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Saint Etienne: International Album Review
Music

Saint Etienne: International Album Review

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

At the wedding of a childhood friend, my mother got up and danced harder than I’d ever seen in my entire life. The DJ was mixing a fairly aggressive set of Lebanese dabke music, and somehow, between the poignance of the occasion, the beat’s unfamiliar pulse, and the stuttering flash of a strobe light, I caught a glimpse of her as she was at 20 years old. As soon as I registered what I was witnessing, the track broke away and the lights went down. A disco ball glinted across the room and illuminated her face, and though the years had caught up with her, the continuity between her many lives seemed to linger. After what felt like a small eternity, the present reasserted itself with a needle scratch, a roaring crowd, and another pummeling rush of noise.

Music’s ability to suspend, sustain, and reverse time is one of its most powerful and mysterious qualities. The philosopher Susanne Langer believed that this property of “time made audible” was essential to the colorful, parallel dimensions that music can conjure. It also helps explain the wormhole effect, in which moments (and even years) can be compressed into a handful of notes and sprung again in an instant. Few musicians have understood these dynamics as masterfully as Saint Etienne. Since the early 1990s, Bob Stanley, Pete Wiggs, and Sarah Cracknell have mapped the elements of dance music onto a listener’s most tender feelings of longing, optimism, and nostalgia. A song like early masterpiece “Avenue” echoes through the ages in real time, capturing a love affair in the crossfade between young abandon and adult knowingness. The only thing more remarkable than the track’s panorama of swirling memory and conflicted feeling is how brilliantly and consistently the band was able to conjure it throughout its records.

Over the course of more than three decades, Saint Etienne have matured with their music, and they have mostly used this longevity to their advantage. But for every song that’s grappled with an adult overview of human experience, on recent records they’ve struck a world-weary note, as though aware that more yesterdays than tomorrows await the three middle-aged musicians. With their 13th and final album, International, Saint Etienne aim to go out on top, with one more blaze of fun and passion in the spirit of their best work. It is a graceful but slightly anticlimactic grand finale: a victory lap over well-trodden ground that eagerly commands the spotlight before it goes out for good.

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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VMAs 2025 Review: The VMAs Are Back
Fashion

VMAs 2025 Review: The VMAs Are Back

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Are the VMAs back? Or was MTV simply pandering to my millennial sensibilities at the 2025 VMAs?

There had to be someone at MTV whispering “do it for the 30-somethings” into the ears of the producers. Or maybe the millennials are in charge now. Whatever—all I know is that when I saw the stars arriving on the red carpet at the UBS Arena on September 7, I felt as though I’d tripped, hit my head, and woken up in the year 2009. The guest list was littered with early ’00s pop culture royalty—Ciara, Ricky Martin, the Simpsons (sisters Ashlee and Jessica), the Hiltons (sisters Paris and Nicky), Brittany Snow, Taylor Momsen, Mike “the Situation” Sorrentino, Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi, and many, many more.

Video Vanguard winner Mariah Carey.

Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

Of course, stoking our collective nostalgia for views is nothing new to the awards show. That’s basically the reason for the Video Vanguard Award, which is given each year to an artist for lifetime achievement.

In addition to the Vanguard Award, which was presented to Mariah Carey this year (rumor has it she’s still slowly shuffling off the stage. Take all the time you need, queen!), MTV bestowed its first ever Latin Icon Award to Ricky Martin, who, I’m happy to report, has absolutely still got it. Fans got an extra hit of that sweet, sweet nostalgia when Jessica Simpson presented him with the award and reminded the audience that, back in 1999, she opened for him on his Livin’ La Vida Loca tour.

Jessica Simpson and Ricky Martin.

Jessica Simpson and Ricky Martin.

Manny Carabel/Getty Images

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Lucrecia Dalt: A Danger to Ourselves Album Review
Music

Lucrecia Dalt: A Danger to Ourselves Album Review

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

On July 7, 2025, Lucrecia Dalt’s heart stopped. She had suffered a severe epileptic seizure, and eight seconds would pass before it resumed beating. The next day, the Colombian musician released “caes,” the third single from her breathtaking new album A Danger to Ourselves—a song that suggests, she says, “that the sublime can be reached through surrendering to the act of falling.” For two days after her near-death experience, she soared, so overwhelmed by the beauty of her surroundings that she wondered if she had actually died and was experiencing the afterlife. She hadn’t, of course, and the world that wowed her was the same one she occupied before her heart had stopped. She had just surrendered to the fall.

“Caes,” a gorgeously harmonic duet with Amor Muere’s Camille Mandoki, draws inspiration from the Cuban-American artist Ana Mendieta and the model Evelyn McHale, two women whose fatal falls remain intertwined with the artworks connected to them. McHale’s final photograph, “The Most Beautiful Suicide,” was taken by Robert Wiles and repurposed by Andy Warhol, while Mendieta’s haunting multimedia series Siluetas presaged her tragic end. Dalt’s tumble was decidedly more metaphorical; after years on the road, juggling multiple projects while touring the world, she moved to New Mexico and fell in love.

