An Inferno with Devil Youth Studios

Photography by Skye Collacott Williamson.

Devil Youth Studios is a Skateboard clothing brand that doesn’t just focus on style, but also on practicality. Their designs, inspired by animations and video game graphics, are magnificently curated into beautiful drawings on cosy jumpers and t-shirts. These clothes are not just for show, but are perfect for wearing even if you fall off your skateboard. The designer’s imagination is the source of these initial drawings, which have blossomed into the ones you see today on their clothes.

Devil Youth Studios was not just a thought, but a moment of imagination that the owner turned into reality in 2019. This journey, from a mere idea to the brand it is today, is a testament to their passion and ambition. Based in Bristol, the Skateboard capital of the UK, they are proud to be a part of this vibrant community. A stroll down the centre of Bristol, even in the light rain, is a sight to behold, with friends united by their love of skateboarding and fashion, all wearing the Devil Youth Studios brand.

Check out the Devil Youth Studios Website for their clothes and their Instagram for latest updates.

Twisters (2024) Takes Cinemas by Storm: A Critical Review

Photography by Skye Collacott Williamson.

Watch the trailer for the film here.

The wind swells, the ocean breeze circles in salt rust around you, men in half-deserted streets roll up their car windows, the dimming sun hidden behind darkening clouds, the light of the cinema glows within, drawing you inside, and destiny awaits. The click of the machine, the blink of electricity, the drip of the rain outside, the ticket leading you to the screen with Twisters marked above it.

The original Twister, directed by Jan de Bont, has left an indelible mark on my life, and Lee Isaac Chung continues his legacy. Like many children who deeply connected with The Lion King or Toy Story, I had a similar love affair with Twister. This film’s portrayal of the power and unpredictability of nature inspired me to pursue Geography A Level and Environmental Science. It’s a testament to the film’s influence on my career choices and my fascination with the darker side of nature.

The newest film directed by Lee Isaac Chung Twisters stars Daisy Edgar-Jones, Glen Powell, and Anthony Ramos as the protagonists. The film was shot in various locations, including Oklahoma City and Cashion, Okarche, El Reno and Chickasha, to capture the story’s essence and the tornadoes’ power.

The Plot and Characters:

Kate (Daisy Edgar-Jones) is a PhD student interested in cloud microphysics. Javi (Antony Ramos) is responsible for data collection, and three of their close friends are also involved. They need the perfect storm, the perfect conditions, the perfect tornado. However, these conditions make a tornado align too well to create an EF-5 tornado instead of the EF-1 tornado they were searching for to test their theory. The science group’s hypostasis uses sodium polymer to remove the critical element of moisture to ‘disturb a tornado’. Theoretically, it should work, but the technology to understand a tornado has not evolved yet, and there is not enough polymer for an EF-5 tornado.

The lighthearted innocence of five PhD students in the field, highlighted by the use of video cams, and the passionate excitement for a tornado turned on their heads as the thing they loved became the thing that killed them.

The film’s opening scene, where Daisy Edgar-Jones’ character screams in agony as the tornado claims her two best friends and her boyfriend, is a powerful emotional punch. The beauty of the shot, the chaos unleashed by the tornado, and the raw pain in the scream all cut to a serene white scene, almost like heavenly imagery, and then back to Daisy, covered in blood and dirt, walking through the tornado’s aftermath. This scene, with its emotional intensity, draws you in and sets the tone for the rest of the film, making you feel deeply engaged and connected to the characters. The contrast between the white eeriness and the filth conveys Kate’s loss of innocence, her love for a tornado wiped out and replaced by fear. The grey that haunts her, the grass destroyed in the path of the tornado, her heart destroyed in the path of the tornado, her ‘childish belief that’ she ‘could make a difference’ killed in the path of the tornado.

The film is a rollercoaster of non-stop action. There’s never a dull moment as it moves from one heart-pounding action sequence to another, punctuated by gut-wrenching emotional moments that keep you on the edge of your seat. The constant thrill and excitement of the film’s action sequences will keep you engaged and thrilled, making you feel each moment’s adrenaline rush and the suspense.

Five years later, Javi returns to Kate’s life with a mission and an idea to help analyse tornados. Kate has a natural gift that none of the other characters can even grace against, and that’s the feel, the presence, the essence of a tornado. The film begins.

(I would like to officially get this out the way: I would like to apologise to Glen Powell. I have only watched him Set It Up, which I hated, and I take it back, the man can act).

