Guy “Woke Seed-Pod” Lodge Hired as Co-Chief Variety Critic, Replacing Peter Debruge

Congrats to the ultra-dweeby Guy Lodge, a longtime Variety stringer and an insightful film nut, upon his hiring as Variety‘s new co-chief film critic, replacing Peter Debruge and now on equal footing with co-honcho Owen Gleiberman.

HE admired and respected Lodge all through the first 15 or so years of this century. We first met 20 or so years ago…drinks in London, Cannes schmoozings, a dinner in Paris, etc. And then Lodge went wokey-woke and snooty-snoot in the late teens. Okay, fine…all film critics are woke these days and Lodge, an excellent writer, is no different. But he can also be, to be fair, a reasonably supple mainstream guy on occasion.

12 years ago I was delighted by Lodge’s praise for Olivier AssayasPersonal Shopper: “Among the many things that appear to be on Assayas’s mind is the disembodied — and disembodying — nature of modern-day communication and social media, which makes ghosts of us all to those with whom we text far more than we talk. Perhaps no film has ever made the mobile phone quite such an instrument of tension: the on-screen iPhone ellipsis of an incoming message takes on a breath-halting urgency here. No more should be revealed about the film’s gliding, glassy sashay through multiple, splintered genres and levels of consciousness – except to say that Assayas, working in the high-concept, game-playing vein of his Irma Vep and demonlover, is in shivery control of it all.”

Three or four years later the woke virus began to manifest, and Lodge was infected along with the rest. A certain tone of dutiful cult servitude began to settle in.

From “A Fifth Body Snatchers is Required“, posted on 1.9.18: “Friends and family members of seed-pod film critics have begun to notice a certain robotic manner and a glassy, out-to-lunch look in their eyes. Local constable: “But he looks like his picture, madam. Obviously he’s Guy Lodge, the Variety critic.” Mrs. Lodge: “But it isn’t him, I’m telling you. Something is missing. It’s just not Guy!”

Posted three and a half years ago:

Posted on 12.7.25: “Variety’s Guy Lodge, the bespectacled king of the Cannes filmcrit dweebs, has totally raved about Mascha Schilinski’s Sound of Falling. I respect Lodge’s willingness to drop to his knees and kowtow to a feminist filmmaker who has the chutzpah to subject viewers to a drip-drip gloom virus, but at the same time I think he’s either left the planet or had simply decided to praise this fairly infuriating film no matter what.”

Saga of a “Daughter of The Desert” Needs A Coda

Who could have foreseen on 2.1.26 that the missing and presumed-kidnapped Nancy Guthrie, beloved mom of TODAY‘s Savannah Guthrie, would still be missing nine weeks later, and that the Tuscon fuzz and the FBI still wouldn’t have clue #1 as to what exactly happened or where she is or anything?

I wonder if any of the principals involved have seen or even heard of Peter Weir‘s Picnic at Hanging Rock?

Two more ransom notes have been reported by TMZ, only they aren’t about where Nancy Guthrie may or may not be — it’s about where her body is. The first note, received on Monday, says “she is dead.”

TMZ’s Harvey Levin: “We got another letter today from this person, an email saying ‘I know where her body is, and who the kidnapper is…give me half a bitcoin and I’ll tell you.'”

“Take A Train, Dear”

13 years expired between the 12.18.09 debut of James Cameron‘s Avatar and his aquatic follow-up, Avatar: The Way of Water, which opened on 12.16.22. A long wait.

But that’s nothing compared to the 20 year gap between David Frankel‘s The Devil Wears Prada and The Devil Wears Prada 2, which opens on 5.1.26 — a mere 3 and 1/2 weeks hence.

Everyone, of course, is 20 years older. Way back in ’06 Meryl Streep was 56 or 57, Anne Hathaway was 24, Emily Blunt was 23, Stanley Tucci was 56, etc. And the material is…well, who knows if it’s dated or not? But the concept certainly is.

Will there be any references to deranged fashion industry wokeism, which is apparently ebbing as we speak. Will anyone mention the mercifully brief vogue of plus-sized women in underwear and fragrance ads? Will the film allow a glimpse of any trans runway models? The only portion I’m really looking forward to is the Milan footage.

No One Wore Neck Whiskers In The 1930s…NOBODY!

In Todd Haynes’ 1930s-era De Noche, which is currently filming in Mexico, Pedro Pascal plays a gay Los Angeles detective who falls in love with a younger hunky teacher with dark watery eyes (Danny Ramirez) and hoo boy, the cock-and-balls-and-sweaty-scrotum action is hot and unceasing…

We’re talking donkey dicks, gross animal members, rim jobs, hum jobs, hand jobs, fisting, blowjobs, slippery ass jobs, golden showers, squish jobs, jobby-type jobs…dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick dick, etc.

They decide to leave for Mexico for more of the same with some tortillas and sautéed shrimp and a little tequila and lime on the side.

