet and my extra conventional songwriter facet,” Wolfe mentioned. “To honor each and never really feel like I’ve to be just one method or one other.”

A woman and a man sit in front of a drum kit

Cathy Pellow and enterprise accomplice Mark Jetton.

(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Instances)

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2021, for all its grief, was a banner 12 months for the label creatively. Its flagship black-metal/shoegaze act Deafheaven broadened into somber, exactly sung rock on “Infinite Granite” that recalibrated the band’s place in metallic. Wolfe teamed with metallic/hardcore veterans Converge for the textured, compellingly moody LP “Bloodmoon: I,“ and the label produced a concert-length movie with the Michigan noise-punk collective the Armed that’s an entire inversion of a conventional tour documentary — no audiences, for starters.

Ignota, the alias of SoCal-raised composer Kristin Hayter, left behind a lot of her harrowing noise in favor of doom-stricken Appalachian folks preparations on “Sinner Get Prepared.” (She headlines the Regent Theater on June 9.)

“Everybody had a second to get actual with what they wanted to say, and a variety of them mentioned, ‘I’m going to make use of my quiet voice now,’” Pellow mentioned.

Laina Dawes, a metallic scholar in a doctoral program at Columbia College and creator of “What Are You Doing Right here? A Black Girl’s Life and Liberation in Heavy Steel,” is a fan of many Sargent Home acts like Earth, Chelsea Wolfe and Russian Circles. She describes the label as “a rather well curated residence for these post-metal or experimental metallic acts, which is a reasonably new phenomenon. Lots of these acts wanted a house like this.”

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Dawes mentioned just a few of the marquee acts “match an archetype of a sure sort of femininity” however added that “one of many points with metal-adjacent music are these preconceived notions round tropes of who’s a metallic artist. Youthful generations of underground followers need to see far more variety.”

Like many underground labels, the Sargent Home roster usually makes extra money on vinyl than streaming. The label’s greatest hits sometimes peak underneath 10 million Spotify performs. “When your lead single is 9 minutes lengthy, it’s robust to get playlisted,” Pellow mentioned with a shrug.

However holding these bands afloat over the last two years generally meant, fairly actually, intervening to maintain them shifting.

“In my explicit case, I all of the sudden wanted backbone surgical procedure I couldn’t pay for as a result of I had no insurance coverage and all my touring fell by means of,” Hayter mentioned. “Cathy took the helm of a marketing campaign that raised cash for my surgical procedure by means of my fan base. I’m not exaggerating once I say I most likely wouldn’t be strolling as we speak if this hadn’t occurred.”

“Sargent Home made the selection to remain actually constructive and supportive, particularly at first of COVID when many individuals went into disaster mode,” Wolfe mentioned. “Cathy was securing loans to assist a few of her artists and pointing us all in the proper route to assist ourselves and others keep afloat.”

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Whereas the label soldiered on in its compound, hope was generally arduous to maintain up. Each time she’d revisit her previous Echo Park haunts, Pellow questioned what sort of scene could be left standing when the pandemic ended.

The category divides of L.A. arts and music, which already helped nudge them out of city, turned extra palpable.

“It’s truly an actual drawback as a result of I need to be hiring,” Pellow mentioned. “However now younger individuals can’t afford to reside right here.”

However probably the most unsettling second of the previous couple of years got here on the finish of 2021, when Hayter accused her former romantic accomplice and Sargent Home labelmate Alexis S. F. Marshall, the singer for the longtime noise-rock band Daughters, of sexual and bodily abuse.

In December, Hayter launched an extended public notice throughout social media stating that “I endured psychological and emotional abuse and sexual abuse leading to bodily hurt. … I used to be subjected to a number of sexual assaults/rapes the place I used to be absolutely penetrated whereas sleeping with out my consent.” Hayter mentioned within the submit that the expertise drove her to try suicide. (Reached once more this month, she referred again to her earlier assertion.)

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Marshall, reached by means of a former consultant, declined to remark. In a December assertion, Marshall mentioned that “I completely didn’t have interaction in any type of abusive conduct in direction of Kristin. … I can guarantee anybody studying this that I completely didn’t abuse her, mentally or bodily.”

In December, Sargent Home said that “We ceased working with Alexis Marshall again in August. We made no public assertion at the moment as a result of we wished to respect Kristin’s privateness and her timeline for when she felt prepared to come back ahead. She has now and we proceed to face in solidarity along with her.”

The allegations shook the close-knit label, which prided itself as a haven for feminine acts in a heavy rock scene coming to phrases with abuse.

“The scenario that occurred between them affected me on so many ranges,” Pellow mentioned after months of serving to Hayter behind the scenes in her choice to come back ahead. “It emotionally destroyed me and I discover it very tough to touch upon it nonetheless. I don’t condone abuse of any form.”

Dawes mentioned extreme-music labels don’t at all times reply so forcefully to allegations of misconduct of their midst. “Steel labels can generally be horrible for this. There may be an emphasis on the music itself the place anything like sexism or assault or racism will get dismissed,” she mentioned.

