Selasa, 02 April 2019

“Monopoly” by Ariana Grande / Victoria Monét Review - Pitchfork

After the expedited February release of the thank u, next album, Ariana Grande has now dropped “Monopoly,” a new impromptu song with longtime collaborator and friend Victoria Monét, who holds co-writing credits on both “thank u, next” and “7 rings.” Born from the desire to bring her fans into her life by being off-the-cuff and unconstrained, “Monopoly” is pure unfettered fun. As Grande and Monét switch places singing in a garbled Auto-Tune, they roll off hyper-specific bars that would make any Arianator leap to prove that they know the backstory to all the references. They brag about the drunken writing sessions that bore thank u, next, scoff at the large percent of royalties allotted to Rogers & Hammerstein from their Sound of Music-sampling hit “7 rings,” and bicker about a Nutty Professor scene. They even drop unsubtle hints about their sexuality, as both Monét and Grande sing, “I like women and men,” sparking discussion of Ariana’s possible bisexuality. (Responding directly to a fan on Twitter who said “Ariana ain’t gotta label herself,” Ari wrote: “i haven’t before and still don’t feel the need to now.”)

The cool casualness of “Monopoly” extends to its instantly meme-able visual, directed by Alfredo Flores and Ariana’s ex Ricky Alvarez (also of “thank u, next” fame). Partially filmed on old ’90s camcorders, it borrows from the hilarious dance Instagram videos of Donté Colley (who is featured in the clip), in which he edits heartfelt positive messages and emoji hearts launching from his self-choreographed moves. The “Monopoly” vid is so different from the fantastical, expensive visuals that Grande usually puts out, her fans have even criticized it for being too “low-budget.” But as she trots around in a pink onesie and dusts the literal word “Fuckery” from her ponytail, Grande seems like she couldn’t give one single fuck. Without the apparent intervention of the major label powers that be, Ariana reveals more of her true, goofy self.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://pitchfork.com/reviews/tracks/ariana-grande-victoria-monet-monopoly/

2019-04-02 18:26:00Z
52780256732138

Nipsey Hussle knew the man accused of killing him, police chief says - CNN

Moore declined to elaborate on the feud between the two, saying he didn't want to jeopardize any potential prosecution, but he said the suspect -- who has been identified via surveillance video and witnesses as 29-year-old Eric Holder -- approached Nipsey and others multiple times, engaging them in conversation.
Nipsey Hussle was slain Sunday in front of a store he owns.
At one point, Holder returned with a handgun and "purposely and repeatedly fired" at the men, injuring two of them and killing the rapper, he said.
Holder should turn himself in, Moore said, warning the community that anyone who helps him or the getaway driver avoid arrest will be prosecuted.
"There should be no safe haven for this individual. He poses an imminent risk to public safety," he said.
Though the rapper was a member of an arm of the Crips street gang and police believe Holder belongs to a gang as well, Moore declined to specify any gang affiliation and said the dispute between the two does not appear gang-related.

Video shows shooting

The manhunt for Holder unfolded as surveillance video emerged showing the moment Nipsey and two others were shot Sunday afternoon.
The Grammy-nominated artist was among four people standing between cars outside The Marathon Clothing store he owned in Los Angeles' Hyde Park neighborhood, video from a surveillance camera trained on the parking lot shows.
Police are seeking Eric Holder, 29, in Nipsey Hussle's fatal shooting.
It is not clear which of the four is Nipsey, but they appear to be casually talking as others mill about in front of the store. A figure dressed in dark clothing appears to approach the four, and everyone scatters.
Two of the people standing by the car don't get far. They fall to the ground. One of them, wearing a white hat and shirt, tries to get back up but promptly collapses, the video, which has no sound, shows.
It is not clear if the figure in dark clothing is Holder, who police say is wanted in the homicide.

