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How to Watch 'One Battle After Another' in VistaVision
TV & Streaming

How to Watch ‘One Battle After Another’ in VistaVision

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

When the rise of television threatened movie attendance in the 1950s, Hollywood responded by introducing several new exhibition formats designed to bring people back to theaters with the promise of widescreen images and stereophonic sound. CinemaScope, Cinerama, and VistaVision were just a few of these processes, which dazzled audiences and yielded films like “The Robe,” “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” and “Around the World in 80 Days,” attracting customers in droves.

Now, as exhibitors struggle with the rise of streaming and declining theater attendance, one of America’s greatest living filmmakers has revived one of the greatest of all widescreen formats, giving today’s audiences the same reason to get off their couches that Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Curtiz, and other premier directors of their era gave in the 1950s. The glorious return of VistaVision began last year when Brady Corbet shot “The Brutalist” in the format and exhibited the film in several venues in 70mm, a gauge that approximates VistaVision’s high resolution — but that was only the beginning.

'Arco'

Now, director Paul Thomas Anderson has not only filmed but is releasing “One Battle After Another” in VistaVision, with a handful of venues projecting the movie in a format that hasn’t been seen by audiences of a new release film since Marlon Brando’s “One-Eyed Jacks” in 1961. (Lucky viewers at this year’s TCM Film Festival did get to see revivals of “We’re No Angels” and “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” in true VistaVision.)

Why is that important? And what does it mean for audiences, filmmakers, and projectionists? Let’s break it down.

What made VistaVision special compared to rival formats like CinemaScope was its larger negative — around twice the size of a typical 35mm film frame, as the film was run through the camera horizontally rather than vertically. As Margaret Bodde, who works with Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation, told IndieWire, “With CinemaScope, you have a four-perf negative. VistaVision is eight-perf, so you’re doubling the size of the image. It just has a superior image quality.”

In spite of that superior quality, VistaVision ultimately became more or less obsolete for feature film production, though it continued to be used extensively for special effects work on blockbusters like the original “Star Wars,” “Back to the Future,” and “Jurassic Park.” “One Battle After Another” was shot using a combination of VistaVision and Super 35, and will be released in no fewer than seven formats. This has led to intense excitement among cinephiles — and no small amount of misinformation.

In one example, a fan-created graphic recently took off on social media and led to widespread confusion over aspect ratios of the various exhibition formats. (Among other things, it incorrectly stated that the movie would be released in a 2.20:1 aspect ratio in 70mm.) To clarify what formats “One Battle After Another” will be presented in, their technical specs, and where to see them, IndieWire reached out to the source: Paul Thomas Anderson.

Anderson referred us to three members of his post-production team: editor Andy Jurgensen, post-production supervisor Erica Frauman, and associate editor Jay Trautman, all of whom dealt with the complexities of VistaVision and the movie’s varied release prints throughout the post-production process. Together, they addressed several important questions related to the different ways you can watch “One Battle After Another” when it opens in theaters on September 26.

The below interview condenses and combines responses from Jurgensen, Frauman, and Trautman on the specifics of formats for seeing “One Battle After Another.”

What Are the Release Formats for “One Battle After Another,” Their Aspect Ratios, and Sound Specs?

Screenshot

What Aspect Ratio Was the Movie Originally Shot in?

The film was shot using a combination of VistaVision (8-perf) and Super 35 (4-perf) formats. (“Perf” referring to the perforations that run alongside or — depending on the format — above and below the image so that the celluloid can be pulled through the projector.) Both offer a tall enough negative to accommodate the full IMAX 1.43:1 aspect ratio, though the image can be cropped top and bottom to fit the 1.90:1 IMAX or standard 1.85:1 aspect ratios. Camera operator Colin Anderson used ground glass marked with framelines for both 1.85:1 and 1.43:1 compositions to ensure flexibility in framing.

When the opportunity for special VistaVision screenings arose, Paul Thomas Anderson chose to present the film in the full 1.50:1 VistaVision frame, an aspect ratio very close to IMAX’s 1.43:1. The 5-perf 70mm version is presented in 1.85:1, pillarboxed within a 2.20:1 frame, while standard DCPs are also formatted in 1.85:1.

How Do the Different Release Formats Complicate the Post Process?

We often say that each release format offers its own unique experience of the film. In the photochemical world, it’s impossible to make all formats look exactly the same!

Because the film was shot with both VistaVision and Super 35mm cameras, we had to navigate not only multiple release formats but also multiple capture formats. If we were using the digital intermediate process that nearly every modern film uses, we would just scan all of the negative and resize it in a computer. However, we cut and splice the camera negative and print photochemically. This means that we had to figure out how to create the VistaVision negative from our Super 35mm shots and our digital visual effects. We started testing these processes over two years ago. In the end, FotoKem configured both an optical printer and a digital film recorder specifically for VistaVision, allowing us to create all the necessary elements to assemble a complete VistaVision negative and produce a VistaVision release print.

Does Paul Thomas Anderson Have a Preferred Format?

Paul has noted that the VistaVision presentation is the closest to the film’s intended look, as it’s struck directly from the VistaVision cut negative. There are only four of these special screening venues currently scheduled — in Los Angeles, New York, Boston, and London.

That said, we always knew there would be an IMAX release, so from the beginning, the 1.43:1 and 1.90:1 IMAX presentations (both film and digital) were intended to be the most immersive. This is the first narrative feature film to be presented entirely in IMAX’s 1.43:1 aspect ratio (with no jumping between aspect ratios). The 70mm (5-perf) version is an optical blow-up from the VistaVision-cut negative. It has slightly more grain and contrast, and its 1.85:1 aspect ratio matches the non-IMAX DCP presentations.

What Does It Really Mean to Capture and Project in True VistaVision?

Unlike traditional 35mm film, which runs vertically through the camera gate, VistaVision uses a horizontal feed. This allows the image to be recorded on a frame that is twice the size of a standard 4-perf 35mm frame, resulting in a finer-grained negative with improved image quality.

Just like the cameras, VistaVision projectors must also run the film horizontally. Very few of these projectors still exist today. According to VistaVision expert Charlotte Barker, “It’s been exactly 70 years since VistaVision projectors were first installed for commercial use, debuting with Paramount’s ‘Strategic Air Command’ in 1955. Back then, seven U.S. theaters were outfitted with VistaVision projectors, custom 2-foot-deep curvilinear screens, and special aperture plates. ‘One Battle After Another’ will echo this historic rollout next week at The Vista in Los Angeles, Regal Union Square 17 in New York, Coolidge Corner Theater in Boston, and Odeon Leicester Square in London.”

