Django Take #5: Paving the Road to Hell
The problem with Tarantino’s Django Unchained is that it’s a very good movie. Wildly entertaining, expertly made, and very fun to watch. I loved almost every second of the watching of it. The man-child...
View ArticleDjango Take #4: Substance Amidst Spectacle
There is an unpleasant moment about halfway through Quentin Tarantino’s new film, Django Unchained. It involves two Mandingo fighters, two burly black men who fight to the death in the very upscale...
View ArticleDjango Take #3: (Re)chained
VillainsDjango is not a movie with “villains.” Instead, the movie itself is villainous.Trauma and StyleFilms about recent historical traumas (the Holocaust) or deific figures are not supposed to be...
View ArticleDjango Take #2: We Have Arrived
L.S.B. That’s what my crew called themselves. Light Skinned Bitches. I refused to say it. The light-skinned part. I’d spent too much time anguishing over the term “good-hair” and that all my friends...
View ArticleDjango Take #1: Good is the Enemy of Great
Look, we’re going to have to make a decision about Quentin Tarantino.Is he the genius auteur he gets so much credit for being, maybe the most original voice of his generation? Or is he simply a...
View ArticleThe Saturday Rumpus Essay: Kill Bob
When I was 15 years old, I came to associate evil with a jean-jacketed, gray-haired, man-monster. His name was Bob and although his rapes and murders of young women were restricted to the all-too-real...
View ArticleRewrite, Reboot, Remix
I suspect that everyone is always rewriting something or other, whether they are self-conscious about it or operating intuitively. It’s probably endemic to the literary impulse to wish to transform the...
View ArticleThe Rumpus Interview with Manuel Gonzales
Manuel Gonzales’s first book, The Miniature Wife, a collection of short stories, was often compared to work by George Saunders, Aimee Bender, and Karen Russell. Three years ago, shortly after the...
View ArticleThe Rumpus Interview with Kea Wilson
Kea Wilson’s phenomenal debut novel, We Eat Our Own, has its roots in a film that came out decades ago. In the late 1970s Italian film director Ruggero Deodato filmed Cannibal Holocaust on location in...
View ArticleAlbum of the Week: She-Devils by the She-Devils
Coming from Montreal’s notable music scene, the She-Devils, Audrey Ann Boucher and Kyle Jukka, approach their music-making more as visual artists than songwriters. Boucher draws and paints...
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