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Rising playwright Benjamin Benne combats Trump’s anti-Mexican rhetoric with ‘Alma’

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Playwright Benjamin Benne.

(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Instances)

There’s a pivotal second in “Alma” when the loudest voice within the Kirk Douglas Theatre is that of Donald Trump. Although the previous president is just not a portrayed character, neither is his title ever mentioned by both of the play’s characters, the quantity of his anti-Mexican rhetoric, emanating from a small but clunky TV set simply inches off the ground, grows louder and louder till his diatribe virtually feels omnipresent, drowning out every thing else onstage.

Playwright Benjamin Benne felt equally when he first heard Trump say these phrases throughout his preliminary candidacy announcement in 2015. “He was seemingly in a position to get away with spewing lots of actually horrible, hateful, harmful issues, with out anyone actually checking him on it,” he remembers. “It shocked and terrified me, I used to be simply so afraid. I felt known as to fight that rhetoric straight and write concerning the folks he was demonizing and dehumanizing, and showcase the fullness of their humanity.”

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That decision to motion comes by way of in Benne’s play “Alma,” now receiving its world premiere by way of April 3 as a part of a Heart Theatre Group initiative to show its Culver Metropolis venue right into a theatrical springboard for native voices.

Set days after the 2016 presidential election, the poetic but lifelike dramedy friends contained in the one-bedroom La Puente condominium of Alma, an undocumented immigrant who works hourly-wage jobs, and Angel, her American-born daughter who is predicted to take the SAT examination the next morning. Their bilingual arguments concerning the worth of “the American dream,” and whether or not making unfathomable sacrifices and assembly unattainable expectations is one of the simplest ways to realize it, are all of the extra amplified in California — colonized land that was a part of Mexico.

A woman holds a stuffed animal and leans on the shoulder of a crying woman.

Sabrina Fest, left, and Cheryl Umaña in “Alma.”

(Craig Schwartz)

“The worry of not having management over one’s life, not having the choice to declare what house is for you, standing on floor that you just’ve been instructed is just not yours — all of that has a deep, unstated affect,” says director Juliette Castillo. “This play is constructed on the nuances of how this relationship navigates the circumstances of Alma being undocumented, and the emotional undercurrent of dwelling a life with that form of stress.”

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The plot of “Alma” hits dwelling for 34-year-old Benne, who grew up in Hacienda Heights and whose mom was beforehand an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala. To make it as emotionally and linguistically correct as potential, he consulted with immigration legal professionals concerning the arduous pathways to citizenship, learn books like Gloria Anzaldúa’s “Borderlands/La Frontera” and employed translators to specify colloquialisms or slang extra particular to Mexican Spanish audio system.

Benne additionally interviewed mates of Latinx heritage about their childhoods, and requested them to interview their immigrant moms on his behalf. “Doing that basically affirmed that there have been many different folks with the experiences that my mom and I had,” he remembers. “That gave me some confidence that the play may maintain, folks may watch it and it will resonate with them.”

On the core of “Alma” is a truthful, dimensional richness of mother-daughter dynamics, one which’s very particular when involving an immigrant guardian and a first-generation American little one. Take, for instance, Benne’s deft use of language: As the 2 argue about social location and upward mobility, Alma (Cheryl Umaña) switches between Spanish and English a number of occasions inside a single sentence, and sometimes seems annoyed by her lack of on a regular basis English vocabulary. When heated, Angel (Sabrina Fest) corrects her mom’s grammar as a approach to undercut her parental authority; when apologetic, she helps her mom with pronunciation and phrasing as expressions of care.

A man stands next to a white wall, leaning his head against it.

“Lots of items for the white gaze are likely to focus extra on folks’s ache and struggling,” says Benne. “[I] wish to be true to the struggles folks have, particularly in conditions like Alma and Angel’s….”

(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Instances)

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“We simply wish to inform the reality with this play as a result of it’s so many individuals’s tales, particularly right here in Los Angeles,” says Umaña. “Angel doesn’t know that the ache Alma suffers — her swollen ft on the finish of the evening, or lacking a lease fee and being on the verge of being kicked out of the condominium — is what motivates her to push her daughter towards going away to school. And Angel desires to guard her mom herself. They each have some extent; they each simply have the perfect intentions for one another.”

