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Anthony Veasna So, Diane Seuss among National Book Critics Circle Award winners

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Anthony Veasna So, Diane Seuss among National Book Critics Circle Award winners

Prizes

The 2022 Nationwide E book Critics Circle Awards

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Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, Anthony Veasna So and Clint Smith are amongst this yr’s seven winners of Nationwide E book Critics Circle Awards for work revealed in 2021, introduced Thursday throughout a digital awards ceremony by the group of American guide critics.

Jeffers received the prize in fiction for “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois,” her debut novel, about Black historical past and coming of age within the South.

“This can be a full shock,” mentioned Jeffers, overlaying her mouth in disbelief and wiping tears from her eyes as Jane Ciabattari, the fiction committee chair, introduced her title. “I didn’t wish to get cute, I used to be simply going to put on a T-shirt.”

Via tears, Jeffers thanked the “cherished Georgia girls of my maternal line,” together with her mom and late sister; the historians and writers “who offered the backbone for this guide”; W.E.B. Dubois, “whose spirit hopefully blessed this guide”; and Oprah Winfrey for selecting the novel for her guide membership. “[She] spoke my title with grace and kindness, and utterly modified my life for the higher.”

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So, who died in December 2020, was awarded the John Leonard Prize for a primary guide, introduced for his posthumous quick story assortment, “Afterparties.” The guide follows a group of Cambodian People residing principally in California’s Central Valley and offers with reincarnation, the inherited trauma of the Khmer Rouge period, queerness and the intricacies of household life. The judges recommended “Afterparties” for its “vigor, originality, and good humor” and expressed their condolences. “The NBCC joins So’s family members and readers in celebrating his work and mourning his loss.”

Accepting the award on So’s behalf was his sister, Samantha So Lamb. “After my brother’s loss of life, [the team at Ecco] actually wrapped round us, myself included, my household,” she mentioned, her voice cracking with emotion. “My brother is a famous person, and our staff made positive of it. I’m grateful that my brother was capable of share his voice and uplift the Cambodian American and LGBTQ communities earlier than he handed.”

Smith acquired the nonfiction award for “How the Phrase Is Handed: A Reckoning With the Historical past of Slavery Throughout America,” a piece that explores the legacy of slavery and its lasting impact on U.S. historical past.

“Once I wrote this guide, I got down to attempt to write a guide that I felt like I wanted once I was 16, sitting in my American historical past class,” mentioned Smith in his speech. “I’m pondering of 16-year-old Clint as we speak, sitting in that American historical past class, and I’m pondering of my grandfather’s grandfather, who was born enslaved. And I’m pondering too of Toni Morrison, who we’ve invoked tonight and was all the time on my thoughts and coronary heart.”

The poetry prize went to Diane Seuss for “frank: sonnets,” a deeply private assortment that explores the creator’s life and her seek for some semblance of “magnificence or aid.” Within the biography class, Rebecca Donner received for “All of the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: The True Story of the American Lady on the Coronary heart of the German Resistance to Hitler.” At its heart is Donner’s great-great-aunt, Mildred Harnack, an American girl executed by the Nazis for main an underground resistance group in Germany throughout World Warfare II.

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Jeremy Atherton Lin took dwelling the autobiography prize for “Homosexual Bar: Why We Went Out,” a transatlantic tour of the homosexual bars that formed the creator’s queer identification, which weaves collectively memoir, criticism and historical past. Within the criticism class, Melissa Febos received for “Girlhood,” a group of tales in regards to the values that form ladies and the ladies they develop into. Judges referred to as it an “incisive, vibrant critique of what it means to develop up feminine.”

Writer and literary critic Merve Emre and author and distinguished USC professor Percival Everett additionally had been honored in the course of the occasion as recipients, respectively, of the Nona Balakian Quotation for Excellence in Reviewing and the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award. The Cave Canem Basis additionally was honored, receiving the inaugural Toni Morrison Achievement Award.

