Phoenix, Bush and Deftones are among the biggest names slated to perform at Edgefest 23, the annual spring concert held by alternative-rock radio station KDGE-FM 102.1 "The Edge." Edgefest 23 takes place Saturday, April 27, at FC Dallas Stadium in Frisco. Tickets go on sale February 22.
The radio station followed its traditional method for announcing the band lineup by releasing the name of an act every hour.
Bush formed in 1992 as a band for MTV to love and Nirvana fans to hate. The band is renewing its commitment to touring and is apparently hitting every summer festival, from Rock on the Range in Columbus, Ohio, to Rocklahoma on Memorial Day in Pryor, Oklahoma. Frontman Gavin Rossdale has been cultivating an acting career and will appear in a Sofia Coppola film this summer called The Bling Ring.
Deftones tops the second stage with A Day to Remember, Gaslight Anthem, Twenty One Pilots, Robert DeLong, The Neighbourhood, The Mowgli's and A Silent Film.
Other bands on the lineup show a definite coed trend: Paramore is a coed Tennessee band fronted by shocking-redhead Hayley Williams that blends emo, pop and rock. They'll release their fourth album April 9. The Airborne Toxic Event is a coed indie-rock quintet from LA with a classically trained violinist. Youngblood Hawke is a coed electro-pop quintet from LA whose eponymous debut EP came out in 2012.
Capital Cities is another electro-pop band from LA, while indie-rock band Atlas Genius is from Australia. They're an MTV favorite who just released their debut When It Was Now. AWOL Nation is the Beck-like solo project of Aaron Bruno. Phoenix is the Phoenix from France.
For a series whose first two films made over $5 billion combined worldwide, Avatar has a curious lack of widespread cultural impact. The films seem to exist in a sort of vacuum, popping up for their run in theaters and then almost as quickly disappearing from the larger movie landscape. The third of five planned movies, Avatar: Fire and Ash, is finally being released three years after its predecessor, Avatar: The Way of Water.
The new film finds the main duo, human-turned-Na’vi Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his native Na’vi wife, Neytiri (Zoë Saldaña), still living with the water-loving Metkayina clan led by Ronal (Kate Winslet) and Tonowari (Cliff Curtis). While Jake and Neytiri still play a big part, the focus shifts significantly to their two surviving children, Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) and Tuk (Trinity Jo-Li Bliss), as well as two they’ve essentially adopted, Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) and Spider (Jack Champion).
Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), who lives on in a fabricated Na’vi body, is still looking for revenge on Jake, and he finds help in the form of the Mangkwan Clan (aka the Ash People), led by Varang (Oona Chaplin). Quaritch’s access to human weapons and the Mangkwan’s desire for more power on the moon known as Pandora make them a nice match, and they team up to try to dominate the other tribes.
Aside from the story, the main point of making the films for writer/director James Cameron is showing off his considerable technical filmmaking prowess, and that is on full display right from the start. The characters zoom around both the air and sea on various creatures with which they’ve bonded, providing Cameron and his team with plenty of opportunities to put the audience right there with them. Cameron’s preferred viewing method of 3D makes the experience even more immersive, even if the high frame rate he uses makes some scenes look too realistic for their own good.
The story, as it has been in the first two films, is a mixed bag. Cameron and co-writers Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver start off well, having Jake, Neytiri, and their kids continue mourning the death of Neteyam (Jamie Flatters) in the previous film. The struggle for power provides an interesting setup, but Cameron and his team seem to drag out the conflict for much too long. This is the longest Avatar film yet, and you really start to feel it in the back half as the filmmakers add on a bunch of unnecessary elements.
Worse than the elongated story, though, is the hackneyed dialogue that Cameron, Jaffa, and Silver have come up with. Almost every main character is forced to spout lines that diminish the importance of the events around them. The writers seemingly couldn’t resist trying to throw in jokes despite them clashing with the tone of the scenes in which they’re said. Combined with the somewhat goofy nature of the Na’vi themselves (not to mention talking whales), the eye-rolling words detract from any excitement or emotion the story builds up.
A pre-movie behind-the-scenes short film shows how the actors act out every scene in performance capture suits, lending an authenticity to their performances. Still, some performers are better than others, with Saldaña, Worthington, and Lang standing out. It’s more than a little weird having Weaver play a 14-year-old girl, but it works relatively well. Those who actually get to show their real faces are collectively fine, but none of them elevate the film overall.
There are undoubtedly some Avatar superfans for which Fire and Ash will move the larger story forward in significant ways. For anyone else, though, the film is a demonstration of both the good and bad sides of Cameron. As he’s proven for 40 years, his visuals are (almost) beyond reproach, but the lack of a story that sticks with you long after you’ve left the theater keeps the film from being truly memorable.
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Avatar: Fire and Ash opens in theaters on December 19.