celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 141
Category:

TV & Streaming

Paul Mescal & Jessie Buckley Rip Your Heart Out
TV & Streaming

Movies Are Meeting the Moment but Distributors Are Scared of Palestine

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The following article is an excerpt from the new edition of “In Review by David Ehrlich,” a biweekly newsletter in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the site’s latest reviews and muses about current events in the movie world. Subscribe here to receive the newsletter in your inbox every other Friday.

Ahoy, mateys! And welcome to another thrilling installment of “In Review.” Over the last two weeks I have journeyed far and wide across this land to bring you the hottest takes on the fall’s most exciting new movies, even if the best of them — by some distance — was the one I saw at the exotic AMC 34th Street (more like One Escalator After Another am I right?). 

US actor Michael Shannon attends the premiere for "Nuremberg" at Roy Thomson Hall during the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) in Toronto, Ontario, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Cole BURSTON / AFP) (Photo by COLE BURSTON/AFP via Getty Images)

Here are five things I learned on my travels:

Mona Fastvold and Brady Corbet Are Re-Writing the Rules

‘The Testament of Ann Lee’

When “The Brutalist” stormed the festival circuit around this time last year, it seemed like something of a unicorn — as well as an almost impossible sell. Twelve months, 10 Oscar nominations, and one rapturous quasi-musical later, it feels like a new kind of recipe for success. How do you follow an epic historical drama about a traumatized European who sails to America and builds their own church? You make another one, of course.

The parallels between Mona Fastvold and Brady Corbet’s future projects may not rhyme quite as clearly as those between “The Brutalist” and “The Testament of Ann Lee,” but the most exciting thing about this one-two punch isn’t their thematic overlap so much as it is their shared sense of scale and self-possession. At a time when Hollywood is both deathly allergic to risk and physically incapable of making anything that costs less than $100 million, the fact that Fastvold and Corbet have now both directed gorgeous, sweeping, and creatively unbound movies for a fraction of that cost in Hungary feels like a new way forward. Sure, that model requires the kind of zeal and asceticism more associated with a religious movement than a film set, but “The Testament of Ann Lee” is nothing if not an ideal example of how it’s done. 

Passion Projects Are a Double-Edged Sword

‘Frankenstein’

Most good movies take a hot minute to get made, but this fall saw the premieres of several films — surely more than I’ve made room to mention here — that were marinating for decades. I mean, Guillermo del Toro was probably pitching his “Frankenstein” to the other kids in the middle of class during first grade, where his teacher forced him to write “I will not be sympathetic toward monsters” on the blackboard 100 times as punishment. 

But timing is everything, and it often only appears as if all of the pieces are falling into place. On the one hand, Park Chan-wook was duly rewarded for waiting 20 years to direct “No Other Choice,” as his Donald Westlake adaptation — about a man so desperate for another job in his field that he murders the other candidates — is perfectly suited for the worldwide pivot to AI. Ditto Laura Poitras, who’d been trying to make a Seymour Hersh documentary since at least 2005, but didn’t manage to wear him down until world events — specifically the genocide in Gaza — had provided her the material she needed to paint her subject’s career as an investigative journalist into a broader and more damning portrait of American malfeasance.

On the other hand, del Toro has not been done any favors by dreaming of “Frankenstein” for so long; his love for the material is sacred and unimpeachable, but it comes through more palpably in how he talks about Mary Shelley’s novel than it does in any part of the movie he’s made from it. Soapy, broad, and so chintzy-looking despite its budget that it was difficult for me to appreciate the tragic beauty of Frankenstein’s monster (I weep for how tactile this film might have been had del Toro made it before teaming up with cinematographer Dan Laustsen for “Crimson Peak” and committing himself to a series of increasingly garish digital veneers), this most passionate of passion projects would be so easy to mistake for any of the other gothic CGIsores from the last 25 years that it might as well be stitched together from the leftover parts of “Van Helsing.” I think there was a time when del Toro would have recognized as much, but the money and technology at this disposal has caused him to lose sight of the human element that drew him to this story in the first place.  

Most Distributors Are Still Scared of Palestine

‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’

Earlier this summer, I wrote about the fate of Nadav Lapid’s “Yes,” and how its post-Cannes disappearance appeared to suggest that festivals and distributors were afraid of films that dared to confront the most transparent moral atrocity of our times: the genocide in Gaza (Kino Lorber has since acquired U.S. rights for “Yes,” and will release it here in early 2026). Did Telluride, Venice, or TIFF do anything to improve the situation? Well, yes and no. 

