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Henry Cavill Shares Photos Of Leg Rehab: "In Enduring, Grow Strong"
TV & Streaming

Henry Cavill Shares Photos Of Leg Rehab: “In Enduring, Grow Strong”

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Henry Cavill seems to be on the mend – or at least in the gym – as evidenced by a series of Instagram photos posted by the star of the upcoming Amazon MGM Studios’ United Artists Highlander reboot.

Last month, Cavill suffered a leg injury while training for the film – as first reported by Deadline – prompting a production delay on the Chad Stahelski directed reboot until after the first of the year.

In the new series of photos, which show a fit-looking Cavill’s left leg in a brace below the knee, the actor is seen working out at the gym – definitely a leg day – and, in one pic, having his ankle taped and with what could be muscle stimulators attached to his calf.

See the photos below.

The series of photos is captioned, “Endure. In enduring, grow strong,” a quote from the character Dak’kon from the video game Planescape: Torment.

On September 19, Cavill posted an Instagram pic of his leg propped up on a table with what appears to be a heavy bandage or possibly even a cast around his ankle. For that caption, he used the 1888 poem “Invictus” by William Ernest Henley (the one with “I am the master of my fate/I am the captain of my soul.”)

The upcoming Highlander movie is written by Michael Finch and also stars Russell Crowe, Marisa Abela, Karen Gillan, Djimon Hounsou, Dave Bautista and Max Zhang.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Seth Rogen, Rose Byrne Set Up More Chaos for Season 3
TV & Streaming

Seth Rogen, Rose Byrne Set Up More Chaos for Season 3

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from “Brett Coyote’s Last Stand,” the season two finale of Platonic.]

Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne were never planning to make a second season of Platonic. In 2020, when they initially agreed to reunite with their Neighbors director Nicholas Stoller and his wife Francesca Delbanco on a new Apple TV+ comedy series, Rogen and Byrne believed the creators were interested in writing an anthology series about different kinds of platonic relationships.

The premise that Stoller and Delbanco had initially pitched and sold to Apple was built around one season that would follow Rogen and Byrne’s characters as they reconnected in their 40s after a painful falling out, and subsequent seasons would feature entirely different stories and characters. But midway through the making of the first season, Stoller and Delbanco — who realized they were having way too much fun with the actors to let them go right away — decided to ask Rogen and Byrne if they would consider making more of the show together. (Spoiler alert: They said yes.)

The offer seemed almost too good to be true, but Rogen and Byrne, who are both executive producers, wanted to make sure there would be enough meat on the bone for a potential second season. As Rogen puts it, “Were they just able to come up with more ideas that seemed like they were worth telling, and could they come up with ways to make the characters worse off?”

The answer was a resounding yes. “It’s like a de-evolution. That’s much better for comedy than evolving, generally speaking,” Rogen tells The Hollywood Reporter in a joint interview with Byrne. Stoller and Delbanco “somehow found a way to [put] us both in worse positions than we were last season. [The characters are] even more dysfunctional, which I thought was very funny and very smart.”

By the end of the first season, Byrne’s Sylvia, a stay-at-home mother of three who had unsuccessfully attempted to reenter the workforce as a lawyer, successfully rekindled her friendship with Rogen’s Will, whose decision to marry his now-ex-wife had previously driven a wedge between him and Sylvia.

The second season finds Sylvia wanting to be supportive of Will’s decisions, and even volunteering to oversee his lavish second wedding to his boss, restaurant chain CEO Jenna (Rachel Rosenbloom), as the main event planner. But when Will — who has always been a little skittish about commitment — begins to have second thoughts about the engagement, Sylvia can’t help but give her two cents, especially after Will reveals that he and Jenna are rarely intimate together.

Will and Jenna end their engagement at their ill-fated wedding at the end of episode four, and the two exes get along as well as can be expected for the next six episodes (i.e., not well). In the finale, Jenna sends Will a letter informing him of a non-compete clause in his original employment agreement, preventing him from opening his “Shitty Little Bar.” To skirt that little legal issue, Sylvia agrees to be the public face of Will’s new bar, and the two friends will now have to go into business together.

In a chaotic chat with THR, Rogen and Byrne break down the evolution of Sylvia and Will’s best friendship (and whether they think that relationship can survive the demands of starting a small business), how their own working relationship has deepened since the Neighbors films — and the likelihood of Byrne popping up on Rogen’s other Apple TV+ series, The Studio. (You know, the one with 23 Emmy nominations and 13 wins.)

***

Platonic cleverly taps into a kind of malaise that seems to happen around middle age, when you’re trying to decide what else you want out of your life. How would you describe your characters’ inner conflict — and the resolution of that conflict — over the course of this second season? What do you think they are both really searching for?

SETH ROGEN The same thing any of us are looking for — just some stability, sense of purpose and companionship, and all that.

ROSE BYRNE Sylvia in the first season was really deep in a midlife crisis of trying to get in the workforce, and this season she’s in the workforce, but it’s not exactly where she wanted or what she thought it would be. Her ability to have more of a typical friendship with Will is still just out of her reach. She’s too opinionated, too controlling, too possessive — all these sorts of funny, crazy characteristics she has. I really enjoyed seeing [how] Luke Macfarlane’s character Charlie spirals out of control; that’s something I’ve seen in couples many times when one person’s really going through something and the roles reverse, and the other person who’s usually the rock has to change their role.

The show’s really relatable in many ways, but it has a very light touch, which I think people really appreciate. My friends just so enjoyed when it came out and were like, “This is exactly what I need to watch right now.” Nothing made me happier than to hear that.

ROGEN It’s all about finding specific storylines that reflect problems people who are in their middle age are experiencing, and doing them in ways that feel like they’re not repetitive. But part of the fun of a show like this is you know the characters well, and I don’t know if sweeping arcs are necessarily a key to comedy like this, rather than being stuck in your patterns. These characters have a sort of imposter syndrome, a desperation to feel like they appear to have their life together, even though they don’t necessarily. That kind of stuff manifests in countless ways, but is at its core is very simple and relatable.

How do you think your characters have evolved? What’s different about the way they interact this season?

BYRNE It was a little more heightened, to be honest. It felt like she was more hyped up, but I think they really try to have a typical friendship. They say it out loud, like, “We are going to have dinner. We are going to do normal things. We are going to strive to do it all.”