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After the shock of the allegations in opposition to Marshall, there’s an urgency to chart the subsequent period for the label. Movie scores may be a technique — Wolfe and Ben Chisholm co-scored Ti West’s new A24 horror film “X” out this month, and Rundle scored Riley Stearns’ sci-fi movie “Twin” (starring Karen Gillan and Aaron Paul) out later this 12 months.

“Once we began, we simply wished to guard underdog bands,” Pellow mentioned. “Now I need to make the stuff I like extra standard, for younger individuals to see it in their very own state of riot. 2022 goes to be our heavy 12 months.”

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Movie Reviews

Catherine Breillat Is Back, Baby

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Catherine Breillat Is Back, Baby

The transgressive French filmmaker is in fine, fucked-up form with Last Summer, about a middle-age lawyer who starts sleeping with her stepson.
Photo: Janus Films

When Anne (Léa Drucker) has sex with her 17-year-old stepson, she closes and sometimes covers her eyes. It’s a pose that brings to mind what people say about the tradition of draping a napkin over your head before eating ortolan, that the idea is to prevent God from witnessing what you’re about to do. Théo (Samuel Kircher) is as fine-boned as any songbird — “You’re so slim!” Anne gasps in what sounds almost like pain during one of their encounters, as she runs her hands up his rangy torso — and just as forbidden. And despite the fact that what she’s doing could blow up her life, she can’t stay away. It wouldn’t be fair to say that desire is a form of madness in Last Summer, a family drama as masterfully propulsive as a horror movie. Anne remains upsettingly clear-eyed about what’s happening, as though to suggest otherwise would be a cop-out. But desire is powerful, enough to compel this bourgeois middle-age professional into betraying everything she stands for in a few breathtaking turns.

Last Summer is the first film in a decade from director Catherine Breillat, the taboo-loving legend behind the likes of Fat Girl and Romance. Last Summer, which Breillat and co-writer Pascal Bonitzer adapted from the 2019 Danish film Queen of Hearts, could be described as tame only in comparison to Rocco Siffredi drinking a teacup full of tampon water in Anatomy of Hell, but there is a lulling sleekness to the way it lays out its setting that turns out to be deceptive. Anne and her husband Pierre (Olivier Rabourdin) live with their two adopted daughters in a handsome house surrounded by sun-dappled countryside, a lifestyle sustained by the business dealings that frequently require Pierre to travel. Anne’s sister and closest friend Mina (Clotilde Courau) works as a manicurist in town, and conversations between the two make it clear that they didn’t grow up in the kind of ease Anne currently enjoys. It’s a luxury that allows her to pursue a career that seems more driven by idealism than by financial concerns. Anne is a lawyer who represents survivors of sexual assault, a detail that isn’t ironic, exactly, so much as it represents just how much individual actions can be divorced from broader beliefs.

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In the opening scene, Anne dispassionately questions an underage client about her sexual history. She informs the girl that she should expect the defense to paint her as promiscuous before reassuring her that judges are accustomed to this tactic. The sequence outlines how familiar Anne is with the narratives used to discredit accusers, but also highlights a certain flintiness to her character. Drucker’s performance is impressively hard-edged even before Anne ends up in bed with her stepson. There’s a restlessness to the character behind the sleek blonde hair and businesswoman shifts, a desire to think of herself as unlike other women and as more interesting than the buttoned-up normies her husband brings by for dinner. Anne enjoys her well-coiffed life, but she also feels impatient with it, and when Théo gets dropped into her lap after being expelled from school in Geneva for punching his teacher, he triggers something in her that’s not just about lust. Théo is still very much a kid, something Breillat emphasizes by showcasing the messes he leaves around the house as much as on his sulky, half-formed beauty. But that rebelliousness speaks to Anne, who finds something invigorating in aligning herself with callow passion and impulsiveness instead of stultifying adulthood — however temporarily.

This being a Breillat film, the sex is Last Summer’s proving ground, the place where all those tensions about gender and class and age meet up with the inexorability of the flesh. The first time Anne sleeps with Théo, it’s shot from below, as though the camera’s lying in bed beside the woman as she looks up at the boy on top of her. It’s a point of view that makes the audience complicit in the scene, but that also dares you not to find its spectacle hot. Breillat is an avid button-pusher responsible for some of the more disturbing depictions of sexuality to have ever been committed to screen, but Last Summer refuses to defang its main character by portraying her simply as a predatory molester. Instead, she’s something more complicated — a woman trying to have things both ways, to dabble in the transgressive without risking her advantageous perch in the mainstream, and to wield the weapons of the victim-blaming society she otherwise battles when they are to her advantage. It’s not the sex that harms Théo; it’s the mindfuck of what he’s subjected to. After dreamily playing tourist in Théo’s youthful existence, Anne drags him into the brutal realities of the grown-up world. The results are unflinching and breathtakingly ugly. You couldn’t be blamed for wanting to look away.