Telluride, a wonderful festival whose need to appease its patrons has seen it become subtly but worryingly less adventurous in its programming, neglected to screen many of the recent films that feature the genocide as their primary subject (“Cover-Up” touches on Gaza with great purpose, but only in passing). Amid a lineup that was absolutely bursting with documentaries about everything from the American Revolution to the making of “Megalopolis,” and everyone from E. Jean Carroll to Elie Wiesel, I was disappointed not to see “Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk,” and only took an uncertain measure of consolation in the fact that Telluride chose to screen Netalie Braun’s “Shooting,” a self-reflexive Israeli film about how the country’s unchecked militarism has poisoned its cinema (I wasn’t able to see it myself, but the movie’s Letterboxd reviews make it sound appropriately damning). 

TIFF, which stepped on rake after rake in the process of premiering “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue,” an “inspiring” documentary by TIFF donor Barry Avrich about an Israeli man who saved his family from the violence of October 7, at least provided a venue for the North American premieres of Venice standout “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” as well as Locarno highlight “With Hasan in Gaza” and the rousing historical drama “Palestine 36.” The festival also, if not on its own accord, played host to a loud and defiant protest in front of the Lightbox last Sunday night, which did more to make TIFF seem relevant and in conversation with the world than most of the movies I saw there. 

And yet, of all these films, only “Put Your Soul” and “Palestine 36” have distribution, but Kino Lorber and Watermelon Pictures — the latter of which almost exclusively releases movies from or about Palestine — can’t be expected to be American cinema’s sole lifeline to the country. (“The Road Between Us” is being released on more than 1,000 screens in October.) Fingers crossed that “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” “With Hasan in Gaza,” and “Cover-Up” will all find proper homes soon, even if only under the auspices of awards season. 

Ambivalence Is Out, Emotion Is In

‘Hamnet’

I don’t want to make any sweeping pronouncements based on anecdotal evidence, a tiny sample size, and my own personal biases (just kidding, I’m a film critic, that’s pretty much my favorite thing to do), but at a time when being numb to the world is at once both a survival mechanism and a moral abdication, the festivals made it seem as if there’s a newfound premium on movies that make you feel anything strongly — even if only through brute force. 

As an introverted cynic whose love of movies can probably be explained on some level by the fact that sitting in the dark allows me to be present but not perceived, I naturally struggled with Chloé Zhao’s insistence on leading every “Hamnet” premiere audience in the same mindfulness routine that she conducted for the cast and crew on set every morning. Taking deep breaths, looking the person next to you in the eye, putting your hand on your heart, that sort of thing. I’m not proud to say that it had the opposite of the intended effect on me, making me more guarded and self-conscious rather less (though as someone who’s been prescribed stimulants to make myself less hyper for the last 20 years, I’m used to that sort of counter-intuitiveness). 

Less than an hour later, I was sobbing so hard that the woman next to me started to look worried. Maybe it was the mountain air, or that I missed my kids, or that “Hamnet” resonated with me as the story of a writer who goes on a work trip that leaves him unable to stop or bear witness to a tragedy back at home (Tweeting about movies in Telluride is basically the same thing as scripting “Macbeth” in 17th century London and don’t you dare suggest otherwise), but I forgot myself for the rest of the film.

I forgot that I was in public, and that leaving yourself completely open to the pain of others can be a paralyzing experience these days. I even forgot that Gracie Abrams was sitting right behind me. “Hamnet” will never be accused of having a light touch (my review accused the tear-jerker of “farming viewers for moisture”), but I found myself unexpectedly grateful for Zhao’s refusal to hold back, and  for how the almost pornographic sentimentality of her film invited its audience to participate in the same kind of emotional transference that Will Shakespeare and his poor wife Agnes experience towards the end of the story. 

It’s no coincidence that “Hamnet” stayed with me — sank deeper into my bones, even — over the course of the days that followed, while the stiff upper lip of “H Is for Hawk,” the probing ambiguity of “After the Hunt,” and the inert wistfulness of “La Grazia” made it that much harder to engage with those films on any level. There’s a reason why the last five minutes of “Jay Kelly” is one of the only memorable parts of that movie, just as there’s a reason why “Rental Family” loses points for not better weaponizing its treacle, and why the most interesting thing about “The Smashing Machine” is how gingerly it navigates between pain and stability. It’s never been more important to feel alive to the world, especially for those of us who are more inclined to be closed off, and it’s the movies which dispossess people of their numbness that are poised to leave the biggest mark this fall.