ROGEN They’re really trying to grow up this season. They’re trying to really be responsible. Will wants to be married. He wants to have a corporate job. He wants to live the life of a real man who does real things. But then he winds up living in her garage, so [that shows life] doesn’t all go the way you want it to at the end of the day.

BYRNE Sylvia’s husband Charlie quits his job and writes a novel called Brett Coyote.

ROGEN Life throws you curveballs!

Seth Rogen in the Platonic finale.

Apple TV+

What do you think are the core personal problems that one of these best friends is uniquely qualified to help the other with?

BYRNE I don’t know if Sylvia is helping, but she does tell the truth. Will’s in this relationship. They’re not having any physical contact. (Laughs.) He’s embarking on a marriage with no intimacy, and she’s trying to hold her tongue and then eventually she’s like, “This isn’t going to last, and I know it’s hard to hear.” And she does it in the worst way. I mean, she blows it up, but it’s a TV show. It’s got to be dramatic! I think there’s something about the truth, a truth teller in your life, that is very confronting. But you do need to hear it sometimes. It sucks, but it’s kind of reality.

Both of you are seasoned physical comedians who were given a lot to play with in the first season — the ketamine-induced drug trip, the running gag of throwing motorized scooters. The action this season, by comparison, feels more visceral. What was the wildest gag for both of you to shoot?

BYRNE [Canoeing in] the L.A. River was pretty funny.

ROGEN The L.A. River was a real adventure.

BYRNE (To Rogen) I didn’t have to do much, but you really did.

ROGEN Yeah, I was drinking from the river. I don’t remember what was used in the end. We did a whole cacophony of things that I found in my mouth after drinking from the river, from feathers to condoms —

BYRNE Oh, my God.

ROGEN But I don’t know what they used in the end. I can’t remember what made it. We were laughing pretty hard as we were filming.

BYRNE I certainly thought it was funny.

ROGEN I think Carla [Gallo, who plays Sylvia’s best friend, Katie] projectile vomiting all over the car was pretty funny as well. I remember there was a scene where we were getting chased around by a dog that was really funny to shoot —

BYRNE That’s right!

ROGEN And really chaotic and actually started to become the scene we were shooting! It was one of those things where the dog would not stop jumping in the pool when I was jumping in the pool.

Will accidentally hitting Jenna’s father in the eye with a golf ball — and him losing that eyeball — was the most gruesome.

ROGEN I just remember thinking that was very funny, and the stuff in the hospital [where Jenna, after nearly losing her father, is suddenly overcome with the urge to have sex with Will] was very funny. I remember laughing a lot as we were shooting some of those scenes in the hospital where Rose was getting nauseous as I was explaining and describing what happened to his eyeball.

BYRNE That’s so stupid! (Laughs.)

Rose, in the finale, you were blasted in the face with a large cooler of Will’s new beer, which ended up all over Sylvia’s backyard. I don’t even know how else to describe what happened to her in that scene, but it sure is funny to watch.

BYRNE Reading it, I felt the same. I was like, “What does this mean and look like?” It wasn’t until I got there [that I figured it out] — and honestly that [scene] was a little bit technical. It was so overwhelming, the physicality of what I had to do, and then we were so wet the whole time. But I kind of liked that you can’t think about what you’re doing, so you’re focused on how you’re physically coping with it. It was ridiculous.

What exactly was being sprayed at you guys in that finale scene? Was it beer?

BYRNE Oh my God, what was it? I mean, it looked like beer, but it wasn’t beer.

ROGEN It might have been tea.

BYRNE It must have been a supplement, like a tea or a water —

ROGEN Like a water steeped in something.

BYRNE Exactly. But that’s a really good question. It didn’t smell like beer.

ROGEN It wasn’t sugary or sticky.

BYRNE Yeah, it didn’t have that kind of texture to it.

ROGEN It was pretty gross, though.

BYRNE It was gross. I just remember it was really muddy, and then I was wet all day. It was fine though — anything for a joke! It was actually really hot, so it was fine. The weather worked out.

So much of the conflict in Sylvia and Will’s relationship can be boiled down to the argument they have in the finale, after they are both drenched in beer. They are telling each other all of these hard truths, but at the same time, there is no one else in their lives who is willing to admit those truths to themselves. What was your experience of shooting that high-octane fight, and what do you think that argument actually says about the state of their relationship?

ROGEN When you’re friends with people in any kind of relationship, there’s a constant balance to be found between: what do I accept versus what do I try to change, and what do I just ignore and what do I speak up about? Especially as you enter your middle age, sometimes you try to present one thing while you’re actually living another. I think they are very perceptive of one another and kind of see through all that.

That is their constant struggle — here’s what my friend is hoping I’ll see in them, and here’s what I’m actually seeing, and do I say [anything] or not? And, do I point out that they don’t seem as happy as they’re pretending to be, or that their relationship isn’t as good as they’re acting like it is? Finding those boundaries and what you should say and what you shouldn’t say is their struggle, and [they’re] learning what is actually productive and helpful and what is not.

BYRNE I remember shooting that scene and thinking, “Oh, this is the show. This is what we do. This is when we’re at our best — [when we’re engaged in] some crazy physical thing and then a weird emotional fight, but that’s still funny. This is a ridiculous fight about calling out each other, but we’re still trying to be funny with it,” which is a fine line. It’s hard to do that.

Luke Macfarlane and Rose Byrne in the season two finale.

Apple TV+

This show is literally called Platonic, so it is a clear signal to the audience that Will and Sylvia will be nothing more than friends, even if audiences may find themselves rooting for something more.

BYRNE Very clear.

What have you wanted to capture about platonic male-female relationships through deepening the dynamic between Will and Sylvia?

BYRNE We had done Neighbors, and we’d played a very happy couple that was a little bit immature, but there’s a sweetness and a natural affection that you bring to each other and the role. And then when we started Platonic, we cut a clear boundary. I was like, “Oh, Seth’s a little bit mean!” It does change the dynamic.

ROGEN (Laughs.) Yeah, a little bit more mean.

BYRNE But that’s funny! It’s funny in a different way. I guess people do root for characters in different ways, but it was always really trying to be definitively clear with the audience that that’s not what we’re rooting for. We’re not rooting for them to get together. We just want them to stay friends. I’ve never seen that on TV. I’ve never seen a show or a movie [where the audience is], like, “I want these guys to stay friends.”

