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How a Bay Area-raised critic captured ‘the banal ecstasy of friendship’

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How a Bay Area-raised critic captured ‘the banal ecstasy of friendship’

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Keep True: A Memoir

By Hua Hsu
Doubleday: 206 pages, $28

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We needed to maintain dodging the rain.

I’d met Hua Hsu at Bard, the liberal arts faculty in Annandale-on-Hudson in New York, and the climate made it unimaginable for us to sit down nonetheless as we talked about his memoir, “Keep True.” Within the guide, Hsu, an excellent, delightfully obsessive cultural critic on workers on the New Yorker, traces how he got here to consider music and group, from his Cupertino childhood by way of faculty.

At Bard, the climate drove us in and out, from his workplace to benches and tables and porticos. College students flowed round us in cohesive packs. They’d solely not too long ago arrived on campus, however earlier than faculty, they’d been linked on-line with their classmates. “All of them presorted who’s into what,” Hsu defined. The younger Gen X-er’s expertise at UC Berkeley was mainly the other; he discovered his buddies the analog means — by way of different buddies, coincidence, bodily proximity.

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For Hsu again then, the music you appreciated or the classic sweater you wore have been very important signifiers. “You may solely mission a restricted quantity of your self into the world and you actually tried to make it depend,” he says. However that was him; his buddies didn’t care a lot. His good friend Ken, for instance, listened to the desperately uncool Dave Matthews Band whereas Hsu’s various bona fides began along with his youthful adoration of Nirvana. In the event that they have been to start out faculty at present, Hsu might need caught to his tribe of music geeks and by no means met Ken, a genial frat boy.

However they grew to become the closest of buddies, a part of a small group who met every others’ households, teased and helped one another, drove round collectively listening to music as a result of there was a lot time. Then, the summer time earlier than senior yr, Ken was murdered in a mindless theft. Hsu was devastated. “I picked up a pen,” he writes within the guide, “and tried to write down myself again into the previous.”

From the time he was younger, Hsu labored over zines and tried to have interaction with tradition and the world by way of writing, however he sees Ken’s dying as his beginning as a author. Battling grief, he discovered energy in writing issues down. “I grew to become fixated on writing as a path out, as a means of reconciling,” he instructed me.

The guide advances chronologically, permitting Hsu to inform Ken’s story as they lived it. “As soon as I discovered {that a} guide concerning the tragedy may be a guide about enjoyable, dumb faculty stuff, or the banal ecstasy of friendship, I used to be like, ‘Cool,’” he mentioned. It’s been 24 years since Ken died, and generally writing these passages was like spending time with him once more. “I don’t suppose I noticed till I used to be older that a part of what I needed to do was additionally maintain onto the pleased instances, the nice instances, the enjoyment.”

He’s, in fact, conscious of the irony that there would have been no have to atomize these faculty moments if Ken hadn’t been killed. “I’d’ve by no means had any motive to recollect any of these items — as a result of if he have been nonetheless alive, we’d’ve simply had extra experiences that sedimented on high of them.” Hsu’s personal experiences, and people of his core group of buddies, proceed on for the final third of the guide, together with an indelible part on the funeral.

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The imprint of his buddies is there, invisibly. All of them learn elements of drafts. “I don’t need the emotional middle of the guide essentially to be my expertise, despite the fact that it’s my story,” he says. Though they’re anonymized within the memoir, these buddies would fall beneath the broad census class of “Asian.” Hsu is the son of immigrants from Taiwan; Ken was from a Japanese household that had lengthy been within the U.S. The writer emphasizes their heritage within the publicity supplies.

My household got here from England generations in the past, so I apologized to Hsu for not with the ability to interact round these points with any standing. He was gracious about it. We had loads of different issues within the guide to debate: grief, the band CAN, California, postmodernism.

So I requested him about Jacques Derrida. I can see why a writer may not wish to emphasize a notoriously incomprehensible linguist and literary theorist on the again jacket, however Hsu discovered a legible technique to deliver Derrida into his memoir. A sequence of Derrida’s lectures was revealed because the guide “The Politics of Friendship,” which features a eulogy for Jean-Francois Lyotard.

“Derrida, individuals usually suppose, is tough to know,” Hsu mentioned, “however when eager about friendship, about Lyotard, concerning the ultimate stretch of his personal life, there’s a lot readability and a lot grace to the way in which he was writing.”

