This week, we saw Captain America again, the relationship of the Golden Bachelor went the way of so many others before it, and reboot fever continued to burn so hot that you could not possibly avoid catching it.
Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Riddle of Fire
Riddle of Fire premiered at Cannes last year. It's a really scrappy neo-fairy tale set in Wyoming. These three kids just want to play video games, but their mom gives them a quest to bake a pie for her because she's not feeling well — and only then can they play their video games. So this launches an epic little adventure — and it's so charming. It's shot on 16mm — it looks like nothing else out there right now. I'm fully in love with this movie, and I hope other people will get the chance to check it out. — Monica Castillo
Palm Royale, streaming on Apple TV+
Palm Royale stars Kristen Wiig, Allison Janney, Carol Burnett and Laura Dern. It is a bunch of women who are not in their 20s and 30s, but are just having a blast. It takes place in the late 1960s — Kristen Wiig plays a woman who wants to fit in with all the rich society mavens at an exclusive Palm Beach club. There is a subplot about a women's consciousness raising group lead by Laura Dern's character. It is frothy, fizzy, good, silly fun — with excellent costumes. Is it great TV? I don't know yet, but it's blast. — Danielle Kurtzleben
Alfred Hitchcock Storyboards, by Tony Lee Moral
I am obsessed with this coffee table book called Alfred Hitchcock Storyboards compiled by Tony Lee Morel. You open it up and you can see the storyboards for the attack of the birds on the gas station. You can see the push zoom effect from Vertigo as it's sketched out. It's like this holy grail of storyboards. Hitchcock famously said that once he finished planning out and drawing the storyboards, the movie was finished — shooting was just a formality. I've been using it as a treat for myself; every time I finish something I don't want to do, I get to go look at the next film. — Walter Chaw
The People's Joker
You might have heard about The People's Joker when its planned extended premiere at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival was abruptly reduced to one midnight showing. It is the origin story of The Joker — if The Joker was a trans woman with a very funny narco-socialist take on pretty much everything, but especially weirdly, the status of contemporary stand up comedy ... and if Gotham City was a combination of crowd-sourced greenscreen backdrops and animation. It is also a queer coming of age tale and a romcom with a very thorough knowledge and jokes about deep Batman lore, especially the Joel Schumacher films and voice cameos from members of LA's alt comedy scene. Everything about this film makes the mega-corporate owners of IP like The Joker and Gotham City and Batman very nervous. When it was pulled from TIFF most of us figured we would never get to see it, but somehow it has managed to secure an extremely limited theatrical release this month and next.— Glen Weldon
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
After I talked last week about how much I love the Netflix athletic competition Physical: 100, several people told me that I needed to move on to Siren: Survive the Island. Just like Physical: 100, it's a South Korean competition show on Netflix that puts a variety of very fit people through some grueling experiences. But! Instead of an individual series of fitness contests, Siren: Survive the Island is a team competition. It pits teams of women — Team Police, Team Firefighter, Team Athlete, Team Stunt (made up of stuntwomen), Team Guard (bodyguards) and Team Soldier — against each other in what's basically a big game of capture the flag that takes place over about a week. It took me a full round of play to understand how it works, but once I did, I was hooked. Highly recommended. And by the way, maybe the best thing about it is that they hardly ever talk about the fact that they're women. They just are, which is similar to how men exist on television most of the time.
The podcast Who Killed the Video Star? about the history of MTV might seem to be an exploration of a well-worn topic: Why did MTV stop showing videos and stop focusing on music? But fortunately, when you listen, you are in the hands of the wonderful writer, funny person and onetime MTV host Dave Holmes, and Dave knows his stuff. It's a fascinating piece of history, and he's the best possible guide for this angle on it. (Also I recommend his memoir, Party of One, a book so fascinating and entertaining I once got a sunburn because I was mesmerized while reading it and lost track of time.)
I'm still working my way through the episodes I have of HBO's The Sympathizer, based on Viet Thanh Nguyen's novel, which premieres Sunday. And while I have a few misgivings about a few things, including the quadruple use of Robert Downey, Jr. in four different roles, the central performance from Hoa Xuande is transfixing, and I'm very excited to see more and talk about it with people.
Beth Novey adapted the Pop Culture Happy Hour segment "What's Making Us Happy" for the Web. If you like these suggestions, consider signing up for our newsletter to get recommendations every week. And listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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