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What a ‘film experience’ at Boston Calling might have looked like — with Vanyaland as curator

(l to r) Baby (ANSEL ELGORT), Bats (JAMIE FOXX), Darling (EIZA GONZALEZ) and Buddy (JON HAMM) decide on doing the heist in TriStar Pictures' BABY DRIVER.

As you might have noticed, the first batches of promotion for this year’s Boston Calling included a curious little tagline near the bottom of the poster. This year’s Memorial Day weekend festival, which starts today at Harvard Athletic Complex, was to include a “Film Experience Curated by Natalie Portman,” the actress and Harvard grad, and many people were wondering what the hell was up with that. Only a few months later did we find out that it’d been cancelled (though we’re not entirely sure, we can guess it might have had something to do with her having given birth to twins, which would complicate anyone’s schedule), and replaced by a Hannibal Buress-led comedy programme. It’s a huge loss, but we’re glad Buress and company stepped in.

It was briefly mentioned at an Allston Civic Association meeting by a festival organizer that Portman’s experience would have centered around “women in film”, and that got us to thinking. If we had control of a film experience to be tied into the festival, what would we show? And we got to thinking, and made up a little schedule for you below. Three of the films are upcoming releases (of course we’ve gotta pay love to what’s coming down the pipeline), but the rest are available to watch on your favorite streaming service or to rent from your preferred digital storefront.

Here’s what the Vanyaland Film Experience at Boston Calling would look like. You can have a "film experience" right there on your couch.

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Saturday: The Bad Batch [coming soon]

We’ve written about the second feature from A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night director Ana Lily Amirpour a few times in the past, but we’re still a month or so away from its Boston-area release, and we can’t fucking wait. A woman (Suki Waterhouse), trekking through the lawless Texas territory of a future United States, is kidnapped by a group of cannibals, and feasted upon. Soon after she escapes, she befriends a former captor, the Miami Man (Jason Momoa), and the two of them must survive in their harsh surroundings. It’s got a great fucking cast — Jim Carrey and Keanu Reeves are also in this, y’all — and has a fascinating and beautiful color palette. In addition, if you’re having a film experience at a giant music festival, it’d make sense to include vibrant works that are tonally on-point with the experience itself. Plus, we’ve heard it has a killer soundtrack.

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