Except hardboiled L.A. detectives never walked around with chin whiskers and neck-beard growth. You can come up with any bullshit grooming fantasy that floats your boat, but detectives didn’t grow chin beards in the mid to late 1930s.
They just didn’t, and THAT’S THAT. Ask Jake Gittes or Roman Polanski or John Huston.

“The Horrors of Such A Lifestyle”

Last night’s Suddenly, Last Summer Facebook commentary (Dale Launer, Rick Segreda, Meredith Brody, myself):

I’ve tried watching Suddenly, Last Summer twice, and have failed — given up — both times. I couldn’t handle the bulk of it, I mean. The interminable middle section. Yes, I’ve seen the powerful finale (an anguished Elizabeth Taylor recalling her memory of cousin Sebastian’s grotesque death), but I could never shake the feeling that this Joseph L. Mankiewicz film was psychologically diseased, and that the disease was somehow catching.

Before my second viewing (streaming) I told myself “shake off your negative attitudes and show respect for these people…Mank, Tennessee Williams, Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, Montgomery Clift, Gore Vidal.” But it once again made me feel oppressed and infected.

Oh, and the predatory “street urchins” were straight out of William S. Burroughs’ “The Wild Boys.” Dirt-poor, dark-complexioned street cannibals with boners. And they don’t really “eat” Sebastian whole. They eat portions, cutlets.

Posted on 2.14.18: Joseph Mankiewicz‘s Suddenly Last Summer is good for one thing — the stills of 27 year-old Elizabeth Taylor that were taken during filming.

She was still slender back then, or a couple of years away from that Cleopatra-era plumpness (heavy drinking + pasta) that began to overtake her features in ’61. Taylor was always a well-respected actress (Giant, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Butterfield 8), but she always seemed to be conspicuously “acting.” I always found her voice shrill and grating on some level, especially when called upon to show anger or outrage and emotional distress. But from the early to late ’50s she was quite the visual package.

Suddenly Last Summer ends with a shocking revelation about Taylor’s mentally unstable character having witnessed her gay cousin, Sebastian Venable, being eaten alive — cannibalized — by a pack of feral young boys.

The bizarre finale was obviously intended as some kind of metaphorical condemnation of gay sexuality. Sebastian’s rich mother (Katharine Hepburn) is so appalled and disgusted by suspicions of Sebastian’s lifestyle that she wants Taylor lobotomized in order to suppress any notion that the cannibal incident happened. It’s quite ugly and joyless, this film. Rage, repression, self-loathing.

From Wikipage: “Following A Streetcar Named Desire (’51) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (’58), Suddenly, Last Summer was the third Williams film that dealt with the subject of homosexuality, although it was far more explicit in its treatment than either of the previous films were allowed to be under the Motion Picture Production Code.

“Working in conjunction with the National Legion of Decency, the Production Code Administration gave the filmmakers special dispensation to depict Sebastian Venable, declaring, ‘Since the film illustrates the horrors of such a lifestyle, it can be considered moral in theme even though it deals with sexual perversion.”

“The horrors of such a lifestyle”! No wonder Tennessee Williams disavowed any direct participation, even though it was based on a 1958 one-act play he’d written for an off-Broadway venue. The play was adapted for the screen by Gore Vidal.

“Crazy Bastards” Is An Expression of Befuddled Respect

If Trump wanted to convey fierce disrespect or acidic disdain, the more appropriate “bastards”’ adjectives would have been “despicable” “godless”, “reptilian”, “seething”, “self-destructive”, etc.

“Crazy bastards” means “eccentric nutters with a genius scheme, or at least one I didn’t see coming”. Crazy as in wily, foxy, deceptive.

Arguably The Greatest Low-Key Film Score of the 20th Century

We all know what aggressive, spirit-throttling film scores sound like, and there are certainly many great ones in this vein. I could go ond on.

But what exactly constitutes a quiet film score? David Shire‘s score for All The President’s Man is an exquisite example. It’s all about antsy moods, suspicions, anxiety, uncertainties, undercurrents. I think it’s masterful — perhaps the best of its kind.

Which scores are Shire’s keenest competitors? The ones for Moneyball, Drive and Twelve Angry Men, certainly. Which others?

Skin Disease

I’m aware this is an illustration of an over-decorated sleeve of a musician’s shirt, but the first impression is that it’s a human forearm infected with some kind of exotic rash or swelling. Which is why it was never used to promote Robert Altman‘s Nashville (’75).

A movie ad of this sort will never appear in a newspaper ever again, primarily because (a) newsprint publications are all but extinct, and (b) lines for movie theatre tix are all but extinct also.

Ice Bucket Challenge

I saw The Other Side of Midnight just shy of 50 years ago, in the summer of 1977 at the Westport Fine Arts III. Based on Sidney Sheldon‘s same-titled novel, it’s a glossy, somewhat grotesque soap opera about an ambitious hottie (Marie France Pisier) climbing her way to wealth and privelege through a series of relationships with powerful men. One of them is an Aristotle Onassis-like tycoon, played by Raf Vallone.