The total record of finalists:

Autobiography
Hanif Abdurraqib, “A Little Satan in America: Notes in Reward of Black Efficiency”
Jeremy Atherton Lin, “Homosexual Bar: Why We Went Out”
Rodrigo Garcia, “A Farewell to Gabo and Mercedes: A Son’s Memoir of Gabriel García Márquez and Mercedes Barcha”
Doireann Ní Ghríofa, “A Ghost within the Throat”
Albert Samaha, “Concepcion: An Immigrant Household’s Fortunes”

Biography
Susan Bernofsky, “Clairvoyant of the Small: The Lifetime of Robert Walser”
Keisha N. Blain, “Till I Am Free: Fannie Lou Hamer’s Enduring Message to America”
Rebecca Donner, “All of the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: The True Story of the American Lady on the Coronary heart of the German Resistance to Hitler”
Mark Harris, “Mike Nichols: A Life”
Alexander Nemerov, “Fierce Poise: Helen Frankenthaler and Fifties New York”

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Criticism
Melissa Febos, “Girlhood”
Jenny Diski, “Why Didn’t You Simply Do What You Have been Informed?: Essays”
Jesse McCarthy, “Who Will Pay Reparations on My Soul?: Essays”
Mark McGurl, “The whole lot and Much less: The Novel within the Age of Amazon”
Amia Srinivasan, “The Proper to Intercourse: Feminism within the Twenty-First Century”

Fiction
Joshua Cohen, “The Netanyahus”
Rachel Cusk, “Second Place”
Sarah Corridor, “Burntcoat”
Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, “The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois”
Colson Whitehead, “Harlem Shuffle”

Nonfiction
Patrick Radden Keefe, “Empire of Ache: The Secret Historical past of the Sackler Dynasty”
Joshua Prager, “The Household Roe: An American Story”
Sam Quinones, “The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope within the Time of Fentanyl and Meth”
Clint Smith, “How the Phrase Is Handed: A Reckoning With the Historical past of Slavery Throughout America”
Rebecca Solnit, “Orwell’s Roses”

Poetry
B.Ok. Fischer, “Ceive”
Donika Kelly, “The Renunciations: Poems”
Rajiv Mohabir, “Cutlish”
Cheswayo Mphanza, “The Rinehart Frames”
Diane Seuss, “Frank: Sonnets”

John Leonard Prize
Ashley C. Ford, “Any individual’s Daughter: A Memoir”
Jocelyn Nicole Johnson, “My Monticello: Fiction”
Torrey Peters, “Detransition, Child”
Larissa Pham, “Pop Tune: Adventures in Artwork & Intimacy”
Anthony Veasna So, “Afterparties: Tales”
Devon Walker-Figueroa, “Philomath: Poems”

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Film Reviews: At the Toronto International Film Festival — Nazi Puppet in Norway and Abortion Saga in Georgia – The Arts Fuse

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Film Reviews: At the Toronto International Film Festival — Nazi Puppet in Norway and Abortion Saga in Georgia – The Arts Fuse

By David D’Arcy

Two closely watched films in Toronto were dark dramas that couldn’t have been more different.

Gard B. Eidsvold in Quisling – The Final Days. Photo: Agnete Brun

Who outside of Norway remembers Vidkun Quisling today? Maybe historians and students of the Second World War. Quisling (1887-1945) was prime minister of Norway during the German occupation, a gruff enforcer for the Nazis whose name became synonymous with collaborator.

Quisling’s rule was harsh, just what the Nazis wanted. Norway deported a thousand Jews to camps in Poland. Not so many, compared to the horrific broader picture, but only 12 of them returned. Quisling – The Final Days, picks up the narrative when the Germans surrender in May 1945 and the puppet prime minister, who expected to be treated with the respect befitting his office, is arrested. A young Lutheran pastor, Peder Olsen (Andres Danielsen Lie), is assigned to minister to Quisling (Gard B. Eidsvold) in prison after the church’s primate refuses the task. Erik Poppe’s gripping film, adapted from diaries kept by Olsen and his wife, takes us from the traitor’s loud assertions of patriotism, to a court’s judgment, to his execution by a firing squad. It’s a grim study of denial and defeat.

