Stop us if you’ve heard this before. The latest Blues on the Green, scheduled for Wednesday, July 16, has been postponed due to rain. KGSR announced Wednesday morning that the free summer concert featuring Shinyribs and Tameca Jones has been rescheduled for Wednesday, August 13.
This isn't the first time this summer that weather has forced Blues on the Green to postpone a concert. In fact, it's not even the first time the Shinyribs show has been rescheduled. This marks the third postponement of Blues on the Green this season; the May 28 Saints of Valory was postponed, as was the June 25 Shinyribs appearance.
But Blues on the Green isn't the only iconic Austin event forced to change its plans this week. The Long Center announced Wednesday afternoon that the July 16 Sound & Cinema show has also been rescheduled due to weather. The performance by Henry + The Invisibles and screening of E.T. will take place Tuesday, July 22.
The updated summer series schedules are listed below.
Blues on the Green July 23: 2014 ACL Music Festival Preview featuring Robert Ellis with The Nightowls August 6: Charlie Mars August 13: Shinyribs and Tameca Jones
Sound & Cinema July 22:E.T. with Henry & The Invisibles July 30:The Pink Panther with The Jeff Lofton Quartet August 13:Raiders of the Lost Ark with The Golden Dawn Arkestra August 20:Close Encounters of the Third Kind with Octopus Project
Sound & Cinema also can't escape the weather forecasts, with this week's show of Henry + The Invisibles and E.T. rescheduled for Tuesday, July 22.
Photo courtesy of Aquasana Water
Sound & Cinema also can't escape the weather forecasts, with this week's show of Henry + The Invisibles and E.T. rescheduled for Tuesday, July 22.
White supremacy has long been a stand-in for evil in movies, with the correlation easy to make with through well-known archetypes like those of Nazi Germany. Whether a film puts forth white supremacists as its main characters or supporting ones, their usefulness in a story is as people who are easy to hate and that deserve to be held to some sort of justice.
While that idea holds true in the new film, The Order, the nature of the group featured is somewhat muddled. The central figure is FBI agent Terry Husk (Jude Law), who essentially sets up a one-man task force in the Pacific Northwest to track a group known as The Order. Husk is convinced that the group, which is an offshoot of a larger white supremacist organization, is behind a series of bank robberies to fund anti-government schemes.
Husk recruits local police officer Jamie Bowen (Tye Sheridan) to help follow the group, which is led by Bob Mathews (Nicholas Hoult). The two, joined occasionally by FBI agent Joanne Carney (Jurnee Smollett), do their best to keep up with The Order’s increasingly bold crimes, which morphs from “just” bank robbery to murder.
Directed by Justin Kurzel and written by Zach Baylin, the film is at its best when it delves into the personalities of its characters. Husk’s monomaniacal nature is great for his job, but not so much for his family life. Bowen has a solid bond with his wife and kids, but his greenness in law enforcement leads to some questionable decision-making. Mathews, like many cult leaders, is a charismatic person with very misguided tendencies.
The filmmakers set up the plot (which is based on a real-life story) well, but the details get a little loose as the film goes along. While The Order has a hatred of Jews, a plot against radio personality Alan Berg (Marc Maron) doesn’t make much sense in the context of the film. The geography of the group’s operations is also confusing; they’re located in Washington, but they range out as far as Colorado and California to commit their crimes.
Still, the inherent appeal of good-vs-evil keeps the plot mechanics going, and the side stories of the main characters give them a depth that makes up for other faults. The filmmakers also make sure to demonstrate how the scourge of white supremacy has never been limited to one particular era, and continues to infect American society to this day.
Law commits fully to the lead role, giving a performance with a convincing American accent that is far from the suave British parts which have dominated his filmography. Hoult proves equally believable, giving his character a nuance that somehow makes him more detestable. Sheridan adds another interesting role to a career that would be enviable for any other young actor.
While The Order doesn’t rise to the level of an awards contender, its story is still relatively compelling with antagonists that, unfortunately, never go out of style. A great cast playing characters with engaging lives keeps the film watchable even when it goes into some odd detours.