Movies Are Meeting the Moment

‘No Other Choice’

On a related — if somewhat perpendicular — note, it was also telling to see that several of the season’s early standouts are movies that engage with our current moment head-on. That’s most obviously true of Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” which towered over the festivals despite skipping all three of them, and, along with “Eddington,” offered the most overt rebuke to/apology for the prevailing wisdom that many of today’s greatest filmmakers are more comfortable engaging with the past (more on that next week). But it was also thrilling to see Yorgos Lanthimos confront red pill conspiracy brain and corporate technocracy with “Bugonia,” whose relevance to the present day was made all the more pronounced by the fact that it’s a remake; “Bugonia” might like the sweep and inventiveness of Lanthimos’ best work, but sometimes a brilliant Chappell Roan needle-drop is all it takes to bridge the gap between any number of different worlds. 

No such luck in Park Chan-wook’s “No Other Choice” (which favors classic Korean pop ballads over the modern American kind), but none of the maestro’s work has stung quite as hard as this one does in the pyrrhic victory of its final moments, when the film’s “Looney Tunes” violence mournfully surrenders to a situation all too real. And while “Wake Up Dead Man” might lack the fun and humor of the previous “Knives Out” movies (I found the mystery in this one labored, its major supporting roles underwritten, and Benoit Blanc’s presence frustratingly ornamental), Rian Johnson’s ensemble Netflix movie comes back to life whenever it refocuses its attention on the political underpinnings of its story — on charismatic demagogues, the self-serving cowardice that fuels their power, and the absurdity of the politics that bind them together. The least of Johnson’s trilogy does the most to position it as a coherent treatise against the indecency of Trumpian narcissism, and as a bittersweet testament to the fantasy of solving it. 

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

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Final Emmy Predictions, As Chosen By Variety's Awards Circuit Podcast
TV & Streaming

Final Emmy Predictions, As Chosen By Variety’s Awards Circuit Podcast

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

We did it! Well, almost. It’s just a few days until we finally learn who won the “Severance”/ “The Pitt” smackdown… and this weekend’s Creative Arts Emmys only added to the intrigue: Shawn Hatosy won guest actor for “The Pitt” and Merritt Weaver was named guest actress for “Severance,” splitting those two up nicely. “Severance” has a lead on “The Pitt” when it comes to win tally so far (6 vs. 2) — but then, “The Pitt” won for the all-important casting category, perhaps showing where the acting votes are headed.

On this episode of the Variety Awards Circuit podcast we talk to Emmys host Nate Bargatze about how this sunday’s awards show is shaping up. But first, on the Roundtable, we give our final predictions in all the major emmy categories. Listen below!

This year’s Emmys, produced by Jesse Collins Entertainment, will include reunions timed to the 25th anniversary of ‘Gilmore Girls,’ with stars Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel, as well as a 40th anniversary ‘Golden Girls’ tribute, as Reba McEntire leads a sing along of the show’s ‘Thank You for Being a Friend’ theme song.

Also, Mariska Hargitay will lead a tribute to the ‘Law & Order’ franchise, and Jeff Probst will celebrate the 50th season of ‘Survivor.’ Plus, Eric Dane and Jesse Williams will help mark the 20th anniversary of ‘Grey’s Anatomy.’

As for Bargatze, he’s excited to talk about his plan to keep acceptance speeches short by donating money to the Boys & Girls Club every time winners don’t go long. And he discussed the fact that he’s heading to Denver this weekend to perform standup before heading back here to host the Emmys.

“I think in my stand up, you’re along for a ride a lot more, and we don’t really veer out of it,” he says. “A night like this is going to be a little more present, a little more in the moment of what’s happening as stuff happens throughout the night. I’ve got to be prepared for anything that can happen. If you think of something funny at the moment, you’ve got to kind of trust it and just throw it out there and see if it works. It’s a lot more in the moment than my stand up is, which is very prepared and exactly I know where I’m going.”

