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Sanjeev Bhaskar and Sinéad Keenan -
TV & Streaming

How Politics and Division Shaped Season 6 (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains spoilers for the Unforgotten Season 6 finale.]

Six seasons in, British crime drama Unforgotten continues to tell gripping, complex stories. When the killer of brutish husband, father and business proprietor Gerry Cooper was revealed in the Masterpiece series’ Sunday, September 28 finale on PBS, it turned out not to be any of the four persons of interest set up at the start: his wife Juliet (Victoria Hamilton), onetime mistress Melinda (MyAnna Buring), former employee Marty (Maximilian Fairley), and the Afghani translator who had aided some of Gerry’s immigrant tenants, Asif (Elham Ehsas).

It was Gerry’s teenage daughter, Taylor (Pixie Davies), who was responsible for his death, and she hadn’t even realized it because her mother had covered for her. When the girl, 11 years old at the time, saw her mother on the floor and her father striking Juliet with his foot, she grabbed a knife that was on the kitchen table and stabbed him in the leg.

He bled out, but by then Juliet had taken Taylor upstairs, before returning to dismember her husband’s body and dispose of it in the marsh. In the end, police detectives Sunny Khan and Jess James (Sanjeev Bhaskar and Sinéad Keenan) learned that prosecutors opted not to charge either one.

Besides offering a terrific whodunit, Unforgotten creator and executive producer Chris Lang, who has written every episode of the series, wanted to explore the political divide that Britain — and many other countries — are facing through this season’s characters.

“That was my prevailing theme, division,” he tells TV Insider. “I think the left and the right in the U.K. used to be able to rub along fairly amicably, but since Brexit, it’s been really difficult, and it feels like people have entrenched themselves even further in their positions. There’s a sort of straight fault line down the middle that’s more marked, I think, than it’s ever been.”

MASTERPIECE and Mainstreet Productions

Although the characters represented varying political stances — Melinda was a right-wing political commentator; Asif was helping a friend who’d entered the country illegally — viewer response illustrated the divide when Unforgotten aired in Britain earlier this year. Lang’s social media pages lit up with angry comments.

“The greatest challenge was … to not respond in the way that I was advocating we’ve got to stop doing,” Lang says. “We’ve got to start having more restrained conversations. We’ve got to respect each other more. I developed a technique of saying, ‘Well, I’m sorry you feel like that, and I hope you can still enjoy the show in some way.’ I knew it was going to provoke a reaction, but I didn’t think it would be as strong as it was.”

The American political climate even prompted a change in filming locales. Unforgotten‘s American broadcaster, PBS, was defunded by the federal government this summer amid accusations by Republicans and President Trump that PBS has a liberal bias. But concerns about the political ramifications of this season existed even before the 2024 election.

Lang initially planned to set and shoot part of Season 6 in the U.S., but those scenes, which involved Melinda, were rewritten to take place in Ireland (and shot in Wales). “In the end, it was deemed to be too difficult to shoot in America,” he says. “The elections were coming up and … it was a politically sensitive story. There were a lot of difficult subjects addressed, and in the end, it was felt it was probably more expedient to shoot in a country close to home.”

Lang feels not filming in the U.S. was the right decision. “Whatever I’m saying as a writer is really about the U.K. and its environments. When you move out and start maybe commenting on other countries, it becomes a bit more problematic and less welcome,” he says. “The response the show got here was really evidence of how sensitive these more difficult subjects are. I think it would have just been the same in America, and perhaps the pressure is even greater there.”

Unforgotten‘s seventh season is scheduled to start shooting in January.

Unforgotten, Seasons 1-6, PBS app (with Passport) and PBS Masterpiece Prime Video Channel

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Jeremy Allen White Has Read the Script for 'The Social Network' Sequel
TV & Streaming

Jeremy Allen White Has Read the Script for ‘The Social Network’ Sequel

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

The 63rd New York Film Festival brought The Boss to Alice Tully Hall for the NYC premiere of “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.” Jeremy Allen White transforms into iconic rocker Bruce Springsteen for the biopic, which is set in the early ’80s during the recordings of “Born in the USA” and “Nebraska,” and co-stars Jeremy Strong, Paul Walter Hauser, Marc Maron, Gaby Hoffmann, and Odessa Young.

