I needed this. Not the Billy Joel part. But the primer. It’s useful and what that Fallon fellow was put on late night for.
I needed this. Not the Billy Joel part. But the primer. It’s useful and what that Fallon fellow was put on late night for.
Hollywood Reporter (@THR) Tweeted:
For the first time, the soundtracks of #Marvel movies will be released on vinyl – starting this week with #AntmanAndTheWasp https://t.co/tlMXTF2c7y https://t.co/9iyVTuXZo7 https://twitter.com/THR/status/1120610019966431232?s=17
Bill Camp is the leader of the “blood and soil” “family” of racists that takes in Jamie Bell. Danielle MacDonald (“Patti Cakes”) is the young woman who thinks he’s better than that. Vera Farmiga and Mike Colter (“Breakthrough”) also star in this July 29 release.
It’s from A24. Of course it’s good.
Because Clint, like Warner Brothers, which will NOT be releasing Great Grandpa’s movie (Fox Disney might, surprise), sees political hay to be made from Richard Jewell’s story. The old GOP coot should stick to interviewing empty chairs. Not that he was good at that, either.
“The Ballad of Richard Jewell” is being described as the wrongful trial-by-media of Olympics Park hero Richard Jewell, who spotted the bomb and was ushering bystanders out of an Atlanta park in 1996, and then was fingered by law enforcement as a suspect in the bombing that followed.
I cannot remember, was it the Feds who leaked the story to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, which ran with it? Or was it the local cops? Blue Lies Matter.
Anyway, what we’re looking at is a curmudgeonly GOP hack too old to wait around for a second take any more and whose movies reflect this, telling a story with the sort of spin he wants to put on it.
Think I’m exaggerating? Did you SEE “Absolute Power,” his thinly-disguised swipe at the Clinton presidency?
Warners wouldn’t let him release that loaded diatribe during an election year. Maybe Disney will be too smart to, as well.

I’m always down for a little rock’n roll nostalgia. One can barely recall what music was before the rise of Kanye, Eminem, Swift and Snoop.
This one has Springsteen and Little Steven, among others, old men telling rock war stories about Asbury Park’s contribution to music, it’s rough history, the “redemption” of music that came from there.
The film has no IMDb page (yet), so details? Digging around for more, now. It will have two “one night only” showings — May 22 and 29 — for starters.

Rick Kelly was a famous New York luthier/guitar builder, a master of his trade, long before he added “The Bones of Old New York” to his work.
His Carmine Street Guitars shop in Greenwich Village was where musicians in the know — people like Lou Reed and G.E. Smith, longtime leader of the “Saturday Night Live” band — would come for custom-made axes, or to have their guitars –acoustic or electric, ancient or new vintage — repaired.
Then he got the idea of making guitars out of wood salvaged from bars and other businesses torn down, from burned-out churches. He’d scavenge the extinct elm and Ash, stack the lumber in the back of the shop and later take a scroll saw to it to create necks and bodies for guitars as works of art.
Inside the hollowed-out body, hidden where the neck attaches, he notes the place the”Bowery Wood” came from, the type of wood and its age.
That’s a lovely detail from “Carmine Street Guitars,” the eccentric, serene, almost poetic documentary about Kelly, his business, his protege guitar builder/decorator, the former art student Cindy Hulej.
Filmmaker Ron Mann lets us see the dust-bunny collecting business, where former sculpture student Kelly practices his trade with the quiet patience of a master craftsman. The walls of the shop are a clutter of news clippings and tribute photos from the guitarists who bought Rick’s guitars. Mother Dorothy answers the grimy, land-line phone, keeps the books on an adding machine and tries to keep the dust bunnies at bay.
Cindy is a 25 year-old with great skills with woodburning tools, crafting a “tribute to the Traveling Wilburrys” model, complete with engraved/burned images of each of the members of the All Star band, which came and went before she was born. When she or Rick finishes a guitar, she posts a picture on Instagram — “#guitarporn.”