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Review: In the underpowered 'Daddio,' the proverbial cab ride from hell could use more hell

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Review: In the underpowered 'Daddio,' the proverbial cab ride from hell could use more hell

The art of conversation has been a casualty in these deeply divided days of ours, and the poor state of talk in the movies — so often expositional, glib or posturing — is an unfortunate reflection of that. The new film “Daddio” is an attempt to put verbal discourse front and center, confining to a yellow taxi a pair with different life paths, as you would expect when your leads are Sean Penn and Dakota Johnson. (Guess which one is the cabbie.)

Johnson’s coolly elegant, nameless traveler, a computer programmer returning to New York’s JFK airport from a trip visiting a big sister in Oklahoma, may be getting a flat rate for her journey, but the meter’s always running on the mouth of Penn’s gleefully crusty and opinionated driver, Clark. He’s a twice-married man prone to streetwise philosophizing about the state of the world and, over the course of the ride, the unsettled romances of his attractive fare. And as she drops clues about her life — sometimes unwittingly, then a little more freely — she gives back with some probing responses of her own, trying to pry him open.

Writer-director Christy Hall, who originally conceived the scenario as a stage play, lets the chatter roll — there’s a significant stretch in which the cab isn’t even moving. And when silence sets in, there’s still an exchange to tend to, as Johnson occasionally, with apprehension, responds to a lover’s insistent sexting. This third figure (unseen, save one predictable picture sent to her phone) becomes another source of conjectural bravado for Clark, a self-proclaimed expert in male-female relations, who makes eye contact through the rearview mirror.

Sean Penn in the movie “Daddio.”

(Sony Pictures Classics)

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Watching the unremarkable “Daddio,” you’ll never worry that anything untoward or combustible will happen between the chauvinist driver with a heart of gold and the smart if vulnerable young female passenger who “can handle herself,” as Clark frequently observes. That lack of tension is the problem. The movie is less about a nuanced conversation between strangers than a writer’s careful construction, designed to bridge a cultural impasse between the sexes. Hall is so eager to stage a big moment that upends expectations and triggers wet-eyed epiphanies — He’s a compassionate blowhard! She can laugh at his crassness! — that we’re never allowed to feel the molecules shift from moment to moment in a way that isn’t unforced. Life may be the subject, but life is what’s missing.

It doesn’t help that in directing her first feature, Hall has given herself one of the hardest jobs, getting the most out of only two ingredients and one container. It’s probably why Jim Jarmusch went the variety route with five different tales for his memorable 1991 taxi suite “Night on Earth.” That film conveyed a palpable sense of time and space.

“Daddio,” on the other hand, is nowhere near as assured visually or in its pacing. Hall has an experienced cinematographer in Phedon Papamichael (“Nebraska,” “Ford v Ferrari”) but chooses an unfortunate studio gloss that suggests utter control, rather than a what-might-happen vibe. Not that there’s anything wrong with a movie so clearly made on a set. But Johnson’s well-rehearsed poise and Penn’s coasting boldness make them seem like the stars of a commercial for a scent called Common Ground rather than flesh-and-blood people. At times, they hardly seem to be sharing the same car interior, leaving “Daddio” feeling like a safe space, when what it needs is danger.

‘Daddio’

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Rating: R, for language throughout, sexual material and brief graphic nudity

Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes

Playing: In limited release Friday, June 28

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‘Kunddala Puranam’ Review | A simplistic tale featuring an in-form Indrans, Remya Suresh

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‘Kunddala Puranam’ Review | A simplistic tale featuring an in-form Indrans, Remya Suresh

‘Kunddala Puranam’, starring Indrans and Remya Suresh in the lead, is the kind of movie you might want to watch for its focus on village folk and their everyday lives, offering a break from the bustling city. However, its far too simplistic approach may not work for all, especially at a time when filmmakers are trying to break new ground with experimental storytelling, unique styles, and mixing genres.
‘Kunddala Puranam’, directed by Santhosh Puthukkunnu, is set in Kasaragod, where a family opens up their private well to their neighbors. The well is an often-used trope in Malayalam cinema, with women characters gathering around it for water and some gossip. Venu (Indrans) and Thankamani (Remya Suresh) have a school-going daughter who yearns to wear gold earrings but can’t because of an ear infection. When her condition improves, Venu, who works as a security guard at a local bar, decides to purchase a pair for her. The gold earrings soon become the source of both happiness and unhappiness for the family.

The Kasaragod dialect, explored in films since the latter half of the last decade, has a certain charm, but what is particularly interesting is how Indrans effortlessly mouths his dialogues in the dialect. He is a masterclass in emotional acting and nails his role as a resolute father in this film. Remya Suresh, who played a prominent role in last year’s acclaimed movie ‘1001 Nunakal’, performs exceptionally well in this movie. Unni Raja, best known for ‘Thinkalazhcha Nishchayam’, also plays an interesting character. However, it is the child actor Sivaani Shibin who manages to capture the audience’s hearts with her playful innocence, a quality sadly missing in characters written for children in recent years.
Though the writers have tried their hand at humor in the movie, most of the dialogues fall flat, except for some scenes involving a drunkard and the other villagers. The story, though interesting, is stretched too long for comfort. Sound designer and musician Blesson Thomas manages to capture the mood of the story well through his music.

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