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‘Right to Offend’ charts the ‘Black Comedy Revolution’

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‘Right to Offend’ charts the ‘Black Comedy Revolution’

The primary half is maybe inevitably a visit down reminiscence lane, coping with trailblazers on the standup circuit, foremost amongst them Gregory, who primarily gave up performing in an effort to throw himself into the civil-rights motion. It additionally affords a good period of time, grudgingly, to Cosby (“There is not any Barack Obama with out Invoice Cosby,” D.L. Hughley says), earlier than shifting on to Richard Pryor, who lots of these interviewed cite as probably the most influential voice of all and, as writer Mark Anthony Neal notes, “the template for everyone who comes after.”

The second half, in contrast, veers from the stage closely into the affect of flicks and tv, from Fox’s “In Dwelling Coloration” to Eddie Murphy — first on “Saturday Night time Reside,” then as a mainstream star in movies like “48 Hours” — to the marriage of a hip-hop sensibility and comedy by way of TV showcases like “Def Comedy Jam.”

These hours additionally concentrate on two comics who’ve been a lot within the headlines of late, Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle, representing probably the most distinguished heirs to Pryor, with each focus on how they see their roles as provocateurs.

Requested about making enjoyable of Black individuals in entrance of racially various audiences, Rock admits that the apply made some individuals uncomfortable, however he says, “I just like the viewers to be barely appalled now and again.”

Maybe foremost, “Proper to Offend” retains returning to comedy’s significance as a instrument to deal with and spotlight points the place the temptation is usually to look away, comparable to public demonstrations of racism and overt White supremacy witnessed in the course of the Trump administration and in its aftermath.

In troubled and unsettling occasions, comedian W. Kamau Bell says, “As a Black comic, you wish to be the one who goes, ‘Let me assist you determine what the f—ok is happening.’”

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Produced by Kevin Hart, the subject is frankly too massive to be fully complete even in a four-hour format, although it does an admirable job of casting a large internet and thoroughly curating its clips, from pioneers like Redd Foxx to Mothers Mabley to Pryor’s short-lived selection present and landmark word-association sketch with Chevy Chase on “SNL.”

Administrators Mario Diaz and Jessica Sherif additionally personalize the presentation by interviewing the youngsters of among the previous comedians featured, comparable to Pryor’s daughters, Elizabeth and Rain.

In hindsight, the one quibble is likely to be the title, since a frequent level is that Black comics do not simply have a proper to offend, however a necessity, even an obligation, to make audiences uncomfortable in an effort to expose bigger truths.

Such materials tends to make Hollywood nervous as properly, although as a number of performers notice, success tends to beat such misgivings, which does not imply that they do not contain dangers. As Rock places it, when Gregory spoke about racism in ways in which risked alienating White audiences, it was “very daring on the time. Nonetheless is.”

“Proper to Offend: The Black Comedy Revolution” will air June 29-30 at 9 p.m. ET on A&E.

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Rapper charged with sexually assaulting women who sought him out as tattoo artist in Koreatown

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Rapper charged with sexually assaulting women who sought him out as tattoo artist in Koreatown

A 28-year-old rapper has been arrested and charged with sexually assaulting two women who sought him out as a tattoo artist, the Los Angeles Police Department announced, and authorities believe there could be more victims.

Charles Wayne Wilkerson IV.

(LAPD)

Charles Wayne Wilkerson IV, an L.A.-based tattoo artist who goes by the rap name “Franko Khalifa,” was arrested on Oct. 29, the LAPD said Monday in a news release. He’s known on Instagram as “frankokhalifa” and also uses the name “Franko,” according to police.

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Investigators released Wilkerson’s photo in the hopes of encouraging other possible victims to come forward.

Wilkerson is accused of sexually assaulting two 25-year-old women on separate occasions. According to the LAPD, the first alleged assault happened at Wilkerson’s tattoo shop in Koreatown on Dec. 18, 2023, and the second alleged assault was at a home in the Southwest area of the city on Feb. 16 of this year.

On Nov. 20, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office charged Wilkerson with four felony sexual assault charges, including two counts of rape of a drugged/intoxicated victim; one count of forcible oral copulation; and oral copulation by anesthesia or controlled substance.

Wilkerson is still in police custody awaiting a preliminary hearing.

“He preyed upon young women who hired him for his tattoo artistry,” LAPD Det. Robert Smey, a sexual assault investigator, said in a statement. “Once he gained their trust, the assaults occurred. Now that these brave young women have told their story, hopefully more will be encouraged to step forward and seek justice.”

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Anyone with information that could lead to the identification of additional victims or witnesses can contact the LAPD’s Southwest Division at (323) 290-2976 or (877) 527-3247. Anonymous tips can be made with L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477 or at lacrimestoppers.org.