Mann’s unhurried movie purports to show “a week in the life” of this guitar shop — Rick, pedaling a 10 speed to work, running the drills, saws and routers, and handling the rasps, files and draw knives of his trade.
And as he does, famous pickers drop by, to shop, to play, to chew the guitar fat.
Lenny Kaye of Patti Smith’s band drops by for a repair.
Guitars Kelly built for Lou Reed that came back to him after Reed’s death are trotted out for Reed’s guitar sideman, Stewart Hurwood, to play and see how they’re aging, how they sound now.
Jamie Hince of The Kills, Charlie Sexton of Bob Dylan’s touring band, Nels Cline of Wilco (shopping for a guitar for Jeff Tweedy), Christine Bougie of Bahamas, all “stop by” to visit, shop and pick.
Kelly, a soft-spoken enthusiast, shows off 150 year-old slabs from Chumley’s, a pre-Civil War era speakeasy, a gorgeous piece from the former Bowery bar and brothel known as McGirk’s, from a burned Serbian cathedral, and from another even more famous watering hole, McSorley’.
“People’ve been spillin’ beer on this wood for 160 years!”
Kirk Douglas of The Roots appreciates Kelly’s mania for simplicity, in both guitar making and the music he likes to hear from them. Kelly fell in love with the feminine shape of the Fender Telecaster, the quintessential solid body electric guitar of the rock era. Although he has created all manner of far-out designs, hollow bodies and Gibson Les Paul clones, it’s the simple “Tele” that is his great inspiration.
“Hard to beat a Tele,” Kelly says.
“One pickup, wood, electricity. Boom!” Douglas enthuses.
Eszter Blaint picks at a guitar with a fingerboard that looks like rescued, chipped lava. Kelly’s new passion of for worm-eaten, ancient wood that he leaves partly finished — “survivor wood.”
The film may feel scripted and staged — filmmaker and Sqürl band guitarist Jim Jarmusch comes in for a repair to his ash and catalpa wood acoustic, a tactless monied young realtor who just sold the property next door drops by to imply the shop is not long for this neighborhood. It’s more an essay on the Last of His Kind than a fly-on-the-wall documentary.
That doesn’t dull its virtues. We get a lesson on how wood for any instrument, even one plugged in, ages, feels and sounds. Some of the folk arty guitars look like an invitation to get mid-performance splinters.
But as Bill Frisell picks up a primitive-looking instrument and starts playing the music he loved as a boy growing up in Denver, “Little Surfer Girl,” the magic being made in that sea of wood, tools, ukuleles, banjos, hollow and solid bodies of every description, you can’t help but hope the pupil learns all the master has to offer and carries the trade forward.
“This one just went UP in price. Now it’s got Bill Frisell in there!”
Maybe she’ll outgrow that mania for gaudy woodburned filigree and flourishes — “#guitarporn” — and absorb the simplicity Kelly has kept as an ethos, in his instruments and the music he loves.
“Anything more than three chords is just SHOWING off!”
![]()
MPAA Rating: unrated, some profanity
Cast:Eszter Balint, Bill Frisell, Cindy Hulej, Lenny Kaye
Credits:Directed by Rom Mann, script by Len Blum. An Abramorama release.
Running time: 1:20

Merce Cunningham was the greatest “acquired taste” in modern dance. And living to the active old age of 90, with 60+ years in the public eye, we had a lot of time to acquire that taste.
His choreography is revived, explained and dissected in “If the Dancer Dances,” a revealing documentary about reviving his 1968 piece “Rainforest,” complete with the “Andy Warhol aluminum pillows” balloons), David Tudor music and ripped Jasper Johns “nude” costumes.
New York choreographer Stephen Petronio unleashes his company on one of Cunningham’s classics. But he doesn’t trust himself to stage it.
