Some tropes in the film business are entirely divorced from the contents of any given film. One of these, oft-repeated, concerns the bright young débutante who is lavished with praise. In this narrative, the first-time director emerges from the soil in full bloom. They have made a competent movie, perhaps even a good one – though certainly not the epochal effort the adulation would have you bel ... (read more)
Michael Sun
Michael Sun is a critic and essayist. He works in culture and lifestyle at The Guardian, where he hosts the internet culture podcast Saved for Later. His writing on film and music has been published in The Saturday Paper, The Monthly, Sydney Review of Books, and ABC Arts. He presents a weekly show on FBi Radio in Sydney, where he lives.
It’s drizzling when an Aimee Mann song plays in Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Broker. You know the one: ‘Wise Up’, the scabrous number that soundtracks a famous sequence in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia (1999), whose central cast – united by various machinations of fate – sing along in some kind of deranged processional, each character downcast and seeking salvation in Mann’s lyrics. None ... (read more)