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  • The Week's Saturday Wrap
    Stephen King’s brutal contest, an essential ancient history podcast, and America’s Martian craze

     
    FILM review

    The Long Walk

    Young men must keep moving or else.

    Though the latest adaptation of a Stephen King novel could be described as Lord of the Flies on foot, said Alison Willmore in NYMag.com, “it’s really more like The Hunger Games for dudes,” in a good way. The established film franchise and this movie even have the same director, here dramatizing King’s decades-old story about a brutal contest in which dozens of young men seeking a cash prize agree to walk until all but one have been shot dead by military overseers for failing to keep the designated pace. 

    As in a war movie, the brutal violence of this film “allows it to get sentimental,” with Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson playing contestants who form a believably complex biracial friendship that’s used to ratchet up the pathos. “The violence doesn’t take long to become numbing, but that’s the point,” said Tom Jorgensen in IGN. King wanted his readers to be horrified that state-sanctioned killing of young men could begin to feel routine, and while the repetitiveness of the action does grow tiresome, the story’s simple conceit “proves a very elastic premise onto which many types of societal adversity can be projected.” 

    Even when the pacing falters, The Long Walk remains “pretty impossible to turn away from,” said Liz Shannon Miller in Consequence. And while it’s never explained what kind of society stages such a competition, the contest’s very existence is “all we need to understand about the world that allows it to happen.”

     
     
    tv review

    High Potential

    Kaitlin Olson, after 17 seasons on It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, scored a hit of her own last year with this procedural about a peppery single mom with a genius-level IQ who stumbles into a consulting job with the LAPD while serving as a precinct’s cleaning lady. The mysteries will get personal for Olson’s Morgan Gillory in Season 2, because in last fall’s season finale a serial killer took an interest in her and she also learned that her long-gone first husband is still alive. Tuesday, Sept. 16, at 10 p.m., ABC.

     
     
    NEW AND NOTABLE PODCASTS

    Instant Classics

    (Vespucci)

    To get swept up with this new podcast about ancient Greece and Rome, “you don’t have to know Homer from Herodotus,” said Fiona Sturges in the Financial Times. That’s because authors and hosts Mary Beard and Charlotte Higgins “bring authority, accessibility, and humor to their subject,” while connecting the dots between past and present.

    Indeed, the first episode explores which Roman emperor is most like Donald Trump, and the figure they settle on is “unlikely to be who you think.” Though Instant Classics is nominally a video podcast, “I wouldn’t bother watching,” said Miranda Sawyer in The Observer (U.K.). You’d only see Beard and Higgins sitting in recording booths. The hosts are worth listening to, though, as they’re “enormously informed experts” whose “huge enthusiasm sold the whole thing to me.”

    While each week’s main episode is “packed full of stuff we didn’t know,” the “pièce de résistance” is the show’s spin-off—a book club focused on analyzing Emily Wilson’s translation of The Odyssey. That’s “akin to a free weekly Oxford tutorial” and “I’m in.”

     
     
    BOOK OF THE WEEK

    The Martians: The True Story of an Alien Craze That Captured Turn-of- the-Century America

    by David Baron

    A little over a century ago, the U.S. and much of the rest of the world “had Martians on the brain,” said Chris Vognar in the Los Angeles Times. In 1906, The New York Times reported that evidence of life had been discovered on the red planet, and a year later, The Wall Street Journal asserted that the existence of intelligent human life on our planetary neighbor had been proven. “How this came to pass is the subject of The Martians,” David Baron’s “witty” and deeply researched new book about a cultural craze that had taken flight about 15 years earlier. It was an era when breakthroughs were common, the theory of evolution had changed how people understood their universe, and tabloid-style journalism fanned interest in barely justified scientific speculation. Fortunately, “Baron comes not to bury the Mars mania but to examine the reasons why we choose to believe what we believe,” and he “approaches his subject with clarity, style, and drive.”