Warner Bros. refurbished two Ballantyne VistaVision projectors for use in Los Angeles and New York; Barry Wright (Bell Theatre Services) refreshed their VistaVision projector in London. Boston Light & Sound had previously refurbished two projectors supplied by the George Eastman Museum for the TCM Festival in April of 2025; these will be used in Boston. Each Ballantyne projector is equipped with DTS readers to synchronize audio and fitted with custom-built platters capable of running the entire two-hour, 40-minute film on a single reel. The Boston location will utilize two projectors and play reel-to-reel. Projectionists at each location are receiving specialized training to operate the equipment.

Projecting in VistaVision allows prints made directly from the original cut negative to be shown to an audience. This hasn’t been possible for over 60 years. Historically, footage shot on VistaVision had to be converted to another format for exhibition. As far as we know, this is the first new release feature film to be projected from true VistaVision prints since “One-Eyed Jacks” in 1961.

Where Can We See the Movie Projected on Film?

See the below listings across select cities when “One Battle After Another” opens starting September 26.

VISTAVISION ENGAGEMENTS

Los Angeles, CA, USA — Vista Theater
New York, NY, USA — Regal Union Square 17
Boston, MA, USA — Coolidge Corner Theater
London, England, UK — Odeon Leicester Square

IMAX 70MM (15-PERF) ENGAGEMENTS

Dallas, TX, USA — Webb Chapel IMAX
Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA — AutoNation IMAX
Indianapolis, IN, USA — Indiana State Museum
Irvine, CA, USA — Regal Edwards Irvine Spectrum 21
London, England, UK — BFI IMAX
New York, NY, USA — AMC Lincoln Square 13
San Francisco, CA, USA — AMC Metreon 16
Tempe, AZ, USA — Harkins Arizona Mills 18
Universal City, CA, USA — AMC Universal Citywalk 19
Woodbridge, Ontario, Canada — Cineplex Vaughan IMAX

70MM (5-PERF) ENGAGEMENTS

Atlanta, GA, USA — Plaza
Austin, TX, USA — Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar
Berlin, Germany — Delphi
Berlin, Germany — Zoo
Chicago, IL, USA — Music Box
Copenhagen, Denmark — Denmark Imperial
Dublin, Ireland — Irish Film Institute
Melbourne, Australia — Palace
Milwaukee, WI, USA — Oriental
New Orleans, LA, USA — Prytania
New York, NY, USA — Alamo Drafthouse Downtown Brooklyn
New York, NY, USA — Angelika Cinema 1, 2, 3
New York, NY, USA — Angelika Village East 7
Oakland, CA, USA — Grand Lake
Portland, OR, USA — Hollywood
San Francisco, CA, USA — Alamo Drafthouse New Mission
Silver Spring, MD, USA — AFI Silver
Somerville, MA, USA — Somerville
Sydney, Australia — Ritz
Vancouver, BC, Canada — Park

Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” opens in theaters on September 26. Special thanks to Benjamin Tucker for his assistance with this article.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Hannah Beachler to Receive Variety's Creative Impact Award at SCAD
TV & Streaming

Hannah Beachler to Receive Variety’s Creative Impact Award at SCAD

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Oscar-winning production designer Hannah Beachler will be honored with Variety’s Creative Impact in Production Design Award at the SCAD Savannah Film Festival.

Beachler made history when she became the first African American to take home a trophy in the production design category for her work on “Black Panther.” She has been Ryan Coogler’s go-to, with the two working on “Fruitvale Station,” “Creed” and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” together.

“SCAD is delighted to partner again with Variety to present the Creative Impact Award to the extraordinary production designer, Hannah Beachler,” said Christina Routhier, senior executive director of the SCAD Savannah Film Festival. “Her work on ‘Sinners’—from the haunting juke joint to the textures of the Mississippi Delta—roots the film in authenticity while elevating the story into something otherworldly. The choices she made demonstrate the power of production design to shape narrative and deepen the cinematic experience. For our SCAD students in production design, film, and television, her artistry is an inspiring example of bold, innovative world-building, and we are thrilled to celebrate her contributions to moviemaking.”

“Hannah’s work is extraordinary. On behalf of Variety, I am thrilled to partner with the team at SCAD Savannah Film Festival and to recognize her work,” said Variety’s senior artisans editor Jazz Tangcay. ”The Creative Impact Award celebrates someone who has made an impact in their field, and Hannah’s work has done just that. From building Wakanda to the Mississippi Delta in ‘Sinners,’ hearing her talk about her process and research is going to be such a gift for the students at SCAD. Hannah’s insight into her process will be a masterclass, and will be an exciting morning.” Tangcay continued, “This is the first time we have awarded the Creative Impact in Production Design, and what better place to do it than in Savannah, and to present it to Hannah and celebrate her incredible career.”

Beachler will receive this award during the SCAD Savannah Film Festival which will run from Oct. 25 through Nov. 1.

Presented by the Savannah College of Art and Design, the SCAD Savannah Film Festival is filled with cinematic creativity from award-winning professionals and emerging student filmmakers. Each year, more than 63,000 people attend the eight-day festival. A distinguished stop on the road to the Academy Awards, the annual festival kicks off with a gala opening night screening, while the rest of the week features scheduled competition films, premiere screenings, workshops, lectures and panels. These events take place at SCAD’s historic theaters and industry-leading studio spaces throughout the historic city of Savannah, Ga.

As previously announced, Jon M. Chu will receive the Vanguard Director Award and Jennifer Lopez will receive the Virtuoso Award.

Variety’s chief awards editor Clayton Davis will also be returning to host the “Pixels and Pencils” panel.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Ego Nwodim Says 'SNL' Was "Always Meant To Be A Stepping Stone"
TV & Streaming

Ego Nwodim Says ‘SNL’ Was “Always Meant To Be A Stepping Stone”

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Former Saturday Night Live cast member Ego Nwodim says she’s excited about moving on to new challenges, and that the NBC comedy show is a “stepping stone.”

Speaking on a panel titled “Cultural Impact: How Story, Style, and Strategy Shape What’s Next” at the Fast Company Innovation Festival in New York City Wednesday, Nwodim addressed her recent SNL departure after seven seasons.