Nor was the allusion incidental to Derrida’s type or concepts. “Once I was writing the guide, there are these digressions — I don’t know in the event that they’re digressions,” Hsu mentioned (digressively), “however there are these moments the place Derrida reveals up, Marcel Mauss reveals up.” Hsu brings in these French thinkers to underscore the type of ideas he was encountering in faculty, whereas additionally gesturing towards what underlies the textual content you’re studying; in some ways, the guide is a portrait of the general public mental as a younger man.

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Hsu, who has a PhD from Harvard in American research, has a capacious intelligence wrapped in a chill vibe. He says “like” quite a bit, a lot that it usually seems a number of instances per sentence (such verbal placeholders are edited out for readability). Perhaps it was rising up in California. “I nonetheless have that type of disposition the place individuals suppose I’m stoned just a little bit,” he mentioned.

“California, at the least once I was rising up, was a really various, liberal place. It’s the place individuals wished to go. Everybody felt like we had gained as a result of we grew up in California.” He mentions the seaside, then laughingly admits he by no means went to the seaside. However currently, when he teaches courses on urbanism, his college students wish to write about Los Angeles.

Hsu’s workplace at Bard is packed filled with books and music and magazines and ephemera: baseball bobbleheads, outdated tape gamers, 90s stickers, a prototype 50 Cent Vitamin Water. However once I was there, it didn’t have a lick of furnishings. Hsu simply moved to Bard (he taught beforehand at Vassar School) and his first-class can be within the spring; he doesn’t have a desk or chairs but.

“That is the place I maintain loads of issues that I don’t really feel like I ought to throw away but, however I’ve no use for. Like my outdated faculty skateboard,” he mentioned. “However I really feel like I by no means left faculty in a means, so it is smart to have these items nonetheless.”

Kellogg is a former guide editor of The Instances. She will be discovered on Twitter @paperhaus.

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Movie Reviews

‘Kalki 2898 AD’ Review: Lavish Tollywood Sci-Fi Epic Is an Unabashedly Derivative Spectacle

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‘Kalki 2898 AD’ Review: Lavish Tollywood Sci-Fi Epic Is an Unabashedly Derivative Spectacle

With “Kalki 2898 AD,” Telugu cinema filmmaker Nag Ashwin rifles through a century of sci-fi and fantasy extravaganzas to create a wildly uneven mashup of everything from Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis” to Marvel Comics movies, underpinned by elements from the Hindu epic poem “Mahabharata.” It’s billed, perhaps optimistically, as the first chapter of the Kalki Cinematic Universe franchise — which makes it part of a larger trend, since it launches the same weekend that Kevin Costner’s multi-film “Horizon” saga does in the U.S.

International viewers unfamiliar with the specifics of the ancient Kurukshetra War between the Kauravas and the Pandavas — think Hatfields and McCoys, only with chariots and spears — may want to brush up on Indian mythology before approaching “Kalki 2898 AD,” if only to make some sense of repeated references to that clash. Such foreknowledge could be especially useful during the CGI-amped opening scenes that illustrate how Lord Krishna cursed the warrior Ashwatthama to an eternal life as punishment for a grave misdeed, but allowed him a shot at redemption if he someday assisted in the birth of Kalki, the tenth and final avatar of the Hindu god Vishnu.

On the other hand, moviegoers throughout the world should have no trouble identifying (and in many cases appreciating) Ashwin’s numerous visual and narrative allusions to “Dune,” “The Handmaid’s Tale,” “Star Wars,” “Black Panther,” “Blade Runner,” “Mad Max,” the Harry Potter movies and a dozen or so other pieces of intellectual property. Extended and unwieldy hunks of “Kalki 2898 AD” are devoted to world-building and character-introducing in parallel plotlines that take a long time to intersect. As a result, there are too many sluggishly paced stretches where the passing of time is keenly felt and the storyline is obscured by confusion. But the aggressively spectacular (and, again, CGI-intensified) action set-pieces are generously plentiful and undeniably thrilling, and the lead players are charismatic enough, or over-the-top villainous enough, to seize and maintain interest. Will that be enough to justify two followup flicks? It’s hard to say from early box-office reports.