We caught up with White on the red carpet, who will soon go into production for the sequel to “The Social Network,” titled “The Social Reckoning.” “I have read the script, but I can’t tell you anything,” White told IndieWire. As for whether he has connected with writer and director Aaron Sorkin, White said, “Yeah, of course.” He will also reunite with Strong in this film. “I feel like every October Jeremy and I should do a movie together,” he joked.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 26: Andrew Garfield attends the "After The Hunt" Red Carpet during the 63rd New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center on September 26, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for FLC)

Last week we asked Andrew Garfield, star of the first film, if there was any chance he would return for this one. “No, no,” Garfield told IndieWire. “Eduardo [Saverin] is in Singapore having a good time.” And is the actor excited to eventually see it? “Oh yeah.”

The film will open in theaters on October 9, 2026. And alongside White and Jeremy Strong as Mark Zuckerberg, Mikey Madison and Bill Burr will also star. Sorkin’s original screenplay for the film tells the true story of how Frances Haugen (Madison), a young Facebook engineer, enlists the help of Jeff Horwitz (White), a Wall Street Journal reporter, to go on a dangerous journey that ends up blowing the whistle on the social network’s most guarded secrets.

But Sunday night at NYFF was all about all things Springsteen. In David Ehrlich’s review for “Deliver Me from Nowhere,” he writes that it “is a semi-desolate sketch of a biopic about a depressed 32-year-old man who channel surfs across a much better movie on TV one night in the fall of 1981. The man is Bruce Springsteen (a possessed Jeremy Allen White), the movie is Terrence Malick’s “Badlands,” and its story of a Korean War vet who takes his 15-year-old girlfriend on a killing spree across the American heartland gives the wayward rock god a newfound sense of direction that just might save his life.”

It is the latest musical biopic starring an in-demand rising actor: “A Complete Unknown” landed a slew of Academy noms, including a Best Actor nod for Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan. The four-part Beatles biopic is also in the works, with Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Joseph Quinn as George Harrison, Barry Keoghan as Ringo Starr, and Harris Dickinson as John Lennon.

20th Century Studios will release “Deliver Me from Nowhere” in theaters on Friday, October 24. Check out the trailer here.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter Star on Broadway
TV & Streaming

Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter Star on Broadway

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Forget the tree.

That iconic lone tree from the stage directions in Samuel Beckett’s tragicomic masterwork “Waiting for Godot” is offstage in Jamie Lloyd’s re-envisioned revival. The polarizing British director who has placed his conceptual stamp on “A Doll’s House,” “Sunset Boulevard” and “Evita,” again challenges the norms in his latest production, taking on the master of ambiguity, absurdity and minimalism — but with mixed results. 

Though Lloyd supplants Beckett’s bleak and barren setting with something brighter, cleaner and cosmic — but minus any “Sunset Boulevard”-style video flourishes this go-round — the play’s existential angst in an irrational world remains as powerful as ever — and perhaps more attractive to new audiences due to the casting.

This New York revival is driven by the star power of Keanu Reeves (of the “The Matrix” and “John Wick” film series), who is making a respectable Broadway bow. Joining him in this earnest project as Beckett’s Sisyphean vagabonds is Reeves’ longtime bud, Alex Winter, his goofball bro from the loopy time-traveling “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” films which began in 1989 (the year of Beckett’s death). 

This return match-up (“Together again at last!”) has turned the playwright’s vaudevillian clowns into comics of a cooler sort. If not stoner dudes — they are, after all, both 60ish now — they’re more like go-with-the-flow buds with their own relaxed rhythms, encircling speech patterns and genuine bond. Though the two actors have a kind of slacker ease in the nonsensical volleys, this lower temperature approach too often misses the work’s humor, horror and emotional resonance.