Meanwhile, here is Variety chief awards editor Clayton Davis’ final thoughts on the major Emmy categories:

Drama Series: “Severance” (Apple TV+)

Comedy Series: “The Studio” (Apple TV+)

Limited Series: “Adolescence” (Netflix)

Lead Drama Actor: Noah Wyle, “The Pitt” (HBO Max)

Lead Drama Actress: Kathy Bates, “Matlock” (CBS)

Lead Comedy Actor: Seth Rogen, “The Studio” (Apple TV+)

Lead Comedy Actress: Jean Smart, “Hacks” (HBO Max)

Lead Actor Limited: Colin Farrell, “The Penguin” (HBO Max)

Lead Actress Limited: Michelle Williams, “Dying for Sex” (FX)

Supporting Drama Actor: Tramell Tillman, “Severance” (Apple TV+)

Supporting Drama Actress: Carrie Coon, “The White Lotus” (HBO Max)

Supporting Comedy Actor: Harrison Ford, “Shrinking” (Apple TV+)

Supporting Comedy Actress: Catherine O’Hara, “The Studio” (Apple TV+)

Supporting Actor Limited: Owen Cooper, “Adolescence” (Netflix)

Supporting Actress Limited: Erin Doherty, “Adolescence” (Netflix)

Competition Program: “The Traitors” (Peacock)

Talk Series: “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” (CBS)

Scripted Variety: “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” (HBO Max)

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Elvis Has Not Left The Building
TV & Streaming

Elvis Has Not Left The Building

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The Baz Luhrmann-directed love labor documentary EPiC: Elvis Presley In Concert has received strong reviews and audience response at the Toronto International Film Festival. The fest just added an additional screening tomorrow at 8:30 PM at Scotiabank 12. Pic premiered as an acquisitions title, and while most of the buyer crowd has gone back to LA and New York, I’m told that multiple buyers are circling with streamers leaning in. This was one of a few titles with sizeable mainstream audience potential to be in play. Another is Normal, the raucous action pic written by John Wick and Nobody creator Derek Kolstad and starring Bob Odenkirk. There will be numerous TIFF sales, but they are just going to follow that slower track that is maddening for a journalist who were around when splashy deals followed all-night auctions hours after films premiered. Those days for the most part are gone.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Koji Yakusho
TV & Streaming

Netflix Announces Koji Yakusho-Led ‘Did Someone Happen to Mention Me?’

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix continues to deepen its investments in live-action Japanese content, betting on the country’s continued domestic growth potential and cross-border appeal. Friday marks the 10-year anniversary of the company’s launch in the Japanese market, and the streamer unveiled a trio of buzzy local titles to mark the moment and build on its momentum.

The new series include the comedy-drama Did Someone Happen to Mention Me?, starring Japanese screen icon Koji Yakusho; Straight to Hell, a dramatization of the life of celebrity fortune-teller Kazuko Hosoki; and JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Steel Ball Run, the latest anime adaptation of Hirohiko Araki’s hit manga.

“Looking ahead to the next decade, Netflix will continue to push boundaries and bring unforgettable entertainment from Japan to the world,” the company said in a statement.

Did Someone Happen to Mention Me? is an original comedy drama from hitmaker Kankuro Kudo (Netflix Japan breakouts Let’s Get Divorced and Extremely Inappropriate!) and his longtime producing partner Aki Isoyama. Yakusho, one of Japan’s most recognizable stars and winner of the Cannes Film Festival’s best actor prize in 2023, plays Gen Takasegawa, a once-lauded Japanese actor who made history as the first from his country to lead at London’s Globe Theatre, only to return home after two years abroad and find that he has been inexplicably forgotten by everyone. The series probes the human obsession with recognition through the prism of a man whose reputation, family and money have vanished overnight.

“Based on Kankuro Kudo’s brilliant script — which is intricate, wild, funny, and strangely moving — I’m having a great time filming with the cast and crew, even in the intense summer heat,” Yakusho said. “This is the second time in my life that I’ve been given the role of ‘an actor.’ The shoot will be a long one, spanning into the next year, but I’ll do my best until the very end to make this a work that everyone can enjoy.”

Kudo added: “Koji Yakusho pours his heart and soul into even the most trivial lines I write.… Whether you’re an actor, a screenwriter, or just someone with a social media account, everyone has a surplus of desire for recognition — they perform, exaggerate, edit themselves, and sometimes tweet unnecessary things late at night and end up feeling self-loathing. It can’t be helped. That troublesome human tendency — I’ve portrayed it as a comedy, without denying or affirming it. I hope you enjoy it.”

Isoyama said Yakusho’s casting felt inevitable: “I never could have dreamed that Koji Yakusho would end up taking the role.… He has taken on an incredible number of challenges, shown us so many different sides of himself, and turned this into an unmissable drama.”

Did Someone Happen to Mention Me? is currently in production and slated to launch on Netflix in 2026.

Straight to Hell revisits the extraordinary life of Hosoki, a fortune-teller who dominated Japanese media from the 1980s through the 2000s. Hosoki became a household name — and something of a social phenomenon — with her blunt, sometimes brutal predictions (“You’ll die,” “You’ll go to hell”), while her fortune-telling books set Guinness World Records for sales. The series, starring Erika Toda, explores the darker, lesser-known chapters of her early life and her rise from postwar poverty to national notoriety.