Vigil goes awry

Late Monday, about 300 people gathered around a candlelight memorial in The Marathon Clothing parking lot, feet from where the rapper was shot, when a person with a gun spurred the mourners to take off in every direction, police said.
There were initial reports of gunshots, but police quickly knocked down those reports. Moore acknowledged that two women showed up at a hospital late Monday night saying they had been shot at the vigil, but he said one of his commanders was near the scene and heard no gunshots.
"I'm lacking information that a shooting occurred," the chief said.
The crowd fled, he said, after someone at the vigil produced a handgun and another person tried to disarm the individual. A stampede ensued.
Los Angeles police spokeswoman Meghan Aguilar described it to CNN affiliate KCAL/KCBS as "absolutely chaotic, mass panic."
"When we were watching it from footage from overhead, it was literally people scattered in all directions," she said.
The panic came about 8:15 p.m., Moore said, and "as (the crowd) fled, we had a series of falls and trips and injures." One individual was stabbed in the melee, but police have no suspect, he said.
Video from KCAL/KCBS shows mourners abruptly running through and around the candle-and-balloon memorial and into the street. Police with riot gear and batons begin forming containment lines.
People carry away the injured as emergency responders tend to people on the ground, the affiliate video shows.
Some present threw rocks and bottles at police officers, and an officer suffered a "serious cut" to his hand, requiring sutures, Moore said. At least one person was detained for disorderly conduct, Aguilar said.
Nineteen people were transported to the hospital, most of them with trample injuries, the Los Angeles Fire Department said. Two suffered critical injuries, and two more were hurt seriously. One person was hit by a car, the department said.
None of the injured people suffered gunshot wounds, Los Angeles police said.

Police ID car and alleged shooter

The grainy video of Nipsey's shooting does not provide much in the way of detail, but police late Monday offered additional information about the shooting.
At about 3:20 p.m. Sunday, the suspect walked up to the men standing in the parking lot and opened fire, police said. He then ran down an alley and jumped into the passenger side of a car driven by an unidentified woman, they said.
The car was a white, four-door 2016 Chevrolet Cruze with the California license plate 7RJD742, police said.
Two people were transported to the hospital; one refused treatment at the scene, and Nipsey died from gunshots to the head and torso, authorities said.
The 33-year-old rhymesmith was a mainstay of the Crenshaw District where he grew up. He owned businesses there, invested in the community and counted several Los Angeles rappers among his influences and collaborators.
Two of his mixtapes -- "Slauson Boy Vol. 1" and "Crenshaw" -- took their names from the area. The Marathon Clothing store sits near West Slauson Avenue and Crenshaw Boulevard. Though Nipsey released several mixtapes independently or through his All Money In record label, his studio debut, "Victory Lap," dropped last year and was nominated for a Grammy.
Before his death, Nipsey, a member of the Rollin 60s Neighborhood Crips, had requested a meeting to discuss ways to mitigate gang violence, Los Angeles police Commissioner Steve Soboroff said Tuesday, sharing an email he received from the rapper and Jay-Z's Roc Nation.
It said, "Our goal is to work with the department to help improve communication relationships, and work towards changing the culture and dialogue between LAPD and the inner city. We want to hear about your new programs, your goals for the department, as well as how we can help stop gang violence and help you help kids."
"The meeting will happen," Soboroff said. "It will happen when Roc Nation and Nipsey's family come together."

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/02/us/nipsey-hussle-investigation/index.html

2019-04-02 17:50:00Z
52780258085736

Kim Kardashian reveals baby name she's considering for fourth child - Fox News

Kim Kardashian recently revealed that she's never officially named her children before they were born and she's had a chance to bond with them.

However, the reality TV star and businesswoman said that doesn't mean she doesn't mull over a few options beforehand.

During an appearance on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" Monday night with her sisters Khloe and Kourtney, Kardashian spilled some family secrets when it comes to the baby-naming process.

KIM KARDASHIAN SEEMINGLY SHADES JORDYN WOODS OVER ALLEGED CHEATING SCANDAL WITH SASSY ADVICE

"We all weigh in. I definitely take a family survey but it's usually after the baby is born and we're trying to figure out what the baby looks like," Kardashian, a mother of three, told late-night host Jimmy Kimmel. "I usually go about three or four days nameless until I feel that it really connects with the baby."

Kourtney admitted she's even tried out different names on different names on occasion — a process that once spanned an entire week.

"One day, Reign, his name was Preston for one whole day. I [knew] in my soul his name is Reign, and Scott didn't believe me," Kourtney explained, referring to her 4-year-old son. "It didn't work out."

Kimmel then asked Kardashian, who's expecting baby No. 4 via surrogate with husband Kanye West in May, if she has any names in mind.

"I actually do not, but I was Googling Armenian boys names last night ... and I couldn't really find anything," Kardashian said.

'BIG BANG THEORY' STAR JIM PARSONS REVEALS 'SCIENCE BEHIND' HIS 'BRILLIANT' NCAA PICKS

But then Kardashian clarified that there is actually one name she's considered.

