Selasa, 17 September 2019

Silicon Valley Goes to Washington in Season Six Trailer

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Silicon Valley goes to Washington, D.C. in the latest trailer for the sixth and final season of the HBO tech-savvy comedy series.

The teaser offers a send-up of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerbergs infamously awkward testimony in front of Congress, with Pied Piper CEO Richard Hendricks (played by Thomas Middleditch) causing havoc on Capitol Hill as the tech community answers lawmakers questions.

He looks like a child in a messy custody hearing, Martin Starrs Gilfoyle quips of Hendricks CSPAN appearance.

The trailer doesnt forecast much in terms of Season Six plot, but Hendricks reveals a portion of his plans to Congress: I promise I will end this tyranny by creating an internet of the people, by the people and for the people, so help me God.

The seven-episode sixth and final season of Silicon Valley premieres October 27th.

D.A. Pennebaker, Legendary Documentarian, Dead at 94

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D.A. Pennebaker, a champion of the cinma-vrit approach to documentary, which emphasized intimate portraits of its subjects, died Thursdayfrom natural causes, his son Frazer confirmed to Rolling Stone. He was 94.

Chronicling rock stars and political operatives, Pennebaker sought to strip away the artifice both in nonfiction films and from the famous figures who populated his movies to craft deceptively casual snapshots of people we thought we knew. Whether in Dont Look Back (about Bob Dylans 1965 tour of England) or The War Room (a look behind the scenes of Bill Clintons 1992 presidential campaign), his handheld camera made viewers feel as if they were along for the ride as history was taking place. Concert films such as Monterey Pop and Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars captured the passion and inventiveness of rock musics cultural zenith, while 2001s Startup.com (which he produced) examined the internet bubble of the late 20th century through the deteriorating friendship of two entrepreneurs. No matter the film, though, Pennebaker was open to the randomness of life to provide unpredictability and energy to his fly-on-the-wall portraits. As he said in 2017, Half the things that happened to me, that I look back on and were really good, were all kind of I think of as luck. Chance.

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Donn Alan Pennebaker was born July 15, 1925, growing up in Chicago to a father, a successful photographer, who divorced his mother when he was still a boy. I didnt want to be what he was, Pennebaker later admitted. He had no time for a family. After studying engineering at Yale, he worked as a carpenter for about a decade before deciding to focus on writing and painting. Eventually, he turned his attention to filmmaking, which led to his first short, 1953s Daybreak Express, about an elevated New York subway line. Scored to Duke Ellington, the non-narrative Daybreak Express was an early indicator of Pennebakers ability to meld music with images, and soon he teamed up with fellow documentarian Robert Drew and others to form Drew Associates, a collective that advocated for a new kind of nonfiction cinema unfussy, lacking polish or traditional talking-head interviews that offered viewers direct, unvarnished access to the films subject.

Pennebaker put that theory into practice on Primary, a 1960 documentary about the Democratic primary in Wisconsin, in which he served as a cameraman. Even more importantly, it was while working on that film that he helped create a lighter, portable sound-recording camera a crucial development in the history of nonfiction filmmaking. It was the synch that really changed documentaries, Pennebaker explained to Film Comment, later adding that, before Primary, [E]verything had to be lip synched when we edited. We had to find the synch. Nothing was even cued. So that was a big problem.

No longer encumbered, he was able to work much more quickly and freely, which he did brilliantly when he signed on to direct a film about Dylan as he toured Britain in 1965. The two men had a handshake deal but no formal plan regarding what Pennebaker would shoot. Dylan was important that was the first thing I was convinced of, the filmmaker recalled. I wanted to find out more about him, and I didnt know any other way. Asking questions was no good; I wanted to watch Dylan in as intimate a way as possible.

The resulting film, Dont Look Back, is one of the quintessential rock movies of the 1960s, tagging along with the young singer-songwriter just as hes ditching his persona of a folk-singing poet and preparing to embrace electric guitars. The Dylan we meet in the documentary is magnetic, surly, exceptionally witty and, above all, unguarded in a way he never would be again. As for the films iconic opening, in which Dylan holds a series of cue cards printed with some of the lyrics to Subterranean Homesick Blues as the song plays on the soundtrack, it became the model for the modern music video.

