It’s all about major music moments this weekend. Rock out to Green Day or see Guns N’ Roses in concert with ZZ Top. For a full list of San Antonio events, visit our calendar.
Thursday, September 7
San Antonio World Heritage Festival The annual San Antonio World Heritage Festival returns with cultural events and festivities at the Mission County Park Pavilions. Events run through Sunday and include a sunset picnic, living heritage symposium, tour of the missions, and more.
Colin Hay in concert Singer-songwriter Colin Hay heads to the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts in support of his new album, Fierce Mercy. Hay is most widely known as the influential frontman of Men at Work.
Friday, September 8
Opera San Antonio presents Macbeth The classic story of Macbeth comes to life through song at the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts. Rediscover the story of power, greed, and ambition to the tune of composer Giuseppe Verdi’s masterpiece sung in Italian with English supertitles. There are shows on Friday and Sunday.
Guns N’ Roses in concert with ZZ Top Guns N’ Roses join ZZ Top in concert for one big show at the Alamodome. Rock out with the reunited lineup of Axl Rose, Slash, and Duff McKagan, plus Texas’ own ZZ Top.
Saturday, September 9
Green Day in concert with Catfish and the Bottlemen Legendary Green Day return to San Antonio with can’t-miss concert at the AT&T Center. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees will perform songs from their new album, Revolution Radio. Arrive early for opening act Catfish and the Bottlemen.
Singer-songwriter Colin Hay plays the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts Thursday.
Photo by Beth Herzhaft
Singer-songwriter Colin Hay plays the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts Thursday.
Writer/director Lynne Ramsay does not make feel-good movies. Her previous two films —You Were Never Really Here and We Need to Talk About Kevin — were about a traumatized veteran who tracks down missing girls for a living and parents reckoning with a child who might be a sociopath, respectively. Her latest, Die My Love, has a story as dark as its title.
Grace (Jennifer Lawrence) and Jackson (Robert Pattinson) are a married couple who move into a run-down house that used to belong to Jackson’s uncle, who shot and killed himself on the property. That doesn’t exactly scream “great vibes,” but the somewhat manic duo quickly introduce a child into the equation, an event that forms a schism between two people who previously seemed to be on the same off-kilter wavelength.
While Jackson works to provide for the family, Grace is left to take care of the baby and herself at the somewhat remote house. She doesn’t appear to be a big fan of the arrangement, engaging in all manner of odd behavior, like crawling around the floor, talking to herself, and taking the baby on miles-long walks to visit her mother-in-law, Pam (Sissy Spacek), who’s not doing well herself after recently losing her husband, Harry (Nick Nolte).
Ramsay, who co-wrote the film with Enda Walsh and Alice Birch, foregrounds Grace’s experience above all others, but the film is far from straightforward. The idea of post-partum depression is raised as a reason for Grace’s weird behavior, but as both she and Jackson are introduced as two people who skew to the “ab” side of normal, it’s difficult to say that everything she does is due to feelings that arise after giving birth.
Plus, Grace has plenty to be upset about in general, including living in a death house, being left alone with their child the majority of the time, and Jackson bringing home a yapping dog without even so much as a conversation. But the manifestation of her anger/depression is hard to parse, as Ramsay includes scenes of her carrying around a butcher knife, meeting up with a mysterious figure on a motorcycle, and other strange things that may or may not actually be happening.
There is clearly a lot of metaphorical work being done by seemingly random things like the reappearance of a black horse on multiple occasions, blaring rock music that accompanies several scenes, and the use of the 1x1 aspect ratio by Ramsay. It’s easy to feel the intensity of the film’s central relationship and their conflicts even if you can’t make heads or tails of the allusions that the filmmaker seems to love.
Lawrence is put through the wringer almost as much as she was in Darren Aronofsky’s Mother!, and her performance is one that can be felt strongly. Still, because the narrative is unclear, she often appears to be overwrought in certain scenes. Pattinson never fits well with his uncaring and/or oblivious character. Spacek makes a nice impression in a limited amount of screen time, but why Ramsay chose to use the ultra-talented LaKeith Stanfield in the nothing part of the motorcycle rider is baffling.
Those who love to dig into symbolism and non-linear storytelling will have a field day with the arty Die My Love. But for everyone else, anything Ramsay might have been trying to say about the difficulties of being a mother gets buried under many scenes that don’t make any logical sense and over-the-top acting that’s only fit to match the bizarreness of the film itself.