ROGEN You are usually rooting for them to get together.

BYRNE It’s quietly a little bit unusual —

ROGEN Because of society, man!

With the Neighbors movies and now Platonic, you have worked together for the better part of the last dozen years. Looking back, how do you think your friendship and working relationship has evolved over time, and what do you think has stayed the same?

BYRNE I think we work very similarly.

ROGEN Yeah.

BYRNE It’s a very easy time on set, and we have a great working relationship. I live in New York. Seth is in LA. I am so fond of Lauren, Seth’s wife, who’s extraordinary.

ROGEN I’m a little afraid of Bobby [Cannavale, Byrne’s longtime partner] —

BYRNE Just a little bit!

ROGEN But I have to wrap my head around it. We’ve made progress, I’d say in recent years. (Laughter.)

BYRNE But I feel so grateful to have a great friendship and working relationship with someone over so long — and with Nick and Francesca, that’s really the other huge half of this conversation. They’re creating this work for us. Nick gave me my break in comedy. Seth’s known Nick since he was a teenager, so that’s all lovely.

But has anything about the way you work together changed over the years?

ROGEN It’s pretty similar, honestly. We met each other when we were in the swing of our careers. We already worked a certain way and were on set a certain way, you know what I mean? So I think it’s refreshing that it’s the same in a lot of ways, and that not a lot has changed, and that we fall into the same rhythms and patterns that we’ve always had with one another.

BYRNE And, just like anything, if you clock more hours [together], you get to know each other more.

ROGEN There’s a real ease to it. Sometimes there’s days where you’re just sitting in a car with someone for 12 hours a day [for a shoot]. And with Rose, it’s lovely. There’s times where I’m just like, “Oh my God, I have to sit with this person in a car for 12 hours. What are we going to talk about? It’s going to be so awkward. What are we going to do? It’s going to be so uncomfortable.” I never have that problem on this show.

BYRNE No, we’re beyond that. And it’s the same with Carla Gallo, who plays Katie. She’s an old friend of Seth’s.

ROGEN It’s really easy with her around because she does not stop talking. (Laughter.)

The season ends with Will and Sylvia agreeing to go into business with each other — Will is going to run the operations from behind the scenes, while Sylvia will be the public face of their beer-slash-wine company. Do you think their friendship can withstand the stressful realities of running a business together? [Note: Platonic has not yet been renewed for season three.]

ROGEN No!

BYRNE No! Absolutely not! (Laughter.)

ROGEN It’ll be really rough —

BYRNE Chaos!

ROGEN I think it’ll be very bad for both their relationship and their business.

BYRNE Huge fail, I predict. I can’t even believe they’re having the conversation. But hopefully it’ll be funny?

Have you had any conversations with the rest of the creative team about what the next chapter of this story would actually look like?

BYRNE No, not yet. Nick and Francesca really are the brains and the kind of drive behind the ideas, and they come to us with them and [we as executive producers] bat them around a little bit. But I hope that there’s more to tell. I feel like these characters are really funny and fun, and like any show, you want to return because you want to spend time with them and you want to spend time in that world.

For now, it appears that Seth will be preoccupied with The Studio. Rose, what did you think of Seth’s other Apple TV+ comedy and the way that it satirizes Hollywood?

BYRNE Look, I heard it has been well-received, and I heard there were some Em-mys, is that how you say it? (Laughs.) I feel like I should go on the press tour at this point! Well, Bobby nearly did a thing on it, which is really cute.

ROGEN I know! We tried to get Bobby, but —

BYRNE Scheduling craziness. But I’m such a fan. I loved it. He was writing it [during Platonic] season one. I remember we were chatting about it a lot, and he was describing it to me and I was like, “Wow, this is such another creative extension for you to develop this. You’ve been in this industry for so long, since you’re a teenager, and it’s a wild life to have lived, and this is a version of all of that.” So, day one, I was like, “I want to see this! It’s awesome.”

Seth, what are the chances that we will see Rose — or Bobby! — pop up in the next season of The Studio?

BYRNE I think he’s getting pitched a lot of people.

ROGEN No, it’s a good question!

BYRNE I think he’s getting a lot of calls. He might need a break [from me].

ROGEN We’re getting some weird ones! (Laughter.)

BYRNE You know what? You need to miss somebody. You need to miss them and then want to come back.

ROGEN Not at all. That is not my philosophy. Mine is to quadruple down on someone and never let go.

BYRNE You gotta yearn! You gotta yearn!

ROGEN I don’t want to spoil [the show], but…

BYRNE I do! (Laughter.)

***

The first two seasons of Platonic are now streaming on Apple TV+.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Only Fools and Horses legend Patrick Murray dies, aged 68
TV & Streaming

Only Fools and Horses legend Patrick Murray dies, aged 68

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Patrick Murray, best known for playing Mickey Pearce in Only Fools and Horses, has died aged 68.

Murray became a household name for his portrayal of the cheeky, boastful wheeler-dealer Mickey Pearce – a fixture in the beloved BBC sitcom from 1983 to 2003.

Known for his comic timing and swaggering self-confidence, Murray’s character often clashed with Rodney Trotter (Nicholas Lyndhurst) and was famed for his tall tales of business success.

He appeared in 20 episodes across the show’s 22-year run, helping make Only Fools and Horses one of the most popular British comedies of all time.

A statement shared by an Only Fools and Horses fan account on X read: “It is with heartfelt sadness that we report the death of our friend Patrick Murray – Mickey Pearce to so many. He was a regular attendee of our conventions, and we will miss his humour and the joy he brought to many.”

Only Fools and Horses stars Patrick Murray and John Challis attending the TV Quick Awards in 2002. Dave Hogan/Getty Images

Born in London, Murray spent several years living in Thailand, where he married his wife Anong in 2016. The couple had one daughter, Josie.

Murray remained closely associated with Only Fools and Horses throughout his life, often attending fan conventions and reunions.

Outside of the BBC sitcom, Murray built up a varied career on both the big and small screen.