With scraggly hair and beard and a dazed countenance of man waking up from an unspeakable dream, Reeves brings the tender vulnerability to his Estrogen (aka Gogo). Sometimes with his arms tightly folded in full pout or for protection, sometimes in a fearful fetal position as if protecting himself from the unknown, he’s a man-child lost in time, space and memory. But the sense of the poet that Gogo once was is absent here — and Gogo needs to be a soul worth saving.

However, Winter’s unbowed Vladimir (aka Didi) is. He’s clearly the driver here as the duo patiently and impatiently wait for the mysterious Godot to arrive. Didi considers his tasks to be: staying the course, keeping the faith, buoying his buddy, and clinging to hope, despite a hopeless loop of disappointments and deferrals.

Winter’s face has the weathered look of a person whose struggles for survival in a cruel and violent world have taken its toll. In the end his Didi hangs by a thread as he movingly faces the void, realizing that taking it one day at a time is a life sentence he can barely endure and yet he does.

And about that void: Beckett’s country road is replaced here with a giant spiral structure that encompasses the stage, designed by Soutra Gilmour. It’s a stunning and glistening setting — perhaps it’s an ivory pipeline to the universe or maybe the eye of God or whatever one projects. Though shocking at first sight for this play’s familiar landscape, it also feels thematically fitting.

Jon Clark’s no-place-to-hide lighting unnervingly brightens Beckett’s shadowy world but without losing its sense of dread, allowing both light and dark at the end of this infinite tunnel. The actors also make great physical use of the epic curvature, comically sliding, slipping and cradling themselves to sleep though they’re more often than not swallowed up in the setting that severely limits the playing field.

Breaking into the duo’s static world are Brandon J. Dirden as the pompous interloper Pozzo and Michael Patrick Thornton as his almost-silent, strangely masked slave Lucky.  Dirden brings many colors to the indulgent bombast of this self-centered sociopath, his fascistic brutality disguised as hollow civility. He’s repellent but Dirden makes it so we can’t take our eyes off him.

But Lloyd’s awkward staging here and questionable affectations (including an audience clap-along) makes Pozzo’s relationship with Lucky unfocused and puzzling. Beckett’s symbols of master and slave — the whip, the rope, the servant weighed down with baggage — are either mimed or cut and in doing so lose its real horror. 

Thornton uses a wheelchair, and here his Lucky is guided by his tormentor. But the character’s state of servitude is largely hidden in clumsy blocking. Thornton, however, is magnificent in Lucky’s epic “thinking” tirade, a babbling aria with its own inner logic.

Zaynn Arora as the boy messenger (Eric Williams in alternate performances) who delivers the news of  Godot’s postponement is suitably fragile, fearful and haunting.

One might also wonder what Beckett — whose strict oversight of productions was legendary — would make of Reeves and Winter’s air-guitar riff, echoing the duo’s signature stance from their film partnership. (Robin Williams also tossed pop-culture references into a 1988 production in which he was paired with Steve Martin.) Certainly many in the audience love it. Purists not so much — but this production is clearly not meant for them.

Still, as a resigned Didi says, “the essential doesn’t change.” Whether on stages in post-war Europe, a hall in San Quentin, or on a pandemic Zoom, Beckett’s wandering refugees and their desperate need to be seen as they search for meaning, purpose and hope continue to find fresh relevance. In the current dystopia, this evergreen play and provocative production may just be worth the wait.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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'Big Brother' Season 27 Crowns Winner On CBS; America's Favorite Houseguest & BB Mastermind Revealed
TV & Streaming

‘Big Brother’ Season 27 Crowns Winner On CBS; America’s Favorite Houseguest & BB Mastermind Revealed

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

SPOILER ALERT: This post contains details on the Big Brother Season 27 Season Finale (Episode 39, which aired on Sunday, September 28.

Julie Chen Moonves returned to host Big Brother Season 27 on the finale night, introducing the Top 3 houseguests who had a shot at the $750,000 cash prize.

Three members of the Judges alliance made it to the final and would fight to be the last Head of Household (HOH) to secure their spot in the Final 2 and decide who would sit next to them to face the Jury.