Lucrecia Dalt: Alien Among Us

The path of Lucrecia Dalt’s career over the past 20 years has been serpentine, growing from electronic-tinged synth pop into various sonic abstractions, embodying beasts, spirits, and the earth itself before reimagining the boleros of her youth through the lens of science fiction. Each experiment felt distinct, yet they all shared a similar detachment; building her records around fantastical characters and surrealistic concepts, she maintained a semblance of distance between her art and her personal life. Her latest work obliterates that gap.

Most of A Danger to Ourselves was written and recorded in New Mexico at the home studio of her partner, David Sylvian, the veteran British art-rocker, and its content captures the intense exchange of new love. Dalt says the record emerged after “spending enough time in the abyssal realm of erotic delirium.” This time, rather than invoking mythical creatures, she says, “the lyrics function as declarations, or odes, and the most personal truths I have explored to date are found within those lines.” It’s the most exposed she’s ever been on record.

The album opens with their duet “cosa rara,” a deceptively buoyant investigation of lust built upon dynamic drum loops from Alex Lázaro, who also gave ¡Ay! its rhythmic backbone, that shrink and expand, building and releasing tension. The new lovers swirl around one another amid breathy harmonies, scattered flexatone, and the screech of Sylvian’s guitar. Enveloped by their own desire, they succumb to it, their minds and bodies disassembled and rearranged. The climax is a car crash; Sylvian’s gravelly baritone narrates the final, refractory verse with post-coital clarity, the bliss of surrender tempered by unease.

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Anna Domino: East and West Album Review
Music

Anna Domino: East and West Album Review

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

If Domino’s world on East and West feels topsy-turvy, maybe it’s because the album was made in a state of intense, nearly paralytic anxiety. In 1983, she met the owner of the small indie label Les Disques du Crépuscule during a night out in New York—or did someone send her demo tape to their office in Brussels?—and the label flew her to Belgium to record with a band of local musicians at an unfinished studio, where Domino realized she was “unprepared, shy and inarticulate with no real way to convey what I heard in my head.” She “mimed, stumbled, and crammed everything I could” into her 10-day session, and returned to New York convinced that the label would deem her a lost cause. A few months later, a test pressing of East and West appeared in her mailbox.

You can’t hear any of that drama in the serene and stoic final product. Her elegiac cover of Aretha Franklin’s “Land of Dreams” saps the original of its desperation and desire; Domino sings that “I imagine you oh so close,” but you get the sense she’s more interested in exploring the “land of this wonderful dream.” On “Review,” Domino’s disaffected take on a breakup banger, the frustration of lyrics like, “I’ve taken all of my time/And spent it on you” is quickly supplanted by thoughts of moving out of their shared apartment: “Busy with my inventory/And the pictures and chairs/Picking up what’s left lying on the stairs.” Halfway through, co-producer Blaine L. Reininger’s mewling violin skates into view and becomes the track’s focus, as if Domino got bored of pretending that she gave a damn about the ex anymore. She’s not one to waste time being didactic, but if there’s a lesson to be taken from these five songs, it’s that one is company. Far from some hard-won realization or proto-men-are-trash platitude, it seems to exist at the core of Domino’s being, like it’s never even crossed her mind that other people might actually prefer the company of others.

This idea isn’t always explicit, and, in fact, I suspect Domino would laugh at the attempt to wring such blunt meaning from songs that are so expansive and explorable. A quiet no-wave hymnal like “Everyday, I Don’t” probably only really makes sense to her; it begins mid-thought, with the curious line “And I don’t,” and ends when another figure enters the frame: “12:44, there’s a knock on my door/You want more.”

In 1986, Domino told Record Mirror that “there is a kind of despair that comes into my music. It’s not like I’m afraid of death or anything… it’s just when you know about something and you’re not able to do something about it.” It’s a typically vague statement that seems to allude to an aspect of dramatic irony Domino sees in her own work. There is a performed, hermetically sealed quality to some of these songs; when she exclaims “Look out!” on “Trust, in Love,” it does feel a little like she’s playing Greek chorus to herself, and in my mind’s eye, she strolls a version of New York that looks more like the set Kubrick made for Eyes Wide Shut. Perhaps Domino was simply describing the twitch of anxiety that follows an especially vivid dream—waking to the suggestion that those rotted teeth and naked speaking engagements hold some deeper meaning that you can’t access.

I don’t hear any despair in Domino’s music, especially not in “Everyday, I Don’t.” To me, “Everyday, I say that I won’t, and I don’t” represents the exact opposite of powerlessness. It’s an ultraquotidian mantra, the perfect encapsulation of the freedom Domino found in New York City: the power to step away from the party, slip into bed, and explore the endless universes inside your head.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Eladio Carrión: Barclays Center Concert Review
Music

Eladio Carrión: Barclays Center Concert Review

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Puerto Rican rapper Eladio Carrión wasn’t holding back during last night’s stop of his DON KBRN tour at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. While it isn’t the first time the rapper has performed in New York City, this was his first official arena show in the city  — and he wanted it to be bigger than ever. 