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“Surely there must be some civilized people left in this country,” a baffled Quisling pleads before turning himself in, “you’re calling me a criminal ….. I’ve worked so hard for this country.” So much for remorse.

Eidsvold plays the man who led occupied Norway under Hitler as smug and certain in his politics. Even when the Germans surrender, the leader who met with Hitler as late as January 1945 is shocked when he’s put in handcuffs. Locked in a prison cell before his trial, he finds his spiritual future placed in the hands of the pious young Olsen, who is sworn to secrecy about counseling the collaborator. Like any tyrant, Quisling is angry and impatient. Struggling to sleep on his cot, he asks the young guard attending to him to switch the bright light off. The guard turns it off and back on again, an everyman’s expression of the country’s loathing for the thug claiming to be a misunderstood patriot, now brought down to size.

At every step, caged and scorned, Eidsvold brings rage, but also an unexpected subtlety, to the role of his country’s official bully. Not to give too much away, but the final third of the film takes place almost entirely in the condemned man’s cell, where pride battles with a stark begrudging recognition of mortality. We watch this struggle in relentless closeups. Poppe doesn’t flinch from showing the final moments of those final days.

Norway tends to focus on the underground heroism of some brave citizens rather than the many who collaborated during the wartime Quisling years. There’s still nothing revisionist here about Quisling’s crimes. But questions arise as we watch the man try to come to terms with himself with the help of Olsen the clergyman. Attempting to get the former strong man to open up, Olsen admits that there were moments during the just-ended war when he himself was less than admirable, a confession that the self-satisfied Quisling is willing to accept. But that’s about as far as kinship goes between a minister who endured the occupation and the traitor who presided over it.

Then there is the parallel to European politics today, where reactionary extremists are applauded, not punished, and court their counterparts on the American Right.

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Those autocrats are not the simple stooges of foreign enemies, except in Putin-dependent Belarus (and in Ukraine before 2014). Yet in Quisling’s claims of being persecuted and misunderstood, and in his constant lies about serving Norway while following orders from Berlin, we find the same pattern of lying in the palaver of those would-be strong men close to home today. In our case, a leader who has already threatened to punish those who stood in his way after the last election – including Jews who vote against him this time – may not need an occupying army to install him back into power.

It’s a sobering prospect to consider, after watching scenes in which a country exults in the downfall of a tyrant.

A scene from April. Photo: TIFF

The politics in Georgian director Dea Kulumbegashvili’s April lurch backward and forward through a bleak and cryptically symbolic drama that explores the risks and the stigma of abortion in rural Georgia (the former Soviet republic). And there’s a lot more than politics in this sometimes inscrutable film.

The deadpan Nina (Ia Sukhitashvili) is an obstetrician who supplements her income performing abortions in the countryside, a foreboding expanse which we encounter mostly in the dark. Think of the shadowy emptiness of a place haunted by visions worthy of Bela Tarr, and then place a pregnant patient there whose medical history is unknown and who forbids any emergency surgery. It is a recipe for things to go wrong. A baby is still-born under those conditions to a woman who refuses to have a cesarean section. Nina is forced to defend herself against accusations by the mother’s angry husband and by superiors at her daytime hospital job. Abortion may be legal in Georgia, but it is culturally taboo in much of the country.

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This parable about the sufferings of women in a male-dominated culture and the plight of women who try to help them is unnerving in its fatalism. The action — if that’s the right word — moves at a creeping pace, another Tarr trademark. April can feel like a horror film without a monster. Yet Kulumbegashvili gives us a figure – a character? – thats monstrous enough. That presence is a humanoid shape with reptilian textures that slinks around – an observer of injustices, a witness of rural horrors, a victim, a conscience?