“There’s so much I want to do and SNL is always meant to be a stepping stone,” she said. “There’s so many ideas that I need to have time to create. I’m looking forward to doing that. So directing, more writing in a different capacity. Very excited. It’s an exciting thing.”

Nwodim’s decision not to return for the show’s 51st season, launching October 4, was one of the more surprising recent exits – her announcement came after the show’s cast line-up was thought to be settled. The turnover for the upcoming season was extensive: Before Nwodim’s announcement, the exits had already included Heidi Gardner (after eight seasons), Michal Longfellow (after three seasons), Devon Walker (after three seasons), Emil Wakim (after one season), and John Higgins, who was part of the Please Don’t Destroy troupe that joined the late-night show in 2021.

Nwodim announced on Instagram last week that she would not be back for another SNL season. “The hardest part of a great party is knowing when to say goodnight,” she wrote. “But after seven unforgettable seasons, I have decided to leave SNL. I am immensely grateful to Lorne [Michaels] for the opportunity, to my castmates, the writers, and the crew for their brilliance, support, and friendship. Week after week on that stage taught me more than I could have ever imagined, and I will carry those memories, and that laughter, with me always.”

Watch the panel discussion below. Nwodim’s “stepping stone” comments come at the 1:25 mark.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel
TV & Streaming

Hollywood Notables, Politicians React to ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ Suspension

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

While President Donald Trump is celebrating Jimmy Kimmel Live! getting suspended by ABC over host Jimmy Kimmel’s viral Charlie Kirk remarks, other Hollywood notables and political figures are slamming the network’s decision.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom is among those calling ABC’s move an attack on free speech, writing on X, “Buying and controlling media platforms. Firing commentators. Canceling shows. These aren’t coincidences. It’s coordinated. And it’s dangerous. The @GOP does not believe in free speech. They are censoring you in real time.”

On Wednesday, ABC announced Jimmy Kimmel Live! would be “pre-empted indefinitely” after Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr condemned Kimmel for saying during his Monday night show that he suspected Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson was a MAGA Republican.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said during his opening monologue. After, Carr also threatened to take action against ABC affiliates over Kimmel’s remarks.

In response to ABC’s decision, Michael Kosta, a comedian and one of The Daily Show‘s rotating hosts, highlighted the First Amendment on his Instagram Story, adding, “This is a serious moment in American history. TV networks MUST push back. This is complete BS.”

Hacks star Jean Smart shared on Instagram, “I am horrified at the cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel Live. What Jimmy said was FREE speech, not hate speech. People seem to only want to protect free speech when it suits THEIR agenda. Though I didn’t agree at ALL with Charlie Kirk; his shooting death sickened me; and should have sickened any decent human being. What is happening to our country?”

In an Instagram video, comedian and actress Wandy Sykes blamed the suspension on “complaints by the Trump administration.” She added, “Let’s see, he didn’t end the Ukraine War or solve Gaza within his first week. But he did end freedom of speech within his first year. Hey, for those of you who pray, now’s the time to do it. Love you, Jimmy.”

Alex Edelman, writer, comedian and star on The Paper, also wrote on X, “This is the actual cancel culture everyone claims to hate so much.”

Actor and comedian Paul Scheer wrote on Threads, responding to a video of Fox commentator Brian Kilmeade calling for mentally ill homeless people to be killed, “So let me get this straight. Kimmel is off the air for his comments about the politicization of an assassination but this is totally fine.”

As the premiere of his new movie Him took place right across the street from Kimmel’s theater Wednesday night, comedian Tim Heidecker told THR, “It’s a dark, dark time. I think it’s very scary; it’s happening very quickly and we are seeing the results of electing a fascist and what it feels like to be living under a fascist regime. I am sure Jimmy will be OK but it’s very scary and is absolutely state-sponsored censorship. I mean the guy from the FCC said, ‘We can do this the easy way or the hard way’ — that’s like mob stuff. I’m very upset by it. Late night TV is not my thing but that’s OK, I think he should be able to say what he wants, within reason. What he said didn’t seem that crazy. ”

More reactions to the news about the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! follow.

Buying and controlling media platforms.

Firing commentators.

Canceling shows.

These aren’t coincidences.

It’s coordinated. And it’s dangerous.

The @GOP does not believe in free speech.

They are censoring you in real time.

— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) September 17, 2025

America is meant to be a bastion of free speech.

Everybody across the political spectrum should be speaking out to stop what’s happening to Jimmy Kimmel.

This is about protecting democracy.

This must go to court.

— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) September 18, 2025

EVERY CORPORATION IS INSTANTLY FOLDING TO THE ADMIN EVEN WHEN ITS OVER AN UTTERLY INNOFFENSIVE JOKE THE ADMIN DOESNT LIKE! LIBERALS NEED TO WAKE UP!!!! WE ALL HAVE TO FIGHT BACK, THESE WEALTHY ASSHOLES ARENT GOING TO STAND UP FOR ANYTHING BEYOND THEIR BOTTOM LINE! https://t.co/o8tC4DSgSM

— hasanabi (@hasanthehun) September 17, 2025

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Man Utd v SK Brann Women's Champions League qualifier TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Man Utd v SK Brann Women’s Champions League qualifier TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

The task is clear for Manchester United on Thursday evening – overturn a one-goal deficit in the second leg of their qualifier against SK Brann and reach the Women’s Champions League for the first time in their history.

Marc Skinner’s side are back at Leigh Sports Village after falling to a 1-0 defeat away at the Norwegian champions last week. The Red Devils were made to pay for not converting any of their plentiful chances when Ingrid Østervold Stenevik headed in the winner midway through the second half.

Sunday’s 5-1 thrashing of the London City Lionesses, which leaves Man Utd top of the Women’s Super League, will provide a timely confidence boost for the hosts ahead of Thursday’s decider.

The Red Devils finished third in the WSL last term and have already beaten both PSV Eindhoven and Hammarby IF in qualifying but are now at risk of falling at the final hurdle, which would at least mean a place in the inaugural season of the Women’s Europa League.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Man Utd v SK Brann 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 Man Utd v SK Brann?

Man Utd v SK Brann will take place on Thursday 18th September 2025.

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

Man Utd v SK Brann kick-off time

Man Utd v SK Brann will kick off at 8pm.

What TV channel is Man Utd v SK Brann on?