Rising act Danny Towers warmed the crowd up with a medley of songs from his latest album Sinners Club which includes collaborations with Carrión on the tracks “Crush” and “ASAP.” Soon, Carrión stepped onto the stage donning a silk suit with an embroidered red dragon on the back, sidling up next to dancers who played the part of mafioso goons as they began the show with a street fight right out of a movie. 

During the two-hour performance, Carrión seemed genuinely excited to be on stage and connecting with fans. From dancing and hyping up the crowd, The singer carried an undeniable confidence and warmth which only encouraged the crowd to have a good time — even when he performed some of his more scrappier hits such as “Invencible,” “Ohtani,” “H.I.M,” “Broly,” and “Vetements.” 

This was also a bigger production for Carrión,f rom stage design to wardrobe styling to choreography. The back-up dancers captured interpretive elements of Carrión’s discography and demonstrated their skill and strength while performing gravity-defying breakdancing numbers and theatrical battle scenes. Surrounded by floor-to-ceiling screens, the retro-inspired Japanese iconography was cohesive throughout the show. Neon-pink, edgy graphics made Carrion appear as though he were on the cover of an underground Japanese magazine.

As the pyrotechnics, laser, and neon lighting brightened the arena, Carrión welcomed a string of guests and close friends to the stage, starting with Rich The Kid and Ty Dolla $ign, who performed their single “Carnival.” Throughout his set, Carrión revisited tracks from his earliest projects such as Sauce Boyz, Sen2 Kbrn Vol. 1, and Monaraca, all which dropped at the height of the pandemic and helped put his name on the map. During the second act, fellow Puerto Rican singers Justin Quiles and Lenny Tavares performed a medley, including “Conexion” and “SI SI SI SI.” Fans were given one last surprise as Young Miko joined the rapper for their joint track “AMG.” She even launched into one of her own hits, “Wassup,” before sharing a hug with Carrión.

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Editor’s picks

Carrión came into the Latin trap scene during its peak era of the late 2010s. While several of the colleagues he came up with have gone on to experiment with different sounds, and a new crop of rappers, like Dei V, Omar Courtz, and VEI HABACHE, infuse the genre with their own unique twists, Carrión offers fans a reliable continuity in sound that remains fresh and authentic. During sentimental moments of the show, Carrión performed more emotionally vulnerable tracks “Paz Mental,” and thanked fans for following his journey since his Sauce Boyz (2020) days. He also took a moment to shout out his mother and father who were in attendance. All in all, it was Carrión at his purest.

Set List
“Intro”
“Invencible”
“Ohtani”
“Vetements”
“H.I.M”
“Broly”
Interlude (Dancers)
“THUNDER Y LIGHTNING” (Bad Bunny cover)
“Si La Calle Llama (Remix)”
“Heavyweight”
“Kemba Walker”
“Romeo y Julieta”
“El Reggaeton del Disco”
“100 Conmigo”
“3 AM”
“Todo o Nada”
“Paz Mental”
“Hola Cómo Vas”
“Primer Lugar”
“Me Gustas Natural”
“Flores en Anónimo”
“Coco Chanel”
“TQMQA”
“Hey Lil Mama”
“Mami”
“Midas/Gladiador”
“Conexion”
“Sisisisi”
Lost Files Video
“Ricky Bobby”
“Peso a Peso”
“Carnaval”
“Mosh Pit Muzik”
“Cómodo”
“AMG”
“Wassup”
“Betty”
“Sin Frenos”
“BZRP Music Sessions #40”
“Mbappe”

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Justin Bieber Swag 2' Review
Music

Justin Bieber Swag 2′ Review

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Sometimes in life we all overswag. Two months ago, Justin Bieber shocked the world with his excellent Swag, his first album in four years. It was the artistic comeback he needed—sweet validation after all his celebrity meltdowns, troubling headlines, paparazzi battles, and social-media disasters. So there’s something perfect about Swag II — after catching everyone off guard before, he’s immediately back with the lame album everyone expected last time. He could have called it Swag And It’s Completely Different And Not Very Good But Also Still Swag.

The first one was a deeply weird personal statement, from an artist going through six kinds of it. But Swag II is everything the original wasn’t: slick, anonymous, half-assed, playing depressingly safe. Out of 23 songs, there’s maybe 5 or 6 keepers, buried in way too many duds that drag on forever at 3 minutes. Who knows — maybe Swag 3 will be the remix album where God joins him for a surprise Lorde-style duet on “Story of God.” (“No no, Justin—YOUR voice is the foundation of everything!”)

Bieber just announced Swag II yesterday, promising it would drop at midnight. Except it ended up getting delayed for four hours — so it’s intriguing to guess which last-minute details Bieber was still working out at deadline time. Maybe he spent the extra hours trying to think up rhymes for “You look so good”? If so, what he came up with was “If you gave me the rights, you know I would.” (So probably not.)