The echoes of Jeb throughout the film land a gut punch to my soul. They are so hidden in the movie that once you start noticing the trail left behind by you, you can not help but have glisten form in their eyes and trail water droplets down their cheeks. As Kate contemplates staying in New York or helping Javi, she is comforted by a ghost, Jeb, holding her the way he held onto her during the tornado. It is the first essence of warm tones since the accident, and as quickly as it appears, it is wiped away by a cut through the loud train tracks and her awakening in her cool-tone apartment. One can only imagine this is a regular occurrence in her life. The moment Jeb is echoing through her is during the Toronado with Owens. The mother repeats the words Jeb did, and if you listen so closely, you hear the actor also echo those words. Love truly is the knife turning inside me. Jeb is there saving Kate over and over, and his actions are reincarnated as Javi uses the physics of levers to help Kate get Owens from under a truck. Kate finally lets go of Jeb as she looks to the sky, which she once begged to; she smiles, knowing she completed their science project and has done right by him.

My director and film-critic friend, Billy Howells, wrote: ‘Let’s face it: a sequel to Twister released 28 years after the original seems like a pure cash grab, but Chung gives this movie a reason to exist artistically. It absolutely has the “tornados destroying shit” you expect from the original, and that is very well done, but his handling of the characters is what makes this movie special.

Through these characters, the audience experiences loss and what to do when their dreams conflict with their moral values. These themes and how they are structured around the characters, especially Daisy Edgar-Jones’ Kate, make it not just a fun watch but an emotionally invested one. For those reasons, Twisters feels like a true summer blockbuster and not just a product made from a machine.’

During my casual scoop on the Internet, I saw an opinion that Kate and Owen should have completed the enemies-to-lovers trope with a final kiss. The enemies-to-lovers trope a popular narrative device in romantic films and novels, was hinted at in ‘Twisters’ and was the driving force behind the original Twister but not fully realised. I agree with the Executive Producer, Steven Spielberg, that it is better without a kiss. The intensity of their love does not require the physical notion of a kiss; there is something better about the undercurrent of waiting and waiting for confirmation. It is what made Jurassic Park’s couple, directed by the Executive Producer, sizzle and live longer in film history.

Cinematography and Directing:

One can always spot an indie director by their use of camerawork inside a car. The camerawork matched the panic and chaos; it captured the fear on everyone’s faces and the haunting use of reflection. The switch from careful, smooth camerawork during the calm to the handheld whiplash camera during the storms was captivating. I only hold one note: the scene in which Owens and Kate are hiding in a pool from the tornado. I wish the camera was tilted further down upon Kate; you just about saw Owens, and I felt that it almost ruined such a beautiful moment about Jeb and Kate with Owens slightly in the shot. I still cried my eyes out, nonetheless. There was also precisely one shot where they had the rainwater go on the camera, and it’s one of my favourite B-roll shots.

My director and film-critic friend, Billy Howells, wrote: ‘When it comes to big-budget blockbusters, studios tend to have a habit of hiring indie filmmakers. Said indie filmmakers will have only previously made movies where the entire budget is the catering budget for a blockbuster.

On the surface, studios do this to intrigue people, but they actually do it to take creative control away from the filmmaker and shape the movie into a guaranteed money-maker.

In the case of Twisters, director Lee Isaac Chung previously made Minari, which had a budget of $2 million and was nominated for several Oscars. His hiring for Twisters made me very worried due to everything I just mentioned, but this truly feels like a Lee Isaac Chung movie.

I remember watching ‘The Idea of You’ and all these new films surrounding teenagers worried that I had started to see the future of filmmaking through the spine-enduring, cringe-worthy way they used social media, hashtags and cinematography. So when Boone (Brandon Perea) brought out the iPhone with the vlogging equipment, my heart dropped for the original Twister; however, I backtracked, and they did an incredible job. The use of YouTube, vlogging, and live streaming flowed the way video camera footage rolled throughout the film. It is one of the first times I have witnessed this used effectively, leaving me pleasantly surprised and intrigued by the film’s innovative approach. I appreciate that they still had the video cam footage involved; my heart will always love them and believe they should be in every film ever. It adds a level of charm that nostalgia cannot survive without.