After the fateful encounter on the centuries-earlier Kurukshetra War battlefield, “Kalki 2898 AD” fast-forwards a few thousand years to Kasi, a familiar looking but impressively detailed dystopian slum described variously as the first and the last viable city on Earth. High above the huddled masses, there is the Complex, a humongous inverted pyramid where, not unlike the elites in “Metropolis,” an Emperor Palpatine lookalike ruler named Supreme Yaskin (Kamal Haasan) and other members of the in crowd savor an abundance of luxuries — including, no joke, their very own ocean — while served by manual laborers recruited from below.

Bhairava (Telugu superstar Prabhas), a roguish bounty hunter who rolls in a tricked-out faux Batmobile equipped with a robotic co-pilot, yearns to earn enough “credits” to buy his way into the Complex, where he can crash the best parties, ride horses through open fields and avoid all the debt collectors hounding him in Kasi. He seizes on the opportunity to make his dreams come true when a colossal reward is posted for the capture of SUM-80 (Deepika Padukone), an escapee from the Complex’s Project K lab, where pregnant women are routinely incinerated after being drained of fluids that can ensure Yaskin’s longevity.

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While on the run through a desert wasteland, en route to the rebel enclave known as Shambala, SUM-80 is renamed Sumati by newfound allies and, more important, protected by the now-ancient Ashwatthama (Amitabh Bachchan), who has evolved into an 8-foot-tall sage with superhuman strength, kinda-sorta like Obi-Wan Kenobi on steroids, and a sharp eye for any woman who might qualify as the Mother, the long-prophesized parent of — yes, you guessed it — Kalki.

Bhairava and his droid sidekick Bujji (voiced by Shambala Keerthy Suresh) follow in hot pursuit, and are in turn pursued by an army of storm troopers led by Commander Manas (Saswata Chatterjee), a cherubic-faced Yaskin factotum who always seems to be trying a shade too hard to exude intimidating, butch-level authority. Ashwatthama swats away the storm troopers and their flying vehicles like so many bothersome flies, and exerts only slightly more effort by warding off Bhairava and his high-tech weaponry. (Shoes that enable you to fly do qualify as weaponry, right?)

For his own part, Bhairava has a few magical powers of his own, though it’s never entirely clear what he can or cannot do with them. After a while, it’s tempting to simply assume that, in any given scene, the bounty hunter can do whatever the script requires him to do.

But never mind: He and Ashwatthama do their respective things excitingly well during the marathon of mortal combat that ensues when just about everybody (including Manas and his heavily armed goons) get ready to rumble in Shambala for the climactic clash.

All of which may make “Kalki 2898 AD” sound a great deal more coherent than it actually is. Truth to tell, this is a movie that can easily lead you at some point to just throw up your hands and go with the flow. Or enjoy the rollercoaster ride. And if this really is, as reported, the most expensive motion picture ever produced in India, at least it looks like every penny and more is right there up on the screen.

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Review: 'A Quiet Place: Day One' is the rare prequel that outclasses the original for mood

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Review: 'A Quiet Place: Day One' is the rare prequel that outclasses the original for mood

To watch “A Quiet Place: Day One” is to recalibrate your senses — not to the alien horror movie you know is in store but rather, to the intimate human drama it hangs onto, long after a lesser film would have given up. Among its lovely images, there’s the distant New York skyline seen beyond a Queens cemetery, a sight familiar to anyone who’s ever driven into town. There are the resigned glances of terminal patients in hospice. Mostly, we take in the exquisite face of Lupita Nyong’o as Sam, a young person in the prime of life stricken with cancer, who carries the unfairness of her situation just below the surface.

Sirens and fighter-jet shrieks ease their way into the sound mix, as they must in any prequel to 2018’s civilization-ending “A Quiet Place” and 2020’s more-of-the-same “A Quiet Place Part II.” But even as smoke and white ash fill the air (best to leave those Sept. 11 memories at home) and pissed-off creatures rampage like cattle down the city’s glass and steel canyons, there’s an unusual commitment to the darker fringes of postapocalyptic moviemaking. It’s less “Furiosa” and more “The Road.”

Sam is already prepared to die, lending the film an impressively bleak tone and sparing us the rote machinations of hardy-band-of-survivors plotting. All she wants to do is walk — very quietly — approximately 120 blocks north from Chinatown to Harlem, where she can scarf the last slices of pizza from Patsy’s before such delicacies become ancient history.

Joseph Quinn in the movie “A Quiet Place: Day One.”