Swag II the kind of sequel that just reminds you how great the first one was. On the surface, it sounds like the same formula, with a loose groove between R&B and indie rock. He brings back the same collaborators — Carter Lang, Dijon, Mk.gee — and even two of the same duet partners, Lil B and Eddie Benjamin. The guests include Nigerian Afrobeats star Tems, London indie songwriter Bakar, 2000s Louisiana rapper Hurricane Chris. But it’s a whole lotta less of the same. There aren’t even any therapy sessions with Druski — you keep hoping he’ll show up to offer Justin one of his Black and Milds.

Editor’s picks

Swag II is deep in his Nineties R&B bag, but with a fatal lack of melodies, giving his voice nothing to do. The producers don’t put out like last time, so the whole thing sounds totally generic. When it’s bad, Swag II sinks into self-parody, as in “Need It,” “Speed Demon,” or “I Think You’re Special,” where Tems is completely wasted. As on the first album, Lil B appears in an uplifting moment, “Safe Space.” Yet this time he doesn’t give the Based God any room to say anything, beyond a few hype-man hollers. The occasional squeak of guitar strings is an old cliche of folkie authenticity, but in songs like “Mother In You,” it sounds like the acoustic guitar is just there to cram in as many intentional squeaks as possible, which feels phony.

But there are a few worthy tunes that live up to the original’s adventurous spirit. “Love Song” is clearly the peak, with a distorted piano loop — the one moment here where Mk.gee steps out. Bieber turns on the charm, crooning, “I wanna write you a love song, baby/I wanna write a good one you can’t stop singing to me.” He cruises around with the top down, as his lover’s hair whips in the wind, serenading her with poetic images like “An aesthetic happening on the radio station/Your eyebrows down in contemplation.” 

“Witchya” flows on another breezy groove, with hippie-country guitar twang. In “Moving Fast,” Bieber testifies about his struggles over blues guitar (“I was speeding towards the fall, I was 25”), until a disco drum loop kicks in. “Everything Hallelujah” is the flip side — stripped-down Bieber gospel-soul, with shout-outs to his wife Hailey, his son Jack, his parents, and his dogs. (“Oscar, Piggy, hallelujah!”) 

“Ear Candy” is a clever mix of Nineties Britpop shimmer and Eighties beatbox rap. But it’s also got the album’s most humiliatingly awful moment when Bieber sings, “You could spread your wings and open up,” which is straight from the Rod Stewart school of ornithology metaphors.

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The nadir might be “Petting Zoo,” an utterly blah guitar loop where Bieber vents about marital conflict without any hint of the real-life emotional turmoil he’s already bared in public. It sounds like one of his dodgiest social-media rants. “I told you that you fighting with a man!,” Bieb informs the lucky lady. “I told you I don’t play that shit, no cap / Bitch, I told you I ain’t doing tit-for-tat.” (At least it would be kinda funny if the rhyming line was “Mother’s Day sucks ass.”)

But then there’s “Story of God,” easily the most bizarre moment in a discography full of bizarre. Bieber goes off the deep end with an eight-minute spoken-word sermon about the Bible story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. He’s always been fond of ending his albums with overbaked religious fluff, but wow. Over church organ, Bieber explains how awesome it was living in Eden. “There was no fear here—fear hadn’t even been INVENTED yet!” But wait, there’s more: “It’s a feast, right? Everywhere you look, taste the explosion in your mouth!” 

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Spoiler: there’s a snake, so things don’t end well for Adam and Eve. “We lost paradise,” Bieber laments at the end. “We lost an unbroken connection. We broke the world.” Jeepers creepers, so to speak. If you hear “Story of God” this weekend, it means you’ve stayed at the party too long and your host is going nuclear to drive the damn guests out the door. But what the hell — you have to admire the chutzpah of this thing. On an album where he’s playing it dismally safe, it’s far better to hear him drop a totally unhinged monstrosity on this scale. It would have been even cooler if he’d brought back Druski to play the role of God. But you can’t accuse him of half-assing it, and there’s real emotion in his voice, more than you can say for “Forgiveness” or “Pray.” Remixers, get busy on this one.

Swag II doesn’t kill the buzz of the original, which still sounds great. Rather, the failures here just highlight everything that makes Swag sound so fresh and off-the-wall. Will Bieber stretch it out into a trilogy with Swag 3: I’m Still Standing on Business, Yeah Yeah Yeah? Don’t put it past him. But either way, Swag II already sounds like a minor footnote.

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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Slipknot: Slipknot (25th Anniversary Edition) Album Review
Music

Slipknot: Slipknot (25th Anniversary Edition) Album Review

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Those two were accomplices more than enemies, though; Robinson amplified the demands Jordison made of his bandmates as nu-metal’s first master technician. Slipknot had sheared off most of the instrumental excess that came with coming up in Des Moines’ death metal scene (home to band names like Modifidious, Vexx, and Inveigh Catharsis), but not Jordison. His kick drum could replicate the sound of a jet engine or an industrial thresher. And then it gets punctuated by the sound of a guy bashing a steel shipping container or a beer keg, a perfect merger of virtuosity and dumb violence; I imagine this is what Lars Ulrich thought he was hearing during the St. Anger recording.