You can watch the game live on MUTV, which can be found on Sky channel 418 and Virgin Media channel 526.

A year-long MUTV subscription costs £29.99. Existing Sky Sports customers can add MUTV for an additional £7 per month.

How to live stream Man Utd v SK Brann online

MUTV subscribers can live stream the game on the Man Utd website and through the United App.

The app and website can be accessed on most smart TVs, phones and consoles.

Listen to Man Utd v SK Brann on radio

Unfortunately, there will be no national radio coverage of the game. Please check your local radio network for coverage details.

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Man Utd v SK Brann odds

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

bet365 odds: Man Utd (2/7) Draw (17/4) SK Brann (13/2)*

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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 .

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel
TV & Streaming

Kimmel Replaced by ‘Celebrity Family Feud’ Over Charlie Kirk Comments: Will Show Be Back?

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Jimmy Kimmel Live! was replaced by a repeat of Celebrity Family Feud on Wednesday night (September 17) after ABC pulled the late-night show over comments Jimmy Kimmel made about the Charlie Kirk shooting.

Earlier on Wednesday, a spokesperson for Disney’s ABC announced that the late-night talk show would be on indefinite hiatus following comments Kimmel made about Kirk, the conservative activist who was fatally shot while speaking at Utah Valley University on September 10.

The comments people appeared to take offense to were made on Monday’s (September 15) show, when Kimmel said of the alleged shooter, “The MAGA Gang (is) desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.”

ABC made the decision to suspend Jimmy Kimmel Live! after powerful station group Nexstar announced it would preempt the show on its 32 ABC affiliate stations. Sinclair Broadcast Group later announced it would be doing the same on its own affiliate stations.

Late Wednesday, a memo was sent to the owners of ABC’s more than 150 affiliate station partners, according to Variety. The memo stated that the network would be airing reruns of Celebrity Family Feud in the 11:35 pm slot on Wednesday and Thursday (September 18) in place of Kimmel’s show. “Formal guidance from Disney/ABC is forthcoming,” the memo also noted.

Per Variety, a source close to the situation claims that the network has not yet made a formal decision about the future of the long-running late-night program. Conversations between executives and Kimmel and his representatives were said to be ongoing throughout Wednesday.

It’s unclear whether Kimmel’s show will return on Friday (September 19) or if ABC will air other programming in its place. Sinclair announced it will be airing a special Kirk tribute show on its ABC affiliate stations on Friday and has also encouraged Kimmel to make a “direct apology” and “meaningful personal donation” to the Kirk family.

“Sinclair will not lift the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! on our stations until formal discussions are held with ABC regarding the network’s commitment to professionalism and accountability,” the company said in a press release. “Sinclair also calls upon Mr. Kimmel to issue a direct apology to the Kirk family. Furthermore, we ask Mr. Kimmel to make a meaningful personal donation to the Kirk Family and Turning Point USA.”

The company is also offering its Kirk tribute special to all other ABC stations across the country.

After the news broke on Wednesday, many viewers and fellow celebrities spoke out against ABC’s move, with some saying it went against free speech and others leveling accusations of “corruption.”

The move comes as Nexstar is pushing for the FCC to change its limits on TV station ownership, which would allow it to acquire rival station group, Tegna. The FCC is currently led by veteran Republican member Brendan Carr, who was hand-picked by President Donald Trump last year.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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'The Long Walk' Ending and More Explained: JT Mollner Unpacks Movie
TV & Streaming

‘The Long Walk’ Ending and More Explained: JT Mollner Unpacks Movie

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

I’ve been pursuing an interview with JT Mollner ever since “Strange Darling” became one of my favorite movies last year — but it took the divisive screenwriter’s history-making adaptation of “The Long Walk” for Lionsgate to finally get him on Zoom. 

“You requested a ‘Strange Darling‘ conversation, and I didn’t do it. I’ve always felt bad for not doing it. But it was because at the time, there were so many things I didn’t want to explain to people, and you were going to ask me about exactly those things,” Mollner said.

Also known for 2016’s “Angels and Outlaws,” Mollner became a major name in suspense thanks to Magenta Light Studio’s demonic date night starring Willa Fitzgerald and Kyle Gallner. With Giovanni Ribisi as his cinematographer, Mollner’s jaw-dropping psychological horror movie was buzzy out of its 2023 premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas — but it hit controversy going wide the next year. (Spoiler alert for that movie, too: “Strange Darling” got a bad reputation among some female genre fans thanks to its venomous antagonist, an emotionally war-torn woman drunk on her own trauma, who most controversially implies a false rape allegation to get away with murder.)

LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 20: Mike Figgis attends the premiere of his new film 'Megadoc,' the fly-on-the-wall documentary about the making of Francis Ford Coppola's Megalopolis, at Regent Street Cinema on March 20, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images for TANK Magazine)

“I was exhausted at the time with people misinterpreting what I was doing, and I didn’t want to get caught up in the minutiae of being defensive or over-explaining it,” said Mollner. “I made a decision to just step away.” He went on to describe a Q&A in 2018 for an unnamed film that disillusioned him with the idea of directors dissecting their own work. As a filmmaker himself, but not steering the ship here, Mollner made a special effort to support the vision of “The Long Walk” director Francis Lawrence.

“I had to get really zen about this,” Mollner said. “I knew that I was a piece of this puzzle, and I knew I was just a part of the tapestry, and that I was going to be able to contribute the source material for him to go but then watch him do his thing.” 

Now in theaters, the critically acclaimed film has been widely praised for its script, which sees Mollner adapt the supposedly “unadaptable” early novel written by Stephen King when he was just 19. The story — about a government-facilitated endurance test that sends innocent boys marching to their deaths —was published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman in 1979, more than a decade after King conceived it. As an adaptation, “The Long Walk” has only been toyed with until now.

“When I found out that George Romero and Frank Darabont had both attempted to make this movie, two of my very favorite directors, and I don’t think anybody’s ever been as good as Frank Darabont at adapting Stephen King, I was like, if neither one of these heroes of mine were able to get this done, what makes me think we can?” said Mollner. 

A mass casualty event set in a dystopian America seems like it should be more controversial than a cat-and-mouse game starring one of the most complex sadomasochists ever written, which is “Strange Darling.” But when Mollner and I finally spoke, the “Strange Darling” director brought up the earlier backlash he faced before I did. I’ve never had a problem with the gender politics of “Strange Darling”, and I didn’t waste anyone’s time asking about that nightmare here. Still, my overdue chat with Mollner explains why some writers — and King fans — understand each other better than others. 

