Tag

Metafiction

All articles tagged with #metafiction

Almodóvar Delivers a Colorful, Self-Referencing Metafilm at Cannes
film7 days ago

Almodóvar Delivers a Colorful, Self-Referencing Metafilm at Cannes

Pedro Almodóvar’s Bitter Christmas is a playful, self-referential metafilm that nests a filmmaker’s story within a film and a second alter-ego narrative, anchored by Bárbara Lennie’s Elsa and a parallel autofiction about Raúl Rossetti; while its color-saturated visuals, brisk performances, and metatextual wit stay true to Almodóvar’s sensibility, the work lacks the deeper personal resonance of Pain and Glory and may appeal mainly to devoted fans as it plays out its circular, studio-inside-a-film conceits. It premiered in Cannes (as the non-world premiere) and has posted modest Spanish box office since its late-March release, with international prospects hinging on the director’s name rather than star power.

Vladimir finale unpacked: a writer’s game of reality and fantasy
entertainment2 months ago

Vladimir finale unpacked: a writer’s game of reality and fantasy

Vladimir ends with The Protagonist using real-life obsession as fodder for fiction: in the cabin finale she drugs and binds Vlad, only to learn from Vlad that John and Cynthia weren’t lovers but writing buddies, not a real affair. Vlad’s rage fades as the Protagonist chooses herself, offering Vlad a weekly writing meet-up while she burns both men in her forthcoming novel. John’s misconduct hearing is dismissed (he loses his teaching license but keeps his pension), and the Protagonist ultimately saves her manuscript as a fire threatens the cabin, leaving the disappearance of truth deliberately ambiguous. The ending doubles as a meta-commentary on writers mining reality for stories.

Unraveling the Taylor Swift-Argylle Mystery
entertainment2 years ago

Unraveling the Taylor Swift-Argylle Mystery

The internet is abuzz with conspiracy theories surrounding the forthcoming spy movie "Argylle" and its supposed source material, a yet-to-be-published novel by Elly Conway, who some speculate is actually Taylor Swift. However, Elly Conway appears to be a fictional character, and the real author of the book is likely British thriller writer Tammy Cohen. Director Matthew Vaughn's secretive approach to the author's identity seems to be part of a metafictional marketing strategy, reminiscent of the approach taken by William Goldman in "The Princess Bride."