The 75-minute vignette unfolds in actual time, in an condominium positioned within the venue like an island, floating in an abyss. Although their conversations do get heavy, they’re by no means melodramatic, and tense exchanges are damaged up by loving punch traces and even some chancla-centric bodily comedy. It’s a technique that not solely supplies reduction for the viewers but additionally genuinely displays who these characters are to one another.

“Lots of items for the white gaze are likely to focus extra on folks’s ache and struggling,” says Benne. “Whereas I wish to be true to the struggles folks have, particularly in conditions like Alma and Angel’s, I hope that we additionally get to see the multiplicity of the love and care they’ve for one another: their humorousness with each other, their softness and intimacy with one another, constructed over their a few years collectively.

Two women sit on a couch in a stage set of an apartment.

“Alma” is having its world premiere by way of April 3 as a part of a Heart Theatre Group initiative to show its Culver Metropolis venue right into a theatrical springboard for native voices.

(Craig Schwartz)

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“Love tales are so vital to me,” he continues. “I see so many performs the place the crux of the drama is all about energy dynamics, dominance and subjugation, folks attempting to destroy one another and which means to hurt or commit acts of violence in opposition to one another, whether or not emotional or bodily. However I’m taken with telling tales the place folks care deeply about one another and are attempting to navigate these relationships as greatest they will, even when they mess up a bit in doing so.”

Benne, who graduates from the Yale Faculty of Drama MFA playwriting program in Might, is at present writing a bit commissioned by South Coast Repertory, “Fantasma,” about “how households move down cultural customs and heritage as heirlooms between generations, and what will get misplaced or preserved within the area of assimilation in the US.” His spiritual rom-com “In His Palms” can have its world premiere this summer time in Washington, D.C.; productions of “Alma” will play in Seattle and Chicago later this yr.

Although Trump’s speech could have been the impetus for “Alma” seven years in the past, Benne hopes his written phrases resonate past any explicit administration.

“Whether or not searching for a greater life or asylum, there has by no means been a superb time to be an immigrant coming from south of the border to the US,” says Benne. “Wanting on the lengthy historical past of immigration on this nation, a lot of who has been discluded from citizenship and labeled as ‘threatening’ is set by xenophobia and racism, regardless that these members of our communities are important and vital. It definitely felt like an amplified second with Trump in workplace, however the reality is, it wasn’t good earlier than and it definitely hasn’t been good after both, even now.”

A man with dark hair photographed amid sheer beige draperies.

“Whether or not searching for a greater life or asylum, there has by no means been a superb time to be an immigrant coming from south of the border to the US,” says Benne.

(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Instances)

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‘The Substance’ Review: An Excellent Demi Moore Helps Sustain Coralie Fargeat’s Stylish but Redundant Body Horror

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‘The Substance’ Review: An Excellent Demi Moore Helps Sustain Coralie Fargeat’s Stylish but Redundant Body Horror

Not long into Coralie Fargeat’s campy body horror The Substance, Elisabeth Sparkle (Demi Moore) is unceremoniously fired from her gig as the celebrity host of a daytime exercise program. The former actress’ credentials — an Academy Award, a prominent place on the Hollywood Walk of Fame — aren’t enough to save her Zumba-meets-Jillian-Michaels-style show, fittingly called Sparkle Your Life. Her producer, an oily personality conspicuously named Harvey (Dennis Quaid), wants to replace Elisabeth with a younger, more beautiful star. In his words: “This is network TV, not charity.” 

The Substance, which premiered at Cannes in competition, is Fargeat’s second feature. It builds on the director’s interest in the disposability of women in a sexist society, a theme she first explored in her hyper-stylized and gory 2017 thriller Revenge. She gave that film a subversive feminist bent by turning the trophy girlfriend — a sunny blonde who is raped and murdered — into a vengeance-seeking hunter.

The Substance

The Bottom Line

Uneven genre offering boosted by formal ambition and Demi Moore.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
Cast: Demi Moore, Dennis Quaid, Margaret Qualley
Director-screenwriter: Coralie Fargeat

2 hours 20 minutes

In The Substance, a woman also takes fate into her own hands and combats underestimation, only this time she’s at war with herself, too. Fargeat combines sci-fi elements (as in her early short Reality+) with body horror and satire to show how women are trapped by the dual forces of sexism and ageism. Beauty and youth are the targets at the heart of this film, but the director also takes aim at Hollywood’s ghoulish machinations and the compulsive physical and psychological intrusiveness of cisgender heterosexual men. 