"I was truthfully thinking about just naming him Rob, my brother, Rob," the 38-year-old added. "But then it's like North, Saint, Chicago, Rob. It doesn't like really go, but I really was feeling that or like Robert, and my brother approved it. So that's like, our one kind of name. Rob West."

A source told Fox News in January the couple are expecting a baby boy — which would be the second son for the pair, who also share son Saint, 3, and daughters North, 5, and Chicago, 1.

In August, a source told Entertainment Tonight that West and Kardashian wanted four children: two girls and two boys.

"Kim and Kanye have always wanted a big family. Kim loved growing up with a lot of siblings and wants the same for her children," the source said. "[Kanye would] have as many [kids] as possible."

Fox News' Jessica Sager contributed to this report.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/kim-kardashian-reveals-baby-name-shes-considering-for-fourth-child

2019-04-02 16:18:54Z
52780256287337

Marvel fans wait more than an hour in online queues for 'Avengers: Endgame' presale tickets - CNBC

"Avengers: Endgame" is proving itself to be the most anticipated movie of the summer box office.

Advanced tickets for the 22nd film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe went on sale Tuesday morning and fans have flocked to presale ticket websites like Fandango and Atom Tickets.

Fans trying to snag tickets on Fandango found themselves in online queues waiting for the chance see the film on opening weekend, with some wait times exceeding one hour.

"Moviegoers have been anxiously awaiting this moment for a very long time, as today is the day when they can finally reserve their seats on Fandango for the one movie everyone's talking about," Erik Davis, managing editor at Fandango, said in a statement Tuesday. "It's taken more than ten years to see the culmination of this incredible and historic superhero saga."

"Endgame" is due out in theaters on April 26. The film is expected to finally give some resolution to the events of "Infinity War," in which half of the heroes disappeared into dust. It could possibly serve as the last film for several of the actors who donned the mask, cape or shield of Marvel's most iconic characters.

"Avengers: Infinity War" brought in $678 million domestically and $1.37 billion from international markets on its way to becoming the fourth highest grossing film of all time.

On Atom Tickets, "Avengers: Endgame" has sold three time more tickets in the first hour of sales than "Infinity War" did last year. It set a new record on the site for the best first hour of presales.

Disclosure: Comcast, the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC, owns Fandango.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/02/marvel-fans-wait-in-online-queue-for-avengers-endgame-tickets.html

2019-04-02 15:07:03Z
52780258051104

Kim Kardashian Explaining How She Got Famous to North West Is the Best Thing You'll See All Day - Cosmopolitan.com


    Once upon a time, there was a man named Robert Kardashian who was friends with a certain football player, and Robert married Kris Jenner. Robert and Kris had Kim Kardashian, and the rest is history.

    Except not. There’s a ton that happened between then and now, including a crazy murder case, Kris’s short-lived music career, Kim’s tenure as Paris Hilton’s assistant, and Kim’s sex tape. There’s a ton this mogul is famous for, and Kim had to explain her origin story to her 5-year-old daughter, North West. In true Kardashian fashion, she did it on video, and it’s incredibly awkward and hilarious.

    In the latest episode of Keeping Up With the Kardashians, North asked Kim why they’re always followed by paparazzi, and Kim used it as a teaching moment. Kim previously told her they’re just famous because they’re on TV, but this time she elaborated a little more. She told North, “To get very technical—my name is Kim Kardashian. And Daddy is Kanye West. And Daddy is a singer, performer, artiste. Mommy has so many talents I can’t even begin to name them.” If you watch the video, it’s even more uncomfy than it sounds:

    And while Kim was talking to Jimmy Kimmel on his show last night, she said she wasn’t being totally serious. “I was obviously a little bit joking.” She added, “As they get older, we’ll continue to have that conversation and just explain to them.”

    Then she explained that North gets excited about her status as a baby celebrity and shouts that she’s with Kim and Kanye while they’re out in public. Kim remembered, “The other day I took North to a wedding and she was rolling down the window and going, ‘Kim Kardashian’s in here!’ like, screaming to all the drivers, saying: ‘Hi! I’m North West! Kanye West is my dad!’ And I was just like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ rolling up the window and putting on the child lock.” Ugh, kids. Gotta love ’em.

