Tag: Commentary

  • Urchin (2025)

    This week in my British Media class we were lucky enough to see Harris Dickinson’s directorial and screenplay debut, Urchin, at The Garden Cinema, an independent theater here in London. Urchin follows Mike who is an addict living on the streets of London. He uses violence, panhandling and robbery to help himself get by until he gets into an altercation with a man that forces him to go to jail. After his time in jail he gets sober, gets a job as a line cook at a hotel, and stays in a hostel. The audience watches on as Mike continues to spiral and get sucked into the most unsavory aspects of addiction to no happy end. Overall the film was a discomforting piece of storytelling by Dickinson that completely steps over the more common trajectory of a British coming of age drama and favors something more feral and definitely less resolved. I only have a small prior knowledge of British independent films but from the ones that I have seen, Urchin follows that tradition of honoring authenticity by using grit and ambiguity as an ideology or way of life rather than as texture or volume to fluff up the film. 

    I wonder what caused Harris Dickinson to pursue telling a story like Mike’s. As a director and screenwriter he seems less interested in condemning the society that would punish and make things harder for a character like Mike, and more interested in letting the audience feel each bump and bruise for ourselves from the inside out. The film has a buzzing energy that feels just as erratic and intentional as Mike’s ever changing motives throughout his journey. It’s always threatening to rip apart which feels appropriate considering this is the type of character who seems stitched together by impulse and pain more than support and self-reassurance. 

    I have not done much research on the interviews that the cast has done for Urchin but I gather that Harris Dickinson did not create this film for us to fall in love with it as a whole or as Mike as a character. There’s power in creating a film in an age where aesthetics and prestige takes the forefront over quality storytelling. Although this is his independent filmmaking debut, Harris Dickinson’s direction implies his observational acumen for tension, tone, catharsis, and the importance of being able to convey a level of discomfort that allows the audience to relate to a character that they may not want to like. For a first film I’d say that it was absolutely well done and I can’t wait to see what the future of British indie film has to offer.

  • mother! (2017)

  • Reading Identity in Promotional Material – ‘HIM’ (2025)

    *Written May 1, 2025 (before the film’s theater release)*

    I hated every minute of training, but I said ‘don’t quit’. Suffer now and live the rest of your life a champion.

    Muhammad Ali

    Introduction

    HIM is an upcoming sports horror film directed by Justin Tipping, produced by Jordan Peele. The first teaser trailer begins as an inspirational depiction of the hard work, dedication, and payoffs that are achieved through dedication in football training. It is underscored by an upbeat violin motif, backed by hip-hop 808s that let you know just how black this film is. The first half of the trailer features a voiceover by Marlon Wayans (the coach) giving a motivational speech about digging deep, not taking days off, and pushing your mind and body towards greatness. This is all cut short when we see the main protagonist collide head-first with another player as the screen simultaneously shifts to x-ray vision. We then see intense close-ups of inverted bloody images, violent training practices, demonic rituals, performance enhancing drugs, and the general horrors of American Football, specifically possible effects of CTE or chronic traumatic encephalopathy. The teaser trailer for HIM builds on the historical, cultural, and societal impacts of American football and CTE as well as the exploitation of black male bodies for the sake of entertainment. 

    A poster for this trailer, an upright football adorned with crooked staples, dripping with blood in an enclosed glass case symbolizes the preservation of American football despite the harmful medical, historical, cultural effects and implications of the sport.

    Semiotics

    The ideology surrounding African-American athletic achievement has often been considered a contribution to advancing the black race as a whole amongst black leaders.  Marlon Wayans being cast as the coach solidifies this ideal, as his presence symbolizes, “… the idea that for African-American males living in impoverished inner city areas, sports are viewed as the only legal way to gain social respect and access to mainstream material success”, which is a conflated notion of race and what black people are capable of (Brooks & Blackman, 2011, p.444). As black people operate within the sphere of the white gaze, there is an unfortunate aspiration to be desired and respected in the eyes of white America, especially in the field they most adore: football. 

    The third and fourth images depicted in the trailer are of three aircrafts respectively flying red, white, and blue smoke over a football stadium, representing the overarching theme of American nationalism looming overhead. Erica Childs writes, “The black athletic male is embraced by whites in an attempt to ‘domesticate and dilute its more ominous and subversive uses,’ while using the black athlete for pure consumption and profit” (Childs, 1999, p.13). Although the coach featured in the trailer is not white, there are lingering undertones of the treatment that black men went through during America’s founding. The tagline, “What are you willing to sacrifice?” is reinforced throughout the trailer in the form of repetition; pushing one’s self to the absolute physical and mental limits and abuse of black bodies for the sake of white gain, whether that gain is monetarily from the team owners, or entertainment gains from the networks and spectators. 