Dont Look Back took more than a year to find a distributor many balked at its shaky, gritty look but despite its lofty reputation now, Pennebaker never conceived the film as a salute to the voice of a generation or as a conventional rock doc. What I thought was, this person is trying to generate himself, Pennebaker told The New York Times in 2016. Hes trying to figure out who he is and what he wants to do. So I filmed him talking to people and listening to people. When the concerts came, I would only shoot little parts of them. I didnt want it to be a music film. I wanted it to be a film about a person who was finding out who he was.

In Dont Look Backs wake, Pennebaker became an in-demand filmmaker among rock artists, whether shooting the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival for Monterey Pop or witnessing the power of David Bowie and Depeche Modes concerts. But his tastes were wide-ranging: He also made a film about John DeLorean, 1981s DeLorean, in which Pennebaker followed the car designer around Europe as he showed off his namesake vehicle. And then there was 1983s Rockaby, about the preparations to stage a Samuel Beckett play. It was also during this time that he married Chris Hedegus, who had been his collaborator since the late 70s. They continued their creative partnership for the next several decades, peaking with 1993s The War Room, which spotlighted Clintons chief strategists James Carville and George Stephanopoulos and gave a rare glimpse into how a modern campaign is waged. The film earned Pennebaker his only Oscar nomination.

Pennebaker may have trained his cameras on political figures and other newsworthy subjects, but he insisted that his films werent works of advocacy but, rather, simple reporting. Whatever happens when youre shooting necessarily becomes part of your film because its what you saw, he said in 2016. Were not making a sermon. I think thats the failure in a lot of current documentaries. Theyre sermonizing, and for perfectly understandable reasons they want people to act better, or whatever. Its the same reason the bishops sermonize, but thats not our kind of filmmaking.

He backed up his claim in recent films like Startup.com (which Hedegus co-directed alongside Jehane Noujaim) and Unlocking the Cage, which located the personal, human story within the national headlines. Unlocking the Cage followed attorney Steve Wise as he fights for animal rights through the court system, but as always Pennebaker wanted to look at the individuals rather than the larger apparatus. It also helped that he was often captivated by the people he documented. Could I make a film about somebody I didnt like, or whose political message I disagreed with? Probably, he once said. But it wouldnt be as much fun to do.

Pennebaker received his only Emmy nomination in 2004 for Elaine Stritch at Liberty, and the following year the International Documentary Association awarded him with its Career Achievement Award. In 2013, he received an Honorary Oscar. But perhaps the strongest indicator of his legacy is the number of homages made to his work, particularly Dont Look Back, which has been spoofed and copied in everything from Bob Roberts to Im Not There. And while others would often credit him for being a groundbreaking documentarian, he never liked the word documentary being used to describe his vivid, candid films.

For me, I think of them as home movies, he said in 2015, because theyre made by one person and not made with the expectancy of a large return. Theyre made the way music is written, or books. Its just one persons take on whats going on around them. You shouldnt be the adversary, with a lot of equipment to protect you. You should really be vulnerable just as the people you film are vulnerable.


Senin, 16 September 2019

Leslie Jones Announces Netflix Stand-Up Comedy Special

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Comedian andSaturday Night Live cast member Leslie Jones will get her own Netflix stand-up comedy special. The hour-long special will premiere on Netflix in 2020.

Jones announced the news onJimmy Kimmel Live!Thursday night. Yall get to see what I really do: I am a stand up comic. Its fun to be the actress and all this other stuff, but I am a stand-up, hardcore. Jones added that the special would be recorded in Washington, D.C and that President Donald Trump is banned from the show:

Jones recently completed her fifth season ofSaturday Night Live. Her work on the show has garnered three Emmy nominations and a spot on the Time 100 list. Jones was also the host of the 2017 BET Awards. Known for her live-tweeting of sporting events and Game of Thrones, Jones most recently provided commentary on the 2019 FIFA Womens World Cup, where the U.S. team dominated, and joined Seth Meyers for one last reaction video to the Game of Thrones finale in May.

