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The basic structural facts of rock band July Talk are this: two front people, Leah Fay Goldstein and Peter Dreimanis, surrounded by whiplashing guitarists Ian Docherty and Josh Warburton, and double drummers Danny Miles and Dani Nash. For this compulsively DIY, rigorously self-realizing group, the essence of July Talk has always been the tension between precision and chaos. To understand this tension, we can reduce it to sets of twos, or we can magnify it and look deeper as to why we feel the need to frame it one way or the other. What we see says more about what we’re looking for. With July Talk, as with most things, what have we missed? We need not ask what July Talk’s two writhing frontpeople’s relationship is to each other, but rather what their relationship is to us, their audience, and to the world, this tender, villainous, confounding world. These bodies welcome our gaze, they revel and recoil in it while they furiously push back, asking of us what they ask of each other: please see me for who I am. If we see July Talk as a woman and a man, in opposition to one another, what we are seeing is our own projections upon these bodies. What goes on between these bodies, all of them, that kinetic, staticky, sticky space, is where the truth of July Talk takes shape. On stage, July Talk unfurls and explodes. The action pings from slo-motion commotion to back-bendy communion, fluid (as in bodily) and liquid (as in the dark goo phase of metamorphosis). Things get weird, occasionally grotesque, always enthralling. Each show offers moments of grace that reveal for a moment the inner workings of this unknowable universe. Hold onto those until the next time.

Peter Dreimanis

Silas “The Ghost” Carter
for Silas “The Ghost” Carter in Dancing Diamond
Suggested by s105042

In New York City, a 17-year-old Sarah Mercer is abducted by a ruthless gang and taken to a hidden club, where she meets their enigmatic and dangerous boss Vincent "Vince" Delacroix (played by Mike Myers). Despite her pleas that she doesn’t belong there, he coldly informs her that none of the other captive girls did either. He has brought them all here to dance—to entertain, to profit him. This place is their home now, whether they accept it or not. Meanwhile, the girl’s desperate parents turn to the NYPD, but there’s a chilling obstacle: the club’s location has never been tracked, existing like a ghost in the city’s underbelly. To rescue her, the authorities must rely on unconventional methods—detecting patterns, finding someone who knows the ins and outs of the underground world. As the investigation unfolds, the film keeps its focus on the boss and the girl, building tension as she struggles against his control, searching for a way out.