    Let's block ads! (Why?)


    https://www.cosmopolitan.com/entertainment/tv/a27018424/kim-kardashian-explain-how-she-got-famous-to-north-west-keeping-up-with-kardashians/

    2019-04-02 15:43:00Z
    52780256287337

    Road to Endgame: Iron Man 3 Revisited - /FILM

    Iron Man 3 Revisited

    (Welcome to Road to Endgame, where we revisit all 22 movies of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and ask, “How did we get here?” In this edition: Iron Man 3 brings a personal style to the MCU, even as it stumbles in the homestretch.)

    After six films culminating in an unprecedented crossover, the Marvel Cinematic Universe had arrived. The Avengers set a new standard for summer blockbusters, though the concern going forward (for skeptics, and presumably for studio execs) was one of diminishing returns. Iron Man’s first solo outing after the battle of New York was tasked with bringing audiences back for more, while also establishing Marvel’s ability to tell new kinds of stories. In effect, it had to dramatize moving on from the world of The Avengers, while taking place entirely within it.

    Simply put, the question Iron Man 3 had to answer was, “What comes next?” Would Marvel come close to rivaling the spectacle of its first team-up? Well, no. Then again, perhaps it didn’t have to. Iron Man 3 is nothing like The Avengers. In fact, it barely has anything in common with Iron Man and Iron Man 2, though what it does have — despite yet another vaguely defined character arc — is something only a handful of Marvel movies can boast.

    It has a unique sense of identity.

    Black to Basics

    Outside the odd oblique tilt in Thor (and some self-contained, silent drama in The Incredible Hulk), Captain America: The First Avenger was arguably the only “Phase 1” film to sidestep the genre’s visual trappings. You can thank Joe Johnston of The Rocketeer for that, but not every Marvel movie has the luxury of a period-adventure sandbox.

    Even The Avengers, which delivered some of the finest blockbuster spectacle this decade, didn’t make particularly great use of visual storytelling until its final battle. Its major third-act beats worked because they translated character into action; for instance, the fluid long-take where the Avengers fight in tandem for the first time. One of its only non-action scenes, where subtext was expressed visually — Captain America’s silent stroll through an unfamiliar world — was cut from the film.

    For the most part, Marvel movies rely on straightforward dialogue to deliver emotional information. Iron Man 3 however, feels like the first entry in the series where the filmmakers were granted visual leeway. For once, the end result was not, as critic Matt Zoller Seitz puts it, a “movie-flavored product.”

    Despite the studio notes it was forced to adhere to (like swapping its female villain for a male one to sell more toys)Iron Man 3 is a Shane Black film through-and-through. Its tonal consistency is entirely a function of its story. Black often sets his films around Christmas because he feels the holiday “represents a little stutter in the march of days, a hush in which we have a chance to assess and retrospect our lives.” When Christmas arrives for Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), he’s alone in a remote Tennessee locale, far flung from Happy Hogan (Jon Favreau) and Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow), the loved ones he put in danger.

    Stark’s story began with him building armour to escape a remote cave. Here, for the first time in the series, he’s forced to find a way out of his isolation without the help of his suits. The stage is set for Stark to reflect on his decisions, and on his post-Avengers identity as it relates to the Iron Man persona. The film doesn’t quite stick the landing when it comes to these themes, but it finds an exciting momentum in the way it articulates them.

    Black and cinematographer John Toll (The Thin Red Line, Cloud Atlas) depart from the bright palette of The Avengers to deliver a darker entry, both visually and emotionally. The entire film feels frigid even before Stark gets stuck in the snow. Cold lighting defines the texture of each space, and the muted tones of the productions design are interrupted only by deep-red explosions. The film is drab without being dour, and the characters constantly have to fight their way out of shadows.

    In several scenes, the camera observes instead of empathizing. We see Pepper Potts’ meeting with Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce) through Happy Hogan’s eyes, as he sits in the distance, relaying the information to Stark over the phone. Black, like Hogan, is people-watching, and the visual framing constantly prevents Stark from connecting with those around him. After Stark’s home is attacked, he’s forcefully ejected from his own narrative and launched thousands of miles away. Physically, and emotionally, he could not be more distant.

    The fluid cinematography, combined with the fluidity of Black’s action and dialogue (the script was co-written by Drew Pearce) gives Iron Man 3 a distinctly “cinematic” texture — that is to say, one heavily reliant on non-dialogue audio and visuals to convey meaning — the kind few Marvel films can claim. Downey Jr. underscores the affair with his dry wit as usual, and his emotional separation becomes necessary so that Iron Man can (re)define himself in relation to other people.

