Los Angeles Times - 29.08.2019

(nextflipdebug2) #1
From pop star
to festival mogul
The Cure and Robert
Smith headline the
Pasadena Daydream
fest; he’s curator. E3

Comics................E6-E7
What’s on TV..........E8

Kevin WinterGetty Images

CALENDAR


THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2019:: LATIMES.COM/CALENDAR


E


The new movie “Ad Astra,” which

makes its world premiere Thursday at the Venice Film Festi-


val, is a delicate balancing act — a science-fiction action-ad-


venture epic on the one hand, and a quiet, ruminative treatise


on masculinity and the necessity of human connection on the


other.


Directed, co-produced and co-written by James Gray, the

film stars Brad Pitt as Roy McBride, an American astronaut


sent on a top-secret mission to discover the source of de-


structive power surges coming from deep space. Roy’s father,


an astronaut played by Tommy Lee Jones who disappeared


while on a space exploration mission many years earlier, is


believed to be hiding in orbit somewhere near Neptune and


could hold the answer.


The movie’s dazzling, energetic action sequences include a

lunar rover chase on the moon, McBride breaking into a
rocket as it prepares to launch from Mars and later hurtling
through open space. All while tracking McBride’s interior
journey as a man living a life of isolation and solitude, coming
to the realization he needs more.
“In a sense, the truly unknown, the true terra incognita is
the landscape of the human soul,” said Gray during a recent
interview in Los Angeles. “And sometimes instead of looking
outward, look inward. To keep looking outward, it doesn’t
really give you answers.
“There’s a quote by Arthur C. Clarke where he said either
we’re not alone in the universe or we are and both notions are
equally terrifying. So all of this went into the movie and the
action beats really were an attempt only to illuminate and ex-
pand upon these ideas.”

BRAD PITTstars as a U.S. astronaut on a secret mission in the new science-fiction film “Ad Astra” by writer-director James Gray.


Francois Duhamel20th Century Fox

In a moody space


Even as veteran indie filmmaker James Gray rockets into the


big-budget universe of ‘Ad Astra,’ he gives the sci-fi epic a soul


BYMARKOLSEN>>>


[See‘Ad Astra,’E5]

President
Trump,
members of
his admin-
istration
and some
conserva-
tive politi-
cians get a
lot of grief for their use of the
term “real Americans.”
The grief is justified,
because, at best, the term
implies that certain citizens
of this country — residents
of the Midwest, say, or folks
with “working-class” jobs —
are somehow more Ameri-
can than others, which is
just ridiculous. At worst, the
term is dog-whistle short-
hand for “white people who
are tired of having to share
this country’s resources
with anyone whose face,
faith or family might look a
little different from theirs.”
Either way, the phrase
is regularly mocked and
decried by late-night hosts
and members of “liberal
Hollywood” who are active
in politics or on social
media.
Yet Hollywood does
more to perpetuate the
myth of “real Americans”
than any politician, or any
other cultural force in the
world.
Go to the movies, turn on
whatever screen you use to
watch the art form formally
known as television, and
what do you see? A wide
array of stories revolving
around a fairly narrow
group of people, mostly
white, mostly male.
If you were a newcomer
to this country or planet,
looking, as historians and

They


do not


reflect


the real


U. S.


MARY McNAMARA

[SeeAmericans,E4]

SAN FRANCISCO —


When Netflix plunged into
India’s vast market with its
first original animated kids
series in April, it turned to a
curious baby known as
Bheem who crawls through
his rural village overcoming
challenges to nab the perfect
white flower to complement
his mom’s purple sari.
Company executives an-
ticipated that “Mighty Little
Bheem” would be embraced
by Indian audiences, but
they were pleasantly sur-
prised when the series tar-
geting preschoolers took off
worldwide, becoming the
second-most-popular origi-
nal kids program to launch NETFLIXwas pleasantly surprised by the global success of its investment in In-
dia’s animated preschoolers show “Mighty Little Bheem,” starring a superbaby.


Netflix / Green Gold Animation

India’s ‘Bheem’ lifts Netflix


Streaming giant sees


growth opportunities


by expanding globally


with more family fare.


By Wendy Lee


[SeeNetflix, E5]

SALZBURG, Austria —
There is so much being
made about the mystique of
Kirill Petrenko, the seem-
ingly otherworldly 47-year-
old conductor from Siberia
who began his tenure as
Berlin Philharmonic music
director last weekend, that it
hardly seems like mystique
at all anymore. The fact that
he does not sell himself has
been made a selling point.
The New York Times has
dubbed him the anti-anti-
maestro (does that make a
maestro?).
He shies away from inter-

views and is said to be truly
shy, a rare and you would
think undesirable trait for a
conductor. He is also said to
leave his ego, if he even has
one, at the stage door. Again,
it is said (everything comes
second hand with Pe-
trenko), that rather than
genuflect before the greatest
orchestral machine the
world has ever known, as
many a maestosomaestro
has for the most sought-af-
ter job in the profession, Pe-
trenko was genuinely sur-
prised to have been selected
by the players, who pick
their music director them-
selves.
So was the music world.
Petrenko had never before
headed an orchestra, only
opera companies and only
one big one, Bavarian State
Opera in Munich, where he
remains for two more sea-
sons. He is a perfectionist

MARK SWED
MUSIC CRITIC

Conductor steps


onto world stage


Berlin Philharmonic


chose Kirill Petrenko


for the job. In concert,


he makes it clear why.


[SeeKirill Petrenko,E4]
Free download pdf