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IFFI 2024 | ‘Better Man’ movie review: Robbie Williams’ musical biopic is eccentric but earnest in its ‘monkey’ business

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IFFI 2024 | ‘Better Man’ movie review: Robbie Williams’ musical biopic is eccentric but earnest in its ‘monkey’ business

A still from ‘Better Man’
| Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures

I am sceptical if a more banana (no pun intended, seriously) of a biopic could arrive this festival season than Better Man, which is The Greatest Showman-maker Michael Gracey’s captivating film on the life of British pop star Robbie Williams.

Let’s get this underway first: Better Man isn’t that trailblazing film that tells you the answers to the universe’s mysteries. At its chassis, this adrenaline-pumping musical biopic only tells an all too familiar story of an unruly artist and his cocaine-fuelled slides in and out of self-apathy, addiction, heartbreak, fame, and mountains of insecurities.

But then what elevated Better Man into one of the most fun experiences on the opening night of the 55th International Film Festival of India was this: it’s an all-out musical with wonderfully choreographed and pristine-looking set-pieces. Secondly, Gracey exhibits extraordinary control over a narrative that moves in and out of reality and fantasy. And, as you would have guessed, the central character is a CGI-generated monkey, voiced by Williams and Jonno Davies, and fully enacted for motion capture by Davies.

All this monkeying around seemed like a mere gimmick from the promos of Better Man, but then this distinctive feature of the biopic is also its most daring endeavour. Gracey has taken seed of the idea, as he says in a message before the screening, from how Williams grew up looking at himself as a less evolved human being. Better Man doesn’t treat this as a joke but uses it to spotlight the humour and irony in everything around Williams.

Thanks to the voice acting and good CGI magic that captures nuanced expressions and body movements, in mere minutes into the film, yours truly suspended the fact that this was a monkey. If anything, that only credits Michael Gracey’s film, co-written along with Simon Gleeson and Oliver Cole, as an attempt true to the human element at its core. Most of the emotional beats in the script manage to strike hard.

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Better Man (English)

Director: Michael Gracey

Cast: Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton, Damon Herriman, Raechelle Banno

Runtime: 134 minutes

Storyline: An adrenaline-pumping musical journey into the life of popular British pop singer, Robbie Williams, from his humble beginnings in Stoke-on-Trent to his career-defining Knebworth Park concert

It all begins when Robbie Williams wasn’t Robbie Williams, but only Robert, a kid who lives with his nan (Alison Steadman) and mother (Kate Mulvany) in the underbelly of Stoke-on-Trent, and wishes to see if he has the ‘it’ that his father (Steve Pemberton) had said (before he abandoned him) all superstars are born with. He’s bullied around and deserted by friends, but even as a child, Robert displays a talent for putting on a show. As a teen, he actualises a position on the music scene after becoming a part of the hot and new boy band, Take That. Strap on your seatbelts as, from here on, Better Man rockets into the night sky.

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Gracey’s explosive style of filmmaking makes every musical set piece — one more over-the-top than the other — count. One such sequence comes immediately after Take That, with the help of their manager Nigel Martin-Smith (Damon Herriman), secures a new record label. The sequence where Robbie meets his lady love, All Saints singer Nicole Appleton (Raechelle Banno), is gorgeously shot and choreographed; a regular meet-cute on a yacht, after Robbie is humiliated out of Take That, is blown into something straight out of Disney’s handbook. With every song, you wonder if Gracey just wanted to pump more money and test the limits of how bizarre it could get.

A still from ‘Better Man’

A still from ‘Better Man’
| Photo Credit:
Paramount Pictures

It surely must take guts and an audacious conviction to say, let’s push a musical to its unconventional peak, not because it could be done, but because it must be. This is a film that either works for you or doesn’t; regardless, it is undeniably eccentric. In one instance, the sound of a toilet being flushed in the background is imposed on the image of Williams drowning a drink. The crazy reaches its peak at a Planet of the Apes-esque sequence where Robbie sings at Knebworth Park, the historic concert that cemented his position as a pop star of the ages.

Again, while this is the most unusual of biopics, is it the most piercing portrayal of a troubled man? I am unsure. A few emotional beats are opaque, like why Williams couldn’t pull himself up and amend his relationship with Nicole. But then, when you wonder how a real-life pop star had trusted the vision of a filmmaker to dig so deep into his troubles, baring naked his vulnerabilities, Better Man is triumph enough.

Better Man was the opening film of the 55th International Film Festival of India

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Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline really want viewers to watch 'Disclaimer' a second time

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Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline really want viewers to watch 'Disclaimer' a second time

In adapting Renée Knight’s novel “Disclaimer” into the Apple TV+ limited series, writer-director Alfonso Cuarón enlisted fellow Academy Award winners Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline to play its central arch-nemeses. Over seven “chapters,” the two share relatively little screen time. But their eventual pas de deux will send viewers scrambling to rewatch the smoke-and-mirrors mystery thriller to uncover everything that initially went unnoticed.

The Envelope sat down with Blanchett and Kline for a quick chat over Zoom at the end of a long London press day 48 hours before the series’ debut. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

I would be remiss in not asking you about working with your respective onscreen spouses, the great Lesley Manville and Sacha Baron Cohen.