The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Tut Nyuot as Baker, Ben Wang as Olson, Jordan Gonzalez as Harkness, Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Joshua Odjick as Parker, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close
‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

IndieWire: Let’s start with your history with Stephen King and the Richard Bachman novels. What’s your experience with him as an author? 

JT Mollner: The first novel I ever read was a Stephen King book. It’s hard to believe, but I was 7 years old and it was “Carrie.” I was aware of Stephen King, even as a little kid, because I remember at five or six seeing a copy of “Cujo” on my mom’s dresser, and asking her about it. The cover was very striking to me, and I was always fascinated by scary things. I did not read “Cujo.” I was too young. I couldn’t really read at that point, but I was fascinated by it, and I’ll never forget seeing it.

Then, when I went on a trip to L.A. when I was a kid — we’d been living in Vegas — and we went to this bookstore called Bart’s Books in Ojai, and I saw a copy of “Carrie.” I was in second grade, and I was with my aunt. We bought it for a buck, and I took it to school, and I started reading through. I didn’t understand a lot of it. “Carrie” has a lot of very, very adult themes, but I eventually made it through the book.

I’ll never forget, I got sent to the principal’s office because I had this obscenity on my desk, this Stephen King novel, which was for adults. My mom had to come to school, and I remember her telling the principal, “I don’t let my kid watch rated-R movies or anything like that, but I’m never going to tell him not to read.” 

From that point on, I just remember being a constant Stephen King reader. I am to this day. He is so prolific every year in September, usually, because his birthday is September 21. But I share a birthday with him … I don’t know if that has something to do with why I was so drawn to him — or shared some of that artistic DNA? Almost every year, for the last 20 years or so, every September, I usually have a pre-order of one of his books, and it’s a yearly tradition.

Cooper Hoffman as Garraty and David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close
‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

He’s informed so much of my writing, my writing style, my desire to be a writer. I’m really big on original stories, and I have too many original ideas to ever make them. I’m not really obsessed with finding IP to adapt. It’s not like something I need to do. But I always knew that I wanted to adapt Stephen King. So, when [producer] Roy Lee called me and asked me if I wanted to adapt “The Long Walk” for Francis Lawrence, I was all about it, and I fought really hard to get the job.

Were you already familiar with “The Long Walk” and Richard Bachman? People have talked about this being unadaptable. You had a hell of a challenge. 

I’d read the book as a teenager. I read “Carrie,” and then after that I read “The Shining,” and I read “The Stand,” “The Dark Tower” series. Then, I was probably 16, so the age of the walkers in the book when I read “The Long Walk,” and it always stuck with me. 

Over the years, I wasn’t keeping up with the trades or anything, back when a lot of these other directors were trying to make the movie. So I wasn’t aware then. That was all very daunting at first, and it is challenging material to adapt. But I think Romero or Darabont could have probably done it. 

There was another script that was supposed to get made by somebody else shortly before I did, and I think there was a timing thing going on with that as well. It was a challenge to make “The Long Walk,” but also all the elements have to come together for a movie to come together, and the studio has to be ready to green-light it. With our situation, it was just very, very fast. The only thing that slowed us down was the writers’ strike, but once the writers’ strike was over, it never stopped. We were just right into production.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 08: (L-R) Roy Lee and J.T. Mollner attend “The Long Walk” Special Screening at American Cinematheque's Beyond Fest at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on September 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for Lionsgate)
Roy Lee and JT Mollner attend ‘The Long Walk’ special screening in Los AngelesGetty Images for Lionsgate

People will make the thematic connection and say Francis is a perfect fit because of “The Hunger Games,” but you make it a digestible, directable challenge for him. How did you approach simplifying the story as a filmmaker yourself?

I am a director, and directors are control freaks. Not all directors maybe, but the type of director I am — I’m a control freak. I love to collaborate with department heads and actors, but I also have a very, very strong point of view as a director. When I was writing this, I started envisioning things a certain way, and then I had to get really zen about it. 

Because I thought, “Francis Lawrence is such an accomplished director. He’s made so many great movies. He’s a very different director than I am, so this isn’t going to be my movie. It’s going to be his movie.” I knew he was going to make a good movie, but I wasn’t sure if it would be my kind of movie.

Director Francis Lawrence, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, and David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Director Francis Lawrence and stars Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson on set for ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

I had ideas as I was writing the script, and I was fully expecting Francis to shoot things down or be like, “This is how I want this. This is how I want that.” But the beautiful thing about working with Francis was that he was very open-minded and he had no problem telling me if there was something I wanted to do that he didn’t like. That happened a couple times, and I was fine with it because once again, it’s a Francis Lawrence movie. But there were other times when I would come up with some crazy new idea, and I was like, “I wonder what Francis is going to think.” And he really got on board. 

Talk to me about some of the changes you made to adapt the book.

It was daunting because there were a hundred walkers, and there are so many things going on in the book that are so interesting for a 400-plus page novel. A lot of people mistakenly say this is a novella, or they remember it as a short story, but it’s a full-on novel. In the book, I think that Garraty [Cooper Hoffman] and McVries [David Jonsson] become the focus, but it spends a lot of time on all the characters. To make this palatable, digestible, and also cinematic in a way that would work in the under two-hour format, we had to figure out something else because I couldn’t include everything.

We reduced the character count to 50. Stephen King and Francis were really cool with that. Then, I just thought, “I want to really get into all these characters, but we’re going to have to eliminate some, and we’re going to have to amalgamate some.” Most stories are interesting to me, and I’ve never really written anything for the screen that hasn’t been a love story. So I thought, “What’s the love story here?” I decided to really focus on the relationship [between] McVries and Garraty. So it turns out to be their love story. These two guys who really are drawn to each other, who really inspire each other, and who bring out the best in each other.

With the change to the ending, that’s consistent with the DNA of King’s story. I hate the word “message,” but it’s true to his observations about the world. It was also the best way for me to articulate this love between these two characters, and thank God that Francis and Stephen King both were up for that.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 08: (L-R) Chris Lemaire, J.T. Mollner, Roy Lee, Charlie Plummer, Garrett Wareing, Ben Wang, Judy Greer, David Jonsson, Cooper Hoffman, and Mark Hamill speak onstage during “The Long Walk” Special Screening at American Cinematheque's Beyond Fest at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on September 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for Lionsgate)
The premiere of ‘The Long Walk’ for LionsgateGetty Images for Lionsgate

You have an incredible partnership with Francis, but you also collaborated with Stephen King as a writer, on a project where you’re suggesting massive alterations to Stephen King’s work — to him. How did you meet him, and how did you not crack under the pressure?