Her previous hour-long comedy special,Problem Child, was broadcast on Showtime in 2010. This year she voiced the villainess Zeta in the movie Angry Birds 2, in theaters August 16th.

Watch Emilia Clarke Find the Holiday Spirit in Last Christmas Trailer

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The holiday season is closer than you might think, especially now that the Christmas movie trailers have been dropping. The latest is Last Christmas, a new romantic comedy from Bridesmaids director Paul Feig starring Emilia Clarke and Henry Golding.

In the trailer, Clarke plays a cynical Londoner named Kate who works as an elf in a year-round Christmas shop called Yuletide Wonderful. She encounters Goldings Tom when she gets pooped on by a bird and sparks fly. With Toms help Kate begins to find her Christmas spirit again. Emma Thompson, who wrote the script with Bryony Kimmings, co-stars as Kates mom (who appears to have some kind of Russian accent in the film). Michelle Yeoh and Patti LuPone round out the cast.

Last Christmas, in theaters November 8th, will feature the music of George Michael, including the titular song, and will also premiere unreleased material by the singer. Feig told Entertainment Weekly that the film was inspired by Michael and Thompson began writing the script while the late singer was still alive. A plot line about homelessness was given the Michaels blessing and the filmmakers worked with the singers estate after he died on Christmas Day in 2016.

We have a whole story line in our movie about a homeless shelter, and [we consulted] with a lot of homeless charities to make sure we were portraying it correctly, Feig said. The great sadness is that hes not here to be a part of this. But he knew it was going to happen, and that gives me such joy. We feel like hes here with us.

The Long Journey of The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance

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Once upon a time, Jim Henson found himself stranded in the middle of a snowstorm. To pass the time, the Muppet Show creator began to dream up an elaborate story of mystics, monsters, and two different races a vulturelike aristocracy called the Skeksis and a kindhearted, elfin people known as Gelflings battling over the fate of their planet, Thra. By the time the storm ended, Henson had a 25-page movie treatment. He called it The Dark Crystal. The pioneering puppeteer was prepared to stake his whole career and his relationship with his No. 1 benefactor, Lord Lew Grade, to make this movie a reality.

When his passion project, co-directed with Frank Oz, finally hit theaters in 1982, audiences were confused: Were we dropped into the middle of a story, and what, exactly, was going on here? Why was everything so visually dark and foreboding? And why was the man who gave the world Kermit the Frog telling such an intense, too-scary-for-kids tale of corruption, eco-doom and genocide? Henson was heartbroken. But over the years, the movie began to find an audience. If you were of a certain age and fantasy-obsessed demographic, you may have watched The Dark Crystal a million times and/or worn out several VHS tapes of the film. It became a shared secret, a bona fide cult movie. Its fans have been clamoring for a sequel for decades.

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Thanks to Netflix, theyre about to get their wish. The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, a 10-episode prequel series that premieres on the streaming service on August 30th, not only revisits the late Hensons fantasy world but expands upon it to an impressive degree. Set long before the 1982 films story, Age of Resistance follows three young Gelflings a royal guard, a scholarly princess, and a member of an agrarian clan living underground as they learn that their Skeksis masters are using the life-giving totem of the series title to gain immortality. They need to expose the plan in time, or else. And with characters voiced by Taron Egerton, Anya Taylor-Joy, Andy Samberg, Helena Bonham Carter, Game of Thrones Lena Headey, Awkwafina, Sigourney Weaver, Alicia Vikander and many, many others, the new project has a serious A-list pedigree.

For years, Jim Henson Co. CEO Lisa Henson had been trying to get a new Dark Crystal off the ground. I remember going on set as a child and seeing it develop over the years, seeing the puppets being built, she recalls. It was so different from what people expected from my dad and he was so proud of that. Lisa knew the film was beloved by a small but passionate few, but it wasnt until she suddenly found myself talking to a roomful of people at Comic Con [in the mid 00s] and there being tremendous excitement about another Crystal story that the time seemed right to return to Thra. Samurai Jack creator Genddy Tartakovsky had begun working on a sequel in 2006, only to have financing fall through; the storyline inspired a graphic novel, The Power of the Dark Crystal. Other ideas came and went.