Kevin Kline: [Lesley’s] a brilliant actress. It’s such a joy. It was a great, great experience working with her. She’s no-nonsense. Or else the character was no-nonsense. Anyway, just very stiff-upper-lip and very English about things. That was inspiring.

Cate Blanchett: I was working with Sacha, who is [an] absolute genius at what he does. But this is part of a departure he has been making in recent years. He was so open to the experience. It was really great. We talked a lot about the relationship. We had a lot of time to talk, because Alfonso works quite slowly. I really relished those conversations. … The one thing we should say is also our sons [Louis Partridge as Jonathan Brigstocke and Kodi Smit-McPhee as Nicholas Ravenscroft] — talk about phenomenal actors. I have always wanted to work with Kodi, back from his very first film, when we were producing theater in Australia. Desperate to work with him. To me, at the heart of this piece is the relationship of fathers and sons, and mothers and sons, and two parallel families. It was an absolute joy to work with Kodi.

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Kevin Kline and Cate Blanchett star in Alfonso Cuarón’s Apple TV+ series “Disclaimer.”

(Apple TV+)

Without divulging spoilers, please tell me about shooting your pivotal sequence.

Kline: Well, it’s on Cate. It’s mostly listening for me.

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Blanchett: That’s easier said than done. There are qualities of listening, Kevin.

Kline: Well, I was hoping you’d say that. [All laugh.] I was very attentive, and listening with quite a deeply ingrained bias about what I’m hearing and what I’m believing and doubting.

Blanchett: But your character’s been goading my character for such a long period. It’s a very unlikely setting for a very unlikely unburdening. And so, the strangeness of the setup, really, informed the way we shot it. Also, knowing — I talked to Alfonso a couple of days before we started to do it — there would be flashbacks in there, we decided to then shoot all 40 pages to camera rather than treating some as voice-over and flashback, so that we got the whole story, and then he could work out what he wanted.

Kline: Which was extraordinary to me. … [Cate] narrates the whole story to my character, and she just did it! It’s just a phenomenal leap of faith and talent.

Is this the first time you’ve worked together?

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Kline: Yeah.

Blanchett: Is it the last?

Kline: I believe so. [Both laugh.]

 Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline in London

(Jennifer McCord/For The Times)

In general, what surprised you about each other?

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Blanchett: Alfonso’s quite exacting about what he wants. So, we had to sort of find a way of all working together in a similar way. I was so taken — [to Kline] I mean, I knew your invention, your wit, your humanity, all of that. And your craft. That was unsurprisingly brilliant. But I think your patience and your openness to the process, I was —

Kline: I was just gonna say all those things about myself. But also, I would add that —

Blanchett: More of a curmudgeon. [Both laugh.]

Kline: It’s always interesting to watch your fellow actors working with the same director you are, obviously. My first film experience was working with Meryl Streep on “Sophie’s Choice.”

Blanchett: It’s all been downhill since then, is that what you’re saying?

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Kline: Pretty much, yeah.

Blanchett: Look where he is now. [Laughs]

Kline: I know. … I just learn so much watching my fellow actor.

Blanchett: Watching you. You were exceptional. I mean, it was unbelievable.

Kline: The degree of confidence Meryl exuded. I go, “Wow! She just doesn’t question herself at all. How do you do that?” And then [indicates Blanchett], I got the same vibe from this one.

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Blanchett: Oh, I question myself plenty, don’t you worry.

Kline: Well, I suppose we all do. But when someone’s acting with authority, you forget. It doesn’t matter what past things of theirs you’ve seen them do. There’s just a presence you react to. I’m not making any comparisons, but [affected voice] I’ve worked with some of the best. [Both laugh.] No, it was just great to watch how Cate works.

Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline,  in London.

(Jennifer McCord/For The Times)

What would you like audiences to leave with at the end of “Disclaimer”?

Blanchett: Well, the most satisfying thing I’ve heard is the fact that you watched it a second time. I can’t tell you the joy and relief that brings me. Because often with episodic storytelling, people either want to binge-watch it, or they’re time-poor, or watch it with two or three other things on board. And there’s so many almost imperceptible details that Alfonso has woven in — and encouraged us to weave into our performances — that hopefully it is rewarding to watch a second time.

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Kline: Alfonso is very, very detail-oriented. That’s what struck me the first day of working. I had never worked with a director who was that meticulous and that concerned with foreground, background, decor, costume, hair, makeup, accent, acting, mood, atmosphere.

Is there anything else you want to say in the last minute or two I have with you?

Kline: [Long pause] I’d just like to apologize.

Blanchett: [Laughs, reacts to offscreen voice] They’re saying Kevin has to go. [To Kline] Is that what they’re saying?

Kline: Oh, I have to go. Oh, good! No, no. My performance is indefensible. [Blanchett laughs.] I have nothing more to say. The defense rests. [Both laugh.]

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