    Despite the distancing quality of the group scenes, the film extends beyond observational exercise at just the right moments. Its point-of-view shifts jarringly when Stark’s P.T.S.D. comes to the fore. The frame closes in on him with furor, until all we can see, or feel, is panic. Iron Man 3 is at its most potent when exploring the psychological effects of The Avengers on Stark, though unfortunately, there also comes a point when this vital story thread is haphazardly brushed aside.  

    Nothing’s Been the Same Since New York

    Tony Stark was once known as Marvel’s alcoholic superhero — Demon in a Bottle (1979) is his most instrumental story — and while the character’s alcoholism never finds its way into the films, Stark’s addict nature manifests in different forms. In Iron Man 3, his addiction is to building protective armour, and it’s exacerbated by trauma.

    Clinical psychologist Dr. Andrea Letamendi argues that Stark’s symptoms could, in fact, be interpreted as Post-traumatic stress disorder, or P.T.S.D. He seems to display four key factors for diagnosis:

    • Avoidance of potential trauma triggers that lead to anxiety.
    • Hyper-arousal (he’s been awake for 72 hours when the film begins).
    • Vivid recollection via dreams and visions.
    • Functional impairment with regards to personal relationships.

    More pertinently, Tony Stark is also more vulnerable to P.T.S.D. than the average human being, owing to what Letamendi calls “re-deployment.” Stark has been experiencing and re-experiencing trauma since the very first scene in Iron Man. His car was bombed, he had shrapnel lodged in his chest, he was kidnapped and tortured, and he spent the rest of the series embroiled in violent conflict. The Iron Man armour is as much an addiction as it is a symptom, not unlike P.T.S.D.-afflicted soldiers sleeping with guns by their bedside (Stark even calls to one of his suits in his sleep).

    There are now 42 versions of the Iron Man armour, each created for different contingencies. The 42nd, which Stark operates remotely from his workspace, has even begun to replace him in his interactions with Potts. He’s frozen in the moment he flew through the wormhole above New York City, and his technology has consumed him,

    The film dramatizes Stark’s symptoms with aplomb. The leering, distant camera is traded in for rapid zooms and uncomfortable close ups when his anxiety rears its head. The visual shifts feel inescapable; the lens becomes another wall closing in on Stark as we, the audience, poke and prod into his psyche, intruding on both his personal space and his most traumatic memories.

    Stark’s experiences in The Avengers are collectively referred to as “New York.” This, coupled with his vengeful, self-destructive attitude towards vaguely Middle Eastern terrorist The Mandarin (Ben Kingsley) calls to mind America’s own post-9/11 political tenor — albeit to no real end, despite the potential for exploring wartime paranoia.

    However, Stark’s specific road to recovery makes Iron Man 3 a noteworthy sequel. In the context of Marvel’s shared-universe, his arc in this film involves letting go of his own origin story, and his journey to doing so means moving past the events of The Avengers. As much as Iron Man 3 is about defining Iron Man outside of his suits, it’s also about defining this larger narrative outside its most recognizable moments.

    Separation

    The film begins the process of separating Stark from the larger saga by introducing antagonists independent of previous Marvel films. The explosive Extremis Soldiers seem to simply exist, with no connections to Gamma Radiation, the Super Soldier Serum or Stark’s technology, something only Loki has had the distinction of thus far. Stark even searches for connections to prior entries, but it turns out the soldiers were created by Aldrich Killian, whose path to Extremis began decade before The Avengers. It’s as if Stark must move past the memory of his crossover and confront something new, just to make this movie happen.

    Unfortunately, this meta-narrative of blazing a new path takes precedence over Stark’s mindset, the backbone of the film. His story is set up admirably, before being promptly forgotten.

    Stark is in a bad way. He can’t sleep. His anxiety is triggered by a child’s drawing of the event — a crayon depiction of him flying towards the source of his trauma — leading to a public breakdown. He’s even triggered by Harley Keener (Ty Simpkins) simply mentioning New York, and it gets to a point where he has a mid-freeway episode for almost no reason at all.

    With his suits out of commission, Stark attempts to combat his disorder by building weapons out of hardware scraps. Creating new tech to protect himself, a one-time survival mechanism in Iron Man, has become his crutch. Though while he finally sheds his stockpile by the end of the film, his journey to doing so feels disconnected. The freeway freak-out is the last time his anxiety or P.T.S.D. come up in the narrative.