Though Slipknot is a nearly flawless execution of a single idea, Slipknot, the band, were still figuring some things out. “Tattered & Torn” and especially “Prosthetics” are Slipknot’s “experimental tracks,” showcases for Jones and turntablist Sid Wilson that argue for an alternate history living out their earliest dreams of signing to Ipecac and touring with Fantômas or Mr. Bungle. “Spit It Out” lives on the complete opposite end; this is the song that got the interest of Robinson and Roadrunner Records and sounds like Static-X in a Spirit Halloween. When Taylor remembers that Slipknot are a metal band, they sound like the subject of a congressional investigation. When he raps, he sounds like the backpacker you’d avoid in the school cafeteria.

The most revealing document of Slipknot figuring it all out comes not from the bounty of demos and live cuts, but the official video for “Wait and Bleed.” Though Slipknot are playing in front of a dazed, crazed crowd of thousands, it doesn’t look glamorous, because it’s not; the footage is from Mancow’s Lazer Luau II, a 1999 shock-jock radio festival at Ankeny Airfield in Des Moines. The video is overlain by a hazy scrim, like the camera was sitting on the tarmac in the oppressive Iowa summer. Compare that to the live clip for “People = Shit,” off their 2001 follow-up, Iowa. In “Wait and Bleed,” Taylor mutters, “This song is called ‘Wait and Bleed.’” Before the beat drops in “People = Shit” he hollers, “Let me see your fucking hands in the air, London!” They now have higher-end, custom-made gear, they do crowdwork, they headbang in unison instead of flopping all over the stage. Even if you still get them confused with Insane Clown Posse, there’s no denying how incredible it looks.

Yet by 2001, there was a lingering sense that this style of music was on its way out. Korn’s Issues, Limp Bizkit’s Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, “Back to School,” all of it was still doing numbers, but the returns were diminishing; Linkin Park proved that nu-metal was more likely to merge with their TRL competitors than vanquish them. I distinctly remember leafing through an issue of Rolling Stone with Slipknot on the cover and a four-star review of the Strokes’ Is This It, and thinking it could be a cultural turning point à la Guns N’ Roses and Nirvana duking it out at the Video Music Awards. The next issue was their 9/11 tribute; Clear Channel stations banned songs ranging from 311’s “Down” to Drowning Pool’s “Bodies” and Jimmy Eat World had to temporarily self-title their breakthrough album. No one knew what America needed to heal at that time, but it probably wasn’t “People = Shit.”

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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'John Candy: I Like Me' Review: Colin Hanks Doc
TV & Streaming

‘John Candy: I Like Me’ Review: Colin Hanks Doc

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

I fell in love with John Candy the moment I saw him serve up those shovel-sized pancakes in “Uncle Buck.” John Hughes wrote the part of Uncle Buck specifically for Candy, and the uncle’s affection for his nieces and nephew was true in real life too.

Now, over 30 years after Candy’s death in 1994, comes a new documentary “John Candy: I Like Me,” full of funny anecdotes about a guy virtually everyone liked and also what being that guy cost him. Directed by Colin Hanks, it premiered on opening night of the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival with Hanks, producer Ryan Reynolds, and Candy’s children, co-executive producers Chris Candy and Jennifer Candy-Sullivan, onstage for a post-screening Q&A.

Stanton Wood. Cillian Murphy as Steve (Center-Right) in
Stanton Wood. Cr. Robert Viglasky/Netflix
© 2025.

If you already loved John Candy, this doc will make you love him even more. If you were born after his time, it will be a lovely introduction. Still, the way the doc lingers on its unabashed celebration of Candy’s life and work yet rushes through its brief examination of his psyche prevents it from being a total knockout.

From Candy’s SCTV improv buddies—Martin Short, Catherine O’Hara, Eugene Levy, Dave Hall, Andrea Martin—to Hollywood collaborators like Steve Martin, Tom Hanks, and Mel Brooks, to close friends Dan Aykroyd and Bill Murray, the film is overflowing with household names. A history of the Toronto sketch comedy scene runs as a convenient subplot.

Some of the most memorable commentary comes from Bill Murray, who is the first and last person to appear. At the premiere, Reynolds said Murray was the hardest person to book. After many unreturned calls and even ghosting a set date, Reynolds finally got Murray to agree when he sent him a video of his then two-year-old son saying, “Do the interview.”

Murray sets up one of the narrative difficulties of the film: John Candy was practically a saint, and it’s hard to find people who have anything negative to say. The film leans into this and focuses primarily on celebrating Candy, who appeared in more than 30 films and died of a heart attack alone in his hotel room on a shoot in Durango, Mexico. He was 43 years old. We learn early on that Candy’s own father, whom he strongly resembled, died of a heart attack when John was just five. He lived with the fear that he too would meet an early grave like his father.