Then filmmaker Louis Leterrier the French director behind The Transporter, The Incredible Hulk and the Clash of the Titans remake took a meeting with Lisa Henson in 2011. His one question: So what are you doing with The Dark Crystal? Hed obsessed over what he called this weird UFO of a movie as a kid, seeing it endlessly in film clubs and on TV while growing up in Paris (It was the first movie to scar mebut in a good way!), and asked to take a crack at a film sequel. Meanwhile, Henson was developing an animated prequel series. When she pitched Netflix on the toon, execs asked, Well, why cant you do it like the original, with puppets? The projects were combined. Writers Jeffrey Addiss and Will Matthews came on board as executive producers/showrunners. Leterrier spent six months filming a live-action chase scene as a test, and Netflix was sold.

The rest of the industry, however, remained slightly skeptical or somewhat disinterested. Leterrrier remembers several meetings, and more than a few dinner parties, where people would ask him what he was working on. When hed tell them his new project was a follow-up to Hensons 1982 anti-Muppet movie, the answer was usually: Oh, is that the one with Bowie? No, thats Labyrinth, the director would gently remind them, referring to Hensons 1986 fantasy featuring a goblin king, a kidnapped 16-year-old and the former Thin White Duke sporting ones of the cinemas greatest blown-out mullets. Im doing the one with the dinosaurs in dresses,' Leterrier would tell them, cackling. So many people just couldnt remember what it was. But fans remembered. I remembered. There was this feeling that we could pay homage to Jim, and to his work, and really do something unique and new with what he gave us.

Both he and Lisa Henson hope that longtime fans will appreciate how the Age of Resistance pays tribute to the original without being a slavish imitation or a mere nostalgia trip; they respectively mention that the mix of creative Dark Crystal brain trusts from back in the day (including concept artist Brian Froud, who contributed several new designs along with his wife Wendy and son Toby) and next-gen puppeteers gave the series continuity without a sense of creakiness. Theyre each anxious for younger viewers to step into this universe for the first time. And they love that, like the 1982 film, the 2019 show retains the Grimms Fairy Tales feel of the senior Hensons storytelling combined with a childlike sense of imagination. It was the most political thing he ever did, talking about abuse of power and distrust of the ruling class, Leterrier says. So to be able to put this into the world at this moment. It took years to make, but Im glad its coming out now.

Minggu, 15 September 2019

Fiddler: Miracle of Miracles Review An Untraditional Documentary on a Beloved Musical

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A documentary about a 55-year-old musical sounds like a quaint and nostalgic cinematic scrap book. But Fiddler:Miracle of Miraclesturns out be an exhilarating, expansive, warts-and-all look into 1964 Broadway phenomenonFiddler on the Roof. Director Max Lewkowicz delivers an emotional powerhouse in which none of the compromises, growing pains and ego wars of Fiddlers creation are left out in the name of tribute. The film is dedicated to the memory of Hal Prince, who produced the original show and died last month, and truly documents what goes into the creation of a masterpiece. (Never mind that the shows first review in Variety declared it had no memorable songs in a score that includes If I Were a Rich Man, Matchmaker, Matchmaker, and Sunrise, Sunset.)

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Based on the short stories of turn-of-the-century Russian-Yiddish author Sholem Aleichem, the show (set in 1905)focuses on Tevye and the tiny czarist Russian village of Anatevka. Themilkman brings humor and heart to struggles with poverty, a strong-willed wife, and five marriage-age daughters. The stirrings of feminist rebellion can be felt as the young women push back against the attempts of Yenta the matchmaker one defies tradition to marry a non-Jew. Tevye talks to God about his problems, especially when his people face religious persecution through violent pogroms and are forced to leave their shtetl as refugees facing a scarily uncertain future. If youre wondering why Fiddler is so pertinent to our tumultuous present that theres an all-YiddishJoel Grey production of the show currently on Broadway, heres your answer.