The standout scene involves Pisier, Vallone and a silver-chrome bucket of ice. A naked Pisier, riding Vallone like an equestrian, grabs a handful of ice cubes and, at the moment of orgasm, mashes the ice into Vallone’s privates. The camera doesn’t show this — we are shown only an insert shot of Pisier’s hand scooping up the ice, and then we hear Vallone moan like a large animal who’s just been speared.

Sheldon’s book was adapted for the screen by Herman Raucher and poor Daniel Taradash (From Here To Eternity, Picnic, Castle Keep), who almost certainly took the gig for the money and money alone, holding his nose all the way.

Worried about the commercial potential of Star Wars (5.25.77), 20th Century Fox made a preemptive decision to furnish prints of The Other Side of Midnight only to those theaters and/or theatre chains who agreed to book Star Wars also — a package deal.

Midnight, which opened on 6.8.77 or two weeks after George Lucas‘s pop space epic, wasn’t a flop but only made $24 million. We all know what happened with the Obi Wan Kenobi thing.

Kuschnir’s Trump Fantasia

A surreal, frenetic, darkly imaginative fantasy from Ari Kuschnir, posted two days ago.

One of Kuschnir’s inspirations, I believe or at least suspect, was Spike Jonze‘s legendary “Pardon Our Dust“, a 2005 Gap commercial.

Both use Edvard Grieg‘s “In The Hall of The Mountain King” on the soundtrack. Grieg supplies an arch, mock-bombastic air to the raucous destruction, etc.

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Grok Parody of HE’s “The Drama” Review

Confession: I intend to see The Drama but I’m not sure I want to catch it theatrically. Okay, I may catch it this evening but while deliberating this I decided to ask Grok to write an HE parody review:

I saw A24’s The Drama last night at one of those smug little screenings where everyone’s pretending they’re not there to gawk at Zendaya and RTPatz pretending to be normal people having a meltdown. And this thing is a sleek, serpentine little viper of a movie, lemme tell ya. It’s cringe, all right, and it won’t let go until the credits roll and you’re left wondering why the hell you’re suddenly questioning every relationship you’ve ever had.

Kristoffer Borgli (the sick fuck who gave us Sick of Myself) has made what feels like an anti-romcom for people who’ve actually been in a real relationship.

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson play Emma and Charlie, this impossibly photogenic couple about to get married, and they’re happy…too happy. The kind of happy that makes you lean over to your plus-one and whisper, “Something awful is about to happen.”

And brother, does it ever! Without spoiling the precise nature of the “one damn confession” (though the trailer sorta kinda ruins it like a drunk uncle at Thanksgiving), the film detonates their perfect little world in ways that are by turns hilarious, excruciating, and weirdly erotic in that uncomfortable “am I supposed to be turned on by emotional carnage?” kind of way.

Pattinson is doing that patented Pattinson thing where he looks like a Victorian ghost who wandered into a SoulCycle class and decided to commit to the bit. He’s twitchy, haunted, funny as hell, and somehow still hot in the way only beautiful disasters can be. Zendaya, meanwhile, is operating on another plane. She weaponizes stillness like a sniper. One slow blink from her and you feel like you’ve been emotionally waterboarded.

The script is vicious in its precision. Borgli has an almost sadistic ear for the way people who love each other can still eviscerate one another with a perfectly timed sigh or a loaded “it’s fine.”

The supporting cast (including a couple of scene-stealing weirdos I won’t name because spoilers) are all operating at peak “A24 character actor who’s been waiting their whole life for this exact monologue”.

The Drama isn’t for the Marvel crowd. If you need your hand held and your catharsis spoon-fed with a nice little dessert served at the end, stay home and rewatch Anyone But You. The Drama leaves you raw. It’s messy. It’s mean. It’s funny in the way that real pain sometimes is when you’re watching it from a safe distance.

Zendaya and Pattinson have more chemistry arguing about whether a certain revelation counts as “technically cheating” than most couples have during actual sex scenes in other movies. I laughed. I squirmed. At one point I audibly groaned in the theater and the guy next to me (some hipster in a backwards baseball cap) shot me a dirty look like I’d violated sacred cinema space. Sorry, pal — this movie earns the groans.

Bottom line: The Drama is one of the most uncomfortably entertaining films I’ve seen in a while. It’s not perfect — there’s a third-act swerve that feels a little too pleased with itself — but it’s alive in a way most 2026 releases aren’t. Zendaya and Pattinson are giving career-high work, Borgli is a twisted little genius, and A24 continues its reign as the studio that understands that adults still exist and sometimes want to watch beautiful people destroy each other for two hours.Go see it. Then go home and stare at your partner a little too long. See what happens.