Soundtrack:

I can assure you with my hand on my heart that as soon as my paycheck comes in, I will give my money to the employee to buy a Twisters vinyl. This film’s soundtrack, filled with classic country tunes, has become a significant part of its identity. It’s a good day to love country music, and it’s a great day to celebrate the impact that music can have in a film. Personally, the soundtrack is the first thing I notice and the first thing I will scroll onto my phone whilst leaving the cinema (even before writing a Letterboxd review). It sets the film’s tone, makes or breaks the dramatic scenes, and combines emotion.

The most noticeable songs in the soundtrack are ‘Aint No Love in Oklahoma’ by Luke Combs and ‘Out of Oklahoma’ by Lainey Wilson. Luke Combs is used to introduce Owen; it is soulful and driven, and it plays on the truck speakers as he drives in. It reminds Kate of the country, further emphasised by her nickname of city girl; it is the masculinity of America, the epitome of the cowboy, the rough and rugged man unafraid of tornados. He is an extension of nature himself.

The two songs mirror each other in a reflection of the characters. ‘Out of Oklahoma’ is the ghost of the country life as Kate returns home to her mother; she cannot outrun her hopes, her dreams, and her fears as she almost dies in another tornado alongside Owen. She hasn’t returned home in the entire five years. Reflecting Kate, it is a slower, more melancholy country song; it is a long sequence compared to the fast-paced film as she returns and finally breathes. But the film needs it.

Wardrobe and Makeup:

The wardrobe and makeup department brought this film together. I am so sick of recent careless makeup mistakes in cinema or the need to be airbrushed while they are in the middle of a natural disaster or a horror film. The makeup of this film exceeded my expectations, and I noticed it even more on the second rewatch the next day. It made the chaos and panic ever so more natural, the sweat dripping off Glen Powell and the dust combined in Daisy Edgar-Jones’s hair. It created the illusion that they got swept up near a tornado and fought against the odds. The film’s technical aspects, particularly the wardrobe and makeup, are truly impressive and will leave you appreciative of the attention to detail, making you feel impressed and immersed in Daisy Edgar-Jones’s world.

An example of both Kate’s character development and the wardrobe department, she begins in cool-tone colours, the whites, the blues. One could represent the figure of Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, who famously wore blue and white, hence the colours of Storm Par. Alternatively, the film depicts the clean slate she wants after the accident, while Owens wears warm tones and browns to showcase his rustic side, unafraid of nature’s dark side. Another essential detail is the side-by-side of Kate and Javi in New York, both in shirts, but Kate’s is tight, restrictive, and buttoned up. In their first tornado chase, she continues this in a turtle neck and a shirt. At the same time, Javi wears shirts throughout, but buttons show his professionalism and relaxed nature despite the military training. The military background, while not quite dived into, was an interesting character point showcasing his trauma to the incident without so drastically pointing it out in writing. Another wardrode example is the change in Kate’s hair from painfully pin straight in New York to the wavy blonde mess in Oklahoma, showing her return to her roots and finally accepting the chaos, not trying to control everything due to her behaviour towards losing her boyfriend. Referring back to the cool and warm tones, she starts to wear warmer tones as she slowly begins mixing with Owens. The climax of her wardrobe coincides with the film’s climax, as she wears a red vest top and loose brown trousers to chase the last tornado. This shows she has let go of her past traumas, and the influence of Owens has brought back warmth and purpose in her life.

In conclusion, I spent my week watching this film in cinemas three times, and I cried every time. It never lost its sparkle on rewatch, and I feel a gravitational pull to it. In my books, it’s a classic.

Check out Blu-ray Billy’s video on Twisters here.

Our Field of Dreams

Photography by Skye Collacott Williamson.

How unfortunate you were to love a girl who had never been loved,

Our constellations beaconing into a bridge for a time so monetary,

The love never quite married or quite buried in the cemetery,

Reformation or reconciliation, they will always protest against us.

Celebrations brought in a microcosm of my bed, my walls, our kisses,

A field of dreams cascaded by a simple act of taking off your ring,

They ring the death rattle, and you slip it on my ring finger,

I slip it later inside my drawer against your dreams to linger.

Your sphere is intertwined in my ring finger; my sphere remains empty,

Oh, nevermind the passionate devotion to the alter to my hips,

Breathless to our echoing admirations of harmony upon our lips,

The snakes and larks could never understand the need for isolation.

The voices in my head implore the way your eyes engulf my existence,

My heart continues to beat for you, but I feel the valve resistance.

Leave no Silverstone unturned at Mercedes: Sir Lewis Hamilton wins his ninth British Grand Prix.