In Fiddler: A Miracle of Miracles, archival interviews with the shows creators composer Jerry Bock, lyricist Sheldon Harnick, and librettist Joseph Stein are mixed with those from contemporary artists like Stephen Sondheim, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Fran Lebowitz, Calvin Trillin, and Alisa Solomon, who extol the shows enduring value. We hear from Norman Jewison, the director of theOscar-winning 1971 film version, who hilariously had to apologize to the studio for not being a Jew, despite a last name that suggested otherwise.

Lewkowiczs film allows us to see how Fiddler on the Roof was put together by a band of outsiders who constantly questioned its artistic viability and commerciality. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the portrait of Jerome Robbins, the shows dazzling, notoriously difficult director and choreographer. Conflicted about his Judaism and sexuality, Robbins, who died in 1998, was a domineering genius. Zero Mostel, the formerly blacklisted actor who starred as the original Tevye, so resented Robbins for naming names at Senator Joe McCarthys anti-communist witchhunts that he barely spoke to Robbins during rehearsals. Actor Austin Pendleton, who costarred in the original production as Motel the tailor, recounts a stinging story about how Robbins insulted him, calling him physically repulsive and saying how hard it must have been for the actress playing his wife to act opposite him. But then the film cuts to Robbins at work, creating the glorious Bottle Dance for Tzeitel and Motels wedding in which the male guests move with bottles balanced on their heads, symbolizing the precariousness of life as Jews in Anatevka. The sequence remains one of the finest achievements in choreography as characterization.

Fiddler: A Miracle of Miracles makes itself essential viewing by chronicling the turbulent genesis of a global sensation. But its real miracle is demonstrating whyit continues to entertain and illuminate, from Tokyo to a Brooklyn middle school where an African-American girl now plays the role of Tevyes wife, Golde, and back to Broadway.

Why Canceling The Hunt Was Wrong

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Even if youre not a horror-film fanatic, youve heard about The Hunt. A grisly-looking, modern grindhouse film, it was supposed to come out through Universal Pictures at the end of September. The plot was said to feature wealthy liberals as portrayed by Hilary Swanks well-dressed villain who kidnap jus-folks types and put them into a forested compound where theyre picked off one by one. Originally titled, per The Hollywood Reporter, Red State vs. Blue State, the movie seems to boast a comparable mixture of paranoia, political topicality and pulp fiction and is produced by Blumhouse, Hollywoods finest purveyor of smart, low-budget scary movies such as the Oscar-winning social satire Get Out and the Purge franchise.

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But The Hunt is most likely on your radar because it might never get a chance to see the light of day. Thats because Universal, the Comcast-owned studio that produced the film, abruptly canceled its release after President Donald Trump angrily tweeted about it last Sunday. The president, almost assuredly egged on by Fox News drum-beating, decided to sound off on the movie even though he, like the rest of us, hasnt seen it. Acting like an angry fanboy, the kind that has little information about an upcoming project but just knows theyre mad anyway, our commander-in-chief found it prudent to render a verdict sight-unseen.

Liberal Hollywood is Racist at the highest level, and with great Anger and Hate! he tweeted on August 9th. They like to call themselves Elite, but they are not Elite. The movie coming out is made in order to inflame and cause chaos. They create their own violence, and then try to blame others. They are the true Racists, and are very bad for our Country! Trump chose to see The Hunt as an attack on MAGA voters you know, real Americans and thus inflamed anger against a film that had released all of one trailer to that point.

In a sane society, we wouldnt have a president sounding off on something as minor as an action-horror movie like it was a major catastrophe. And we also wouldnt have a studio do what Universal did in response, which was surrender. While Universal Pictures had already paused the marketing campaign for The Hunt, after thoughtful consideration, the studio has decided to cancel our plans to release the film, the company said in a statement on August 10th. We stand by our filmmakers and will continue to distribute films in partnership with bold and visionary creators, like those associated with this satirical social thriller, but we understand that now is not the right time to release this film.