You meet so many people when you start working in this business. With some people, you get starstruck and weird — and I respect a lot of people, but I’m not impressed or intimidated by a lot of people. He’s one of the people I’m impressed and intimidated by. [Laughs] So I’ve been terrified to meet him. Stephen King is one of those living iconic legends, so I was very nervous about what he would think. I really wanted to honor Stephen King, and I wanted to make sure that he was OK with everything. 

I had not directly interacted with him until about a month ago. During the entire writing process, even though he was a big part of the collaboration, there was never direct contact. It’s not that he doesn’t allow it or something. It just wasn’t that way. I have this feeling that he wants approval over everything because he really cares, but once he approves certain people, he also knows what it’s like to direct a movie. He directed “Maximum Overdrive.” He knows what it’s like to work on a movie. He’s acted in movies. He seems very respectful of [directors going] through an artistic process — the writer’s process. He could be totally precious and totally micromanaging, but he chooses not to be. 

Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Garrett Wareing as Stebbins, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries, Tut Nyuot as Baker, and Joshua Odjick as Parker in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
A scene from ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

We wanted to make sure he approved of big things, like that major, narrative, tectonic change in the ending. But we did not ask him to approve other, more peripheral things, like us eliminating a character or amalgamating a character into another. We didn’t ask about that. I would just write it. Then, we’d send him a draft and he’d either give a thumbs up or a thumbs down.

I thought we were going to wait a long time for him to read it, but I remember sending in the draft to the studio and them saying they wanted to do it, and then on Friday they sent it to Stephen King, and then they heard back on Sunday that he liked it — which is really weird and unheard of. But I think he read it over the course of a day and a half and said he liked it.

Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Garrett Wareing as Stebbins, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries, Ben Wang as Olson, Tut Nyuot as Baker, and Joshua Odjick as Parker in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
A scene from ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

In changing “The Long Walk,” people are going to come to it with their own interpretation as to why you made the choice you did. Do you pitch an explanation to Stephen King? Do you care about what that explanation is?

I wonder if I’ll be able to stick to this throughout my career, but especially as a director, I mean as a writer, I don’t feel like I have the right to explain during a Q&A or anything what it’s supposed to mean. That’s up to Francis.

I won’t say who the filmmaker was, but I remember one of my favorite movies of 2018 — a very controversial movie, one of my favorite directors — was open to so much interpretation. There was so much metaphor in the movie. It was so crazy, and it was a wild film, and all these people were interpreting it differently. I remember going to a screening, and the director was doing a Q&A, and I was so excited. He proceeded to spend 40 minutes explaining to the audience exactly what each thing meant and what each metaphor was, and it just ruined the movie for me, even though I had guessed most of his intentions.

STRANGE DARLING, Willa Fitzgerald, 2023. ph: Allyson Riggs / © Magenta Light Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection
Willa Fitzgerald as The Lady in ‘Strange Darling’ (2024)Courtesy Everett Collection

I remember someone saying to David Lynch once, something like, “What’s it mean? What’s the ending mean? I don’t understand.” And he was like, “The movie’s not meant to be understood. It’s meant to be felt.” I love it that people get different things from that. Everybody interprets things differently, and I think that’s what art is. Experiencing a movie or a painting or a book or poetry … should come down to, “What do they see in it?” But there are always intentions.

Here, I see [“The Long Walk”] as a tragedy because I believe a lot of the things that Pete’s saying during his monologues as he’s walking. I don’t think that violence is ever the answer. Violence begets more violence, and it’s a real tragedy if people succumb to their base instincts. The initial idea in this, all the sequence of events that happen in the last five minutes of the movie, was to have this mixture around that relationship, that central love story.

You get to see what people are willing to do for each other. We get to articulate loyalty and sacrifice and love. Then you see how sometimes love can drive you to the darkest places, even though the intention is good. It is really tragic to go to those dark places sometimes, and there’s a lot of that. It’s what I’m interested in exploring, and I explored it in “Strange Darling,” and I explored it in “Outlaws and Angels,” my first film. I don’t like this idea of vengeance being romanticized. There’s a real darkness surrounding that and a real tragedy surrounding that.

I would say there’s a clear message about authoritarianism in this book — and these ideologies have many, many faces and the people who are representing them. It doesn’t kill the ideology to go after those people. 

There’s something much bigger at play here, especially with The Major character [played by Mark Hamill]. We wanted him to represent something. He’s more of a construct, even though Mark Hamill does a great job fleshing him out, and there’s even dark comedic moments with him. He’s the least nuanced character in the movie and the book because he represents something. But we really wanted to know that group of walkers. We didn’t want there to be white hats and black hats, and good guys and bad guys, even though it seems like there are in the beginning. We wanted everybody to realize at some point that the enemy is on the outside.

Mark Hamil as The Major in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Mark Hamill as The Major in ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

King has described this as his bleakest novel, and he’s often talked about Bachman being this much angrier younger version of himself. I talked to Judy Greer about this, but there is a real hopeful core to the change that you’ve made to the ending. This ending is, in many ways, more true to the Stephen King we know now.

With this movie, I’ve read a few of the reviews. I used to tell myself I wouldn’t do that, but people have sent me some. There’s a few that are like, “This is so bleak and horrific,” and I just feel like everything’s relative. I feel like the movie’s very sentimental, and more so than I’m usually comfortable with. It’s weird. I really felt like I was drawn to this, even though there’s people getting killed all through it, and it couldn’t be much worse in the world than it is in this book.

You could work all your life to get all this money, and on one level, the Scrooge story comes to mind when I think of the themes in “The Long Walk,” because if you get to the end and you win and you get the prize and you get all the money, it’s getting to the end of life and focusing only on that and not having any relationships. It’s the relationships that mattered. That’s very universal and very accessible.

I don’t think Stephen King needed this to feel true to his alter ego sensibility, and I wasn’t really thinking about that. I feel like the Bachman thing now is just, it had a different meeting back then than it does now, and we really wanted it to feel like Stephen King country.

