Image via Complex/HBO/Universal Pictures
Welcome to Couch Review, a new review series from Complex's Pop Culture team. It's simple: we sit on the couch, check out something new, and then write about it. "So, a review," you're saying? Basically. Grab a seat and tune in.
As we try and figure out what to do while still on lockdown, we entertain some intriguing ideas. Maybe we check out a stand-up special—the first!—on HBO Max. Maybe we hop into a roomy whip and take a trip to a drive-in to properly socially distance while taking in a classic flick. We ended up doing both.
From our literal couch to the couch we share (responsibly) mobile-y, here's the latest edition of the Couch Review.
'Beth Stelling: Girl Daddy'
Where to Watch: HBO Max
When you think of standup specials, Netflix and Comedy Central tend to be the first two things that come to mind. However, there are so many comedians releasing specials that other channels have stepped up to broadcast them—Beth Stelling’s Girl Daddy is one of the first specials to grace HBO Max. It is a stunning debut, one that makes it clear that the service is here to provide viewers with quality content and serve as an extension of the HBO flagship's longtime support of comedy and standup.
Filmed at The Varsity Theater in Minneapolis, veteran standup Beth Stelling wastes no time establishing her offbeat yet hilarious brand of comedy. The comic has made appearances on Netflix’s The Standups, Comedy Central’s smash-hit Corporate, in addition to her multiple appearances performing on late night. You can clearly see her appeal in Girl Daddy. Stelling captivates her audience with dazzling wit and relatable self-deprecation, making for a brilliant hour of comedy.
One mark of a truly great comedian is the comic’s relationship with the audience. Stelling masterfully combines crowd work into her own material. It doesn’t feel forced; rather, her interactions with her audience (shoutout to Jeremy!) lead directly into her own material. Stelling’s views on things such as dating in the #MeToo movement, her struggles with weight, and her own battles being a female comedian all involve a level of audience participation. Crowd work can sometimes be used as a weapon, to antagonize and vilify the audience. However, Beth Stelling establishes a friendly (if offbeat) relationship with the audience, and it makes her act all the more likable.
HBO Max pulled no punches by having Girl Daddy be one of the first specials aired on the site. Beth Stelling is clearly in control of her craft as well as the audience the entire time, and the special is one of this year’s cant-misses. —Kevin Hall
'Jaws'
Where to Watch: Hulu (or at the drive-in)
In a year when movie theaters are closed during the season that's typically home to some of our collective fondest moviegoing memories, and new films are scarce, returning to staples that embody the purest peak of "summer blockbuster" has been a comfort. Couple that with the feel-good retro aesthetics of a drive-in theater, and you'll come as close to restoring the summer movie feeling as possible.
As far as movies that exude big summer, blockbuster and summer blockbuster energy, all these other flicks are still Jaws' sons. The 1975 thriller screened earlier this week at Brooklyn's Skyline Drive-In, a Greenpoint waterfront theater set-up birthed post-COVID-19 that offers, as the name promises, stunning views of Manhattan. (I'd recommend pulling up early and in an SUV for optimum screen view, Cadillac was nice enough to lend me their spacious XT6 for my excursion.) Spielberg's run from the '70s through to the first Jurassic Park are an upper echelon popcorn flick in a class of their own, if his sophomore directorial effort isn't the best among his later classics, it may be the most suited to a drive-in setting now. (The last time I saw Jurassic Park in a theater it was at Lincoln Square IMAX, an experience that cannot be duplicated in the whip.)
Jaws turned 45 this year, and it's never been more relevant. The back-half is a man versus nature battle in the Dad Movie pantheon—Quint's chilling below-deck tale and his eventual death will never lose potency. But that first hour is all about themes of capitalism versus morality and empathy—specifically how the former will always prevail until tragedy strikes in a blatantly unavoidable way. Sound familiar? Mayor Larry's hair even sticks up like Trump's does when he's ruffled. A dead boy isn't reason enough to prioritize caution over beach town Amity's economy-dependent 4th of July festivities; warm weather widely threw all COVID anxieties to the wind—our country is currently taking the longest to beat back the virus while our death and case tolls hit astronomical heights.
Still, Jaws stands as some of the best legacy escapism there is. It's a comforting throwback to air-conditioned dark theaters, buttery tubs of popcorn, awe-inspiring feats of filmmaking, and a time when, even belatedly, common sense prevailed. —Frazier Tharpe