(Gareth Gatrell / Paramount Pictures)

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It’s a refreshing, near-radical concept to build a studio film around, and as Sam sets off, a tote bag on her arm and her black-and-white support cat Frodo beside her, you may be reminded of that other woman-and-feline survival story, “Alien,” stripped to the bone. (One also wonders, glumly, how NYC’s thousands of dogs fared with these tetchy sound-averse invaders.)

The person pulling all this off is director-screenwriter Michael Sarnoski, last seen evincing a recognizably human performance from Nicolas Cage as a crumpled, broken chef in “Pig,” which was also about facing a kind of personal catastrophe. (He’s now made two of the most downbeat foodie films in a row.) Sarnoski, who wrote the story with original creator John Krasinski, does fine enough by the James Cameron-like action sequences that probably were mandated by the powers that be: chase sequences in flooded subway tunnels — yuck — and abandoned landmarks.

But he’s stronger on personal moments, such as the finest take of Djimon Hounsou’s career, consumed in spiraling guilt and choking back a scream after accidentally killing someone for panicking too loud. There’s also a business-suited Brit (Joseph Quinn, last seen shredding to Metallica in “Stranger Things”) who only wants to join Sam on her pizza quest. With a minimum of words, we somehow understand that he’s devoted way too much of his time on the planet to not connecting with other human beings, and he may only get this one day to make up for it.

You can take or leave a subplot about Sam’s writing career and thwarted dreams. For this viewer, there’s more poetry in her stopping at an abandoned bookstore, as we all would do, picking up a used paperback (fittingly, Octavia E. Butler’s 1987 sci-fi novel “Dawn,” which you sense she has read) and sniffing the pages: a history captured in a scent. She too is savoring humanity’s last vestiges. This is a film that seems to know a lot about future psychology. May we never know such mournfulness outside of an ambitious summer blockbuster.

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‘A Quiet Place: Day One’

Rating: PG-13, for terror and violent content/bloody images

Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes

Playing: In wide release June 28.

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Movie Reviews

'Federer: Twelve Final Days' movie review: Federer’s sweet swansong is fascinating

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'Federer: Twelve Final Days' movie review: Federer’s sweet swansong is fascinating

July 3, 2022, was a Sunday for the ages. Having greeted all past champions at Wimbledon’s Centre Court with warmth and respect, the crowd erupted in frenzied joy and delivered a standing ovation as an eight-time champion walked into the arena. The same spirits which were lifted when the master raised hopes of a last hurrah at Wimbledon, were devastated months later when Roger Federer decided to hang his boots.

Asif Kapadia and Joe Sabia’s directorial venture Federer: Twelve Final Days is a gripping account of Federer’s final few days before retirement. Federer, a global tennis icon and arguably the biggest superstar of the game, plunged tennis fans into collective mourning with the shocking news, while the Alps shed its tears with bountiful rains. As he retires in view of his repeated knee surgeries and advancing age, he plans a grand exit.

The audience relives the iconic Laver Cup in London, where Federer caught up with arch-rivals Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and other tennis stars on September 23, 2022, for a sweet swansong.

Interspersed with layers of old clips displaying his unmatched elegance on and off the court, the documentary’s biggest strength is its deep emotional connect. With timely interviews by the greatest of his rivals, his wife and parents, the audience gets a glimpse of Federer’s two roles — a sporting legend and a devout family man.

What stands out is the Swiss master’s bonhomie with his biggest rival Nadal. Despite only a few days to go for his wife’s first delivery, Nadal still makes it to London for Federer’s farewell. With the camaraderie, the duo gives sporting rivalry a refreshingly newer, nobler perspective. Being the oldest of the lot, Federer comes out as a class act when he says, “It feels right that of all the guys here, I am the first to go.”

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However, with its emphasis on nuances, the documentary is best suited for a niche audience. The general public, who might be curious to discover Federer’s legacy before appreciating it fully, may be left a tad disappointed.

Editing by Avdhesh Mohla is top notch as it does justice to Federer’s majestic on-court grace. With slick visuals and a fine script, the documentary does justice to Federer’s legacy, which, as Nadal says “Will live forever.”

It’s a must-watch if you are a Federer fan. But even if not, don’t miss it as Federer was for decades synonymous with tennis.

Cut-off box – Federer: Twelve Final Days
English (Prime Video)
Director: Asif Kapadia Joe Sabia
Rating: 4/5

Published 29 June 2024, 01:17 IST

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