    What follows is a passable display of the film trying to figure out who Stark is outside of his iron cocoon. Fighting with only one Iron Man boot and glove makes for a hilarious action beat, but the film’s climactic scenes are muddled, especially in how they try to define Stark in relation to his new villain.

    Like Thor before it, Iron Man 3 is yet another example of a Marvel film being “almost there” with its character arc.

    A Clash of Ideologies, or Lack Thereof 

    There’s much debate as to the movie version of The Mandarin (Ben Kingsley), originally a racist caricature best left in the ’60s. The character being cast Indian rather than Chinese avoids outright whitewashing, though the form he takes instead of an orientalist stereotype is an intentional mixture of bastardized iconographies — see also, his Captain America tattoo which uses an Anarchist ‘A’.

    Not unlike real-world terrorist outfits (ISIL, for one), the Mandarin lays claim to attacks that may not be his doing. He likens the recently-bombed Hollywood’s Chinese Theatre to the fortune cookie, an American-in-origin manipulation of Eastern imagery, repackaged and mass-marketed to the West. Fittingly, this ideological repackaging is exactly who the Mandarin is too.

    As revealed late in the film, the Mandarin is actually a hodgepodge of western fears, a think-tank terrorist strung together by a clueless actor and his wealthy benefactor, Aldrich Killian. It’s a believable explanation for Killian’s unstable-to-the-point-of-explosion Extremis Soldiers, thus avoiding further inquiry into his experiments. This Mandarin borrows the symbol of The Ten Rings, the organization that kidnapped Tony Stark in Iron Man, and he fashions himself (or rather, is fashioned by Killian) as a grandiose, moralizing zealot, hell-bent on attacking the United States and its foreign interests.

    For the first time, the Marvel Cinematic Universe comes this close to having something concrete to say about America. The “war on terror” being nebulous here, as it’s often framed the real world, allows Killian to sell biological weapons to both sides. These “both sides,” however, are never defined, or even alluded to in any way that would flesh out Killian and the world around him. Who Killian sells to matters, because his willingness to sell to them ultimately defines his conscience.

    Credit where credit is due: compared to the other films in the series, Iron Man 3 features a marginally more critical take on America’s military industrial complex, certainly more than Iron Man, Iron Man 2, Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Captain Marvel, which were all made with military funding. And while Iron Man 3 cast several real-life Air Force recruits, there’s yet to be any evidence of Department of Defense involvement in the film.

    Rather than avoiding the question of military ideology altogether, Iron Man 3 frames capitalist war profiteering through its sheer lack of ideology outside of money and power, something even U.S. political biopics have started to do. Though, the profit-motive being divorced from concerns of who, culturally or racially, is considered expendable, is its own relevant issue, something even the most military-centric Marvel films barely touch on.

    Over the course of the film, U.S. militarism is sold and packaged through media narratives on multiple fronts. One on hand, there are televised portrayals of vaguely Middle Eastern threats, whose outlook is irrelevant so long as they seem scary to Americans. On the other, the film shows America’s limp, lip-service-only ideological response to those threats, as the nation simply paints over the heavily armed “War Machine” (Don Cheadle) in red, white & blue and calls him “The Iron Patriot” (War crimes often become acceptable when given focus-tested monikers).

    While the film does little to portray the actual effects of this warmongering (Iron Patriot’s foreign interventions play out as dark comedy), it does portray the American response as both predictable and ill-considered. Killian takes advantage of this, conning the American President into invading Pakistan on two different occasions as the villain sets his traps elsewhere. While Iron Man and Iron Man 2 blame military industrialism solely on industry, Iron Man 3 at least draws a line straight to the U.S. Commander-In-Chief; the bare minimum, in a series so focused on war.

    The downside to this empty ideology, as is the case in prior Marvel films, is that it fails to properly mirror the character-story being told. Aldrich Killian’s motivations are disconnected from Stark’s “self-created demons.” Killian has an unfeeling dedication to the business of war (as Stark once did), but his appearance in Stark’s flashback does little to entwine the two beyond happenstance. Where Killian would have fit perfectly in prior Iron Man entries, Iron Man 3 isn’t concerned with Stark’s place in the world of warfare.

    Killian’s ruthlessness is on full display after the Mandarin reveal. He treats his soldiers as disposable, and he readily murders Maya Hansen (Rebecca Hall), the one person whose objectives are aligned with his. He doesn’t care about the people closest to him, which is what separates him from Stark on the surface. Stark’s arc, at least nominally, involves learning that Happy Hogan, Pepper Potts and the likes ought to be more important to him than his suits. This journey is externalized when Potts seemingly dies, followed by Stark’s far-too-late realization of just how good he had it.

