Thursday, November 19, 2020

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arts Bleachers, Bruce and the Garden State dailycardinal.com

By Emily Knepple ARTS EDITOR

Jack Antonoff and his band Bleachers have teamed up with the Boss himself on new track, “chinatown.” Dropped this past Monday, ‘chinatown’ comes out alongside another new Bleachers track, “45.” While the success and significance of these artists alone speak volumes, putting two New Jersey natives together means a lot and it’s not entirely by coincidence at all. In a press release ahead of the drop, Antonoff shares that “china-

Thursday, November 19, 2020

town” is about being pulled back to where you’re from and coping with the flurry of emotions that come with it. Antonoff, who hosts an annual charity concert in Asbury Park at the infamous Stone Pony — preCOVID, of course — has always been proud of the Garden State. It’s evident in his music and his efforts. Antonoff has worked with some of the biggest artists like Taylor Swift, Lorde, FKA Twigs and The Chicks. His songwriting credits span a long list and one that few in pop

JASON KEMPIN/GETTY IMAGES FOR MTV

Jack Antonoff plays with Bleachers at The Stone Pony in Asbury Park.

can currently top. As someone from New Jersey, I can confidently say that he might be in my top five favorite New Jerseyans ever. Antonoff also shared in the press release that Springsteen has taught him the value New Jersey can have in his own voice and music. In a way, his new collaboration can offer insight into how New Jersey artists have continued to perfect and grow over the years. For older generations, even young, Bruce Springsteen is the New Jersey icon. It’s hard to speak to someone on the Shore who hasn’t been personally moved by the Boss. His music has expanded over decades and still gets played loudly and proudly across all of New Jersey. He also resides there now and I can attest to this. Last winter, a friend of mine ran into him in Urban Outfitters and had a picture to prove it. That being said, Bruce Springsteen is a big deal outside of state borders, too. His music has won an array of awards. Those include 20 Grammys, two Golden Globes, an Academy Award and a Tony for his very own “Springsteen on Broadway,”

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JACK ANTONOFF/INSTAGRAM

Springsteen, Scaifla and Antonoff pose outside of Electric Lady Studios. which showcased the Boss himself on stage night after night, playing music and occasionally was joined by his wife, Patti Scaifla, who joined the E-Street Band in 1984. Antonoff might just be on his way to such recognition and such accolades. The two together on this song

showcase New Jersey’s best, both young and old. The songs “chinatown” and “45” are the first released ahead of Bleachers’ next album, which is slated to drop in 2021. You can listen to both Bleachers and Bruce Springsteen’s music catalogs on any and all major music streaming services right now.

New HBO mystery ‘The Undoing’ is a simple one to solve, but that does not make it any less watchable By John Bildings STAFF WRITER

A few weeks ago, I told you Nicole Kidman would keep me around purely out of the fact that I needed a tight-laced mystery in my life as we approach another stretch of stay-at-home orders. And while what we’ve gotten from the six-episode miniseries isn’t perfect and feels a bit repetitive in the early goings, it manages to find enough ways remain a fun thrill ride for viewers nonetheless. “The Undoing” stars Nicole as Grace Fischer, a psychotherapist and wealthy socialite who seemingly has everything a person could ever want among a hyper-realistic, Manhattan fantasy world that feels more foreign than ever. There’s the infallible love of her husband and prominent oncologist Jonathan, played by the always effervescent Hugh Grant (“Four Weddings”), a growing list of prospective clients who want her erudite insights on how to improve their struggling lives, and a gifted young son, played by talented up and comer Noah Jupe (“A Quiet Place”, “Honey Boy”) who attends and excels at Reardon Academy, one of the most renowned private schools in New York City. Without as much as a single pot out of place, Grace appears to be living on top of the world and doesn’t seem poised to come down from her upperclass perch anytime soon. Not without a gut-wrenching, seemingly endless crash landing, that is. Trouble begins when Elena Alves, a new mother to Reardon, arrives out of nowhere at a fundraiser committee and catches Grace’s attention from the moment they first meet. Unlike those who hold prestigious law careers or fret over their

husband’s laundry list of ineptitudes, Elena is an artist and — stop me if you’ve heard this before — “outsider” who struggles to fit in, and after a few encounters begins to quite literally reveal herself in uncomfortable manner that clashes with the polished nature Grace possesses. Upon a final conversation the evening of the fundraiser, Elena is found brutally murdered at her studio by her son the next day — beginning the

ous show for the flagship network — the same domestic murder mystery elements that garnered many rewards with a star-studded ensemble just a few years ago. “Undoing” transports the setting and names to the opposite coast for a more refined tone than the sunny beaches of Monterrey, California ever could. Story comparisons — ranging from the conflict between a rigid status hierarchy and alienating new-

As the investigation unfolds, Grace’s confusion about the realities of her life grow blurrier and blurrier as more devastating details are revealed to her — throwing her through endless loops of uncertainty that Bier effectually frames with bewildering insert shots and a pulsepounding score that consistently keeps audiences waiting as the dominos continue to fall. Tilting the lens during tense inter-

NIKO TAVENRISE/HBO

Hugh Grant and Nicole Kidman star in new drama mystery "The Undoing," which is now streaming on HBOMax. unraveling of Grace’s reputation, marriage and mind as Jonathan is chosen as lead suspect. Written and produced by David E. Kelley, the man behind “Big Little Lies”, and directed by Susanne Bier (“Bird Box”), “Undoing” feels like another season of the former’s previ-

comer who threatens the social order, to underlying animosity amongst the marriages of many — are inevitable and strain through the early moments of the pilot, but quickly pick up the pace as viewers realize that something more deceitful is at play in this bloody incident.

rogation scenes in New York City police stations and psychotic episodes in Central Park to illustrate the unspoken acting abilities Kidman possesses in her eyes alone, her direction ramps up the mental aspect that “Lies” never delivered and keeps you invested despite familiar faces.

Not to be outdone by Bier and Kidman working together to bring the heightened paranoia beyond what Kelley’s formulaic teleplay occasionally fails to provide, a pair of powerful turns from both Hugh Grant and Donald Sutherland (“The Hunger Games”) as Grace’s father Franklin manage to keep viewers invested, even if they do figure out the inevitable twist in early episodes. Grant, revealed to be a much different person than initially believed in the opening moments, twists the inherent sense of sarcasm that made him a household name ever so slightly towards the devilish to portray an honorable man whose made many mistakes in his past, while Sutherland provides every fiber of his naturally sophisticated — and incredibly intimidating — nature to the role of an immensely wealthy and powerful father who will do anything to see his daughter and grandson survive this nightmare of a situation. If corners were cut at all, it was not in the casting, as each at home among the impossibly rich and impossibly screwed in Kelley’s tale. Once you start to connect the dots behind who is secretly the cause of Elena’s bludgeoning, it’s fairly easy to see where the train tracks are headed here. While I — obviously — won’t give away who this slayer might be, “Undoing” is still worthy of following along, purely for the sights and sounds of some heavy hitters and weekly reveals that will fill you up until Thanksgiving arrives. Predictable is never bad in the world we’re living in, and Kidman delivers upon that principle here. You can find the first four episodes of “The Undoing” streaming right now on HBO.


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