The slew of interviews from family, friends, and colleagues forms the skeleton of the film, alongside clips from Candy’s extensive filmography dating back to the mid-1970s. The archival footage of Candy — on set and at home with his kids — gives the film vitality, and the intimate, relaxed settings where interviewees recount memories of the man who left their lives too soon evoke home and hold the film together visually. The score includes heart-wrenching music sung by a poised Cynthia Erivo, recorded especially for the film. It’s a sincere lovefest, warm without being cloying.

But Hanks’ second documentary feature has a classic problem: it lacks editorial discipline. In other words, it’s too long. The reason is a good problem to have — too many beloved stars who rarely give interviews and genuinely wanted to talk about Candy. For example, the now 40-something Macaulay Culkin, who recalls the fatherly care and bond he felt with Candy at a time when his own father and manager was neglecting the child megastar, has some of the most interesting things to say about Candy, but doesn’t appear until the last act. But the recent interview with Dan Akroyd, while nice to see him on camera again, added very little to Candy’s narrative and could’ve been left on the cutting room floor.

Too often the tension between who Candy was to others and who he was to himself gets lost, veering away from the “I Like Me” ethos. (That line comes from another John Hughes’ film, “Planes, Trains and Automobiles,” in which Candy plays a lovable loser opposite Steve Martin.)

One of the places where the movie reaches beyond simply getting the band back together again is when Candy’s son Chris says that in his father’s last years “his mind was overweight,” complicating the narrative that Candy was unjustly lumped in with “living fast and dying young.” On top of eating his feelings — not to mention smoking and drinking them — Candy, according to his son, a personal trainer, and others included in the doc, increasingly suffered from anxiety and panic attacks as his career slowed and his responsibilities as a businessman grew. Conan O’Brien, recalling when the Harvard Lampoon staff brought Candy to campus, adds a salient point: “The hazard of this business is that it’s very unhealthy for people pleasers.”

What the film eventually draws out is that it wasn’t just Candy’s weight that killed him, but a toxic combination of anxiety, stress, and genetic predisposition to heart disease and obesity. Ultimately the film positions Candy’s legacy as one of a decent guy and a talented performer who, as his daughter Jennifer says, “took care of people,” on and off set. But just as important is how it unravels the long shadow cast by a five-year-old boy’s way of coping with the traumatic loss of a parent.

Many interviewees, like Catherine O’Hara and Candy’s “Splash” castmate Tom Hanks, said that whether acting or not, Candy was extremely present when you were with him. Yet the film doesn’t provide enough space for us to feel that presence. Viewers don’t get much of a chance to sit with the particulars of Candy’s life before the film moves on to the next anecdote. One longs to see a full scene of Candy in action onscreen or in a home video, rather than just snippets. There also wasn’t enough of Candy speaking for himself, rather than people telling us how great he was.

The interviews from the SCTV crew, who had a front-row seat to Candy before and after he became a star, were the most compelling. The doc would have benefitted from more of Catherine O’Hara, shown in the film giving a touching tribute at Candy’s 1994 funeral, whose commentary felt especially rich but truncated.

In the end, Hanks delivers a good, but not great, portrait of a lovable guy whose shortcomings took him out — an ordinary guy with extraordinary talent who remains one of the best comedic actors of the 20th century.

Grade: B-

“John Candy: I Like Me” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. It will stream on Prime Video beginning on October 10.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers. 

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala's "Loser" Is Our Song of the Week: Review
Music

Tame Impala’s “Loser” Is Our Song of the Week: Review

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, our Songs of the Week column highlights the best new tracks from the last seven days. This week, we dig into Tame Impala’s latest single “Loser,” the second offering from their upcoming album Deadbeat.


10 years ago, Kevin Parker released a Tame Impala song called “‘Cause I’m a Man” for the band’s beloved third album, Currents. A lot like “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” and “New Person, Same Old Mistakes,” “‘Cause I’m a Man” took aim at habitual fuck-ups and the excuses that men make when they can’t escape their own destructive patterns, blaming biology with a clever shrug and letting the song’s majestic chorus do most of the talking.

This theme of Parker lamenting his inherent flaws resurfaces with even sharper self-awareness on Tame Impala’s latest single, “Loser,” the new offering from the band’s upcoming fifth album, Deadbeat, out October 17th. “Loser,” with its modest trot and front-and-center vocals from Parker, feels intrinsically linked to “‘Cause I’m a Man;” but where the songs merge with regards to tempo, lyrical content, and production, Parker makes “Loser” a lot spikier than his usual psych pop bliss.