If this odd figure in cutaway shots defies explanation, other elements in this film of chilling visuals come off as clear as an anthropologist’s journal. Women stuck in village life are doomed to be pregnant most of the time, and the culture is so closed that medicine isn’t given the opportunity  to help them. April will be praised for the staggering power of its images which appear like bumps in the road on which Nina drives her car in the dark. That said, the jostling arrhythmia of the director’s picaresque storytelling (plus the spectral creature) suggest that what we have here are parts of a whole that’s still in pursuit of a style. The film feels like a work in progress – imaginative and improvised — akin to the medical procedures that the film depicts with so much uneasiness. Like the patients in April, audiences who can bear the experience will be grateful to receive what help Kulumbegashvili provides.


David D’Arcy lives in New York. For years, he was a programmer for the Haifa International Film Festival in Israel. He writes about art for many publications, including the Art Newspaper. He produced and co-wrote the documentary Portrait of Wally (2012), about the fight over a Nazi-looted painting found at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan.

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'Days of Our Lives' veteran Drake Hogestyn dies at 70

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'Days of Our Lives' veteran Drake Hogestyn dies at 70

Drake Hogestyn, who played mysterious and heroic John Black on “Days of Our Lives” for nearly four decades, died Saturday morning. He was 70.

The actor, who lived in Los Angeles and died one day shy of his 71st birthday, had been battling pancreatic cancer. His family announced news of his passing in a statement posted to the Instagram account of the long-running soap opera.

“After putting up an unbelievable fight, he passed peacefully surrounded by loved ones,” part of the statement read. “He was the most amazing husband, father, papa and actor. He loved performing for the ‘Days’ audience and sharing the stage with the greatest cast, crew, and production team in the business. We love him and we will miss him all the Days of our Lives.”

Born Sept. 29, 1953, in Fort Wayne, Ind., Hogestyn’s early onscreen work included TV series “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers” and TV films such as “Generation” and “Beverly Hills Cowgirl Blues.”

He first appeared on “Days of Our Lives” on Jan. 24, 1986, and went on to establish a long running arc as one of the daytime soap’s most popular characters. As John Black, across more than 4,200 episodes, Hogestyn was a spy, mercenary, police officer, private investigator and secret agent. Along the way, he’s been shot, stabbed, paralyzed, ejected from a submarine, trapped in a gas chamber, stalked by a serial killer, attacked by Satan, and has effortlessly come back to life after being dead — all while his signature eyebrow arch reacted to the chaos accordingly.

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Drake Hogestyn and Deidre Hall in “Days of Our Lives.”

(JPI / Days of Our Lives)

And with Diedre Hall as Marlena Evans, Hogestyn helped create one of daytime TV’s most beloved romances, known affectionately as Jarlena.

Hogestyn’s former castmate Alison Sweeney, who played Sami Brady on the soap, was one of his “Days of Our Lives” family members who paid tribute to the late actor on social media.

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“Drake was an incredible man,” she wrote. “He was funny, generous and thoughtful. He cared about every single scene, every person. He loved Days, the fans, and shared that passion with everyone on set.”

Kristin Alfonso, known for playing Hope Brady on the soap, praised Hogestyn as a “loving father, husband, and Dear friend” [sic].

He is survived by his wife Victoria Post, as well as their four children and seven grandchildren.

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Megalopolis (2024) – Movie Review

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Megalopolis (2024) – Movie Review

Megalopolis, 2024.

Written and Directed by Francis Ford Coppola.
Starring Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Giancarlo Esposito, Aubrey Plaza, Shia LaBeouf, Jon Voight, Jason Schwartzman, Talia Shire, Grace VanderWaal, Laurence Fishburne, Kathryn Hunter, Dustin Hoffman, James Remar, Chloe Fineman, Isabelle Kusman, D.B. Sweeney, Haley Sims, Balthazar Getty, Bailey Ives, Adams Bellouis, Madeleine Gardella, and Romy Mars.

SYNOPSIS:

The city of New Rome is the main conflict between Cesar Catilina, a brilliant artist in favor of a utopian future, and the greedy mayor Franklyn Cicero. Between them is Julia Cicero, her loyalty divided between her father and her beloved.

