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    Mud Kisses & Music

    Mud kisses & music: Rejuvenated Lauryn Hill, Jack White and drones send Summer Fest out in style

    Reid Schroder
    Reid Schroder
    Jun 2, 2014 | 6:00 am

    A perfectly good mud pit went to waste Sunday afternoon at Eleanor Tinsley Park, and I'm left wondering if that's good news or bad news for the reputation of Free Press Summer Fest, now in it's sixth year.

    To be fair, this patch of mud down the sloping grounds near the front of the Mars stage was the only one I spent any real time near. There may have been massive mud orgies elsewhere along the bayou and I just missed them. However, this particular pit was a messy memory of Saturday's deluge and it would have been quite a thing to see all of that sloppy earth being unceremoniously abused by reckless festival goers.

    Despite the liberties the small tribe of mud people took with what nature gave us on Sunday, I left the festival wondering what it would have taken to get more people in the mud during Jack White's set.

    Instead, the gooey ground created a nice open space to get close to the Mars stage for anyone who didn't care about clean ankles and also gave the few dedicated (or more likely, inebriated) Free Presstonians a chance to cover each other in mud kisses to the tune of Jack White's playful ditty "We're Going to Be Friends."

    Yep. That display really did happen, and it was just as precious as it sounds in print.

    Despite the liberties the small tribe of mud people took with what nature gave us on Sunday, I left the festival wondering what it would have taken to get more people in the mud during Jack White's set to celebrate the end of the most eventful Free Press Summer Fest since its early years.

    A winning baseball team might have worked. Then, when White mentioned to the audience that he had gone to an Astros game with his kids on Saturday night, he would have been greeted not with boos but with unanimous cheers followed by hundreds of fans lining up to do victory slides across the mud while White's band triumphantly performed "Seven Nation Army" underneath a sky lit up with fireworks.

    Instead, as White implied with his tongue-in-cheek response to a sea of people booing their own baseball team, the lack of any significant activity in the mud, drugs, and rock and roll department paints an accurate picture of the collective personality of this festival.

    People more or less behave themselves, they don't break any real social contracts, and it is the music, not the antics, that brings in the revenue.

    How else would you explain a throng of first-timers and Austinites that toughed out the 100-percent unshaded Venus Stage to hear Austin local Shakey Graves do things with an acoustic guitar that would make Led Zeppelin's III jealous?

    Or the overcrowded space in front of Neptune Stage where the gang waited out an extra long sound check before hearing Wu-Tang deliver a set full of some of the greatest hip-hop songs of all time?

    And how would you explain multiple generations chanting in unison to nearly two-decade old Fugees songs with Ms. Lauryn Hill? At 39 years old and many years removed from any new hip-hop conversations, her performance at Mars stage needed to be tight, energizing, and relevant in order to go against the garage punk of The Kills and the neo-Americana of Drew Holcolmb and the Neighbors at that 5 p.m. time slot. Hill brought it with all the bravado and confidence required of the veteran diva that she is, and in doing so, successfully won a large percentage of Sunday's attendees to her stage.

    Yes, what this festival lacks in spontaneity and low inhibition is going to be a good thing as long as the lineups continue to cater to such a broad audience. I can live with being one of the only ones out of umpteen thousand who cares to get his toes muddy during a Jack White set.

    File Under Brilliant Ideas For This Year's Festival.....

    METRO threw the non-Fancy Pants ticket holders a huge bone in the form of a parked bus along the Allen Parkway feeder road. As far as I could tell, this bus's sole purpose was to give anyone who hopped on it a place to sit in an air-conditioned, windowed environment. Though I had Fancy Pants access, I was on that bus as much as I could be between stage-trotting. The people-watching from the ergonomically sound seats of a METRO bus is unrivaled.

    Saint Arnold brought White Noise to the festival for the second year in a row, made it accessible to everyone, and never ran out. Though Belgian Whites aren't everyone's style year-round, that blend of coriander and orange is just what the doctor ordered on a hot summer's day. I was looking forward to having enough to last me through a blistering Drive-By Truckers set, and Saint Arnold did not disappoint.