    The semiotics within the movie poster’s graphic design alludes to one of the more gruesome, yet lesser known facts about American history: slave leather. As leather became a symbol of luxury in 19th-century America, more and more white people were seeking out ways to become more fashionable, so naturally, human leather was the best option. The article, “LEATHER FROM HUMAN SKIN,” published in The Mercury on March 17th, 1888. The author writes, “He obtains the skins from the bodies of negroes which have been dissected in one of our big medical colleges. The best leather is obtained from the thighs…One of the dudest dudes in town carries a match-safe covered with a portion o f the skin of a beautiful young woman who was found drowned in the Delaware river. It still retains its natural colour. Another young man with whom I am acquainted carries a cigar case made of negro skin, a ghastly skull and crossbones appearing on one side in relief. One of the best known surgeons in this country, who resides in this city, has a beautiful instrument case, entirely covered with leather made from an African’s skin”. With the knowledge of this heinous reality, one can interpret the encased football with staples dripping with blood as a continuation of the “black people as subhuman” ideology. These signs within the texts connect how audiences understand race as they force the watcher to come to terms with underrepresented horrors within the black community. 

    Audience Position

    Based on the multiple themes depicted in the trailer, it is quite difficult to interpret who the intended audience for this film could be. Based on the semiotics in the trailer, I believe the intended audience will shift towards those who enjoy horror, sports, the dark underbelly of the entertainment industry,as well as racial and religious commentary. Based on certain aspects of the intended viewer’s life, their own identity could be taken into question as the film appears to be questioning the sanctity and glorification of black athletic achievement. Those who have a close relationship to football may feel exposed or called-out by this overtly gruesome take on the dangers of football, as well as the slippery slope of sacrificing everything for fame and glory. 

    Audience Response

    Feedback from audiences of the teaser all appear to be grounded in interpreting the semiotics of the text multiple ways, due to the inherently stacked structure of the trailer. The audience has taken a more negotiated reader position as there are comments reiterating the obvious messages in the trailer in addition to added nuances that stem from their own personal experiences or research. 

    I believe the audience is reading the trailer in the way that it was intended because of the nature of films that are produced by Jordan Peele. As this film comes from his production company, audiences are compelled to dissect and analyze any possible meaning that could be extracted or interpreted from any piece of media that has his name attached to it. I would say that this trailer is structured to garner that response from audiences not only to generate buzz and excitement for the film, but to also give the reader a personal stake in the outcome of the film. There weren’t many mentions of inadvertent messages in the text with commenters even going as far as to say that people were looking too closely at the trailer, arguing the true premise is obvious and in our faces. It is difficult to confidently say that the film is resonating with the intended audience because it is unclear who the audience is. For those who are fans of Jordan Peele, they feel misled on the quality of the film as he is not directing it, so that automatically removes his audience (hyperwoke analytical film buffs) from the conversation. 

    Conclusion

    The trailer and poster for HIM (2025) work directly against social, political, and cultural norms. As it stands as a teaser, it is too early to decide whether this piece of promotional media helps or hurts social progress. It spreads awareness for CTE, but at the same time the varied subliminal messaging can confuse the viewer on the problems presented. The nature of a Hollywood horror commentary is automatically divisive, but with the added elements of sports, race, nationalism, and masculinity, it is clear that this film, or at least the trailer, is an unambiguous evaluation of how Hollywood and sports have conflated and commodified the black male athlete. 

    I am America. I am the part you won’t recognize. But get used to me. Black, confident, cocky; my name, not yours; my religion, not yours; my goals, my own; get used to me.

    Muhammad Ali

    References

    Brooks, S. N., & Blackman, D. (2011). Introduction: African Americans 

    and the History of Sport—New Perspectives. The Journal of African American History, 96(4), 441-447. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.5323/jafriamerhist.96.4.0441

    Childs, E. (1999). Images of the Black Athlete: Intersection of Race, 

    Sexuality, and Sports. Journal of African American Men, 4(2), 19–38. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41819361

    LEATHER FROM HUMAN SKIN. (1888, March 17). 

    The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 – 1954), p. 4.

     http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9144128

    Sorek, T., & White, R. G. (2016). American football and national pride: 

    Racial differences. Social Science Research, 58, 266–278. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2016.03.006

    Link to HIM

    HIM | Official Teaser Trailer