Related Video

“I got the message, I learned my lesson,” Parker croons in his shimmering head voice, channeling both dejection and wistful yearning. He recalls Beck’s eternal dirtbag anthem of the same name in the chorus, offering a similarly dramatic suggestion regarding his pathetic streak: “I’m a loser, babe/ Do you want to tear my heart out?” It’s all deeply in line with the type of psych-tinged slacker rock that Parker is going for, complete with a sharp electric guitar line and enough space in between the drum beat to let his self-loathing breathe.

It’s a far cry even from prior single “End of Summer,” which provided a brief trip to the Tame Impala Acid House Factory and brought a repetitive buoyancy found mostly in the band’s extended odysseys like “Let It Happen.” But “Loser” is a lot less concerned with tripping out and much more focused on the id; the raw impulses and self-destructive tendencies that Parker usually wraps in layers of dreamy production are presented here with minimal cushioning, save for the touch of atmosphere on his vocals and the kaleidoscopic synths that warm up around the bridge.

But self-deprecation aside, “Loser” is great because it grooves. The song’s bounce and plucky keyboard touches are almost like a ’90s hip-hop cut; Parker’s descending pre-chorus, layered with harmonies, is sweet like syrup. It’s this tension between Parker’s harsh self-assessment and the song’s catchiness that makes “Loser” such an intriguing preview of Deadbeat. Even when he’s calling himself pathetic, he can’t help but make bangers.

— Paolo Ragusa
Live Music Editor


Hatchie — “Lose It Again”

Hatchie’s back! With “Lose It Again,” the Australian dream pop star continues her use of psychedelic instrumentation and indestructible hooks for a powerful final product. “You are the star I’m chasing,” she sings, with romance swirling all around her; the song’s chorus is so open and cathartic that it sounds like something Hatchie has been waiting to say for ages. Following from the majestic peaks of her 2022 album Giving the World Away, “Lose It Again” once again serves as a pain reliever, soothing the listener with lush tones while livening them with another pure-hearted refrain. Gorgeous is an understatement. — P. Ragusa

Horse Jumper of Love — “Blue Factory Flame”

Run for Cover’s tribute compilation celebrating the work of Jason Molina — the creative mind behind Songs: Ohio and Magnolia Electric Co. — I Will Swim to You, drops today and includes previously released covers from folks like MJ Lenderman, Trace Mountains, Friendship, Lutalo, and more. Just prior to the release of the full project, the label shared Horse Jumper of Love’s take on the Didn’t It Rain cut “Blue Factory Flame.” In the hands of the slowcore experimentalists, the sparse and dejected tone of the original becomes thorny and jagged. There are tempo changes, wailing guitar lines soaked in reverb, and raw, strained lead vocals. It’s (blue) fire. — Jonah Krueger

SG Lewis — “Baby Blue” featuring Oliver Sim

Along with the release of his great new album Anemonia, SG Lewis has offered the standout cut “Baby Blue,” which features The xx’s Oliver Sim for a rather effervescent vocal performance. SG Lewis makes music for golden hour, like you can hear the warmth and light of the sun harmoniously meeting the revelry of night in real time. “Baby Blue” is exactly the kind of open-hearted, transcendent dance music he’s become known for, and just like his best collaborations — like “Heat” and “Hurting” — it’s endlessly replayable. — P. Ragusa

Shallowater — “Ativan”

Shallowater, one of our artists to watch in 2025, return today with their sophomore effort, the excellent (and excellently titled) God’s Gonna Give You a Million Dollars. The record is primarily made up of extended slowcore epics with a tinge of twang, and one of the most enthralling is the penultimate track “Ativan.” Extending almost to nine minutes in length, the tune boasts beautiful performances, an ever-compelling structure, and a grand payoff that rewards those patient enough to stick around for it. Come to think of it, those descriptions really could apply to just about the entire album. — J. Krueger

Softcult — “16/25”

After several years of standout EPs, Canadian rock duo Softcult (one of our 2025 artists to watch) have finally announced their debut album, When a Flower Doesn’t Grow, out in early 2026. They’ve shared the rollicking, furious “16/25,” an anthemic slice of shoegaze taking aim at predatory older men who groom younger women. “She doesn’t know how to love you,” they sing over pummeling drums, a line rendered less abstract each time they repeat it. “She’s 16, you’re 25.” Though cloaked in the warm haze of down-tuned guitars, that final lyric leaps out. She’s 16, you’re 25. Gross! — P. Ragusa

Sword II — “Even If It’s Just a Dream”

“Even If It’s Just a Dream,” the first single from Sword II’s recently announced new album Electric Hour, finds the Atlanta outfit embracing their dreamiest, most melodic tendencies. Over top acoustic chords and jangly electric lines, as well as synth arpeggios that wouldn’t sound all that out of place on a Beach House tune, the track is a shockingly warm and cozy affair — especially when juxtaposed with the angsty imagery of the music video. — J. Krueger

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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The Bengal Files X Review
Bollywood

The Bengal Files X Review: Vivek Agnihotri’s Film Is “Gut Wrenching” & “Unmissable”

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

The Bengal Files X Review! ( Photo Credit – Instagram )

Vivek Agnihotri has released the final installment of The Files trilogy. Starring Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, and Simrat Kaur, The Bengal Files was released in theatres worldwide today, September 5, 2025. It opened to highly positive reviews, and cinegoers are calling it a must-watch. Scroll below for the X reviews!