Judy Greer as Ginny Garraty in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Judy Greer as Ginnie Garraty in ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

You gave Ray’s mom a name, and she doesn’t have one in the novel. Ginnie is your mom’s name, right?

It’s funny. In the initial draft, her name was just Mrs. Garraty, and she appears here and there, and she is literally called “Mrs. Garraty” in the script. Then Judy Greer got the role, which I was really excited about, and I hadn’t met Judy yet, but Francis called me during their first meeting. And she said, “Can you give me a name? I need to have a name.” That’s something actors ask for a lot, and I should have anticipated that here because she’s a very pivotal character, even though she’s not in a lot of the movie.

So he said, “Of course, she can have a name.” And Francis has this really cool style where he lets his actors know what the character is, and then he says, “Go and pick your wardrobe,” or “Go and pick this and this.” There is a world in which Francis may have said to an actor, using that directorial style, “What name do you think you should have?” But he didn’t. He came to me, and I was like, “Oh, I can do that!” I ran away before we could talk much more about it. I knew what I wanted to do.

My mom’s name is spelled G-I-N-N-I-E, which is not common. People always mistake her. They always say “Jenny” or “Jeanie.” They always get her name wrong, and she has to explain it. So that ended up in there. There’s a scene in the movie where he has to explain how his mom’s name is spelled, and I got to sit in the premiere with my mom next to me as she was watching that scene. It was a surprise, and it was really cool. I’m very close with my mom and my dad.

Well, she was defending you for reading Stephen King in class! 

Yes, exactly.

“The Long Walk” is now in theaters.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Tobias Menzies, Ben Chaplin Join Bella Ramsey in Daisy Haggard's Maya
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Tobias Menzies, Ben Chaplin Join Bella Ramsey in Daisy Haggard’s Maya

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

“Maya,” Channel 4’s upcoming witness protection thriller series starring Bella Ramsey and Daisy Haggard, has started shooting in Scotland, with a host of names joining the cast.

Written and created by BAFTA and International Emmy nominee Haggard (“Back To Life,” “Breeders”), who will also make her directorial debut, co-directing the series from Two Brothers Pictures (“The Tourist,” “Fleabag,” “Boat Story”) alongside Jamie Donoughue (“Doctor Who,” “The Last Kingdom”).

In the six-part series Ramsey plays the titular, Maya, teenage daughter of Anna (Haggard). Forced into a witness protection programme to escape a life-threatening danger, Anna and Maya leave their London lives and parents, Nancy (Harriet Walter – “Succession”, “Ted Lasso”) and George (Tom Courtenay – “Quartet,” “45 Years”) behind, taking on new identities and relocating to a small rural town in Scotland. Aided by Senior Detective Constable Debs (Josie Walker – “Kneecap,” “Andor”) and witness protection officers Tony (Stuart Bowman – “Dept. Q,” “Rebus”) and Karen (Kiran Sonia Sawar – “Slow Horses,” “True Love”) they try to adjust to their new reality, but the trauma of their past continues to haunt them in the form of two hitmen, Benji (Ben Chaplin – “September 5,” “The Dig”) and Ted (Raphel Famotibe – “The Night Manager S2,” “Wale”) who are intent on tracking them down. As the walls close in, it becomes clear that a dangerous and calculating figure from their past, the seemingly charming Bobby (Tobias Menzies – “F1,” “The Crown”), is still a looming and very present threat.

Also joining the cast are Serena Manteghi (“The Diplomat,” “Mrs Wilson”), Archie Backhouse (“Strategic Love Play,” “Farm Hall”), Paul Blair (“Outpost,” “Outlaw King”), Sonny Poon Tip (“Industry,” “Andor”), Finlay Shack (“Dept Q”), Max Fincham (“The Tower,” “The Witness”), Ash Hunter (“Bridgerton, “Harlots”), Harry Hadden-Patton (“Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale,” “Twisters”), Tori Allen-Martin (“Here We Go,” “London Kills”) and Isabele Derosa (“The Bombing of Pan Am 103”).

“Maya” is billed as “darkly comedic,” and am “atmospheric psychological thriller that explores themes of predatory male behaviour, family and love, but, above all, is a warm and witty celebration of the special, unbreakable bond shared between mother and daughter.”

“After years of writing and dreaming this show up… I’m absolutely thrilled that we have started filming ‘Maya’ and cannot get over what an unbelievably brilliant cast we have joining us to bring it all to life!” said Haggard. “I feel so lucky to get to work with all these remarkably talented actors as both a director and actor on this series.”

Added Two Brother Pictures exec producers Daisy Mount and Alex Mercer: “The bar was set so high on ‘Maya’ with Bella and Daisy leading the cast and Daisy’s phenomenally nuanced and entertaining scripts, so we are elated by this incredible roster of talent joining the ensemble alongside them. We can’t wait to bring the series to screens, and are hugely thankful to Channel 4, as well as our incredible cast and Scottish crew.”

Said Gemma Boswell, commissioning editor, Channel 4 Drama: “It’s a pleasure to reveal the stellar ensemble cast for ‘Maya.’ The fantastic scripts have enticed such esteemed and exciting talent, led by Daisy and Bella. Set against a stunning Scottish backdrop, we’re delighted that filming is now underway.”

“Maya” is a Two Brothers Pictures (an All3Media company) production, in association with All3Media International. The 6×60 drama has been written and created by Haggard who will also serve as executive producer, with Harry and Jack Williams, Sarah Hammond, Mercer and Mount serving as executive producers for Two Brothers Pictures. Kenny Tanner is Producer, Donoughue will co-direct and serve as co-executive Producer and Shaheen Baig is casting director. The commissioning editor for Channel 4 is Boswell. All filming will take place on location in Scotland.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Pingyao Film Fest Unveils Crouching Tigers & Hidden Dragons Entries
TV & Streaming

Pingyao Film Fest Unveils Crouching Tigers & Hidden Dragons Entries

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

China’s Pingyao International Film Festival (PYIFF) has unveiled its full selection, including the titles for its Crouching Tigers competition, which will screen 11 films including Cannes award winners My Father’s Shadow and The President’s Cake.

The President’s Cake, from Iraq’s Hasan Hadi, won the Camera d’Or at this year’s Cannes film festival, while My Father’s Shadow, directed by Nigeria’s Akinola Davies Jr, received a Camera d’Or Special Mention. Crouching Tigers will also screen Akio Fujimoto’s Lost Land, which won the Special Jury Prize in the Horizons section of this year’s Venice film festival. 