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Somewhere buried underneath the bluntly narrated New Rome parallels to America’s current downward spiral, the family scheming, betrayals, sociopolitical commentary, endless philosophical musings quoting other famous works and speeches that never quite stick or mean much, sci-fi concepts such as a biological building material dubbed Megalon, the earnest desire to build a promising future and preserve crucial aspects of the present and past, and an ensemble where everyone seems to think they are in a new movie from scene to scene, is a good film within legendary writer/director Francis Ford Coppola’s decades-in-development-hell passion project Megalopolis.

These haphazard elements come together for a final scene that is sincerely moving. The preceding 2 hours and 10 minutes is an onslaught of ideas presented and ambitious set pieces (ranging from living, breathing, suffering statues to extravagant Roman-inspired weddings with modern twists such as wrestling matches replacing gladiatorial combat to futuristic envisionings of a better world) carrying an impressive, transfixing visual language (courtesy of cinematography from previous Francis Ford Coppola collaborator Mihai Malaimare Jr) that ensures even if viewers are flabbergasted at how disjointed and unwieldy the narrative is, it is undeniably hypnotic and striking to absorb.

The question then becomes, does that mean anything if the film is ambitious to a crippling fault and a structural disaster? An early scene sees New Rome Chairman of the Design Authority/architect Cesar Catalina (Adam Driver, who is either miraculously on Francis Ford Coppola’s wavelength or so locked into his distinct take on the character that, if nothing else, it’s a memorable performance for right and wrong reasons) stopping time during the demolition of a building. The reason doesn’t matter, but at times, Megalopolis is similarly catastrophically crumbling (under the weight of its gigantic audacity) that one wishes they too could say “time… stop!”, take a breather, and digest what’s happening for a moment.

By the way, yes, Cesar can stop time. However, it’s an ability that plays more into characterization than anything plot-specific, which might be why it’s one of the few and far between elements that work here. Not only is he a man who can stop time, but he is also paranoid that there isn’t enough time to accomplish his ambitious dream of building a futuristic utopia called Megalopolis. There is also something about the idea of someone who can stop time yet still feels as if they don’t have enough, which is trippy and compelling.

Cesar is opposed by the polarizing Mayor Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito), who is less concerned about the future and more interested in doing something about the present. Yet, he mostly appears to be selling the usual political lies to keep up public trust. However, that support is gradually fading and soon transitions into full-blown riots (with other factors coming into play.) As such, he is determined to do whatever he can to put up a roadblock for Cesar, even if it means slandering his public image as possibly having murdered his wife since the body was never recovered. Mayor Cicero’s socialite daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) attempts to fool Cesar in disguise and gather some intel (one of the film’s most unintentionally hilarious scenes, and one that is inexplicably being used to market the theatrical run), which is easily seen through and gets her belittled in such a manner that, to be a fly on the wall while everyone was working through the performances would have been a treat.

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Nevertheless, romance eventually develops and becomes the film’s heart, and it probably should have been a more significant focus. Instead, Megalopolis is caught up in backstabbing wealthy relatives of Cesar, including a billionaire bank owner played by Jon Voight (he looks seriously confused and not in a funny way, but the concerning late-career Bruce Willis way where there turned out to be a neurological diagnosis in play), a power-hungry cousin (Shia LaBeouf) willing to doublecross anyone, and Cesar’s former mistress and gossip-obsessed newscaster Platinum Wow (Aubrey Plaza delivering the most consistent performance, and a fittingly crudely nutty one at that even if the character comes across as a misguided, uneasy helping of rampant misogyny from the film’s controversial filmmaker.)

The in-house scheming and drama between them take away from a relatively moving romantic subplot between Cesar and Julia, even if there still isn’t any real character development happening. It more comes down to a feeling radiating from the screen. Considering that aspects of Cesar’s egotistical personality and humiliating slander are on full display, it also doesn’t feel out of the realm of possibility that Francis Ford Coppola is throwing up a version of himself on screen (a theory more credible considering the ending credits dedicate the film to his deceased wife). Francis Ford Coppola’s call to action to build a better world with updated principles is admirable and even something some people need to hear, but one wishes that he constructed a better movie out of it than Megalopolis.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★

Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com

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