He first made his mark in the late 1970s, appearing alongside Ray Winstone in both the BBC television play Scum and its 1979 film adaptation. That same year, he featured in the cult classic Quadrophenia, sharing the screen with Sting, Toyah Willcox, Michael Elphick and Timothy Spall.

He went on to appear in films including Curse of the Pink Panther (1983), as well as several television roles throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Jenny Marrs
TV & Streaming

HGTV’s Jenny Marrs Can’t Sleep, Addresses Grief After Heartbreaking Loss

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Jenny Marrs shared a heartfelt post on social media on Wednesday (October 1), opening up about dealing with grief and the “deep heartache” she has been feeling in recent weeks.

The HGTV star recently lost her mother-in-law, Donna, the mother of her husband and Fixer to Fabulous co-star, Dave Marrs. Last month, both Jenny and Dave posted tributes, with Jenny writing on Instagram, “[Donna] taught me how to be the kind of mother-in-law and the kind of grandmother who I can’t even begin to imagine this earth without.”

On Wednesday, Jenny returned to Instagram to reveal she hasn’t “slept well the last two weeks,” admitting, “Grief seeps in at night most acutely, once I slow down from the day’s activity.”

“Each day is a disorienting experience – life continues to move forward as I am simply trying to reconcile my deep heartache with the sunshine out the window and the pressing demands on my time,” she added.

However, she has been finding solace in words from her own book, Trust God, Love People, which is scheduled for release on October 7.

“This morning, I was sorting through emails for next week’s book launch and happened across a handful of audio files from the audio book I recorded,” Jenny shared. “I opened this one from the “Lessons from the Farm” chapter and I felt my own words speak life to my heart… Maybe someone else needed them today too.”

In the accompanying audio clip, Jenny says, “Farm life can be both beautiful and brutal. That day was certainly one of the hardest days. While we’ve witnessed hundreds of joy-filled miracles here on this little patch of land, we’ve also experienced deep grief.”

It’s unclear from the clip which death Jenny is speaking about specifically, but the designer has been open in recent months about several devastating losses. Earlier this year, she revealed the passing of her beloved neighbor Bob, and then, four months later, they lost Bob’s wife, Jill.

In July, Jenny and Dave also posted about losing their long-time pet dog, Dolly, who had been in the family for over a decade.

Sharing her friend’s words of advice in the audio clip, Jenny said, “Being His means holding all of it, the miracles and the pain. And still raising our hands and saying, ‘I don’t understand this and I wanted a different ending to this chapter, but I can still trust that you are good… Despite the hard, God is always only good.”

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Renate Reinsve & Elle Fanning on 'Sentimental Value' — NYFF Interview
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Renate Reinsve & Elle Fanning on ‘Sentimental Value’ — NYFF Interview

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

When Charli xcx coined “Joachim Trier Summer” earlier this year, who knew that that would soon turn into “Joachim Trier Fall,” and now, “Joachim Trier Awards Season.”

His latest, “Sentimental Value,” debuted at the 63rd New York Film Festival on September 30, sending his Cannes Grand Prix winner into even further awards chatter. His follow-up to “The Worst Person in the World,” the film centers on two daughters (Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas) reuniting with their estranged filmmaker father (Stellan Skarsgård) after their mother dies, and as he prepares for his next project.

“This film somehow is a continuation of previous work, but it’s also something new,” Trier told IndieWire on the red carpet at Alice Tully Hall. “Very often, we’ve focused on singular characters in our films, and this is really like an ensemble piece. It’s more of a polyphonic story of family and trying to find the silences in between, by changing point of view, changing perspective throughout.”

(Left to right): Nell Campbell, Barry Bostwick, and Patricia Quinn from 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show'

“Worst Person” star Reinsve plays Nora, an actress best known for her stage work. When her father, Gustav, hopes to cast her in his comeback film, she at first turns down the script. Enter Rachel Kemp, an American actress played by Elle Fanning. After being brought to tears by one of the director’s previous films, she meets Gustav and ends up taking the role, being thrown full throttle into the complicated dynamics of a family in distress. As for Reinsve, this project was already in talks as she and Trier were filming their last, “The Worst Person in the World.” This film marks their third collaboration together, including her one-line role in 2011’s “Oslo, August 31st,” her film debut.

“It was actually during that shoot [on ‘Worst Person’] we felt that artistic connection on set, and that was very naive and open,” Reinsve said. “We started talking about different traits of a character, like what if this and that, but there wasn’t room for it in that movie.”

“Opening that script [for ‘Sentimental Value’] was so scary,” she continued. “He knows me much better now, both as a person and an actor, so I was very curious about how he wanted to challenge me this time. It was really exciting to read the role with so much emotional weight and playing around with what she knew about herself and what she didn’t know about herself. We have so much trust now. It is so much fun, even though it’s heavier.”

SENTIMENTAL VALUE, (aka AFFEKSJONSVERDI), from left: Stellan Skarsgard, Elle Fanning, 2025. ph: Kasper Tuxen /© Neon / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Sentimental Value’Courtesy Everett Collection

Trier worked with many previous collaborators on this film, including best friend and co-writer Eskil Vogt. But Golden Globe nominee Fanning was brand new to the mix. “I learned so much,” she said of working with the director.

“I feel like I’m spoiled now being on his film set, because it’s quite a beautiful thing,” Fanning continued. “He really sees you, and he also knows what he wants. He really allows you to feel free and vulnerable, and he pulls these things out of you that have been dormant inside or are kind of subconscious. Then you’re in the moment, and he’s right next to the camera as well while you’re filming. He’s right there watching you in real time; he sees it all. He’s not afraid of silence. That’s something I really learned. It’s a beautiful thing that you see in the film.”

Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, who plays Reinsve’s sister in the film, also was overjoyed to be working with Trier as well. “Tenderness is cool,” she said when asked what she learned from him. “The best way to approach something is with tenderness and love.”

Trier was also beaming as I brought up the fact that Norway chose the film as its submission for Best International Feature Film at next year’s Oscars. “It’s out of my control, but I’m grateful to be chosen by the Norwegian Film Institute.”

“As an actor, it’s important to keep a distance with bad reviews and good reviews; it can be scary,” Reinsve said of the film’s rapturous reception out of Cannes. “We were really scared going to Cannes with this movie. I was so relieved and so happy. It’s been really great. You make a movie to find a collective in some things you feel that are personal to yourself, and then you have people respond to that in their way, and have conversations [where] you learn even more about those feelings.”