“The beauty…and amazing thing about dance is that it gets passed from one body, one soul, to another,” Petronio explains. “It comes out of the body, it goes into the air. And then it disappears…How do we keep their work alive?”
We convince the dances who worked with Cunningham — among them Andrea Weber and Meg Harper, to teach the work, the style, to young dancers in a company whose works about “constant motion.”
“There’s going to have to work from a different place within their bodies,” Weber notes. “Everything everything EVERYthing comes from the back!”
He’d build his company, and rebuild it around certain types of dancers, and certain physical types.
“Merce,” who starred in his own pieces late into life, “had these crazy-long arms and legs,” Weber says to Petronio’s troupe, emphasizing the difficulties that creates. Every body part is vital, every muscle just so.
“I’m going to HOUND you about the hands.”
“Rainforest,” a work of graceful, halting lurching, leaps, embraces, blooming and stalking, was inspired by Cunningham’s recollection of a rainforest near where he grew up in Washington state.
Backstage, the Gino Grenek, dancing the lead, gripes that “Everything is cramping,” thanks to the en pointe poses held impossibly long, legs or arms suspended in air for seconds upon seconds, the contortions demanded of the human back.
No wonder a young dancer in the company, Nick Sciscione, whispers “The name evokes FEAR.”
“If te Dancer Dances” — the film takes its title from a Cunningham truism, “If the dancer dances, everything is there!” — underlines what Petronio used as his reasoning for bringing in as many Cunningham vets as possible for the rehearsals. “You can’t teach it from the written page, can’t really learn the dance from a video,” Petronio says. It’s all about “muscle memory,” practiced and passed on, “dancer to dancer.”
If Cunningham’s work is to survive, it will be through efforts like this (The Cunningham Trust was set up to ensure that.).
Cunningham veteran Gus Solomons jr analyzes the essence of Cunningham’s art, “Shapes at different speeds, very fast, or very slow,” he says. “Stripped down abstraction” that can “approach physical impossibility. And that’s what’s exciting.”
Yes. “Everything cramps” performing his works.

All this explanation is useful to the viewer, casual dance fan or otherwise, because for all the glories of lithe, sweaty bodies moving in intense physical concentration, of seeing leads Dava (Davalois) Fearon and Grenek and others mastering the movements, no film version of Cunningham’s work can overcome that “acquired taste” thing in itself.
But “If the Dancer Dances” piques the interest and widens the appreciation for just what a test these pieces are, even to the performing arts world’s Olympic-level athletes — dancers.
![]()
MPAA Rating: unrated, some profanity
Cast: Davalois Fearon, Gino Grenek, Meg Harper, Nick Siscione, Andrea Weber, Stephen Petronio
Credits:Directed by Lise Friedman and Maia Wechsler. A Monument release.
Running time: 1:26
There’s an Eastwood in this — Francesca. And Alycia Debnam-Carey and Claire Holt and Ted Levine (“Monk,” “The Silence of the Lambs.” Gerald McRaney, too.
But it’s about brothers played by Brenton Thwaites and Ben Young. A shooting and “a cover up.”
“A Violent Separation” opens in theaters and on VOD May 17.
Several of these folks, including Leo and Don Cheadle, are more accessible to the press via the activism than their work. The most recent times I have spoken with several of them were on behalf of their causes.
Hollywood Reporter (@THR) Tweeted:
In honor of #EarthDay, here’s a look at 10 stars who are making an eco-friendly impact around the world https://t.co/EWh8oyNLxZ https://t.co/s0mYHo7J9d https://twitter.com/THR/status/1120302496449290240?s=17
Better than the fleet of Chevys Roger Moore was chased through New York with in “Live and Let Die,” the endless AMCs in “The Man With the Golden Gun.” https://www.express.co.uk/entertainment/films/1116976/James-Bond-25-product-placement-Omega-Aston-Martin-Bollinger-Heineken-Daniel-Craig/amp#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s