Crouching Tigers selects first, second and third films from international directors, while the festival’s Hidden Dragons competition focuses on films from emerging directors making Chinese-language films. This year, the Hidden Dragons line-up of 11 films includes Singapore filmmaker Tan Siyou’s Amoeba, fresh from its world premiere in Toronto, and Li Dongmei’s Guo Ran, which premiered in Rotterdam (see full line-up below). 

The festival has also set Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another as the opening film of its Galas section, which will screen nine international films. The Galas line-up also includes Cannes award winners such as Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent and Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value; and Sho Miyake’s Locarno Golden Leopard winner Two Seasons, Two Strangers (see full line-up below). 

Special Presentations at the festival include documentary Mr. Kim Goes To The Cinema, directed by Busan International Film Festival co-founder Kim Dong-ho; Chinese director Feng Xiaogang’s 2004 action comedy A World Without Thieves; Andrea Segre’s documentary short The Great Ambition and Zhang Dalei’s short film Happy New Year Mr Wood. 

Founded by Chinese auteur Jia Zhangke and held annually in the UNESCO heritage site of Pingyao, Shanxi province, the festival aims to showcase emerging Chinese talent as well as bring prestige international cinema to Chinese audiences. 

The festival also features a Made In Shanxi section, screening six world premieres from filmmakers based in Shanxi, also Jia’s home province. This year’s Cinephile screening is Yu Shui’s blockbuster animation Nobody, which has grossed $222M at the China box office. 

Pingyao film festival is scheduled to run September 24-30. The festival will announce its closing film and Pingyao Surprise Selection in coming days. 

PINGYAO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2025:

CROUCHING TIGERS:

Rebuilding (US) AP
Dir: Max Walker-Silverman

The Last Blossom (Japan) AP
Dir: Baku Kinoshita
[Animation]

My Father’s Shadow (Nigeria, UK) CP
Dir: Akinola Davies Jr

Wild Foxes (France. Belgium) CP
Dir: Valéry Carnoy

The Massacre Of Gilles De Rais (Portugal) WP
Dir: Juan Branco

Reedland (Netherlands, Belgium) CP
Dir: Sven Bresser

Lost Land (Japan, France, Malaysia, Germany) AP
Dir: Akio Fujimoto

The World Of Love (South Korea) AP
Dir: Yoon Ga-Eun

Adam’s Sake (Belgium, France) CP
Dir: Laura Wandel

Dandelion’s Odyssey (Francem, Belgium) AP
Dir: Momoko Seto
[Animation]

The President’s Cake (Iraq, US, Qatar) CP
Dir: Hasan Hadi

HIDDEN DRAGONS:

Jet Lag In Summer (Hong Kong, China, US) WP
Dir: Yan Kun-Ao

Happy Girls (China) WP
Dir: Meng Xing

Guo Ran (China) AP
Dir: Li Dongmei

Amoeba (Singapore, Netherlands, France, Spain, Korea) AP
Dir: Siyou Tan

The Toddling Youths (China) WP
Dir: Qi Yanyan
[Documentary]

A Long Way Home (China) WP
Dir: Zheng Xusong
[Documentary]

Nighttime Sounds (China) AP
Dir: Zhang Zhongchen

Deep Quiet Room (Taiwan, China, Italy) WP
Dir: Ko-Shang Shen

#4 Road To Vendetta (Hong Kong, China) AP
Dir: Njo Kui Ying

Another World (Hong Kong, China) AP
Dir: Tommy Ng Kai Chung
[Animation]

West Border (China) AP
Dir: Luo Yan

GALAS:

One Battle After Another (US)
Dir: Paul Thomas Anderson
[OPENING FILM]

Love On Trial (Japan)
Dir: Kôji Fukada

Two Seasons, Two Strangers (Japan)
Dir: Sho Miyake

The Secret Agent (Brazil, France, Germany, Netherlands)
Dir: Kleber Mendonça Filho

Woman And Child (Iran, France)
Dir: Saeed Roustayi

Dear Stranger (Japan, Taiwan, China, US)
Dir: Tetsuya Mariko

Sentimental Value (Norway, France, Denmark, Germany, Sweden)
Dir: Joachim Trier

Case137 (France)
Dir: Dominik Moll

The Mastermind (US, UK)
Dir: Kelly Reichardt

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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The Muppets Mayhem
TV & Streaming

The Muppet Show to Return as Disney+ Special From Seth Rogen

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Seth Rogen is basically a Muppet in human form, so it makes sense he would be the one to revive The Muppet Show.

The Muppet Show will return in 2026 as a Disney+ special starring (and executive produced by) Sabrina Carpenter — next year marks the 50th anniversary of the original variety series. The hope is for the Muppet Show special to serve as a backdoor pilot for a new season of the iconic series that debuted in the ‘70s. The Muppets themselves actually date back two decades before that.

Rogen, Evan Goldberg, James Weaver and Alex McAtee will executive produce the special for Point Grey Pictures. David Lightbody, Leigh Slaughter and Michael Steinbach executive produce for The Muppets Studio.

The special, which sees the Muppets return to their theater to produce a variety show, also hails from 20th Television and Disney Branded Television. Albertina Rizzo will write and executive produce; Alex Timbers will direct and executive produce. Matt Vogel and Eric Jacobson are also executive producers. Longtime Muppet performers Bill Barretta, Dave Goelz, Eric Jacobson, Peter Linz, David Rudman and Matt Vogel will perform most of the muppetry.

Created by Jim Henson in 1955, the media franchise was purchased by The Walt Disney Company in 2004. The Muppets first appeared on Sesame Street in 1969, but skyrocketed in recognition through The Muppet Show, which premiered in 1976. All five seasons of The Muppet Show are currently available to stream on Disney+.

Several Muppet feature films have been made, including 1979’s The Muppet Movie, 1981’s The Great Muppet Caper and 1984’s The Muppets Take Manhattan. There have also been various spinoffs and a television film titled It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie (2002).

Since 2004, Disney has managed the characters through The Muppets Studio, which led to two theatrical films: The Muppets (2001) and Muppets Most Wanted, the Halloween special Muppets Haunted Mansion (2021) and most recently the television series The Muppets Mayhem (2023).

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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