Leave no Silverstone unturned at Mercedes: Sir Lewis Hamilton wins his ninth British Grand Prix, a monumental achievement that will be etched in the annals of Formula One history. This victory is not just a win but a testament to Lewis Hamilton’s resilience and determination, inspiring generations of Formula One enthusiasts, engineers, and drivers.

Seventeen years dedicated to Formula One, seventeen million tears celebrated over Sir Lewis Hamilton’s win at the famous Silverstone track. From his early days as a rookie challenging Fernando Alonso to his recent victory at Silverstone, Hamilton’s career has been a rollercoaster of emotions and triumphs.

On a historical note, this win breaks the record for most wins at a Grand Prix previously held by Michael Schumacher and Sir Lewis Hamilton. However, on a personal note, and Formula One is the most personal sport, we watch drivers race in their younger years, create bonds with other drives, look up to different drives to one day meet them, and watch breathlessly as our drivers crash flying into walls, into each other, into the abyss of lost hope. The words Abi Dubai 2021 hushed in whispers, the burden of failure resting on Lewis Hamilton’s shoulders, the taste of an Eighth World Title which should have been his and in any other race, it would have been enough, it should have been enough. He pulls through, despite every knockback from every race he loses, wondering if he will ever be able to taste the mere essence of an Eighth World Title.

Nine hundred and forty-five days. With such mercy and grace, he is restored to his worthy title and wins Silverstone 2024. In my heart, the rookie who almost won against Fernando Alonso, the man who raises the bar for each driver, the driver who got disqualified in Sao Pablo 21, meaning he started from P20 and finished at P1, the teammate who lets George through for a chance at winning. This skilled man does not let tyre degeneration stop him from defending his position in Bahrain to Oscar Piastri or Fernando Alonso; he alone would never be deemed unworthy of his seat at Formula One. Lewis Hamilton is Formula One; he is bigger than Formula One and enables the future of Formula One through his programs.

Silverstone began as a three-British front row: George Russell, the Mercedes driver, started in P1, followed by Lewis Hamilton, another Mercedes driver, and Lando Norris, the third British driver for McLaren.

If you are new to Formula One, there are five leading teams constantly battling it out in Q1: Aston Martin (Fernando Alonso, Lance Stroll), Ferrari (Charles Leclerc, Carlos Sainz), McLaren (Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri), Mercedes (Lewis Hamilton, George Russel), and Redbull (Max Verstappen, Sergio Perez). In Silverstone 2024, it appeared the two teams battling for a possible 2-1 were McLaren and Mercedes, yet neither got a 2-1 podium.

Silverstone races are a fan favourite for the race course, but more significantly, the swing of podiums due to weather conditions and Silverstone 2024 was no different. Ferrari finished in Q2 and Q3 due to their tyre choices, and frankly, Aston Martin started brilliantly this year mainly due to Fernando Alonso, but the team is crashing hard. Silverstone had four race leaders: George Russell, Lando Norris, Lewis Hamilton, and Oscar Piastri. The weather changes rapidly affect the type of tyre needed to be quick on the track first and for the driver to have more control over the car in the rain. Around the halfway mark, the weather began to clean up, meaning they needed to change their tyres at a pitstop, but what do you do when both your drivers are in Q1?

a) Duo-pitstop: Take both drivers in and out as quickly as possible. It’s most different to pull off but best in the long run. It’s high risk, high reward.

b) Opt for a pitstop strategy for one driver, leaving the other out until the optimal time for their pitstop. This approach gives the first driver a head start, but the second driver will need to play catch-up with the other drivers already on the grid, adding an extra layer of competition and strategy to the race.

Mercedes made a bold choice, opting for option A, which could have led to a 2-1 podium finish if not for George Russel’s unfortunate DNF due to suspected water system issue. Meanwhile, McLaren once again favoured their golden boy, leaving Oscar Piastri behind to receive new tyres first.

Max Verstappen slowly crept up from the ashes of Silverstone, remaining somehow in p5 for the duration of the race, climbing up as George Russell DNFed, then chased Oscar Piastri after the pitstop error.

Lando Norris could have come second, but he made a fatal mistake. McLaren gave him two options. Imagine you have a seven-world champion leading the race known for his skill at racing in harsh weather and defence and a three-world champion behind you known for his overtaking skills. You can choose soft tyres to battle Lewis Hamilton on soft or medium tyres to fight off Max Verstappen on hard tyres.

Lando Norris made the decision, not McLaren. He opted to try to charge Lewis Hamilton in soft, only to be charged down by Max Verstappen in a Redbull.

