Music, beer, and festival fun top this weekend’s hottest events in Austin. Raise a glass at a brewery launch party or catch a wide variety of music legends in concert. For a full list of happenings, visit our calendar.
Thursday, June 15
Easy Tiger presents Celis Brewery Launch Party Austin’s first craft beer brewery is back with a bang. Meet and mingle with Christine Celis, while you sip new beers from Celis Brewery at Easy Tiger's new location at 365 by Whole Foods Market. Be among the first 50 guests and take home a logo glass.
Solstice Festival 2017 Catch live music performances, yoga workshops, locally created artwork, and more at Solstice Festival. This year's fest is hosted at several venues across the city on Thursday and Friday, culminating with a 10-hour streak of live music at Pan Am Park on Saturday. The lineup includes JJ Grey & Mofro, Built to Spill, Bright Light Social Hour, Golden Dawn Arkestra, and many more.
Chicago and The Doobie Brothers in concert Rock legends Chicago and The Doobie Brothers join forces for a co-headlining tour at the Austin360 Amphitheater. Don't miss your chance to "Listen to the Music."
The Revolution in concert Just a few days after what would have been his 59th birthday, Prince's original band, The Revolution, will make a stop in Austin to celebrate the life and music of an icon. Head to ACL Live to hear Prince's beloved hits.
Enjoy live music and more at Solstice Festival 2017.
Photo courtesy of Solstice Festival
Enjoy live music and more at Solstice Festival 2017.
If you grew up in the 1980s, chances are you were either a fan of or knew about Masters of the Universe. The property, based on a line of toys from Mattel, spawned a popular-if-short-lived animated TV series, comic books, a comic strip, magazines, and a 1987 live action film starring Dolph Lundgren. It is now the latest ‘80s IP to get a nostalgic reboot in the form of a new blockbuster film.
Nicholas Galitzine stars as Prince Adam of the planet Eternia, who as a child is exiled to Earth to protect the Sword of Power from invaders led by the evil Skeletor (voiced by Jared Leto). Years later, Adam is now working in the human resources department of a generic company, well-versed in corporate speak but disconnected from his heritage other than a never-ending desire to find the sword he lost when he crash-landed on Earth.
Spoiler alert: he recovers the sword and is soon thereafter rescued from Earth by childhood friend Teela (Camila Mendes). Adam’s return to Eternia is less-than-stellar, as the citizens have difficulty believing he’s the long-lost prince, especially because he initially can’t harness the power of the sword. Naturally, he figures it out eventually, leading to a number of face-offs between him and Skeletor’s minions.
Directed by Travis Knight (Bumblebee) and written by a four-person writing team, the film is yet another cynical attempt at exploiting a certain group’s nostalgia without putting any effort into actually making a good movie. The very first scene of the film is a CGI-filled battle between characters that have barely been introduced, much less explained to the audience. For longtime fans, this will be no issue. For everyone else, though, it immediately signals that the filmmakers don’t care about making them care about anyone or anything in the story.
Instead, they substitute actual character development with a campy and self-deprecating vibe that’s in line with the original series. That’s all well and good if the intended audience was solely 50-year-olds, but for a movie that presumably wants to bring in younger audiences, it’s a choice that never fully comes through. Some characters try to be funnier than others, and most of the “jokes” land with a thud since the tone hasn’t been properly established.
Worst of all, there are never any meaningful stakes in the film. Adam is impervious to damage, something that would have been truly funny if commented upon, but instead is just treated as fact for no good reason. Skeletor is not intended to be a fearsome villain, as he often bumbles through scenes or line deliveries, but the lack of a truly terrible enemy keeps the story stuck in neutral. Combined with bloodless PG-13 fight scenes with no sense of realness to them, there is rarely anything about which to get excited.
Galitzine has turned heads as a romantic interest in both gay (Red, White & Royal Blue) and straight (The Idea of You) contexts, but he can never find his footing as the leading man here. The film never allows him to develop into a true action hero, so instead he comes across as a pretender most of the time. Mendes is okay, but she, too, isn’t given the opportunity to become much more than a sidekick. Idris Elba is entirely wasted as Teela’s father Duncan. Leto lets loose, which works because he’s the only character without a recognizable face.
There may be a world in which rebooting Masters of the Universe makes sense, but it does not exist when the film that is offered doesn’t even try to appeal to anyone who doesn’t have a deeply ingrained knowledge of the decades-old property. By relying on nostalgia instead of good filmmaking, the film may get good box office returns on opening weekend, but it’s difficult to imagine that it will endure.
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Masters of the Universe opens in theaters on June 5.