House of Gucci

House of Gucci

Best known as an actor for her role in the remake of A Star is Born, Stefani Germanotta (a.k.a. Lady Gaga) is set to strike filmic gold again with House of Gucci. Based on the novel by Sara Gay Foden, House of Gucci recounts the dramatic story of the titular Italian fashion house. As might be expected, especially for Lady Gaga’s musical pedigree, the way Blondie’s hit single “Heart of Glass” (from the 1978 album “Parallel Lines”) is edited to the trailer is a significant factor for its success. As one YouTube commenter said, “whoever edited this trailer with the music and specific scenes… got me into watching a film about Gucci.”

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UFO (2021)

UFO (2021)

The latest from J. J. Abrams is a four-part docu-series premiering on Showtime, focusing on a fairly perennial topic in American media: Our fascination with whether or not the power of government, corporations, and the military have colluded to shield evidence of extraterrestrial phenomena from the public eye. Though the trailer never directly references the X-Files, the show is one of the tangible influences underlying this preview (and probably the series UFO as well).

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Zola

Zola

In what is most like the first film adapted from a Twitter thread, it’s more than apt that it should start with the sound of a mobile notification; that innocent-sounding, two-ding bell is both complemented and juxtaposed by a woman calmly gliding around a pole. The story—or, as famously known on Twitter, #TheStory—is based on a 148-tweet thread from 2015 by Aziah “Zola” Wells, detailing a Pulp Fictionesque story that’s at first about a stripper, and goes far deeper than anyone could have imagined.

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Schmigadoon!

Schmigadoon!

The narratological space that the music in a musical film occupies—where its characters appear to be unaware that they are engaging in musical performance—is about as fraught as the stylistic inclusion of the exclamation point in Schmigadoon!’s title. That is to say, it’s inconclusive, a bit syntactically awkward, and its purpose and inclusion is subject to one’s opinion on the matter.

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Last Night in Soho

Last Night in Soho

Edgar Wright has always been particularly well-attenuated to the music and image dynamic. From the original music-laden Scott Pilgrim Versus the World to 2017’s Baby Driver, his unique aural sensibilities are analogous to how Wes Anderson has become synonymous with distinctive palettes of colour; one can practically tell just by the edit who one is dealing with.

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Infinite

Infinite

Directed by Antoine Fuqua (perhaps best known for editing music videos for Toni Braxton, Prince, and others) and starring Mark Wahlberg (Ted, Transformers: Age of Extinction), Infinite’s trailer is a study in fastidious synch between sound and image, at times clearly and unabashedly splicing directly to the rhythm.

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Summer of Soul

Summer of Soul

Best known as the band leader for The Roots, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson makes his filmmaking debut with this documentary and concert film celebrating Black culture, fashion, music, and history. It offers a look at artists such as Stevie Wonder and Sly & the Family Stone in never-before-seen appearances. With 98% on the Tomatometer and a prize-winning screening at the most recent Sundance Film Festival, it’s already a can’t-miss event before even watching the teaser.

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Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

After a largely pandemic-induced lull in full feature-length proceedings in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the release schedule looks set to resume (for a mostly vaccinated stateside audience, at least) with Shang-Chi.

Starring Simu Liu (whom Canadians and many around the world will recognize from CBC’s Kim’s Convenience), Marvel’s first film with an Asian lead happens to be arriving in the midst of a moment of increasing awareness—and incidence—of anti-Asian hate.

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West Side Story (2021)

West Side Story (2021)

A recent, burgeoning appetite for musicals—rebooted, reimagined, remade, new or old—continues unabated with Steven Spielberg’s 2021 take on 1961’s West Side Story. While the original was directed by Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins, with music of course by Leonard Bernstein, this update includes a new arrangement and adaptation of the score by David Newman.

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Annette

Annette

Directed by Leos Carax (Holy Motors) and with the music and script written by Ron and Russell Mael of the long-running American pop dup Sparks, Annette is an intriguing new musical starring Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard. Set to open the Cannes Film Festival this year, the plot is not so much to be understood—at least at this point—as felt.

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Tina

Tina

The steady stream of musician biopics in recent years—with at least eighteen in the offing—continues with HBO’s Tina, for which we have an “official teaser trailer.” The two-part structure incorporates multiple editing touches that help lend meaning to Turner’s interview sound bites as well as additional production elements to render it into a cohesive whole, working with footage from the early 60s up to today. From black and white to 4K and from Motown to orchestral anthem, it comes with an overarching promise—appropriate to the genre—that we might come away with a more in-depth understanding of Turner as a person.

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Concrete Cowboy

Concrete Cowboy

It was only about eight years ago that popular media began to really reckon with Hollywood’s whitewashing of American cowfolk. After the original 1960 version of The Magnificent Seven by John Sturges, a 2016 adaptation recast its heroes in a way that better represented historical reality. Other attempts, such as those by Tarantino (Django Unchained, The Hateful Eight) grapple with such issues—without quite letting go of the narrative conventions that made the Western genre racially problematic to begin with. Concrete Cowboy, co-written and directed by Ricky Staub and featuring Idris Elba, not only stands to further correct the aforementioned fictions, but also presents a compelling story in its own right.

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Made for Love

Made for Love

Premiering April 1st on HBO Max, Made for Love is an adaptation of a novel by Alissa Nutting exploring the dystopian experience of Hazel Green (Cristen Milioti: How I Met Your Mother). Her husband Bryan, a billionaire technology entrepreneur, implants a chip in her brain, thinking total surveillance of Hazel’s thoughts and feelings would somehow be an acceptable idea.

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Luca

Luca

Following Soul, Pixar’s latest follows the young boy Luca on adventure by the seaside Italian Riviera—the catch being that Luca and his friend transform into sea monsters whenever they are exposed to water. Directed by Academy Award nominee Enrico Casaros, the voice talent includes John Ratzenberger and Drake Bell.

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