Lil Baby will come to American Airlines Center in Dallas on July 29.
Photo courtesy of Lil Baby
Diamond-certified rapper Lil Baby is doing his version of a humblebrag with his latest tour, dubbed "It's Only Us," which will make a stop in Dallas at American Airlines Center on Saturday, July 29.
Kicking off on July 26 in Houston, the tour by this Atlanta-based artist will travel to 32 cities across the U.S. over the course of two months. In addition to Dallas and Houston, the tour will also stop in Austin on July 28.
Lil Baby will be joined on the tour by a festival-style group of opening acts, including The Kid LAROI, GloRilla, GLOSS UP, Rylo Rodriguez, and Hunxho.
The tour is in support of the rapper's 2022 album, It’s Only Me, his third solo album. Both that and his previous solo release, 2020's My Turn, went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 charts. A 2021 collaborative album with Lil Durk, The Voice of the Heroes, accomplished the same feat.
In fact, Lil Baby is known as much for his collaborative work as his solo work. Through the years, he's been a featured artist on hit songs alongside the likes of Nicki Minaj, Kanye West, The Weeknd, Drake, and DJ Khaled.
An artist pre-sale for the tour will start on Tuesday, April 11 at 10 am, with the general on sale starting on Thursday, April 13 at 10 am. For full tour information, itsonlyustour.com.
As recently as the late 2010s, if a movie was made about an LGBTQ+ character, it was more than likely about their coming out experience. Romance, if it existed, was typically chaste, and actual sex was almost completely out of the question. Things have changed dramatically in the 2020s, to the point that a major movie star has no issue starring in a film called Queer.
Based on the 1985 novella by William S. Burroughs, the film features William Lee (Daniel Craig), whom everyone calls just Lee, a writer living in 1950s-era Mexico City who spends most of his time haunting local bars with friends like fellow writer Joe Guidry (Jason Schwartzman) and hitting on younger men. His early interactions in the film seem to indicate that Lee has a bad reputation within the local gay community, as multiple people avoid him or give him odd looks.
Lee senses an opportunity when he encounters a newcomer, Eugene Allerton (Drew Starkey). Despite some awkward interactions, the two of them start spending time together, although Lee has much more invested in the relationship than Eugene does. Their hit-and-miss bond continues until Lee, who’s starting to get into drugs in addition to the booze, convinces Eugene to accompany him on a trip to South America.
Directed by Luca Guadagnino and written by Justin Kuritzkes (making their second straight film together after Challengers), early on the film seems to be mostly about the divide between an older person who’s grown comfortable in his ways and a younger person who’s living a relatively carefree life. The introduction of drugs into the plot changes things, though, with Lee searching out more ways to open his eyes to what the world has to offer.
Guadagnino and his team use some interesting visual storytelling techniques to introduce ideas that may not be present in the actual script. The most successful, demonstrated in multiple scenes, is the superimposition of movements by Lee over what’s actually taking place in the scene. The subtle overlay gives the audience insight into Lee’s true feelings, showing what he can’t or won’t say out loud.
Music also plays a big part in how the plot is perceived, with the use of anachronistic songs from Nirvana and Prince serving to heighten certain moments. The score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross is not as in-your-face as the one they did for Challengers, but it complements the film well, especially when the plot starts to get trippy in its final half hour.
Craig, who appears sweaty and disheveled for much of the film, is about as far from the suaveness of James Bond as you can get in this role. He takes multiple risks with his performance and almost all of them pay off. Starkey’s character is subdued by comparison, but still comes off well. Schwartzman and Lesley Manville are given showy roles, with both using altered appearances that make them nearly unrecognizable to deliver memorable performances.
Queer is not as accessible as Challengers was storytelling-wise, but the fact that it tells a story about gay men living their lives as they see fit with no interference or questions shows how far the film world has come in a short period of time. It also continues Guadagnino’s streak of making audacious films in a way that few other filmmakers are willing or able to approach.