A tear shed over the view of Lewis Hamilton, British flag in hand, winning Silverstone, and more blood, sweat, and tears swelled under the moment George Russell met Lewis Hamilton immediately to congratulate him. A man who placed first in qualifying, a Mercedes driver who DNF’d during his home race, and a gentleman who runs over to his teammate, understanding the importance of this race to Lewis Hamilton. Then, anything other than a metaphor of a waterfall of tears would not do the moment with his father justice. A mirror to his loss in Abu Dubai 2021 when Lewis Hamilton could not get out of his car for ten minutes and hugged his father in his realisation that he lost. There was no anger or fight; he was defeated in sadness and disappointed in himself, the system, and the FIA.

Lewis Hamilton kisses the trophy in glistening glory, and the crowds roar, breathing in the legacy imprinted onto Mercedes. He is not merely a footnote or an acknowledgement; Lewis Hamilton is the man who raised the bar and Mercedes and continues to raise himself.

UWE’s Open Mic Night

First Published via HUB Magazine when I was Editor-in-Chief.

Date Published: 3rd November 2023.

Hosted by Scott Channon in UWE’s Student Bar every third Thursday of the month is UWE’s Open Mic Night. Whether you are a musician, a comedian or a spoken word poet, the Open Mic Night is open to all. Enjoy a few cheap drinks, live music, and bring a few friends.

A welcoming and livingly crowd, ready to support and here your music. There is a sign up board next to the stage for anyone that would like to be involved, open to everyone.

The event is hosted and organised by Scott Channon, a musician himself.

Max Meadows is an indie rock musician. He sang two originals, as well as Oasis’ Don’t Look Back in Anger. A musician who brilliantly combines childlike wonder, and etherealness with an undertone of melancholy.

(View the interview article here by Skye Collacott Williamson. ‘A Hot Chocolate with Max Meadows’)

Stretched Thin is a solo artist. He sang two originals and a cover of The Pixies Where is my Mind?

Girlstupid is a folk acoustic band formed of Via (vocals), Jess (Guitar), and Molly (Vocals). They beautifully covered Boygenius’ Not Strong Enough, Noah Kahan’s Stick Season, and Phoebe Bridgers’ Georgia.

This House by Bristol Old Vic Theatre School

First Published via Bristol 24/7.

Date Published:  Mar 14, 2023.

James Graham’s frequently funny play This House, directed here by Nik Partridge, is an excellent choice for Bristol Old Vic Theatre School (BOVTS)’s latest production.

Seen through the lens of today’s unsteady politics, this play reflects on the hung parliament of 1970s Westminster. We watch the tension building as Labour and the Conservative party continuously fight it out for the ‘odds and socks’ votes (the Scottish, Irish, Welsh and Liberal parties).

At almost three hours, it’s a satire that will keep you on the edge of your seat both from anticipation and laughter – even despite knowing how it all shakes out in the end.

While the majority of the action is focused on the politics of the time, there are subsidiary plot lines involving personal relationships, mental illness, and planned sabotage.

And the thematic strand of potential devolution of Wales and Scotland from the United Kingdom is strongly resonant of today’s society, given the ongoing campaign for Scottish independence.

This isn’t lost on the audience, who erupt into laughter at a joke about not voting for the prime minister.

Ultimately, back in the 1970s, this vote for devolution costs Labour a big vote, allowing the Conservative party to file for a vote of no confidence in the Queen’s government.

There is humour woven throughout the play, but that’s not to detract from the compelling moments of beauty and sadness. Throughout, the deputy leaders from the two main parliamentary parties are shown to have a close relationship built on mutual respect. The narrative ends with a beautiful moment between the two, during which you could hear a pin drop – and which almost brought me to tears.

Given that the production comes from BOVTS students, it’s worth emphasising that technically, it’s quite a feat. The staging and lighting transitions are seamless; the movement sections beautifully choreographed; the 1970s costume design thoughtful and effective.

There are also some standout moments underscored by the clever use of music to build intensity, as well as live singing.

But it’s the acting that steals the show. The ensemble is superb, across the board – with many of them multi-roling and accent-switching with ease.

This House masterfully combines the laughter value of the satire with the intensity of politics. Happily, there isn’t a single moment where it lags; it is fast-paced with plenty of action throughout.

Even if you are not interested in politics, I can highly recommend this play. It represents some of the best acting performances I have seen on a stage.