5 minute read
Trib’s V-day Crossword Puzzle!
what to wear is another big question—an important tip is to keep your outfit consistent with your typical style. If not, it will probably be costly for you, in more than one way, to maintain that new style that you adopted just for the first date. Second, you need to know if they will like you for who you really are; that won’t be easy if you look like someone else.
To make the situation feel as natural as possible, trust yourself. The cliché is a cliché for a reason: Being yourself is the sexiest thing you can be.
Advertisement
Leane Zogheib, U1 Arts, explains that for her, the importance of authenticity holds true.
“The worst thing someone can do on a first date is to fake liking something that I like, or when they do something [that] they don’t like just to impress me.”
There’s nothing more beautiful than a person talking about that one particular passion they have that makes their eyes shine. Though not everyone will understand your excitement for pandas nibbling on bamboo sticks, the right person will love this on you.
In the end, you can still have a terrible first date that leads to something wonderful or an incredible first date that will die out after a while. There is no magic formula; the best we can do is be ourselves and hope the other person does the same.
Remember that dating doesn’t have to be a serious commitment. Have fun and leave the tension behind! (istockphoto.com)
By: Ghazal Azizi, News Editor, Mattan Schachner, Sonya Colliander & Alia Scheuneman, Contributors
Down:
1. ‘What a cute couple!’
3. Montreal equivalent of a soundcloud rapper
5. “You had me __ hello”
6. Atlantic province abbr.
7. Prefix for sexual
8. “__, what are we?”
9. Fashionable
10. Netflix and _____
11. Singer with lots of songs about exes’ initials
12. Slang for pizza
13. “Let’s go to Las Vegas” is code for “Let’s _____”
15. 4 across’s mate
17. Lube alternative
18. Slang for phase
20. You are the ___ to my tac
21. Apple of my ___
22. Roman god of love
24. Fur baby
25. US Spy org.
26. Not to be cheesy, but I think you are _____
28. South American rodent
30. Carmela Soprano’s husband’s initials
31. Just ask them out!
33. Little
35. Dry response while texting
37. __SM
38. You’re so hot, turn on the
Across:
1. Popular exclamation while dancing
2. Third Wheelers hate seeing
4. 15 down’s mate
6. Maritime province abbr.
8. Spanish for consent
10. Organ known chiefly for pleasure
12. Friend ____
14. Romantic getaway
16. __ and behold
18. More than a single, fewer than an album
19. Bed in french
21. Before, poetically
23. A girl could have four of this
25. Toodaloo over text
27. Arguably Pixar’s most romantic animation
29. Kind of pie
31. Parents love this kind of job for a partner abbr.
32. Gentle touch
34. 2 across must be prefaced by a
35. A membership dream shattered by housing crisis
36. Taxi service by Apple
38. How much are singles allowed to feel sad on Valentine’s day?
39. Kinky nickname
40. If you were a triangle, you’d be _____ one
Brandon Cronenberg’s new film ominously explores class disparities through cloning
Sofia Stankovic Staff Creative
Spoilers ahead for Infinity Pool.
Will elite travellers ever receive justice? Infinity Pool, Brandon Cronenberg’s terrifying satire on the hedonistic exploits of wealthy tourists might have the answer. By commenting on the Western gentrification of developing countries and the class disparities within the justice system, Cronenberg pairs science fiction with body horror, leaving viewers deeply unsettled by its uncensored brutality. While the sex and gore are overwhelming, these elements are essential—even if overdone by the conclusion—in accurately conveying the atrocities committed by the wealthy tourists to the audience. Horrifying and thrilling, Infinity Pool’s impressive cast and heady screenplay make for an undoubtedly compelling experience.
The film begins with married couple James (Alexander Skarsgård) and Em Foster (Cleopatra Coleman), who are vacationing in the fictional country of La Tolqa so the former can find inspiration for his second novel. After James meets beautiful fan Gabi (Mia Goth), he and Em accompany Gabi and her husband Alban (Jalil Lespert) for dinner and a trip to the beach the following day. But inadvertently committing a fatal crime while intoxicated, James is sentenced with the death penalty. However, La Tolqa’s justice system allows wealthy offenders to avoid this fate by paying to have a clone of themselves take their place. James ends up joining Gabi and Alban’s group of wealthy tourists and chaos ensues as the group continues to commit crimes and clone themselves to get off scot-free. While James is initially enamoured by the sex, drugs, and excitement of this depraved trip, he begins to doubt his morality. When Gabi’s group prevents him from leaving, James wakes up to the morbid truth of their indulgence only as he’s trapped in their unrelenting mania.
Infinity Pool uses an exaggerated metaphor to critique the wealthy’s ability to bypass the law and avoid repercussions. Despite his amnesty from the death penalty initially seeming like freedom without consequences, James soon learns that the ordeal may cost him his hu- manity. Since James married rich rather than coming from money, there is something innately different about him. The film implies that other affluent tourists who have always lived lavishly do not have this same moral quandary, as they only become more entranced with their lifestyle after each cloning. Throughout the movie, Gabi’s group wears masks with contorted faces to disguise themselves while they commit crimes. This suggests the true unseemly nature of the group: The masks disguise their misdeeds, while they are able to live normal, privileged lives once they’re removed.
Skarsgård does a fantastic job embodying not only James but several of his clones. The film raises the question of what it truly means to be human, and Skarsgård is the symbol of this conundrum as he struggles with his identity after cloning himself several times, and even brutalizing these versions of himself. Mia Goth—who gained recognition in the horror films X and Pearl—cements herself further as the scream queen of recent cinema, elevating the film’s creepiness to another level. Gabi is immediately recognizable as a character who is not all that she seems, and her capacity for intrigue elevates the suspense.
Cronenberg’s screenplay is profoundly unique, and its fast-paced plot combined with complex characters keeps viewers on the edge of their seats. While cloning has been heavily explored in sci-fi, Infinity Pool avoids predictability by basing its horror around human overindulgence, with the clones only facilitating characters’ debauched exploits. The cinematography meticulously captures both the most indulgent and terrifying aspects, effectively intertwining sex scenes with the visual effects of hallucinogenic drugs, all edited together with pieces of gore. At a certain point in the film, however, the explicit scenes become excessive in number and take away from the rest of the plot.
Infinity Pool questions how elite privilege exacerbates the class disparity in developing countries through relentless hedonism. Similar to other recent on-screen explorations about the upper class, such as White Lotus or Triangle of Sadness, the movie comments on the dangers of unbridled indulgence. A stellar entry into the body horror genre, this film stands out with its eccentric characters and distinctive plot.
Infinity Pool is now playing in theatres.