    However this dramatic beat, while functional as a self-contained moment, is entirely detached from Stark’s larger story, a narrative disconnect that’s only exacerbated by the specifics of the climax.

    Fireworks in Lieu of Character 

    Tony Stark shedding his armour at the end of the film makes sense on paper. The Iron Man concept has become an anchor, and Stark’s ultimate test ought to be whether or not he’s able function without it. Yet the film’s third act, an action-laden set-piece featured heavily in the trailers, sees him entirely reliant on his technology once more.

    Summoning dozens of Iron Man suits is cool. Each one having a different design is cool, despite primarily existing to sell toys. The remote centralization of these unmanned drones is… well, it’s dangerous, but it looks cool, and the image of Stark jumping from suit to suit is cool as well. Ultimately though, empty suits fighting anonymous henchmen is still an empty spectacle, and it happens to be at odds with Stark’s journey in the film.

    Stark’s reliance on his technology is never put to the test; if anything, the finale only supports his obsession. His addiction to his suits is as much a psychological phenomenon that defines his character, as it is a dramatic want or desire in the mechanics of the story. Destroying his outlet (or symptom) neither helps him confront the roots of his trauma, nor adequately pays off the conflict between both needing his suits, and needing to destroy them in order to exist completely. As fun as Iron Man 3 may be, discarding its P.T.S.D. thread this way is narratively disingenuous.

    The Road Ahead

    By this point in the franchise, Robert Downey Jr. had become Marvel’s not-so-secret weapon, and Iron Man 3 features some of the best dramatic work of his career. He’s allowed to dig deep into what makes Stark tick (and what prevents him from ticking), working in tandem with Black’s signature sarcasm-as-shield while balancing it with unshielded moments of vulnerability. Even when the spinning plates prove too many for the story, Downey Jr. balances them with finesse, which is part of why the film feels coherent despite dropping the ball thematically.

    In the film’s closing narration, Stark utters two key phrases: “I’m a changed man” and “I am Iron Man.” The former mirrors a mal-formed character moment in Thor — the God of Thunder says, “I’ve changed,” though it isn’t clear how — while the latter is an intentional callback to the first Iron Man. These sentiments are distinctly at odds with one another, and their conflict is never reckoned with until later in the series.

    Stark hasn’t given up being Iron Man, mind you; it would be unrealistic to expect him to, in a series so lucrative, even though it would’ve made for a stronger character arc; as video essayist Patrick Willems points out, Marvel’s “Phase 2” is where the series begins exhibiting the illusion of change. The removal of the reactor in Stark’s chest indicates that he no longer cocoons himself in armour, but the “change” in question doesn’t come from no longer needing his suits. Nothing is truly different about Tony Stark between the beginning and the end of the film; at some point, his disorder simply fades. His decision to destroy his suits seems to come from wanting to no longer need them, for Potts’ sake. However, the recognition that change can or ought to happen is vastly different from actual change. The latter is where stories end. The former is usually where they begin.

    It’s an unsatisfying narrative conclusion to a story about the personal effects of trauma. But like its predecessors, Iron Man 3 also inadvertently sets into motion specific narrative faults that are eventually taken advantage of, in ways that alter the series’ approach to Tony Stark. If there’s one thing Marvel is good at, it’s taking flaws in narrative framing and retroactively weaving them into the text; the political short-sightedness of Iron Man and Iron Man 2 went on to become Stark’s political blinders; the inadequate character change in Iron Man 3 became a defining trait.

    Iron Man 3 felt like the third time the reset button had been pushed on Tony Stark. His mistakes remained unconfronted, and his story merely had the appearance of progress. But by turning this dramatic shortcoming into an inter-textual narrative, the Marvel Cinematic Universe turned another weakness into a new foundation. From this point on, Stark’s backbone was his penchant for combating mistakes with even more mistakes, creating a long-running narrative between films like Avengers: Age of Ultron, Captain America: Civil War, and even Spider-Man: Homecoming, culminating in Stark’s ultimate failure in Avengers: Infinity War.

    Marvel’s shared-universe has succeeded because of its long-term story. Not one of Infinity Stones and Quantum Realms and other cosmic plots, but one rooted in characters like Tony Stark. The MCU’s heroes are why the series works, despite its myriad of other flaws. If anything, Marvel’s sleight-of-hand makes those flaws seem like they were the plan all along.