SENTIMENTAL VALUE, (aka AFFEKSJONSVERDI), from left: Stellan Skarsgard, Renate Reinsve, 2025. ph: Kasper Tuxen /© Neon / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Sentimental Value’Courtesy Everett Collection

She also just came off shooting “The Backrooms,” with Kane Parsons as the youngest director A24 has ever worked with. The viral YouTube horror series has amassed nearly 200 million views since its 2022 debut, and before getting a feature film greenlight. “He was so impressive,” Reinsve said.

“He turned 20 during the shoot. He was very sure of what he wanted, and I love that he hasn’t really watched that many movies. His references are totally different, so it was very exciting to work with someone who had just these ideas [where I didn’t know the references].”

As for Fanning, it was announced last month that she will star alongside Nicole Kidman in a legal thriller series from A24 titled “Discretion.” The project marks their third collaboration, following Sofia Coppola’s “The Beguiled” in 2017 and the upcoming Apple TV+ show “Margo’s Got Money Troubles.”

“Oh my God, I love Nicole to death,” she said. “I love her. We’ve worked three times now in more of an ensemble capacity, and we are friends, and we’ve gotten very close, but now we get to go toe to toe in this one [that was just announced]. It’s a real two-hander, this show.”

“[It was] extremely good,” Skarsgård also told IndieWire of working with Trier. “He sits right beside the camera, and he watches the detail in your performance. He’s after what happens inside the human being, no matter what you say, and that is what I am, too, doing in my acting. It’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.”

Neon will release “Sentimental Value” in select theaters on Friday, November 7. Check out the trailer here.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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'Joker' Composer Hildur Guðnadóttir on Gyllenhaal's The Bride!'
TV & Streaming

‘Joker’ Composer Hildur Guðnadóttir on Gyllenhaal’s The Bride!’

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Here comes “The Bride!” Composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, who received an Academy Award for “Joker,” is already waiting for her.

Maggie Gyllenhaal’s upcoming monster movie, taking on the “Frankenstein” mythos, stars Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale. In the film, Frankenstein travels to 1930s Chicago to seek the aid of a Dr. Euphronius in creating a companion for himself. They end up reinvigorating a murdered young woman.

“It was a little bit nuts,” she laughs.

“The Bride!” debuted its trailer back in September. 

“It’s a very layered world with lots of different things happening. There’s a love story, thriller and the monstrous birth of a woman. There’s lots of excitement and violence,” says Guðnadóttir, describing Gyllenhaal’s follow-up to “The Lost Daughter” as “intense.” 

“It was both very punk and very romantic, which made it kind of crazy. There’s screaming electric guitar AND an orchestra. That’s what’s so interesting to me about film as a medium. It’s not about being ‘real’ or accurate. You can have fun and let your imagination run wild.”

Guðnadóttir, born in Iceland, talks to Variety at Zurich Film Festival, where she’ll receive the career achievement award and showcase Nia DaCosta’s “Hedda.” Featuring Tessa Thompson, it’s based on Henrik Ibsen’s 1890 play. 

“Throughout history, women were portrayed as a good princess or a bad witch. But they’re much more than that, which is why it’s so important to revisit juicy characters like Hedda. She’s not just nice or resentful. She’s everything. Just like Lydia Tár,” she says, mentioning Cate Blanchett’s tour-de-force role in Todd Field’s drama she also scored. 

“I’m so interested in these complex women and I try to match their complexity with my music.” 

With DaCosta’s post-apocalyptic horror “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple” set to premiere next year, Guðnadóttir admits she generally tends to “gravitate more towards darkness.” 

“I’m trying to understand why that is. Why do I keep coming back? Then again, we can’t shy away from difficult subjects, darker sides of human nature, mental illness or catastrophes like Chernobyl.” She also scored the acclaimed HBO miniseries, winning an Emmy and a Grammy for her work. 

“We have to learn from these stories – and our mistakes. And try to understand what we can do better.” 

She wanted to go dark also in “Women Talking,” based on a novel by Miriam Toews and depicting an isolated religious community where women are being drugged and sexually assaulted. Director Sarah Polley changed her mind. 

“That was such an interesting project to score, because the subject is so harsh. It’s really violent – it’s hard to face what these women went through. When I first read the script, I just remember being so angry on behalf of them,” she recalls. 

“I was upset, so it would be easy to write very angry or aggressive music. Sarah’s approach was interesting, because she didn’t want to dwell on the horror. What we see is horrendous enough – we don’t need to add more. She wanted to give these women hope. This doesn’t have to define who they are forever.” 

That was the role of the music, she explains: to serve as “the counterpoint to the horror.” 

“It was supposed to be hopeful and light, and drive the story forward while looking at their beautiful relationship. My intuition was dark – Sarah pointed me into something lighter. It gave me a lot of hope, too.”

It was a precious experience also because it’s not easy to remain hopeful these days, she notes. 

“There’s the uprising of hate speech and we’re going backwards on women’s rights. It’s something I’ve really been struggling with and struggling with how to respond. It makes you numb, seeing where this whole conversation about women is heading. You’re speechless.”

She adds: “I thought to myself: What difference does it make if I make music or not, when there’s so much hatred? I’ve been sitting with it for the last few months, but the worst I can do is to stay silent. I have to continue using my voice and connecting with people from a place of empathy and care.”

To prove her point, Guðnadóttir will be heading on a small tour with latest album “Where to From.” “My first solo album in 10 years!,” she enthuses. Puppeteer Giséle Vienne is behind the cover art. 

“I used to tour all the time, but when I had my son, I stopped traveling as much. I focused more on composition and less on performing. I haven’t played a cello concert for nine years, almost to the day,” she shakes her head. 

“It was time to go back. Sitting in a room full of people, listening to music together… It’s so powerful.” 

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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AI Will Never Replace Humans After Launch Of FellinAI
TV & Streaming

AI Will Never Replace Humans After Launch Of FellinAI

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Directors UK, the trade body that boasts members including Paul Greengrass and James Hawes, has voiced skepticism after an Italian producer unveiled what he claimed was the world’s first AI director.