    “Striking details” enliven Baron’s account, said Dennis Drabelle in The Washington Post. The story’s central figure, wealthy Boston heir Percival Lowell, was 11 years ahead of the Journal in proclaiming the existence of intelligent life on Mars, and he poured his riches into proving his claim, going so far as to build an observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz., that still stands today. Even when critics scoffed, “Lowell kept peering through his telescopes and seeing what he expected to see”: lines that appeared to be canals connecting oceans on Mars’ surface, suggesting that an advanced civilization had built a sophisticated transport network. Lowell spread his beliefs through well-received books and sold-out lectures, and the popular culture of the era became “awash” in fictional speculations about smart Martians, including in novels by H.G. Wells and Edgar Rice Burroughs.

    We all know that Lowell and his fellow believers were wrong about Mars, said Maren Longbella in The Minnesota Star Tribune. Still, “Baron skillfully builds tension around the house of cards Lowell creates,” and we read on to learn how many famous figures, including Nikola Tesla, jumped on the Martian bandwagon and how their delusions were finally toppled. Because Baron never ridicules the believers, The Martians proves to be “less a tale of mass delusion than a love story,” one in which many of our fellow earthlings became swept away in romantic visions of what life elsewhere in the universe might look like. Because Baron makes our forebears’ foibles charming and persuasively argues that they sowed the seeds of every dream of space travel that has followed, “prepare to be dazzled by the romance, too.”

     
     
    OBITUARY

    Giorgio Armani

    The Italian designer who dressed Hollywood

    Giorgio Armani added by subtracting. The “deconstructed” jackets that brought the Italian designer renown in the mid-1970s stripped out the stiff linings and shoulder padding then common to sport coats in favor of soft fabrics, muted tones, and a sleek design that came to define relaxed elegance. Having done his part to “soften the image of men,” as Armani put it, he then set about to “harden the image of women,” with assertive power suits that in the 1980s became ubiquitous among female executives. Silver-haired, blue-eyed, and suavely handsome, Armani was beloved in Hollywood, where his black-tie suits and evening gowns were such a red-carpet staple that Women’s Wear Daily dubbed the 1990 Oscars “the Armani Awards.” A canny businessman who maintained personal control of a vast global enterprise, Armani amassed an estimated $12 billion. “Life,” he once said, “is a movie. And my clothes are the costumes.” 

    Born in northern Italy, Armani grew up during Benito Mussolini’s reign, and in World War II his family “often had little to eat,” said The Times (U.K.). His father was an accountant, his mother a homemaker who made her three children elegant clothes. “We looked rich,” Armani later said. Aiming to be a doctor, he studied medicine in Milan but left for a stint in the military. He then landed a job as a window dresser at a Milan department store. His styling talents drew notice from designer Nino Cerruti, who gave Armani a job designing menswear despite his lack of training. In 1975, he launched his own label, funded by the sale of his Volkswagen Beetle. Armani’s reworked jackets—“supple as a cardigan, light as a shirt”—quickly caught on in Europe, said Reuters. In 1980, he “won the hearts of the U.S. glittering class” when his clothes were featured in the film American Gigolo, which showed a shirtless Richard Gere scouring a closet full of Armani suits and ties. Two years later, he made the cover of Time under the headline “Giorgio’s Gorgeous Style.” 

    Over the years, “Armani grew the company into a lifestyle empire,” said The Washington Post, putting his name on jewelry, housewares, hotels, restaurants, perfumes, multiple spin-off clothing lines, and hundreds of stores. His fabulous wealth bought a 213-foot yacht and a stable of luxury homes. A reserved workaholic, he toiled into his 90s, maintaining a vision that balanced glamour and subtlety. “Elegance doesn’t mean being noticed,” he once said. “It means being remembered.”

     
     

    Sunday Shortlist was written and edited by Ryan Devlin, Chris Erikson, Mark Gimein, Chris Mitchell, Rebecca Nathanson, and Matt Prigge.

    Image credits, from top: Lionsgate; ABC; Getty Images; Getty Images
     

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