Fargeat flaunts an exciting hyperactive style. Ultra wide-angle shots, close-ups and a bubble-gum color palette contribute to the film’s surreal — and at times uncanny — visual language. The British composer Raffertie’s thunderous score adds an appropriately ominous touch, especially during moments of corporeal mutilation. 

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There’s a lot going on in The Substance, and while the ambition is admirable, not everything works. The thin plotting strains under the weight of its 2 hour 20 minute runtime; there are scenes, especially in the middle of the film, that land as leaden repetition instead of clever mirroring. But strong performances — especially from Moore and Quaid — help sustain momentum through the film’s triumphantly amusing end.

During his final meeting with Elisabeth, Harvey doubles down on his offensiveness. By the time women reach the age of 50, he suggests to Elisabeth while stuffing his mouth with shrimp, it’s over for them. Fargeat heightens the perversity of Harvey’s blunt assessment with shots of his mouth masticating on shellfish bits. As he crushes the coral-colored creatures with his molars, Elisabeth stares at him with a faint disgust bordering on hatred. Quaid’s character lives in the more satirical notes of The Substance, and the actor responds with an appropriately mocking performance.

Harvey’s words, coupled with the blank stares Elisabeth now receives from passersby, drive the actress to seek a solution. She reaches out to the anonymous purveyors of The Substance, a program that allows people to essentially clone a younger version of themselves. While Fargeat’s screenplay leaves much to be desired when it comes to conveying the company’s scale of operations or how they function in her version of Los Angeles, the rules of the experiment are straightforward. After individuals spawn their duplicates, it’s critical they maintain a balanced life. Every 7 days one of them enters a coma, kept alive through a feeding tube, while the other roams free. Then they switch. The catch, of course, is the addiction of youth. 

Elisabeth and her younger self (Margaret Qualley), Sue, follow the program rules for a bit. The middle of The Substance is packed with scenes underscoring the difference in treatment they receive. While Sue blossoms, winning the affection of Harvey and getting her own exercise show, Elisabeth languishes in the shadow of her invisibility.

Moore imbues her character with a visceral desperation, one that enriches the unsettling undercurrents of Fargeat’s film. She plays a woman who can’t quit the addiction of having youth at her fingertips despite its lacerating effect on her psyche. In one particularly strong scene, Elisabeth, haunted by a giant billboard of Sue outside her window, struggles to leave the house for a date. She tirelessly redoes her makeup and each attempt reveals the layers of anguish behind the actress’s pristine facade. 

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Moore leans into the physical requirements of her role later in the film. Elisabeth eventually learns that upsetting the balance of the experiment reduces her vitality. Sue, greedier for more time outside the coma, becomes a kind of vampire, and Elisabeth wilts. Moore’s slow walk and hunched shoulders add to the sense of her character’s suffering. Special makeup effects by Pierre-Olivier Persin render Elisabeth’s withering even more startling and persuasive.  

Qualley does not have as meaty a role as Moore. Her character functions as Elisabeth’s foil, seeming to exist only to help us understand the perversion of Hollywood’s gaze on the starlet. That’s a shame, because The Substance’s smart premise and direction promise more revelatory confrontations between Elisabeth and Sue than the one we are offered.

The reality of this experiment is that it traps both characters in the same toxic, self-hating cycle as the standards imposed by society. The most compelling parts of The Substance deal with how social conventions turn women against themselves. A stronger version of the film might have dug into the complexities of that truth, instead of simply arranging itself around it. 

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Sean 'Diddy' Combs apologizes for attack on his former girlfriend revealed in 2016 video

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Sean 'Diddy' Combs apologizes for attack on his former girlfriend revealed in 2016 video

Embattled hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs issued an apology Sunday for his 2016 assault of his former girlfriend that was captured on a hotel security video.

The video, released Friday in a CNN report, shows Combs chasing, kicking, dragging and hurling a glass vase at Casandra Ventura, who filed a lawsuit against Combs last year. Ventura, a singer who goes by the name Cassie, settled the suit the day after it was filed in U.S. District Court.