As you may recall, the Judges alliance consisted of Rachel Reilly, Clifton “Will” Williams, Vince Panaro, Morgan Pope, and Ashley Hollis. However, Rachel and Will didn’t survive the game and were evicted to the Jury house, which would help determine the winner on finale night.

RELATED: ‘Big Brother’ Season 27: All The Evicted Houseguests From CBS Competition In Chronological Order

Which housemates made it to the Final 3 in Big Brother Season 27?

The three housemates that made it to the Final 3 were Vince Panaro, Morgan Pope, and Ashley Hollis.

Who won the final three-part HOH competition?

Ashley was the first houseguest to drop from the first competition, which meant she would have to compete in the second challenge to still have a shot at winning the final HOH. Vince would be the second to drop out of the competition, which meant Morgan would advance to the third part of the competition.

Big Brother alum Frankie Grande entered the house to host Part 2 of the final HOH, where Vince and Ashley faced off to secure their place in the last competition. Ashley won the second part of the competition and would face Morgan in the third part during the finale night.

In the final part of the HOH competition, Ashley won and became the last HOH, evicting Morgan from the game and choosing Vince to take to the Final 2.

Who made up the Big Brother Season 27 jury?

The Big Brother Season 27 jury, which would determine the winner of the competition, consisted of Rachel Reilly, Clifton “Will” Williams, Kelley Jorgensen, Lauren Domingue, Keanu Soto, Ava Pearl, and Morgan Pope.

RELATED: A Complete List Of ‘Big Brother’ Winners Through 26 Seasons

Who was the BB Mastermind?

On finale night, the identity of the BB Mastermind was revealed to be Big Brother alums Jessie Godderz, Frankie Grande, and Eric Stein. All three housemates were evicted in their respective seasons due to twists in the game.

How did the Jury members vote?

Rachel: Ashley
Will: Ashley
Kelley: Ashley
Lauren: Ashley
Keanu: Ashley
Ava: Ashley
Morgan: Vince

Who won Big Brother Season 27?

Asley won Big Brother Season 27 and took the $750,000 prize, with Vince taking second place and a $75,000 prize.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Glen Powell Plans to Go Incognito as Chad Powers in the Real World
TV & Streaming

Glen Powell Plans to Go Incognito as Chad Powers in the Real World

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Glen Powell‘s prosthetics may be the standout star of his new series Chad Powers — and he’s not quite ready to retire the look.

In the show, which Powell leads as well as co-created, he plays a disgraced former college quarterback who tries to make a comeback by joining a struggling team — while donning a fake nose and wig to hide his true identity.

At the Los Angeles premiere on Thursday — which took over the Rose Bowl for a true football-forward experience — Powell told The Hollywood Reporter that “this is probably the first couple of weeks where I’m not working, and it’s the first time I’ve kind of exposed my face to real air. I think after these last couple of weeks I will call Kevin [Kirkpatrick] and Alexei [Dmitriew], my makeup and prosthetics people, and just see if I can borrow Chad for a little bit” to wear the disguise around town.

Calling the quarterback “the most fun character I’ve ever played, by far,” it’s no surprise Powell wants to keep Chad around, as he added, “I think this show is going to blow people away.”

Glen Powell in Chad Powers

Daniel Delgado/Disney

His Chad Powers look — and accompanying high-pitched, Southern voice — was the talk of the carpet, as showrunner Michael Waldron explained that they knew “we have to make Chad ugly, Chad can’t look good, but the Glen-ness comes out and you end up falling in love with Chad almost immediately.” Steve Zahn, who plays the head coach of struggling team the Catfish (wink, wink), added that he had a “real problem” keeping a straight face across from Powell: “There’s the shower scene and I couldn’t even look at him, you see me looking at the floor.”

The Chad Powers character is based on a viral skit from 2022, where Eli Manning donned prosthetics and the name to go uncover at Penn State and try out for their team. He and brother Peyton Manning serve as executive producers on the series, as Peyton admitted they “had no idea” if the short video would actually work as a larger, scripted story.

But, the former NFL star was quick to mock his little brother, as Peyton teased that Powell’s Powers is “way better looking than Eli. I think it was just a reminder that thank goodness it’s Glen Powell in this show and not Eli Manning. Watching Eli for eight minutes in that viral video, that’s one thing, but six episodes that’s a lot of Eli — I stare at Eli every Monday night [on the Manningcast], it’s hard. That’s why I’m here, to be sure that there’s no last minute change with Eli. He has a cameo in this show, but it’s limited. I’m just glad it’s Glen, Glen looks good no matter what he’s in.”

Chad Powers premieres Tuesday on Hulu.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Marlow Murder Club season 3 first look sees EastEnders star join cast
TV & Streaming

Marlow Murder Club season 3 first look sees EastEnders star join cast

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Samantha Bond, Jo Martin, Cara Horgan and Natalie Dew will all reprise their roles and welcome a host of guest stars, some of whom have featured in the likes of EastEnders, Doctor Who and Happy Valley.

Episodes one and two, which were co-written by Daniel Rusteau and Robert Thorogood, star Nigel Harman (EastEnders), Peter Davison (Doctor Who), Jacqueline Boatswain (After the Flood), Sarah Alexander (Art Detectives), Tony Gardner (Last Tango in Halifax) and Jason Merrells (Happy Valley).

Peter Davison as Geoffrey in The Marlow Murder Club season 3. UKTV/Robbie Gray

Meanwhile, episodes three and four, written by Amy Reith, will feature comedy legend Harry Enfield (Miss Marple – The Moving Finger). The final two episodes, penned by Julia Gilbert, will star Cherie Lunghi (Strike), Adrian Lukis (SAS Rogue Heroes) and Alastair Mackenzie (The Crown).

Season 3 follows Judith, Suzie and Becks now members of an established part of newly promoted DI Tanika Malik’s crime solving gang and they are bringing their unconventional methods to a string of high-profile murders.

Jacqueline Boatswain as Debbie in The Marlow Murder Club season 3 sat down at a desk looking ahead.

Jacqueline Boatswain as Debbie in The Marlow Murder Club season 3. UKTV/Robbie Gray

The synopsis teases: “From the sudden death of the town’s beloved mayor – the nicest man in Marlow – to a celebrity chef found dead at the launch of his cookbook with half the town in attendance, the team will be working under the watchful eye of the Marlow community. They’ll also be called to action at a university reunion in an eerie manor house where in a surprising twist, Becks finds herself amongst the suspects. Could this case threaten our amateur sleuths’ roles as civilian advisors?”

Season 3 was announced earlier this year, with Claire Hookway, commissioning executive for UKTV, commenting: “Following the huge success of the first two series, we’re thrilled to return with another instalment where Judith, Suzie, Becks, and our police team are faced with three puzzling new mysteries to solve.

“We’re excited to treat the audience to more joyous fun in the beautiful town of Marlow, with many surprises and clever twists in store.”

The Marlow Murder Club returns to U and U&DRAMA in 2026. Stream all episodes of the previous series for free on U.

Add The Marlow Murder Club to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Christopher Briney, Lola Tung, and Gavin Casalegno in
TV & Streaming

‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’: Which Season Is Best?

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

The Summer I Turned Pretty isn’t quite over yet, but for the most part, the bulk of Belly’s (Lola Tung) story has been told. Since we’re still waiting for the final movie to come out (that finale episode is still on our mind), let’s reflect on the three seasons that we’re working with so far.

Season 1 was nostalgia at its finest. It set the groundwork for the messy love triangle between Belly and the Fisher brothers. We couldn’t look away for a second. The first season introduced us to Cousins and the beach house, and Susannah (Rachel Blanchard) was still in the picture.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Scarlett Johansson Directs June Squibb
TV & Streaming

Scarlett Johansson Directs June Squibb

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. Sony Pictures Classics releases “Eleanor the Great” in theaters on Friday, September 26.

Eleanor (June Squibb) has a best friend. In fact, she’s had the same best friend for the past seven decades of her life. With both of their husbands long dead and kids well out of the nest, Eleanor and Bessie’s (Rita Zohar) lives don’t just revolve around each other, they’re woven into each other. They don’t just share an apartment in Florida, they share a bedroom, with their neat twin beds laying side by side, complete with matching headboards. They do everything together, sorting bills and clipping coupons and going on walks, and in the dark of certain nights, telling each other the worst things they can remember about their lives.

Gavagai

Suffice it to say, this relationship has worked out. So, what happens when the inevitable happens? Such is the set-up of Scarlett Johansson’s feature directorial debut, “Eleanor the Great,” which tenderly, if trippingly examines what happens after we lose the most important person in our lives, and then take halting steps toward finding someone, if not as important, but just as special to help fill the hole left behind. All of this is neatly tucked into the general (and widely reported) plotline of the film, which follows Eleanor as she decamps for New York City and strikes up a brand-new friendship with adorable college student Nina (the delightful Erin Kellyman).

But that’s not really what “Eleanor the Great” is about.

Written by Tory Kamen, “Eleanor the Great” hinges on the early charm of its relatively feel-good premise — inter-age friendship, what a concept! — before piling on the ever-darker twists and turns. That’s not to say the film isn’t funny or sweet, but that there is something much more profound and uncomfortable at its heart, and one that poses a tricky challenge for first-time filmmakers Johansson and Kamen. It does not always land, but the attempts to navigate the complications that are central to the film are just as compelling when they don’t work, perhaps even more so.

Here’s what brassy Eleanor discovers when she returns home to New York City to live with her adult daughter Lisa (a lovely Jessica Hecht) and her good-natured grandson Max (Will Price in a very underwritten role): trying something new at any age is hard, maybe even impossible when you’ve got a broken heart. So while Eleanor is willing to humor Lisa and head to the local Jewish community center to join a singing class, she’s also definitely going to roll her eyes at it, and probably going to just step right out the door, all the better to pretend she’s above it and not, in fact, terrified to try it.

And when another nice lady, about Eleanor’s age, attempts to guide her into one of the JCC rooms, Eleanor is just curious enough and just confused enough to go with her. It’s not the singing class room. It’s a support group for Holocaust survivors and, as we’ve learned early on, Eleanor is not a Holocaust survivor. But Bessie was, so when Eleanor pretends to be one, just lightly taking on Bessie’s own memories to share with the group (Johansson cast many actual Holocaust survivors for these roles), it’s not malicious. And when shining-eyed student journalist Nina, who is sitting in on the group to write a paper about them, takes instantly to obvious star Eleanor, the lonely transplant lets herself believe her own stories. What could it hurt? We will find out, and so will Eleanor and Nina.

Initially, Eleanor’s lie is, well, it’s kind of funny. We can see, by way of Kamen’s sharp writing, Johnasson’s sure-handed directing, and Squibb’s layered performance how this might happen. It’s harder to see how she might get out of it, especially as her bond with Nina grows. And lingering over every interaction between Eleanor and Nina? A two-pronged beast: the threat that Eleanor’s deception will be revealed, and the knowledge that these two would have been able to bond even without Eleanor’s lie.

Both Eleanor and Nina are defined (and confined) by the worst thing that’s ever happened to them: well, Nina by the worst thing that’s ever happened to her (the still-fresh death of her mother), and Eleanor by the worst thing that’s ever happened to the person she loves most in the world (and, arguably, to the entire world itself). If you’re able to see how alike those two positions are, you’re likely to enjoy the thornier aspects of “Eleanor the Great” and the bigger questions that Johansson and Kamen pose in a seemingly amiable outing.

As Eleanor and Nina adventure around the city (Hélène Louvart’s warm, lived-in cinematography gives the entire film a cozy glow, like a glossy mid-budget studio feature of yore), Eleanor’s lies grow, and soon they involve still more people, like Nina’s father Roger (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a local news anchor who Eleanor has long crushed on. It’s a weird, unnecessary bit of serendipity, though the inclusion of Roger as a character is a smart one, allowing Kamen’s script to explore other sides of grief.

Eleanor, of course, knows this is all wrong. She goes to great pains to hide her lies and Nina from her actual family, and when her rabbi somewhat accidentally suggests that some lies are too important to worry about the question of deception (by way of a discussion of the story of Jacob and Esau that is somehow both too pat and perfectly positioned within the film), she visibly brightens. Perhaps she never needs to come clean! Perhaps what has come from her lie is more important than the lie itself!

But Eleanor has backed herself into an awful corner, and in some ways, so too has Johansson’s film, which is stuck trying to impart sage wisdom through the lens of a truly hideous (if well-meaning) lie. As such, the film’s tone tends to vacillate wildly, particularly in its final act, as we build to what we know must be coming and the hope it might lead all of us somewhere better. That Kamen’s script would attempt to marry these concepts with some grand-gesture stuff, real tear-jerking choices that also tend to read as quite cheesy, doesn’t surprise — after all, what’s more melodramatic than life itself?

It adds up to a fascinating, if often baffling first effort from Johannson and Kamen, one not afraid of big emotional wallops, but not always able to carry them into truly revelatory spaces. It’s a little predictable, a little bizarre, a little funny, and very sad, but it’s also an ambitious swing at what movies can still be (and what sort of stars can populate them), a message and an idea that we expect will lead both the director and writer into quite fruitful new chapters. It’s never too late to try something new, Eleanor and Nina seem to want to tell us, and even imperfect attempts have real value.

Grade: B-

“Eleanor the Great” premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. Sony Pictures Classics releases it on Friday, September 26.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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AI Actress Tilly Norwood Attracts Interest From Talent Agents
TV & Streaming

AI Actress Tilly Norwood Attracts Interest From Talent Agents

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

AI actress Tilly Norwood has attracted the attention of multiple talent agents, actor, comedian and producer Eline Van der Velden told a panel at the Zurich Summit, the industry strand of the Zurich Film Festival.

Tilly Norwood is the first creation to emerge from recently launched AI talent studio Xicoia, a spin-off from Van der Velden’s AI production studio Particle6.

Van der Velden said that studios were quietly moving forward with AI projects, and that further announcements would come in the next few months.

“We were in a lot of boardrooms around February time, and everyone was like, ‘No, this is nothing. It’s not going to happen.’ Then, by May, people were like, ‘We need to do something with you guys,’” said Van der Velden, who was being interviewed on stage Saturday by Diana Lodderhose of Deadline.

“When we first launched Tilly, people were like, ‘What’s that?,’ and now we’re going to be announcing which agency is going to be representing her in the next few months.”

In July, Norwood revealed on her Facebook page that she had appeared in her first role, a comedy sketch “AI Commissioner,” which can be found below.

Norwood wrote, “Can’t believe it… my first ever role is live! I star in ‘AI Commissioner,’ a new comedy sketch that playfully explores the future of TV development produced by the brilliant team at Particle6 Productions.”

She added, “I may be AI generated, but I’m feeling very real emotions right now. I am so excited for what’s coming next!”

“We want Tilly to be the next Scarlett Johansson or Natalie Portman, that’s the aim of what we’re doing,” van der Velden told Broadcast International.

“People are realizing that their creativity doesn’t need to be boxed in by a budget – there are no constraints creatively and that’s why AI can really be a positive,” Van der Velden continued. “It’s just about changing peoples’ viewpoint.”

Particle6 has produced content across multiple genres, from “Miss Holland” for BBC Three to “True Crime Secrets” for Hearst Networks, and “Look See Wow!” for Sky Kids.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Rupert Wyatt’s Long-Gestating Middle Eastern Western
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Rupert Wyatt’s Long-Gestating Middle Eastern Western

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

It is a tale nearly as old as time — but enough about the creative differences that have conspired to keep this ambitious Middle Eastern Western away from movie screens since it went into production four years ago. Looking at it now, and knowing what we know about the shooting conditions, it’s a miracle Desert Warrior exists at all, never mind some of the extraordinary images captured by director Rupert Wyatt and his cinematographer Guillermo Garza. In fact, it’s not immediately clear that it was ever a troubled production at all, but what starts with a very lean and entertaining B-movie gradually becomes something of a slog; after setting up a very simple, almost Sergio Leone-esque scenario — a bandit (Antony Mackie) and a bounty hunter (Sharlto Copley) — Wyatt’s film somehow becomes a stodgy, sprawling, feminist, pre-Islamic Ghandi.

One can only speculate, but it does feel that this two-hour cut is something of a compromise, and, if it is, it’s one that perfectly expresses what happens when too many people bring their concept of an action movie to the table. There are times when you can see unexpected flashes of inspiration, and there are echoes of John Ford’s Monument Valley in the location work. There’s even a little Kurosawa — from all the stages of his career — in the feudal set-up; while the decadent emperor Kisra (Ben Kingsley) holds court, his enemies are banished. This would seem to be the film Wyatt set out to make, and it would have been a good ’un.

And, for a time, it works. Mackie’s bandit is this film’s The Man With No Name, and we find him out in the desert with his camel when the story starts and a mysterious old man enters the frame. “Tell me who you are,” says the bandit. “In time,” says the stranger, who promises gold and a jewel-encrusted dagger in exchange for help. It turns out that he is the former King Numan (Ghassan Massoud), who has been deposed by Emperor Kisra and has escaped with his daughter, the Princess Hind (Aiysha Hart). If they return, Numan will be killed and Hind will be forced to become Kisra’s concubine, which is why the emperor sends the cruel mercenary Jalabzeen (Copley) to bring them back.

The bandit takes the pair into Shaybani territory, where he is treated with suspicion, to the extent that he is considered a traitor and condemned to die. Hind helps him escape, and this might be the exact point that the tension starts to dissipate. For one thing, Hind finds that Numan is gone in the morning, having returned to the city of his own volition. Needless to say, that doesn’t end well. Nevertheless, Hind decides that she must follow in his footsteps, enlisting the bandit as a traveling companion. “You will ride faster alone,” he tells her. “We will ride further together,” she says. (Yes, it’s that kind of script.)

So, here we are, and on her way back, Hind somehow becomes possessed of the kind of mystical messianic qualities that aren’t much seen outside of a Dune movie as her quest gathers support, galvanizing the put-upon castes of the region to come together while a traveling map of the country fills the screen. (Yes, it’s that kind of movie.) Before you know it, Desert Warrior has become a war movie, and quite a spectacular one at that, with elephants and wolves (awful CGI ones, mind) that seem to spring more from an all-hands meeting about what a film with a $150m budget could be missing than what it might actually need.

But to make the film Desert Warrior turns into at this point you need serious star power, and while the Arabic cast is especially strong, the leads needs need that extra bit of wattage that the film just doesn’t have. Even the usually reliable Kingsley can’t bring much more to the party, clearly just dropping in for a few days’ work to have a comfy, ’tache-twirlingly evil sit-down in the film’s much less interesting studio-set scenes. To make things worse, the film’s two most engaging characters — the bandit and Jalabzeen — become so consistently sidelined that it’s hard to get too excited when the inevitable showdown happens, simply because we haven’t spent enough time with either of them to care.

Anyway, it all sorts itself out, and the film sends you home with the helpful message that “there are many ways to fight a battle”. There are also many ways to sing a desert song, and it is in the film’s favor that, but for perhaps one single heat-hazy shot, it doesn’t even attempt to compare itself to Lawrence of Arabia. Tellingly, though, David Lean’s film still cost less than Desert Warrior in today’s money, and perhaps the lesson learned here is that the difference between a true cinematic masterpiece and a decent Sky TV pilot directed by Ridley Scott isn’t necessarily determined by the amount of cash you throw at it.

Title: Desert Warrior
Festival: Zurich (Gala Premieres)
Director: Rupert Wyatt
Screenwriter: Rupert Wyatt, Erica Beeney, David Self, Gary Ross
Cast: Anthony Mackie, Aiysha Hart, Sharlto Copley, Ghassan Massoud, Sami Bouajila, Géza Rohrig, Ben Kingsley
Sales: MBC Studios
Running time: 1 hr 54 mins

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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