Andrea Iervolino, whose credits include Ferrari and To The Bone, announced FellinAI, an artificial intelligence director conceived to celebrate European cinema. FellinAI‘s first feature, The Sweet Idleness, imagines a world in which machines have eradicated 99% of jobs, leaving humans to a life of leisure.

In a statement shared with Deadline, Directors UK CEO Andy Harrower said: “Directors see things that other people – and AI programmes – don’t. Their vision is something that AI will never replace.”

He added: “But they’ve always embraced new technology, and many are exploring how AI can support elements of their work, freeing them up to focus on storytelling. Of course, until the much-discussed copyright and licensing issues are resolved, the use of AI in film and TV production is likely to be limited.”

Directors UK’s intervention follows a similar backlash against Tilly Norwood, an AI actress being circled for representation by talent agents. Deadline first broke the news about the interest in Norwood, sparking full-throated concerns from the acting community, with the likes of Emily Blunt and SAG-AFTRA criticizing the creation.

FellinAI is housed at Andrea Iervolino Company AI, an artificial intelligence arm of The Andrea Iervolino Company, with Iervolino acting as its “human-in-the-loop,” a supervisor and producer who guides and monitors the technology.

Iervolino touted his project as a “new chapter in the history of cinema,” but said it was not designed to “replace traditional cinema,” to which he said he remained committed. Iervolino said his aim was to “unite human sensitivity with the creative power of artificial intelligence in order to tell stories that no one has ever imagined before.”

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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‘Gen V’ Star Asa Germann on the Truth of Sam’s V Shot and Powers
TV & Streaming

‘Gen V’ Star Asa Germann on the Truth of Sam’s V Shot and Powers

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from the fifth episode of Gen V season two, “The Kids Are Not Alright.”]

When Asa Germann sat down with The Hollywood Reporter ahead of Gen V’s latest episode to talk about the show’s midseason developments, much of the conversation was focused on one thing: Sam and the truth about his powers. 

In the fifth episode of season two, “The Kids Are Not Alright,” Sam opts out of using his abilities to help Marie (Jaz Sinclair), Jordan (Luh and London Thor) and Emma (Lizze Broadway) on their mission to rescue Cate (Maddie Phillips) after she’s thrown into Elmira following the last episode’s supe match-up. 

Instead, he makes a surprise return home to the family that he believed shot him up with V causing his hallucinations, before abandoning him to the torturous and deadly Vought machine. Despite a single moment of paranoia resulting in an unintentional outburst of violence, going home to his parents ultimately delivers a deluge of truths and some reconciliation. 

As Sam learns, his parents gave him V hoping it could address his psychosis — something he was born with, not something that manifested as a result of the serum. His family also never abandoned him to Vought or The Woods, but were told he was dead, and once the truth that he was alive emerged, they made multiple attempts to reach him, though they were stopped by Vought. 

Some of these revelations have implications not just for Germann’s character, but in understanding the nature and mechanics of powers in The Boys YA spinoff, which has so far spent the first half of its second season repeatedly picking at what’s actually fueling supe abilities, courtesy of Cipher (Hamish Linklater). It’s also yet another episode that deftly delivers on Gen V’s ongoing examination of coming of age, social politics and superheroes. 

Speaking to THR ahead of Wednesday’s episode, Germann unpacks what Sam’s trip home means for him going forward, the nature of Sam’s violence, depicting those puppet hallucinations in season two, whether he could still show up for his friends, and how a scene between Sam and Jordan honors Andre and Chance Perdomo. 

***

Sam goes back home and discovers a number of truths. Some of that comes through a scene with his mother, which has a lot of conversations — macro discussions around male and gun violence, and society’s focus on institutionalization and punishment versus support and treatment around mental health, and the more micro discussions about trying to understand one’s diagnosis, including questioning if what’s happening is me or the condition. Can you talk about that conversation Sam has with his mom and what it means for him in season two?

You never know what you’re going to get in the show, so I had no idea this was coming down the pipeline. But in the first season, I was getting to play this character who was clearly going through this version of socialized radicalization and embodying all of these elements of the world. He didn’t really know how to even have a set of criteria to evaluate himself with. So much of Sam’s journey up to that point in the show is one of being both told what has happened to him and following the lead of other people. What was so profound to me about that moment in the episode is that it becomes a story for Sam about responsibility. Taking responsibility for his actions, and also — one of the things that I personally relate to with Sam — understanding that existing in the world in the way that we do is not necessarily something we get to choose. But it’s the hand that we’re dealt, and we have to do what we can with it. 

So that’s a point where we see it’s really up to Sam to do the right thing or continue to do the wrong thing. Hopefully, by making the right choices, he can become a voice of reason and a positive role model for people like him in a similar situation, which is ironically the reason he’s in that place. He has no one to look to; no role models. He has no one pointing him in the right direction. It’s not talked about, really, in that scene, but in a way, that is what the role of a parent is, and some of us aren’t fortunate enough to have great parents. We don’t have role models, and we have no one to look to, so people become disaffected, and they can do awful things that hurt tons of people. It’s up to those people if they can get a second chance to do the right thing for others.

Many times on Gen V, characters talk about their parents with a sense of betrayal — this conversation over agency, respect, consent, and the material and immaterial impacts of V. But Sam discovers that his parents’ motivations weren’t like some of the others on this show and that they gave him V hoping it would help him avoid his uncle’s fate. How does knowing that people — his parents and, of course, his brother — wanted him and didn’t willingly abandon him affect his journey going forward, and what side he might pick? 

There’s safety in being alone when that’s what you’re used to. There’s a safety in feeling like the situation you’re in is just the one you’re in. For Sam, this state of loneliness is so much of his existence that having a connection with people is so foreign. There’s not a ton of learned experience of what it was like being close with your mom or your dad or your brother, and certainly not with friends. So that is both an incredibly revelatory thing for him in discovering that these people are actually really rooting for him. It’s also a really scary thing because it means that all of a sudden, it’s up to him to do something different. It’s up to him to make the right choice.

Reading that scene, there’s a way to look at it as a really sad moment, perhaps, where there’s regret and things should have gone a different way, and they didn’t. There’s a way of looking at it, also, where there’s a bit of joy and relief in learning that not only did your family seek you out, but that there’s beauty in embracing the challenges that we face in the world. That’s something that Sam struggles with, feeling different and making that your superpower is really his best superpower. It’s not the strength or the jumping, it’s the fact that he is different. He has challenges that other people might not have, but that also give him an ability that is incredibly profound.