    ***

    Expanded from an article published April 10 2018.

    Let's block ads! (Why?)


    https://www.slashfilm.com/iron-man-3-revisited-road-to-endgame/

    2019-04-02 15:00:49Z
    52780258051104

    Ariana Grande Opened Up About Her Sexuality And It's Obviously Started A Debate On Twitter - BuzzFeed

    In case you missed it, Ariana Grande released new song "Monopoly" on Monday, a collaboration with her best friend Victoria Monét.

    Dave Hogan / Getty Images

    According to Ariana, it's all about "friendship, freedom, protecting your energy and staying right in your bag".

    instagram.com

    However, one lyric in particular — "I like women and men" — has caught the attention of pretty much everybody, with people assuming that Ariana is opening up about her sexuality.

    Kevin Winter / Getty Images

    Obviously, people immediately started to freak out.

    GUYS PLEASE IM SO CONFUSED! CAN SOMEONE TELL ME IF ARIANA GRANDE IS BI OR NO? PLS SOMEONE RETWEET AND SAY YES OR NO BC IM SO CONFUSED!

    Things only stepped up a gear when Victoria, who previously came out as liking men and women last year, responded to an Instagram comment.

    And everything went into meltdown when Ariana waded into the conversation herself, saying she doesn't feel the need to label her sexuality.

    @likeitsyours i haven’t before and still don’t feel the need to now 🖤🧚🏼‍♂️ which is okay

    Eagle-eyed fans also noticed that Ariana liked these tweets about sexuality being fluid.

    hope y’all know sexuality is fluid and no one has to “come out” as anything if they don’t want to. happy monday ๑॔˃̶◡ ˂̶๑॓ ♡

    but fr psa ariana can do whatever tf she wants and as long as she’s happy that’s all that matters. sexuality is fluid in this house

    Of course, the whole thing sparked a massive conversation on Twitter. In fact, it seemed to be all anybody could talk about.

    Labels and coming out shouldn’t even be a thing but anyways I’m so proud of Ariana and I’m glad she feels comfortable tweeting us about her sexuality now even though she’s never needed to

    Fans immediately recalled the drama surrounding Ariana headlining Manchester Pride this year, which some people weren't happy with because they assumed she was straight.

    locals be looking like boo hoo the fool now that ariana’s come out as bi... im so excited for her to headline pride

    fake woke twitter when they finally realise ariana grande is bi after making 1200 think pieces about why she shouldn't headline manchester pride

    Others weren't so sure that the lyric was a confession and instead thought it might be Ariana's way of supporting Victoria, who came out as bisexual in November and co-wrote the song.

    @dialednine I don’t think it’s either! From what I’ve seen Victoria Monét is openly bisexual! I think ari put that lyric in to support Victoria but also I could be wrong on that so don’t take my word on it!

    @heylookitsjuna @Megan_Steffen Victoria monet came out as bi last year so i think that's more her line when they wrote it 🤷🏼‍♀️

    However, this led to people accusing Ariana of queerbaiting, something that she's been accused of in the past.

    Can Ariana Grande stop queerbaiting and treating bisexuality like it’s some cute fuckin joke for straight women to play with??? Thank u, next 🙄

    Ariana will never publicly come out and say she’s bisexual because that would require her actually being attracted to women(not just kissing for fun like every straight girl) she’ll say sexuality is fluid while still only dating men so she doesn’t get accused of queerbaiting

    Fans immediately came to her defence though, claiming that Ariana couldn't win.

    if ariana is bi she doesn't have to say or confirm anything yet. let her breathe and wait til she's ready ty

    The whole drama also brought up a conversation about labels, considering Ariana didn't explicitly say she was bisexual.

    also, calling ariana bi when she isn’t calling herself anything is ugly. she could consider herself pan. she might not want a label. maybe ask her ab how she views her sexuality instead of just assigning one to her.

    dont forget that ariana might be bi but she could also still be figuring herself out/exploring and she might not label herself yet . she could be trying it out feel comfortable expressing it thru music

    Ben Henry is a celebrity reporter for BuzzFeed UK and is based in London.

    Contact Ben Henry at ben.henry@buzzfeed.com.

    Got a confidential tip? Submit it here.

    Let's block ads! (Why?)


    https://www.buzzfeed.com/benhenry/ariana-grande-sexuality-in-new-song-monopoly

    2019-04-02 12:21:00Z
    52780256732138