The Bengal Files revolves around the genocide of the 1946 Great Calcutta Killings and the Noakhali riots, as well as the trauma of partition. It has been much in the controversy over its alleged ban in West Bengal. Director Vivek Agnihotri claims theatres in Bengal threatened against the screening. Pallavi Joshi also wrote an open letter to President Droupadi Murmu, seeking intervention and protection of her constitutional rights.

The Bengal Files Review on X (formerly Twitter)

Interestingly, not a single review of The Bengal Files has been negative on X/ Twitter so far. Cinegoers call it “gut-wrenching” and hail the performances by Pallavi Joshi, Mithun Chakraborty, Simrat Kaur, and others.

A viewer wrote, “A gut-wrenching experience that shakes your soul! Gripping storytelling by Vivek Agnihotri Bone-chilling frames that hit the conscience Powerhouse performances – Simratt Kaur, Namashi Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi & Darshan Kumar Strong support – Anupam Kher, Mithun Chakraborty, Saswata & Sourav Das This is not just cinema… it’s HISTORY on screen. Unmissable & unforgettable!”

#thebengalfilesReview 🔥
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
A gut-wrenching experience that shakes your soul!
Gripping storytelling by Vivek Agnihotri
Bone-chilling frames that hit the conscience
Powerhouse performances – Simratt Kaur, Namashi Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi & Darshan Kumar
Strong… pic.twitter.com/prkDmVy4XE

— Ravi Chaudhary (@BURN4DESIRE1) September 5, 2025

Another tweeted, “A hard-hitting take on Direct Action Day (1946) Raw, intense & unforgettable. Brilliant performances + powerful storytelling = MUST WATCH”

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (4/5) #TheBengalFiles

A hard-hitting take on Direct Action Day (1946) ⚡ Raw, intense & unforgettable.

Brilliant performances + powerful storytelling = MUST WATCH 🔥#TheBengalFilesReview #VivekAgnihotri pic.twitter.com/zmWhGnxt2G

— Sagar Talkies (@SagarTalkies) September 5, 2025

An X user shared, “Incredible movie and haunting. The Bengal Files is our history. Simrat kaur with a performance of a lifetime as Bharathi Banarjee. Her emotions sweep you, definitely to watch out. Namashi and Pallavi Joshi are also fantastic. & Mithu da”

Incredible movie and haunting. The Bengal Files is our history. Simrat kaur with a performance of a lifetime as Bharathi Banarjee. Her emotions sweep you, definitely to watch out. Namashi and Pallavi Joshi are also fantastic. & Mithu da 🫡 #TheBengalFilesReview #thebengalfiles

— Milan Raj Singh (@MilanSi65445733) September 4, 2025

“#TheBengalFilesFirstReview 4/5⭐ 𝗛𝗲𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗯𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴 “It’s a Heartbreaking drama movie with lots of Violence and Brutal scenes,”‘ tweeted another.

#TheBengalFilesFirstReview 4/5⭐
𝗛𝗲𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗯𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴

“It’s a Heartbreaking drama movie with lots of Violence and Brutal scenes.”#TheBengalFiles (#TheBengalFilesReview)#AnupamKher, #MithunChakraborty & #VivekAgnihotri… pic.twitter.com/4ORXJpwDXk

— Zohaib Shah 🇵🇰 (@Zohaib4Sweety) September 3, 2025

A review read, “OUTSTANDING 𝑹𝑨𝑻𝑰𝑵𝑮 – 10/10 For those who believe cinema should shake, stir, and scar you with truth for them The Bengal Files is unmissable.”

𝑹𝑬𝑽𝑰𝑬𝑾 – 𝑻𝑯𝑬 𝑩𝑬𝑵𝑮𝑨𝑳 𝑭𝑰𝑳𝑬𝑺
OUTSTANDING
𝑹𝑨𝑻𝑰𝑵𝑮 – 10/10
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

For those who believe cinema should shake, stir, and scar you with truth for them The Bengal Files is unmissable.#TheBengalFilesReview #TBFReview #VivekAgnihotri

— TJ (@IamTarunJoshii) September 5, 2025

More about The Bengal Files

The Bengal Files is the last installment of The Files trilogy after The Tashkent Files (2019) and The Kashmir Files (2022). It is one of the longest films made in India, with a reported runtime of 204 minutes.

The ensemble cast features Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, Darshan Kumar, Simrat Kaur, Anupam Kher, Saswata Chatterjee, Namashi Chakraborty, Rajesh Khera, Puneet Issar, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Sourav Das, and Mohan Kapur.

Stay tuned to Koimoi for more Bollywood features!

Must Read: When Shah Rukh Khan Rejected Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge Not Once Or Twice But Four Times Due To His Age-Related Concern

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