Sunday, March 5, 2017

March’s Best Movies, TV Shows, Music and Books

Need your cultural calendar filled out for March? Here’s some suggestions.

 
In/Out W Magazine Logo
 

Sunday, March 5th, 2017

 

In this special edition of In & Out, we’re looking a full month ahead and sorting through the cultural calendar for you. Here’s our picks for what you’ll need to consume to keep up with polite dinner party conversation, what you’ll want to bing on late at night, and what’s best to just avoid.

To sign up for this newsletter click here.

 
 
 
     

What You Need to Know:

     

Film: Personal Shopper and Brimstone (March 10 in Limited Release) 

Two American starlets (Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning) who have done their time in the Young Adult genre (both, notably, in the Twilight franchise) team with two artsy European directors (France’s Olivier Assayas and the Netherland’s Martin Koolhoven) for two films that have left viewers on the festival circuit sharply divided. Stewart and Assayas team for the second time with Personal Shopper, a story about an American working in fashion in Paris who tries to communicate with her deceased twin brother. Meanwhile, Fanning and Kollhoven’s Brimstone finds the young actress playing a young mute mother hounded by an evil preacher in the old West in an ultra-violent feminist allegory. Critical reviews for both are all over the board, ranging from raves to absolute takedowns, which means, of course, you’ll have to form your own opinion. If nothing else, both should make for good after-movie debates with your date. 

TV:  Feud: Bette vs Joan (Sunday, March 5 at 10 p.m. on FX)

TV uber-producer Ryan Murphy’s output can veer wildly from campy car crashes you can’t take your eyes off (entire seasons of his American Horror Story have collapsed in on themselves, and yet we keep watching) to bona fide prestige TV (see: the Emmy dominating American Crime Story). So what to expect from Feud, which purports to be a serious take on the rivalry behind the all-time camp classic movie What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? By most early accounts, the series threads the needle nicely by giving us the juice we so desperately crave while also flipping the script on culture’s obsession with women in competition with each other. 

Music: Anohni - Paradise (March 17)

After her triumphant foray into electronic music last year with critically acclaimed album Hopelessness, Anohni reteams with the same set of producers for a follow up e.p. titled Paradise. The lead single of the same name promises good things to come. Meanwhile, Ibibio Sound Machine’s UYAI (out now) finds the Nigerian electro band expertly mixing African rhythms with shimmering synth elements that recall everything from Devo to Off The Wall-era Michael Jackson. Side note: lead singer Eno Williams has some serious style.

     

What You’ll Actually Enjoy:

     

TV: RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 9 (Friday, March 24 at 8 p.m. on VH1) 

After nine seasons, most reality TV shows seems like they should be put out to pasture, and yet RuPaul’s Drag Race just keeps getting bigger and better. Fresh off its first Emmy win (for RuPaul’s hosting naturally), the show moves from its niche network to the cable big leagues with VH1, and, in every gay man’s wildest dreams, Lady Gaga herself will serve as a guest judge for the season premiere. To some, this is a bigger deal than her halftime show. We’re not sure who we’re rooting for yet, but we’re counting on Chicago’s Shea Couleé and Brooklyn’s Sasha Velour to bring the looks. Then there’s Amy Schumer’s first Netflix outing, The Leather Special (March 7). It’s so named because, as she notes in the trailer, “Every comic has some special where they wear all leather and they regret it later.” March will also see the drop of two Dave Chapelle specials on the 21st, but we’re really craving some female laughs at the moment. Let’s not pretend we don’t all want the inside scoop on Kim Kardashian’s Paris Fashion Week robbery and ensuring Kanye collapse. We’re all friends here. Her family's show is back Sunday at 9 p.m. on E!

Music: Nelly Furtado - The Ride (out March 31)

Nelly Furtado finally returns. We heard her sing a few tracks off the album at an Art Basel Miami Beach party in December and kind of wished she performed “Promiscuous Girl” instead, but the final recorded version will play a lot better when you’re not three glasses of champagne deep. The Magnetic Fields’s 50 Song Memoir five-disc set (March 10) includes one song from each year that leader Stephin Merritt has been alive and might be some of his frankest songwriting yet. 

Book: All Grown Up by Jami Attenberg (March 7) 

The latest from the wickedly funny Attenberg tackles what it’s like to be single, childless and almost 40 in New York City. Sure, the main character might have a burgeoning drinking problem and a failed dream of being an artist, but at least she finally has some nice furniture. Then, there’s The Lucky Ones, by Julianne Pachico.  One of the stand-out characters in this novel is a New York fashion student who ends up dealing coke to hipsters (spoiler alert: she gets high on her own supply). That has “guilty pleasure” written all over it, but the wider arc of the book focuses on two decades in Colombia’s drug war.


 
 
 
 
  In Your Feed Image  
 
 
     

What You Can Ignore: 

Film: Power Rangers (March 24) 

The only thing vaguely interesting about the trailer is the fact that Elizabeth Bank’s Rita Repulsa look suspiciously like New York party promoter Susanne Bartsch. What is Wilson, out March 24? Oh, boy, a movie about a middle aged man-child who is forced to connect with a teenage daughter he never had. Why is this basic plot recycled for one movie or another every single year? 

TV: Time After Time (March 5 and 9 p.m. on ABC) 

Did anyone want a TV series about a sexy and oft-shirtless Jack the Ripper being pursued through time by H.G. Wells? It may be a remake of a cult sci-fi film from the ‘70s, but Westworld this is not. 

Music: Bush - Black and White Rainbows  (March 10) 

Some misguided mix of ‘90s nostalgia and a desire to get the other perspective of Gwen Stefani’s divorce may tempt you to check out Black and White Rainbows, the latest from Stefani’s ex Gavin Rossdale’s band. Don’t. The first single “Mad Love” is more painful than one of Stefani and Blake Shelton’s duets. 

 
 
 
 
   

 

No comments: