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China Selects Nanjing Massacre Film 'Dead to Rights' as Oscar Entry
TV & Streaming

China Selects Nanjing Massacre Film ‘Dead to Rights’ as Oscar Entry

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

China has chosen Shen Ao’s “Dead to Rights” as its submission for the best international feature film category at the 98th Academy Awards.

Written by Shen Ao, Zhang Ke, and Xu Luyang, and set against the backdrop of the 1937 Nanjing Massacre and drawing from documented historical events, “Dead to Rights” follows A Chang (Liu Haoran of the “Detective Chinatown” franchise), a postman who assumes the identity of a photo developer to survive the Japanese occupation. Operating from within the walls of a Japanese-controlled studio, he covertly shelters Chinese soldiers and civilians in an act of quiet resistance.

The film is produced by Furuo Qing of “The Wandering Earth” franchise fame. Niu Vision Media and Echelon Studios released the film in North America in August.

“Dead to Rights” opened in China on July 25 and has grossed more than RMB3 billion ($415 million). It led the local box office for 16 consecutive days over the summer.

China has yet to win the international feature Oscar. The country has scored two nominations in the category to date, with Zhang Yimou’s “Ju Dou” (1991) and “Hero” (2003). Hong Kong, which submits separately, has earned three nominations: Zhang Yimou’s “Raise the Red Lantern” (1992), Chen Kaige’s “Farewell My Concubine” (1994) and Derek Tsang’s “Better Days” (2021).

Last year, China submitted Fang Li’s documentary “The Sinking of the Lisbon Maru,” which was disqualified by the Academy for not meeting language requirements.

The Oscar international feature shortlist will be announced on Dec. 16 and the final five nominees will be announced on Jan. 22.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Lola Young Says She Is 'Doing Okay Now' After Collapsing On Stage
TV & Streaming

Lola Young Says She Is ‘Doing Okay Now’ After Collapsing On Stage

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

“Messy” singer Lola Young is updating fans after a health scare in which she collapsed onstage during her performance at All Things Go Festival at New York City’s Forest Hills Stadium.

“Hi, For anyone who saw my set at all things go today, i am doing okay now,” the chart-topping English pop artist wrote on her Instagram Story in the aftermath. “Thank you for all of your support Lola xxx.”

Per reporting from Billboard, Young collapsed while singing track “Conceited,” off of her second album This Wasn’t Meant for You Anyway. At the time, the artist paused the song mid-lyrics to talk to her keyboardist, but suddenly collapsed shortly thereafter. Her band, team and security then rushed the stage to carry her off. The outlet and those in attendance noted online that the “Blind Love” singer-songwriter looked flushed prior to her falling backward.

Remi Wolf, a headliner at the event alongside Doechii, came on shortly after Young was carried out to confirm the musician was all right. In video captured at the event, Doechii told the crowd, “She’s an incredibly talented artist, and she wasn’t feeling well tonight, and I’m so glad you guys were there to support her and hold her up. Let’s wish her the best, OK everybody? So, we love you Lola! And I want her to hear that and I want her to feel that.”

Young’s performance comes on the heels of the release of I’m Only F**king Myself, her third album, which features lead singles “One Thing,” “Not Like That Anymore” and “Dealer.” Yesterday, the 24-year-old South Londoner’s team axed her scheduled appearance at Audacy’s We Can Survive event — aimed at promoting mental health awareness and suicide prevention — held at New Jersey’s Prudential Center in Newark due to a “sensitive matter.”

Her manager, Nick Shymansky, wrote on social media of the canceled performance: “Lola is very open about her mental health and there are very occasionally days where myself and my team have to take protective measures to keep her safe. She is an incredible person and always takes her fans, career and performances seriously. I can only send huge apologies for the inconvenience caused.”

Prior to her collapse, Young addressed her return to the stage at All Things Go: “Today I woke up and I made the decision to come here,” she told the crowd. “I wanted to be here, I wanted to perform, and I didn’t want to wallow in my sadness. Sometimes life can throw you lemons and you just gotta motherf—ing make lemonade.”

Young has seen her star rise throughout the past year, thanks in large part to the viral traction her earworm of a song “Messy” gained on TikTok. She followed that up with a collaboration opposite Tyler, the Creator, on his “Like Him.” Earlier this year, she guest performed on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and made her Coachella debut.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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James Gunn attends HBO's Peacemaker Season 2 Premiere at AMC Lincoln Square Theater on August 13, 2025 in New York City.
TV & Streaming

James Gunn on Peacemaker Twist, Brandon Sklenar as Batman

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers through Peacemaker season two’s sixth episode, “Ignorance Is Chris.”]

When Peacemaker creator James Gunn conceived season two’s seismic twist, the first person he consulted was his Leota Adebayo actor, Danielle Brooks.

Throughout the second season, Christopher “Peacemaker” Smith (John Cena) has been enamored with an alternate dimension that he was able to access via his family’s Quantum Unfolding Chamber (QUC). Earth-2 seemingly provided him with everything he’s been lacking in his own dimension, including a caring version of his father (Robert Patrick’s Auggie), an emotionally available Emilia Harcourt (Jennifer Holland) and a grown-up version of his brother, Keith (David Denman). The latter didn’t suffer the same accidental childhood death that Earth-1’s Keith did at the hands of his younger brother, Chris.

By the end of season two’s fifth episode, “Back to the Suture,” Chris decided to permanently relocate to Earth-2 so that he could finally be the son, brother, romantic partner and well-regarded hero that’s eluded him in his own world. However, he was so caught up in his own personal life that he couldn’t see the forest for the trees. This dimension’s Evergreen, Washington, which he put on a pedestal, turns out to be a round-the-clock “sundown town,” a place that excludes people of color. The reason being is that Earth-2 consists of an alt-history in which the German Reich won World War II.

The 11th Street Kids of Harcourt, John Economos (Steve Agee), Vigilante (Freddie Stroma) and Adebayo had already set out to rescue Chris from Earth-2, and Harcourt’s instincts as an agent who minds her surroundings picked up on the white supremacist haven almost immediately.

Thus, given how sensitive the idea could potentially be for Brooks as a Black actor, Gunn made sure she was his first call.

“When I wrote episode 206, I sent it to Danielle, and I was like, ‘This is where we’re going with this. Tell me what you think.’ And she was really into it,” Gunn tells The Hollywood Reporter. “You’ve got to check yourself with things like this. It’s good to be aware of what you’re dealing with when it comes to audiences’ emotions and feelings. So Danielle was my first stop in making sure that it was all kosher.”

Peacemaker season one may have redeemed Chris for killing Joel Kinnaman’s Rick Flag Jr. in Gunn’s The Suicide Squad (2021), but the surviving Squad characters of Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), Bloodsport (Idris Elba) and Ratcatcher 2 (Daniela Melchior) aren’t privy to the story the audience has seen. In fact, they probably still believe Peacemaker is dead from one of Bloodsport’s bullets. But Gunn doesn’t have any interest in revisiting that conflict because he’s already exploring it with Rick Flag Sr. (Frank Grillo). 

“Now, I’m not saying that those characters won’t reappear. I’m just saying that I am [already] dealing with Peacemaker’s guilt over killing Rick Flag Jr. and his repercussions for that,” Gunn says. “That story is being told through his relationship with Rick Flag Sr. To tell it through Bloodsport, who was friends with Rick Flag Jr., would be an emotionally diminished story compared to the one I’m telling now. So it doesn’t interest me at all.”

Gunn currently hosts Peacemaker: The Official Podcast, an episodic aftershow with Holland, Agee and various guests from the series. During a previous episode, Gunn mentioned in passing that he was watching Taylor Sheridan’s 1923. That detail sparked a flurry of speculation that he was checking out popular Batman fan-cast, Brandon Sklenar, who was the breakout star on that particular Yellowstone prequel. Sklenar recently spoke to THR about his ardent desire to play the next Dark Knight.

Unfortunately, Gunn says that his viewing of 1923 was unrelated to his search for the DCU’s Batman.

“I’m definitely not doing scouting for the Caped Crusader. But I’m always scouting when I’m watching TV shows,” Gunn says. “In fact, I really like the young woman [Julia Schlaepfer] in 1923. She is just so fantastic that I suggested her for something recently. She’s Brandon’s [Sklenar] significant other in that series.”

Gunn is a preexisting admirer of Sheridan’s sprawling TV universe, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a fan of Sklenar’s.

“I’m watching [1923] because I like Taylor Sheridan’s stuff, especially that one. That’s my favorite of all his shows,” Gunn shares. “So I’m watching it mostly for fun, and I’m definitely not watching it because I need to find a Batman. By the way, I love [Sklenar]. I think he’s great. I really do. I honestly think he’s great.”

Below, during a recent spoiler conversation with THR, Gunn also discusses Nicholas Hoult’s return as Lex Luthor, as well as how his job as co-CEO of DC Studios has made him feel more compassion for his former Marvel boss, Kevin Feige.

***

Peacemaker season two has been asking whether the grass is truly greener on the other side, and “Ignorance Is Chris” has answered that question with a resounding no. 

The original episode title for this episode [206] was “The Grass Is Always Meaner.”

How did you arrive at an Earth-2 in which Nazi Germany won World War II?

It comes from Christopher Smith’s personal journey of running away and his inability to accept the place in which he is. When you think of it not in terms of the political — but in terms of the personal and how that represents our own specific journeys and lives — we try to run away from where we are and who we are and what’s in our lives. The inability to accept where we are is the root of all our issues. 

Christopher Smith does this in a physical way, going from one dimension to another that’s as different from his own life as can possibly be imagined. His father is a loving father, his brother is alive and the girl he’s in love with is fawning over him and thirsty. So he has everything he thinks is different from what he has [in his own world] because he’s not willing to accept the challenges of his own life. Of course, that is a sort of monkey’s paw, and it ends up being way worse than where he started. So I see it from a personal journey perspective, and then it just so happens to coincide with political stuff in our own world. 

David Denman’s Keith Smith in Peacemaker season two.

Jessica Miglio/HBO Max

The dynamics that Danielle Brooks has to play in this world without visible people of color are a lot heavier than the rest of the 11th Street Kids. How would you sum up your conversations with her about this concept?

Well, she was the first person I checked with. When I wrote episode 206, I sent it to Danielle, and I was like, “This is where we’re going with this. Tell me what you think.” And she was into it. She was really into it.  So she was the first person I checked with, and you’ve got to check yourself with things like this. We can all tell stories that people are affected by or affect them emotionally in ways that we don’t understand. I’ve learned that over the years, and while that doesn’t mean I don’t choose to tell the story anyway, it’s good to be aware of what you’re dealing with when it comes to audiences’ emotions and feelings. So Danielle was my first stop in checking that out and making sure that it was all kosher.

Nicholas Hoult’s Lex Luthor is also reintroduced at Belle Reeve prison. Does Rick Flag Sr.’s (Frank Grillo) offer of redemption lead straight into your Superman follow-up, Man of Tomorrow?

Well, I would say one of the important things is Flag and Luthor’s relationship. It continues into Man of [Tomorrow], yeah. It definitely continues. Their relationship is a part of the DCU going forward.

Nicholas Hoult’s Lex Luthor, Frank Grillo’s Rick Flag Sr. in Peacemaker.

Courtesy of HBO Max

A month or two in prison seems to have changed Lex. Did you direct Nick to be a bit darker or edgier?

He did that naturally. I think it just comes from the text, really. He’s darker because he’s been chewed up by a Superdog, and he’s now in prison for the rest of his life. But part of it is that there’s a more naturalistic feel to the dialogue and a less heightened feel in Peacemaker than in Superman. So the character just naturally and subtly shifted due to that. 

The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special referenced Batman, and now Peacemaker has referenced Spider-Man. Those characters don’t actually exist in either world, but their media does.

That’s right. 

Did anyone have to make a courtesy call to Sony or Marvel?

Nope. I also didn’t when I put Batman in [the Holiday Special]. But listen, I talk to those guys. We’re all good. 

I’m always curious about how the role of studio head is treating you. Have there been moments that have recontextualized your past Marvel experiences? Have there been instances where you better understood what Marvel boss Kevin Feige was going through at the time or why he had to make a certain decision?

Yes, it’s mostly in the day-to-day thoughtfulness of Kevin Feige and talking to him and seeing him sitting there, thinking. I often see myself doing the same thing with directors or writers. So I understand Kevin more 1759031666, and I’ve learned a lot from him. I always liked Kevin. I never had problems with Kevin in terms of working with him. It was a really, really good partnership. The same with [Marvel Studios co-president] Lou [D’Esposito]. So it was a really good situation. 

I haven’t ever been like, “Oh, I complained about this thing about Kevin, and now I see where it is with me.” If there’s one thing that I sometimes would complain about, it was the looseness of things. It was where they were going or where they were heading and how they were connected, or what they were doing with my characters and this or that. So I probably have a little bit more compassion for him in that respect because things shift and change all the time. It’s hard.

Joel Kinnaman, John Cena, Margot Robbie, Peter Capaldi, Idris Elba in James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad.

Jessica Miglio/DC Comics/Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

The magic trick of Peacemaker season one is that you managed to redeem Chris (Cena) to the audience after he killed Rick Flag Jr. (Joel Kinnaman) in The Suicide Squad. But he’s not redeemed in the eyes of Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), Bloodsport (Idris Elba) and Ratcatcher 2 (Daniela Melchior). They may not even be aware that Chris survived the Corto Maltese mission. Do you hope to resume that conflict someday?

No.

I’m surprised to hear that. 

No, not really. I don’t [hope to resume that conflict]. People are always asking me about stuff from The Suicide Squad, and The Suicide Squad is a difficult thing because it is not DCU. But there aren’t too many things in it that aren’t [DCU]. Unlike Peacemaker season one — which is completely DCU, besides the ending and one or two mentions of different things — The Suicide Squad brings up more questions than answers. 

Now, I’m not saying that those characters won’t reappear. I’m just saying that I am [already] dealing with Peacemaker’s guilt over killing Rick Flag Jr. and his repercussions for that. And that story is being told through his relationship with Rick Flag Sr. To tell it through Bloodsport, who was friends with Rick Flag Jr., would be an emotionally diminished story compared to the one I’m telling now. So it doesn’t interest me at all. 

I heard you say on the official Peacemaker podcast that you’ve been watching a television program called 1923. 

That’s right.

Besides entertaining yourself, were you also doing some scouting for the Caped Crusader?

I’m definitely not doing scouting for the Caped Crusader. But I’m always scouting when I’m watching TV shows. I’m always watching characters. In fact, I really like the young woman in 1923. She is just so fantastic that I suggested her for something recently. 

Julia Schlaepfer?

Yeah, she’s so, so good. She’s Brandon’s [Sklenar] significant other in that series. But I’m watching it because I like Taylor Sheridan’s stuff, especially that one. That’s my favorite of all his shows. So I’m watching it mostly for fun, and I’m definitely not watching it because I need to find a Batman. (Laughs.) I know what your question is, but that’s not the reason I’m watching it.

Sorry, Brandon. I tried. 

By the way, I love him. I think he’s great. I really do. I honestly think he’s great. 

***
Peacemaker season two is currently airing Thursdays on HBO and HBO Max.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Strictly Come Dancing confirms format twist that'll 'change everything'
TV & Streaming

Strictly Come Dancing confirms format twist that’ll ‘change everything’

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Strictly Come Dancing has announced a major change to how the judges cast their votes, with the power being stripped ever so slightly from Head Judge Shirley Ballas.

For the last seven years, the ultimate deciding vote on which couple will stay in the competition has been down to Shirley but now things will change as the power is given to every single judge.

Each week the deciding judge will rotate, with the first casting vote to be announced at the end of next week’s Saturday night show.

The news was revealed at the very end of tonight’s Strictly Come Dancing episode, as Shirley Ballas said: “For seven years I’ve been responsible for one gruelling decision, which hasn’t always been easy. But that’s about to change. It’s time that power was shared by a different judge each week.”

As the celebrities reacted to news, Vicky Pattison noted: “This changes everything,” while Harry Aikines-Aryeetey added: “It’s fair to say I’m going to do everything I can do to not be in that dance off.”

Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Shirley Ballas & Anton Du Beke. BBC/Ray Burmiston

This isn’t the first change to voting on this year’s show either, with the BBC announcing it had scrapped premium-rate voting.

The BBC said that “this is now an outdated system and also expensive to run”, with the Eurovision Song Contest the last major BBC show to offer televoting.

From now one, the public will be able to cast their votes solely online, which you learn more about in this handy voting guide.

But those eager to vote will have to wait until next week, as no celebrity will be leaving the competition in the first week.

Strictly Come Dancing continues on BBC One and iPlayer.

Add Strictly Come Dancing 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 Entertainment 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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Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco attend the Second Annual Rare Impact Fund Benefit Supporting Youth Mental Health
TV & Streaming

Couple Says ‘I Do’ at Star-Studded Wedding

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco are married! The couple, who started dating during summer 2023, tied the knot on September 27 in a California wedding, surrounded by their family and loved ones.

The newlyweds made their wedding announcement on Instagram. They shared a series of romantic snapshots from their nuptials. The former Disney Channel star looked stunning in a classic wedding gown with a halter-style neckline.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Young Stars of 'Wayward' on Stepping Into Mae Martin's Teen Nightmare
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Young Stars of ‘Wayward’ on Stepping Into Mae Martin’s Teen Nightmare

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

When it comes to Toronto teens Abbie (Sydney Topliffe) and Leila (Alyvia Alyn Lind) in Netflix‘s new series “Wayward,” the word the actors behind the characters repeatedly use in conversation is “codependent.” Yes, the duo are best friends and chosen family — but they can’t survive without each other in a way that has already impacted their futures, especially at the disquieting Tall Pines Academy.

Abbie and Leila’s need for each other is established from the start of Mae Martin‘s Netflix thriller series, which sees the girls locked up and subjected to abusive behavioral therapy once they reach the Academy. Before that, Abbie is being ruthlessly scrutinized and controlled by her parents, while Leila’s mother has mostly checked out after her elder daughter’s sudden death.

Gavagai

“When you don’t have that love from from a family member, or from anybody that is blood-related in your life, then you kind of search for it anywhere else,” Lind told IndieWire in a joint interview with Topliffe. “I think she found Abbie at a very young age, and just was like, ‘You’re mine,’ and latched onto her.”

Chosen family is a major theme in the series, from Abbie and Leila to their peers at the Academy to Alex (Martin) and his experiences growing up queer in the Midwest and wife Laura (Sarah Gadon) remaining close to her own Academy cohort.

“You could have a family that’s your blood, but at the end of the day, it’s about the people that you choose to be in your life and people that you love in that way. Abbie is Leila’s chosen family,” Lind said.

The theme was naturally mirrored behind-the-scenes, where the young cast quickly bonded and turned their traumatic on-screen experiences into Canadian summer camp with the cameras off. As creepy as the Academy set was (“I love ghosts, it felt haunted,” Lind said), it helped actors tap into the right head space before clocking out to enjoy the field trip an hour outside of Toronto.

Two teens walking a bicycle down a graffitied alleyway; still of Sydney Topliffe and Alyvia Alyn Lind in 'Wayward'
Sydney Topliffe and Alyvia Alyn Lind in ‘Wayward‘Courtesy of Netflix/Netflix

“When you’re in a really serious position, especially with these two girls, they find the levity in it, even in a horrible situation,” Topliffe said. “There were a couple scenes that were really intense, like the Hot Seat scene days were hard, those were long days.”

Episode 6 traps the teens in the Academy for what amounts to a prison riot, with many of the students and staff played by actual stunt performers. Prior to that, Topliffe was among the actors who took an outdoor adventure when the Academy staff leaves them in the wilderness.

“That was a lot of fun. We would be climbing these hills like on our stomachs, and then we would just find empty beer bottles and break our — well, I probably shouldn’t say that for insurance,” Topliffe said. “But that was really fun. We all got a lot of mosquito bites, but it was great. I loved being dirty.”

After filming the pilot together — not to mention going through their final round of auditions, switching between Abbie and Leila and not realizing they had nabbed the roles — Lind and Topliffe’s on-set fate mirrored their characters’ as they had to work separately.

“In the story, we are each other’s security blankets, so it kind of feels weird when we’re not together. That came through in real life,” Lind said. “By the second episode, it was like, ‘Wait, where’s my friend? I don’t know how to do this without her!’ It was like starting a whole new show.”

WAYWARD. (L to R) Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey, Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila, and Sydney Topliffe as Abbie in episode 103 of Wayward. Cr. Michael Gibson/Netflix© 2024
Mae Martin, Alyvia Alyn Lind, and Sydney Topliffe in ‘Wayward’Michael Gibson/Netflix © 2024

“Wayward” hits a sweet spot for both actors; Topliffe plays a high school student in Aura Entertainment’s “Doin’ It,” now in theaters after its 2023 SXSW premiere, and 18-year-old Lind has somehow logged her third time playing a teen struggling with addiction.

“I don’t know why I keep getting typecast as this, but… I like being able to sink my teeth into it, so keep casting me as it,” she said. “I will try to deliver in the best way possible. It’s fine. Easy roles are boring, so it’s really fun.”

With “Wayward” out in the world (and some potential for a second season), the fun is exactly what both actors remember, and what they hope to find in future work.

“I’m sure the crew hated us because we were just so annoying,” Topliffe said. “We took the work seriously, but we also didn’t want to sit in that all day, so we would make stupid movies.”

“We would be sobbing and crying and upset in a scene and going through all these emotions — and then Sydney would be like, ‘Do you want to pretend to be Zac Efron on that hill over there and do ‘Bet on It’?” Lind recalled. “I’d be like, ‘Yes, I do! Bet on it, bet on it!‘ It was my favorite part of the whole experience. It was so much fun.”

“Wayward” is now streaming on Netflix.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Hostile Political Climate Threatening Cinema, Say Industry Reps
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Hostile Political Climate Threatening Cinema, Say Industry Reps

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Journalists and filmmakers and cinema itself are facing growing political threats and increasing difficulties, according to film industry reps at the Zurich Summit on Saturday.

Taking part in a discussion on the political turmoil engulfing the entertainment industry at the Zurich Film Festival industry event were Kathleen Fournier of Charlotte Street Films, producer of the Julian Assange doc “The Six Billion Dollar Man;” David Unger, CEO of Artist International Group; Nathanaël Karmitz, chairman of Paris-based MK2; and Stephen Follows, film data researcher and consultant for Guinness World Records.

Offering a stark example of the darkening climate for filmmakers was Fournier’s experience in producing Eugene Jarecki’s “The Six Billion Dollar Man,” which screens at the Zurich Film Festival.

“As a filmmaker, as a producer, there is substantial risk sometimes involved for me and my team personally,” Fournier said, explaining how she moved with her family to Berlin to work on the documentary, which tells “the definitive story of Wikileaks,” due to the potentially explosive footage they had obtained.

“We didn’t feel comfortable editing in the U.K. or in the U.S. because there are laws there and ways to seize footage, and journalists aren’t protected in the way they are in Germany. So we moved the entire production and editing team to Berlin, and that was really inspiring and very interesting … until Gaza happened and we started to see that even Germany, with all of its civic mindedness, is fallible to ideology and to erosion. So it was very interesting to see journalists challenged there in real time and to react to that.”

She added: “I think we really do need a mechanism in place to protect journalists. And that’s what our film is about.”

Fournier also noted how the changing political climate and growth of streaming platforms have impacted the prospects of certain types of documentaries.

“It used to be that if you won an Emmy, won the Sundance Grand Jury prize, won a Grierson Award, you would have no trouble getting your films made. And we won all of those with many of our films. I’m not complaining that doors have closed, but what I’m seeing is that as documentaries move to streaming platforms, many of the political and more nuanced and difficult or subjective documentaries did not make that leap.

“The sort of documentaries you now find on streaming platforms tend to be historical – there’s the past, so it flattens the stakes in a way because those people are gone, that time is finished – or it’s true crime or it’s often very sort of personal stories. So it is interesting trying to make a film at this particular juncture as the media landscape is changing fundamentally, dramatically.”

Yet life has always been difficult, Fournier added. “Every epoch has its challenges, and I think we as a generation, my generation, inherited a lot of the fruits of other people’s labor in the civil rights movement, in terms of civil liberties. Now it’s up to us to stand up for those and really investigate what it means as some of those rights and liberties get challenged or taken away.”

Despite winning this year’s Golden Eye Special Jury Prize at Cannes and a “phenomenal” screening in Zurich, “The Six Billion Dollar Man” has yet to land a U.S. distributor.

“We’ve been dancing with lots of partners and talking. People love the film, but it’s a difficult film. … It talks about Trump, it talks about the deep state. It uses all the facts that come from various court cases. It’s an incredibly, deeply researched film.”

Offering a sharp critique of the industry, Follows argued that the onus was on companies to exhibit greater courage, as was the case in the 1970s, which saw much braver, more diverse and interesting storytelling than what was produced in subsequent decades.

“The film industry is fundamentally, as a business and as an ecosystem, risk averse and scared and cowardly. … It’s absolutely cowardly that they’re not releasing these films. You think about how ‘Bowling for Columbine’ got media releases and things like that. So this needs agitators. If we leave it and don’t actively do things, the industry acts in horrible ways. The reason Me Too had to happen is because when left to our own devices as an industry, we didn’t police, we didn’t sort out.”

While stressing that politics and cinema have always been very linked, Karmitz said: “What is new is that we ask this question, and we ask this type of question because culture is under attack and cinema is under attack.”

Karmitz said that while the press was talking less and less about films, far-right accounts on the social media platform X were systematically attacking “everything about movies and French movies.”

The far-right has become the major voice discussing cinema on X, he added. “Is this a problem? Yes, it is, because the question is, how do we organize to fight back?”

Karmitz noted that many of MK2’s cinema events and discussions attract contentious reactions from far-right critics.

Looking at the broader situation in France, he also stressed the recent legal challenge faced by the CNC national film center in Parliament and the ongoing right-wing assault on national television.

Unger, for his part, expressed optimism that the climate would eventually improve. He recalled how earlier films by the likes of Charlie Chaplin and Stanley Kramer “were unbelievably controversial” in their day. Kramer’s 1967 classic “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” for example, no longer causes the great ruckus it once did.

He also underscored the importance of such a discussion at the Zurich Summit. “I see that this register’s here. And I think for us to have this dialogue here is important, because it’s forcing all of us in this room to kind of examine where the business is and how we can help shape it.”

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Tom Holland "Feeling Better" After 'Spider-Man' Set Injury
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Tom Holland “Feeling Better” After ‘Spider-Man’ Set Injury

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

While on pause from filming Spider-Man: Brand New Day after suffering a concussion on the Glasgow set, Tom Holland has shared an update with fans.

The actor noted he’s “feeling better and on the mend” amid the week-long suspension from filming as he shared video from a recent gala for his parents’ nonprofit The Brothers Trust, which he attended with fiancée and co-star Zendaya last weekend after sustaining the injury on Friday.

“What a night! Another huge success,” Holland captioned the Instagram post in part. “The Brothers Trust means more to me than I could possibly say and I have to say a huge thank you to my Mum and her wonderful friends for putting on another incredible night. Raising money for fantastic causes and having fun doing it! I’m sorry I had to leave early but I’m feeling better and on the mend. A huge thanks to my Dad for taking over after I left. The show got considerably funnier.”

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Tom Holland is seen on the set of 'Spider-Man: Brand New Day' on August 3, 2025 in Glasgow, Scotland.

On Sunday, Deadline reported that filming halted on Spider-Man: Brand New Day after Holland was treated for a mild concussion, reportedly during a stunt gone wrong, amid production on the Pinewood UK set of the Sony and Marvel Studios movie.

The actor was taken to the hospital and examined, but not admitted. No other cast or crew was affected during the incident.

Filming began in Scotland last month. In October, Sony added Spider-Man: Brand New Day to its summer 2026 schedule with a July 24 release date, later revealing the title in March at CinemaCon. Spider-Man: Brand New Day‘s release date was then shifted to July 31.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Haunted Hotel
TV & Streaming

‘Haunted Hotel’ Renewed for Season 2 at Netflix

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix is booking another stay at Haunted Hotel.

The streamer has ordered a second season of the animated series from Rick and Morty alum Matt Roller. The renewal was a quick one: Haunted Hotel premiered just one week ago. The 10-episode season made Netflix’s top 10 English-language series worldwide for its opening weekend, gathering 1.8 million views (7.5 million hours of viewing divided by a run time of 4 hours, 14 minutes) in its first three days.

The series has received mixed-to-positive reviews, with THR noting that “Despite a solid cast and some decent jokes, the series rarely rises above the level of pleasantly unobjectionable.”

Haunted Hotel centers on a single mother (voiced by Eliza Coupe) who runs a — wait for it — haunted hotel along with her estranged brother (Will Forte), who happens to be one of the ghosts who inhabit the property and really thinks the other spirits have some good ideas about the place. Skyler Gisondo, Natalie Palamides and Jimmi Simpson also star.

Titmouse (Big Mouth, Star Trek: Lower Decks) is the animation studio on Haunted Hotel. Roller created the series and executive produces with Chris McKenna, Dan Harmon, Steve Levy and Titmouse’s Chris Prynoski, Shannon Prynoski, Antonio Canobbio and Ben Kalina. Erica Hayes is supervising director.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Strictly Come Dancing leaderboard 2025: Full judges' scores LIVE
TV & Streaming

Strictly Come Dancing leaderboard 2025: Full judges’ scores LIVE

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The time has officially come for the first live show of Strictly Come Dancing 2025.

As ever, the dazzling group of 15 celebrities and their professional dance partners will take to the floor for their first routines of the series, and will await the all-important feedback from the judges.

As it is the first week, no pair will be sent packing and their scores will be carried over to next week, when the public vote opens for the very first time.

With a cheeky salsa for one pair and an intense paso doble for another, just what did they score? Read on for the Strictly Come Dancing 2025 leaderboard.

Strictly Come Dancing 2025 leaderboard – Week 1

The cast of Strictly Come Dancing 2025. BBC/Ray Burmiston

  1. Alex Kingston and Johannes Radebe – (4+6+5+6) = 21
  2. Harry Aikines-Aryeetey and Karen Hauer – (4+5+5+5) = 19
  3. Chris Robshaw and Nadiya Bychkova – (3+4+3+4) = 14
  4. Amber Davies and Nikita Kuzmin –
  5. Balvinder Sopal and Julian Caillon –
  6. Ellie Goldstein and Vito Coppola –
  7. George Clarke and Alexis Warr –
  8. Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and Lauren Oakley –
  9. Karen Carney and Carlos Gu –
  10. La Voix and Aljaž Škorjanec –
  11. Lewis Cope and Katya Jones –
  12. Ross King and Jowita Przystał –
  13. Stefan Dennis and Dianne Buswell –
  14. Thomas Skinner and Amy Dowden –
  15. Vicky Pattison and Kai Widdrington –

Strictly Come Dancing is available to watch on catch-up on BBC iPlayer.

Add Strictly Come Dancing 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 Entertainment 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 27, 2025 0 comments
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