The video matched the details of the incident at the InterContinental Hotel in Century City as described in Ventura’s lawsuit. Combs denied all of the allegations at the time the suit was filed.

But Combs acknowledged his actions in a video posted on Instagram.

“It’s so difficult to reflect on the darkest times in your life, but sometimes you got to do that,” Combs said. “I was f— up — I hit rock bottom — but I make no excuses. My behavior on that video is inexcusable. I take full responsibility for my actions in that video.”

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Combs went on to say he sought mental health counseling after the incident. “I got into going to therapy, going to rehab,” he said. “I had to ask God for his mercy and grace. I’m so sorry. But I’m committed to be a better man each and every day. I’m not asking for forgiveness. I’m truly sorry.”

Combs’ apology comes two days after the video first appeared. The Los Angeles Police Department and the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office have both said they are aware of the video but could not prosecute Combs for his actions as the statute of limitations has passed.

Ventura’s attorney Douglas Wigdor issued a statement Sunday that said the Combs apology was self-serving.

“Combs’ most recent statement is more about himself than the many people he has hurt,” Wigdor said. “When Cassie and multiple other women came forward, he denied everything and suggested that his victims were looking for a payday. That he was only compelled to ‘apologize’ once his repeated denials were proven false shows his pathetic desperation, and no one will be swayed by his disingenuous words.”

Law enforcement sources have told The Times that Combs is the subject of a sweeping inquiry into sex-trafficking allegations that resulted in a federal raid in March at his estates in Los Angeles and Miami. Combs has not been charged with any crime and has denied any wrongdoing.

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‘Rumours’ Review: Cate Blanchett and Alicia Vikander Play Clueless World Leaders in Guy Maddin’s Very Funny, Truly Silly Dark Comedy

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‘Rumours’ Review: Cate Blanchett and Alicia Vikander Play Clueless World Leaders in Guy Maddin’s Very Funny, Truly Silly Dark Comedy

World leaders at a G7 conference politely bicker, copulate in the bushes and work on wafty, content-free speeches while a worldwide apocalypse commences — politicians, they’re just like us! — in collaborating Canadian directors Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson’s frequently hilarious latest feature.

Although they’ve kept busy with a steady stream of shorts, the trio haven’t made a feature with actors since the fantastical The Forbidden Room from 2015. With a proper beginning, middle and end, and barely any tributes to silent cinema or interactive tricksiness, Rumours may arguably be Maddin’s most conventional film ever, or at least since The Saddest Music in the World (2003). That is, if you can call a film conventional that’s got furiously masturbating bog zombies, a giant brain the size of a hatchback, and an AI chatbot that catfishes pedophiles. All the same, it’s a hoot, even if the energy flags in the middle.

Rumours

The Bottom Line

The last laugh before it all burns down.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Special Screening)
Cast: Cate Blanchett, Roy Dupuis, Denis Monochet, Charles Dance, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Rolando Ravello, Takehiro Hira, Alicia Vikander
Directors: Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson
Screenwriter: Evan Johnson, based on a story by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson

1 hours 58 minutes

For those who like to keep score on these sort of things, this is also the first film directed by Maddin, let alone brothers Evan and Galen Johnson, that’s been programmed in Cannes’ official selection. Apart from the fact that it’s a welcome rib-tickler that breaks up this year’s festival’s monotonous procession of poverty porn and disappointments by fading auteurs, Rumours’ path to the Croisette was almost certainly smoothed by the presence of major names in the cast including Cate Blanchett, Alicia Vikander, Charles Dance and French star Denis Ménochet (Beau Is Afraid, Peter von Kant). That cast and the festival showcase won’t do any harm to the film’s commercial prospects. Bleecker Street recently announced they’ve acquired the rights for U.S. distribution.

The satire here isn’t necessarily aimed at any specific politician given that the characters are all clearly living in a fictional world, one where ideology barely seems to matter. Nevertheless, there’s a distinct sharpness in the way the script, credited to Evan Johnson but based on a story by all three directors, pokes the bears. Pointedly it lampoons the airy, non-committal language of world summits, the promises that mean nothing, and the outcomes that achieve little in a world that, while admittedly always in crisis, really is on the verge of burning up thanks to climate change.