    The grand re-model of the festival grounds gets huge kudos, especially with the inclusion of beautiful, tranquil Sam Houston Park. There was more shade than ever due to some of these tweaks, and plenty of opportunities to showcase Buffalo Bayou and downtown Houston amongst the stages.

    Aaaand The Low Point of the Festival Goes To...

    An eagle-eyed festival-goer near me during Hill's set spotted a drone skirting across the sky from stage to stage. It was in that moment that I wept a little bit for music festivals around the world.

    Drones were everywhere.

    Drone at Free Press Summer Fest June 2014
      
    Photo by © Michelle Watson CatchLightGroup.com
    Drones were everywhere.
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    Movie Review

    New Pixar film Elio is fun but falls short of Disney's top tier

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 19, 2025 | 6:00 pm
    Elio (Yonas Kibreab) and Glordon (Remy Edgerly) in Elio
    Photo courtesy of Pixar
    Elio (Yonas Kibreab) and Glordon (Remy Edgerly) in Elio.

    Pixar has done a ton of different things in the 28 feature films they’ve released over the past 30 years, but the one they’d never done is deal with aliens (and, no, the alien toys in Toy Story don’t count). Now they’re going where many storytellers have gone before, but in their own unique way, in the new film Elio.

    Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) is a space fanatic who has recently lost both of his parents in an unnamed event. His Aunt Olga (Zoe Saldaña) is now his guardian, and because she happens to be a member of the U.S. Space Force, Elio finds himself tantalizingly close to communications from space. With a desire to be abducted by aliens for both curiosity and sentimental reasons, Elio sends a message into space, hoping for some kind of response.

    He gets that and more when a ship full of multiple types of beings takes him into space, believing him to be a leader instead of a child. An encounter with a hostile force led by Lord Grigon (Brad Garrett) gives Elio both a new friend, Grigon’s son Glordon (Remy Edgerly), and responsibility for maintaining peace during an unexpected galactic crisis.

    Pixar has not typically followed the route of many Disney movies of giving their child protagonist the trauma of dead parents, and doing so here is the first of a few minor missteps. Having Olga be his mom instead of his aunt would have altered their dynamic, but only slightly. While Elio is shown to miss his parents, his major focus is on making contact with aliens. Since the film only briefly deals with his grief, it would have been better served by excising it altogether.

    For the most part, the film is goofy, with Elio’s enthusiasm for aliens matched by the oddness of the creatures he meets in space. The filmmakers - there are three credited directors and three credited writers - seem to have taken inspiration from sea creatures and Pixar’s own history, as the main bad guy emulates Mike and Sully’s boss from Monsters, Inc. Almost every character in the film is heightened to a degree that makes for funny situations, but not as much sentimentality as other Pixar offerings.

    Surprisingly, especially since the film ends with a voiceover from notable astronomer Carl Sagan, the filmmakers play fast and loose with real-life science. Elio’s journeys to and from the alien spaceship are treated as close-to-instantaneous trips, even involving portals directly to Earth. The idea of the story doesn’t allow them to delve into things like relativistic time dilation, but there still could have been other scientific references to keep the story aboveboard.

    There are very few stars to be found among the film’s voice cast other than Saldaña and Garrett, who are each fine if unmemorable. Kibreab and Edgerly are given many more scenes than anyone else, and they each do a great job of bringing out both the joy and naivete of their characters. Some lesser-known actors like Jameela Jamil, Atsuko Okatsuka, and Brendan Hunt show up in minor roles, but they don’t stand out in any way.

    The story and characters in Elio are sweet and fun, but the film as a whole falls well short of the top tier Pixar movies. The filmmakers could have gone many different directions with a story about a boy who wants to be abducted by aliens, and the way they chose ended up being innocuous and less than compelling.

    ---

    Elio opens in theaters on June 20.

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