Someone steps up to help Sam get to this place of understanding, and it’s Jordan. It’s fun in a sense because their episode three fight calls back a little to the season one finale, where Jordan’s sizing up whether to take on Sam. It’s also meaningful because of how Sam and Jordan are physically strong but emotionally vulnerable and have both struggled with managing their emotions, especially around the loss of people they love. Can you talk about why their shared moment is so significant for both of them? 

One thing we definitely didn’t see a ton of from Sam — and at least in this season, we get to deal with that more — is the vocalization of these incredibly traumatic things that happen and finding community and solace and relating with other people who are going through something similar. Certainly, in the first season, there wasn’t a lot of that from Sam or from most of the characters. So frankly, that moment is not only about identifying hardship, but it’s also very pointed toward the future. What that symbolically meant to me in a way — and it was very timely, too, obviously — is that even when someone is gone, they’re still with us, and it’s kind of up to us to carry them forward. Back to the theme of responsibility, which really was my throughline for the whole season, it’s up to you to do that. It’s up to Sam to carry Luke with him. It’s up to Sam to live up to Luke’s message. It’s up to Jordan to do the same for Andre. And to zoom out, it’s up to all of us to do that for Chance. That’s an incredibly profound thing to know as a human being, and I aim to do that. That’s a goal of mine.

This season, Sam has another full-blown puppet hallucination, which captures both the comedy and scariness of his condition in this come-to moment — a mix of dealing with the truth about his own actions via a sandwich and conspiracies via a felt sun. What was it like filming that scene this season, and how do you think about balancing the humor with the terror of those hallucinations? 

They’re so fun to do, first of all. That scene in the script, we shot a lot more of that that wasn’t in the episode, unfortunately. I had a whole conversation with that sandwich that is not in the episode. I understand why it’s not in there because it doesn’t necessarily narratively need to be in there, but it was really fun. The actors who play the puppets are absolutely incredible. Obviously, when you’re doing the scene, there’s not really a felt sun there. There’s like nothing there. I think we had a trash can and a felt puppet, and then a couple of sandwiches and things like that. But other than that, there’s nothing there. So I didn’t know what it was going to look like, and I could just hear Marty [Stelnick, puppeteer] improvising lines as the sun about JFK and other things. So it’s hard to remain serious because of that, but like you said, it’s also so clear the dichotomy of it’s a really safe space, but it’s also the root of all of your trauma. Both those things have to exist, and humor is a great way to deal with those things.

Emma and Sam begin the season on not good terms, understandably. But there’s one moment in episode two, where they have a run-in in the hallway, and Emma is visibly scared of him. It’s a real shift in the relationship from season one, where it often felt that Emma was not only the lone person who didn’t have to fear him but who could help calm him. Do you feel like Emma was in danger in light of what Sam had done between seasons and in season two?

That was the first scene of the season that we filmed chronologically. The first day of shooting, and that was both mine and Lizze’s first scene. What’s so interesting about that scene specifically is that it’s the climax of the first two episodes. And if I feel like Emma was in danger, I don’t know. I think that for Sam, the turmoil is always so internal. Some of the other characters that do bad things their aim is more pointed than Sam’s. Sam is oftentimes flailing around. He’s like a 14-year-old, so it’s more of an outburst. Does that mean somebody can get hurt? Definitely. But I don’t think that he necessarily ever has the intention to hurt somebody. So is there a world where Emma could have gotten hurt? I don’t know, but my hope is that the answer is no. 

Emma extends a chance for Sam to help them save Cate, and he turns it down. It’s understandable in terms of what happened last season, but they then worked for Homelander, and Sam started the season begging her to erase his feelings instead of having to be accountable for his actions — something he spent a lot of season one focused on, in terms of making people remember and be accountable for what they did to him. What was underneath that choice not to help her, and what is the nature of their relationship at this point? 

So much of the first season is about making other people accountable in the best way that he can think to in that moment, which is really the byproduct of what other people are telling him to do. But it’s an easy path, obviously. The thing about Sam that is hopefully redeeming in some way is that there’s definitely a consciousness there. In spite of whatever’s happening, there’s always a feeling, this question underneath that. The weight of making decisions that are questionable is probably a lot of guilt and moral ambiguity, and I don’t think, in general, Sam really knows how to handle any emotion or feeling. So his relationship with Cate is certainly one of utility. I never felt like he had a very strong tie to Cate. Cate was pretty clearly always this force of negativity in his life, pretty much more than anybody else — pretty traumatically awful — so there’s utility in that. But then in dealing with the feelings, as you see throughout the season, it really becomes about how can I address the way that I’m feeling instead of how can I act upon it, or how can I aid it from existing. And that’s the third and hardest thing to do for anybody.

Do you think he could change his mind in light of what happens to him this episode? Do you think he could choose to support his friends? 

The thing that is true throughout both seasons of the show is that Sam always has a desire to do what he thinks is affecting the greater good. So in deciding not to save Cate in that moment, he’s making a choice he thinks is better for the greater good. I don’t think that’s a choice against Emma or to punish people. Even his choice to follow Cate. I always felt like in the first season, Sam had the most reason out of anybody to be angry at the school, let’s be honest. (Laughs.) So it doesn’t mean he made the right choice, but there’s always hope for him to make the right decision. I don’t know if that necessarily always means he’s going to be rewarded either, but he’s going to try. We have to deal with the consequences of our choices. That’s inevitably true in this life. But it’s never too late to make the right choice. 

***

Gen V season two releases new episodes on Wednesdays, with the first five episodes of season two now streaming on Prime Video.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace Conference League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace Conference League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

After a brilliant start to the season, the South East Londoners will have their eyes set on the trophy and are the favourites to lift it in May in most places.

Confidence will be high among Oliver Glasner’s squad after the weekend’s victory over Liverpool but Dynamo Kyiv, who sit second in the Ukrainian Premier League after making an unbeaten start, represent a testing opener.

The hosts are hardly goal-shy, having scored 21 times and conceded 10 in the league, so it promises to be an entertaining welcome to European football for Palace.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace on TV and online.

Read more football features: Best players in the world | Best players of all time | Live football on TV today

When is Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace?

Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace will take place on Thursday 2nd October 2025.

Check out our live football on TV guide for the latest times and information.

Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace kick-off time

Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace will kick off at 8pm.

What TV channel is Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace on?

The game will be shown live on TNT Sports 2 from 7:45pm.

There are multiple ways to get TNT Sports. If you already have BT Broadband, you can add TNT Sports to your existing contract from just £18 per month. You can add the ‘Big Sport’ package for £40 per month which includes all TNT Sports and 11 Sky Sports channels via a NOW pass.

You can also access TNT Sports via discovery+ and stream directly to your smart TV.

How to live stream Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace online

You can watch the match on TNT Sports via discovery+ Premium monthly pass without signing up to a contract.

Regular subscribers can also stream matches on a variety of devices including laptops, smartphones and tablets via the discovery+ app.

discovery+ is the new streaming home of TNT Sports, showing events including live Premier League, UEFA Champions League, Premiership Rugby, UFC, Boxing and MotoGP. Learn more here: discoveryplus.com

Listen to Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace on radio

You can listen to the match on talkSPORT 2.

talkSPORT 2 is available on DAB radio and like the BBC, you can tune in via most TV packages. You can also listen to talkSPORT 2 online via the website or app.

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Dynamo Kyiv v Crystal Palace odds

In working partnership with the Radio Times, bet365 has provided the following betting odds for this event:

bet365 odds: Dynamo Kyiv (17/4) Draw (31/10) Crystal Palace (3/5)*

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Check out more of our coverage or visit our and to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to .

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Joel Murray as Commander Devlin, Jason Beghe as Hank Voight —
TV & Streaming

‘Chicago P.D.’ Boss, Star Talk Voight’s New Enemy in Devlin, Happiness for Burzek, and More

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Chicago P.D. Season 13 premiere, “Consequences.”]

The title of the Chicago P.D. Season 13 premiere certainly is apt, with Intelligence paying the consequences of last season. The unit has been disbanded, Voight’s (Jason Beghe) working Rapid Response — which means he should only be responding to crimes in progress — Burgess (Marina Squerciati) and Torres (Benjamin Levy Aguilar) don’t have badges, and Ruzek (Patrick John Flueger) and Atwater (LaRoyce Hawkins) are assigned elsewhere. But the team still manages to come together in the first episode.

When Voight catches a shooting, frustrated with Commander Devlin (Joel Murray) from Internal Affairs dragging his feet on reactivating his unit, he works the case anyway, eventually bumping into ATF’s Imani (Arienne Mandi) while she’s undercover. Voight calls in Burgess, who ends up saving Imani’s life, then Ruzek and Atwater join Voight and Imani in working the rest of the case.

By episode’s end, Intelligence is back up and running, everyone has their badges back, and Imani is the newest member. But to make that happen, Voight made an enemy out of Devlin, who was prepared to keep Intelligence shut down for good: Some of the guns that were part of the case traced back to the CPD, a batch that Internal Affairs never reported stolen. It would be embarrassing should that come out now, Voight points out.

Below, showrunner Gwen Sigan and star Jason Beghe unpack the premiere and tease what’s ahead for Voight and Devlin, Burgess and Ruzek, and more.

Voight gets his unit reinstated, but it feels like his way of doing so could have made an enemy out of Devlin. Is that the case? What’s coming up with that dynamic? It feels like it has to be so contentious after that.

Jason Beghe: Yeah, I don’t think that Devlin is thrilled. I don’t think he feels like “Voight’s my favorite guy on the planet.” He’s an alpha male in his own way, and he just got alpha’ed. So, I think that he is going to be determined to regain the upper hand.

Gwen, what can you preview about that?

Gwen Sigan: Yeah, I think he’s really — Devlin’s an interesting character because I think he’s very different than a lot of our bosses have been before. He’s a pretty folksy sort of guy. He’s a little more plainspoken. He’s quieter, softer. He’s come up from behind a desk; he hasn’t been working on the streets, and so his motivations are very different than Voight’s. I think he cares a lot about how he ends this job with as many friends as he can have at the end of this thing and with a full pension. So, having an enemy like that is very different for Voight. I think this guy is a little more quiet and sort of unassuming, and so it’ll be interesting to see how he reacts and then what he does about it and how that differs from what we’ve seen in the past.

Burgess and Ruzek start the season off happy. Things seem to be going great for them, but knowing the show, how soon before you start to challenge either or both of them?

Sigan: No. They’re happy. They’re happy. I swear they’re happy. Yeah, I mean, definitely we need conflict, so we’re going to have some conflict, but I would say the conflict that they end up dealing with through this season is not with each other. It’s really with situations that are normal life situations that I think everyone can relate to, but now they’re dealing with them together, and maybe they’re both bringing in different things to those decisions, their own perspective and backgrounds, and so I think it becomes a lot more about their family as opposed to just their relationship with one another. They also have a lot of things that come up through the job, and then how they deal with that together. So, they’re in a good spot, but life will keep going, and they’ll still have to go through some things

Voight tells Imani he’ll give her a long leash. Why is he willing to do so so soon after meeting her?

Beghe: I think there’s just a real natural comfort and also an understanding of who she is, and I think subconsciously, probably, he understands that she’s a good foil for him in that she’s, in a sense, a mirror image of him. So, it’s a good way for him to discover himself and do his job as a man and as an officer better.

Elizabeth Sisson/NBC

And what are we going to see from her with that long leash? That can mean problems — you have to factor in what’s going on with Devlin, all of that.

Sigan: Yeah, exactly. I think that the nice thing about the pair of them [is] because they share some instincts and because they share a style of policing, there’s a lot of good that can come from that, and then there’s a lot of leading each other astray that can come from it. So, we see a bit of both of that. We see through how their relationship evolves this season, the two of them growing, which I think has been really lovely to see. And yeah, it’s fun. It’s going to be a fun ride.

One of my favorite dynamics on the show is between Platt and Voight. Are we going to see a storyline for Platt where Voight’s there for her?

Beghe: That would be nice.

Sigan: We have something cooking, but yeah, we’ll have to wait and see. But yes, I would love to see that and more Platt is always good.

Beghe: Yep.

Chicago P.D., Wednesdays, 10/9c, NBC

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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