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The film’s most consistent running joke — worked so hard it goes from guffaw-inducing to stale to weirdly suddenly hilarious again, as if through attrition — concerns how seriously the seven world leaders take the process of drafting a joint statement full of platitudes, corporate-speak, psychobabble and song lyrics as they sit in a little woodland gazebo. So absorbed are they in their work, broken up into subgroups like high-schoolers assigned a class project, that they don’t even notice that their aides and servers have all mysteriously disappeared, leaving them alone in the woods.

In other ways, the leaders resemble middle-managers enjoying their annual conference with its catering, photo opportunities and time off from troublesome spouses — a particular concern for Canada’s prime minister Maxime Laplace (The Forbidden Room’s Roy Dupuis, rocking a man bun with an undercut like an aging pop star). Broad hints are dropped that Maxime had a fling with the United Kingdom’s otherwise goal-directed prime minister Cardosa Dewindt (Nikki Amuka-Bird). This year he’s caught the thirsty eye of host-country Germany’s elegant Chancellor Hilda Ortmann (Blanchett, showing off strong comedy chops, even in the way she Germanicizes her vowel sounds).

The United States’ President Edison Wolcott (Charles Dance, slyly self-parodying) is more interested in getting some sleep and keeps nodding off, a gag that may be sheer coincidence but weirdly parallels what’s going on at the minute with Donald Trump at his criminal hush money trial. Another cute gag has the film never explaining why the American president has such a plummy British accent, and the one time he’s about to share why gets interrupted.

Rounding out the democratic world powers, Ménochet’s French President Sylvain Broulez is a grandiloquent blowhard who probably talks more than Japan’s reticent Tatsuro Iwasaki (Takehiro Hira) and Italy’s bumbling beta-male Antonio Lamorte (Rolando Ravello) combined. Both of the latter two, however, are aces as slow burns and understated reaction shots, especially Ravello.

Alicia Vikander, speaking only in her native Swedish for a change, shows up halfway through the film as the president of the European Commission, Celestine Sproul, when Maxime stumbles across her in the woods with the aforementioned giant brain, which you’ll have to watch the film to understand.

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Not that understanding is really the point here. Rumours operates on a surrealist plane of its own, making up the rules of its universe as it goes along. Shall we have millennia-old boneless bog people who come to life and menace the guests, it asks itself, and the answer is yes, why not? What if the non-source music swells and bursts like the melodramatic score of a soap opera at times? Sure!

The whole thing sometimes feels like a skit show that just barely holds together until the filmmakers and cast bring it all home for a terrific climactic closure, in which all the buzzwords and banalities get to be rolled up into one triumphant speech shouted into the void as world burns. Like the best comic fantasies, Rumours has more than a grain of tragic truth to it.

Full credits

Cast: Cate Blanchett, Roy Dupuis, Denis Monochet, Charles Dance, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Rolando Ravello, Takehiro Hira, Alicia Vikander, Zlatko Buric, Tomi Kosynus, Ralph Berkin, Alexa Kennedy
Production companies: Buffalo Gal Pictures, Maze Pictures, Square Peg, Thin Stuff Productions, Walking Down Broadway
Directors: Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson
Screenwriter: Evan Johnson, based on a story by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson
Producers: Liz Jarvis, Philipp Kreuzer, Lars Knudsen, Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson
Executive producers: Ari Aster, Cate Blanchett, Phyllis Laing, Jorg Schulze, Joe Neurauter, Devan Towers, Tyler Campellone, Lina Flint, Mary Aloe, Gillian Hormel, Andrew Karpen, Kent Sanderson, Adrian Love, Michael O’Leary, Stefan Kapelari, Moritz Peters, Blair Ward, Anders Erden, Lauren Case, Eric Harbert, Michael Werry, George Heuser, Jacob Phillips, Stephen Griffiths, Christopher Payne, Dave Bishop, George Hamilton, James Pugh, Janina Vilsmaier, Fred Benenson, Morwin Schmookler, George Rush
Co-producers: Judit Stalter, Simon Ofenloch
Directors of photography: Stefan Ciupek
Production designer: Zosia Mackenzie
Costume designer: Bina Daigeler
Editor: John Gurdebeke, Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson
Music: Kristian Eidnes Andersen
Music supervisor: Jillian Ennis
Casting: Avy Kaufman
Sales: Protagonist Pictures

1 hours 58 minutes

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