There are reasonable motivations to call a time out. In the wake of other mass shootings and tragedies, the unveiling of films and TV shows has been pushed back everything from Arnold Schwarzeneggers 2002 thriller Collateral Damage to Ryan Phillippes USA series Shooter in a desire to be sensitive to still-fresh atrocities. Maybe if it had merely been in response to the deadly shootings in El Paso and Dayton, the studios decision would have been understandable thoughtful, even. Respectful restraint is welcome at certain moments.

But what makes Universals disappearing of The Hunt so chilling is that those shootings probably arent what ultimately goaded the executives into taking such drastic action. Its hard not to think that Trumps invective, which can work like a Bat-Signal for his most devoted followers, created the very real scenario of possible violence at public screenings. Never mind that, as National Review film critic Kyle Smith put it, President Trump doesnt have the most finely tuned irony gauge; he seemed unable to understand that the globalists in the film are plainly the bad guys and that the trailer was satirizing rather than saluting the hunters it portrays. The simple fact is that if the president misreads the films possible angle if he doesnt understand that its a satire that might actually try to put non-elites in a positive light and decides to lash out, his actions can have extreme, and deadly, consequences. Universal isnt merely postponing the release. The studio is trying to pretend the movie never existed. (The Hunts website has been scrubbed like its a biohazard.)

Maybe the movie will end up on Netflix. Maybe Universal will give it a small theatrical release and push it onto VOD simultaneously, like the way Sony handled the 2014 Kim Jong-un comedy The Interview. Whatever ultimately happens to The Hunt, however, the studio brass has decided its not worth the headache. And for artists and moviegoers alike, thats the problem.

Superhero flicks, Star Wars sequels, Disney live-action reimaginings, Pixar films: These are the properties Hollywood pledges allegiance to, in the hopes of netting close to a billion dollars with each new installment. And when blockbusters do cause a stir like when there was a shooting in a Colorado theater that showed The Dark Knight Rises a movie of that magnitude isnt getting canceled. Theres too much money invested, too many careers at stake. In that case, the show must go on. But at a time when fewer and fewer risks are being taken by the major studios, Universals decision doesnt just feel like cowardice but rank expediency. Maybe The Hunt would have made a tidy profit Blumhouse films usually do but, apparently, the upside for an action-thriller with few big names, a generic title and a familiar premise wasnt worth it. (As more than one commentator has pointed out, wait til Trump and his minions find out about The Most Dangerous Game, published almost 100 years ago and the inspiration for dozens of movies, including The Hunt and the upcoming horror movie Ready or Not.)

And Universal shouldnt pretend it stand[s] by our filmmakers and will continue to distribute films in partnership with bold and visionary creators. The brouhaha was their opportunity to prove who it stands behind, and it whiffed spectacularly. Its not as if they didnt know what it was getting into by making the film: Last year, the studio won a competitive auction to land the rights to the spec script written by Lost and Leftovers mastermind Damon Lindelof and Nick Cuse, the son of fellow Lost showrunner Carlton Cuse. It then tapped indie provocateur Craig Zobel (Compliance, Z for Zachariah) to direct. If Universal had the guts to honor bold and visionary creators a year ago, theres no reason to stop now.

But whats most upsetting is that the film cant even defend itself. Since no critics or journalists have seen The Hunt the best the Hollywood Reporter could do was read a copy of the script and talk to studio insiders who had watched a cut all of us, up to and including the president, are just speculating. Films arent judged by their prerelease hype theyre judged by the quality of the actual work. Whether its a third-rate Purge rip-off or the second coming of Dr. Strangelove, well never know because Universal has buried it and in the process, created a dangerous precedent.

Movies have to be bigger than one president, or one ideology. They tell us about whats going on around us responding to and sometimes influencing national and global events. Theyre an imperfect but crucial barometer of who we are, what we fear and what we aspire to be. They show us up there on the screen, and then they let us sort out what to make of the whole thing.

The Hunt deserves that same chance, as do dozens of other movies that might offend your parents, a school board, a foreign government or the President of the United States of America. Last week, Swank was asked about the controversy surrounding the movie. [N]o ones seen the film, she said. You cant really have a conversation about it without understanding what its about. Audiences just want that opportunity. More than ever, we need those conversations instead of hunting around for reasons to shut down the dialogue.