“I knew of Kazuko Hosoki, but I didn’t know what kind of person she really was,” Toda said. “I just thought a flashy fortune-teller had shown up on TV.… This story portrays the real life of Kazuko Hosoki from not so long ago — one you don’t know — and I’m certain it will draw you into this world and toss you around.”

Erika Toda as Kazuko Hosoki in Straight to Hell.

Netflix

Director Tomoyuki Takimoto admitted, “I disliked Kazuko Hosoki. Whenever she appeared on TV, I changed the channel. And yet I accepted this reckless project for two reasons…her little-known rise from postwar poverty is immensely compelling…and the powerful partner I had in Erika Toda. Through her performance, I discovered how that once-in-a-generation trickster came to be.” Straight to Hell streams in 2026.

JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Steel Ball Run brings one of manga’s most celebrated arcs to the screen. Araki’s JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure has sold more than 120 million copies worldwide and spawned a vast multimedia franchise with its flamboyant characters and operatic storylines. Steel Ball Run, set in 19th-century America, follows paraplegic former jockey Johnny Joestar and mysterious outlaw Gyro Zeppeli as they enter a perilous, cross-continental horse race that tests their bodies, beliefs and fates.

“Steel Ball Run is a story that depicts characters running through a grand race, staking their own beliefs,” director Yasuhiro Kimura said. “My heart is pounding with excitement to be entrusted with directing this anime adaptation. The entire staff shares this feeling and is pouring their passion into daily production. I look forward to sharing our enthusiasm for this work with all of you and hope we can ride this journey together.”

The series reunites much of the acclaimed creative team behind earlier JoJo’s anime seasons, with David Production once again leading animation. Netflix will host a special event in Japan on Sept. 23 to unveil more details about the series and its launch.

Japan remains one of Netflix’s key growth engines in the Asia-Pacific region, as streaming deepens its foothold across demographics. The company surpassed the 10 million subscriber milestone in the market late last year. Some of Netflix’s biggest Japanese live-action titles are coming in the weeks ahead, including season 3 of sci-fi series Alice in Borderland, set to stream worldwide Sept. 25, and the Meiji-era battle royale Last Samurai Standing, bowing globally Nov. 13 (after a showcase at the Busan International Film Festival on Sept. 18).

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Grow a Garden codes: Full list for September 2025 and how to redeem them
TV & Streaming

Grow a Garden codes: Full list for September 2025 and how to redeem them

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

We have plenty of Roblox codes pages for you, so if you’re into Mugen or Basketball Zero, be sure to check those pages out too!

But for now, you can read on for the full list of currently active codes in Roblox’s Grow a Garden for September 2025.

Full list of Grow a Garden codes for September 2025

Codes in Grow a Garden will typically reward you with some seed packs and other helpful items to give your crops a big boost.

Here are all of the currently available Grow a Garden codes:

Active Grow a Garden codes

  • BEANORLEAVE10 – Green Bean Chamber cosmetic

Expired Grow a Garden codes

  • torigate
  • LUNARGLOW10
  • BIZZY25
  • BUZZYBEES25
  • BEES10
  • BUZZINGEVENT20
  • 3BILLION
  • 2BILLION
  • 9MCCU
  • LOCKFRUIT10

New codes are regularly shared via the game’s official Discord server, especially to celebrate events and milestones.

We’re monitoring the official channels regularly, and will be updating this list as and when we have more codes, so be sure to check back on this page often, especially when new events go live.

How to redeem codes in Grow a Garden

Redeeming codes in Grow a Garden is simple, as you can see in the video above. Here’s how to do it:

  1. Launch Grow a Garden in Roblox
  2. Open the ‘Settings’ menu by clicking the gear icon in the top left corner
  3. Under the ‘Redeem Codes’ heading, type or paste your code into the text box
  4. Click ‘Claim’

That’s everything you need to do! As soon as you hit ‘Claim’, you’ll get your rewards immediately.

Grow a Garden codes not working

There are a few reasons why your Grow a Garden code might not be working, but luckily it’s very easy to figure out the issue.

If you receive the error message ‘Code Is Not Active!’, then that unfortunately means the code in question has expired – nothing you can do there, we’re afraid!

On the other hand, if you receive the message ‘Code is Invalid!’, then it likely means you haven’t entered the code correctly.

Double check that you’ve copied the code from our page directly, and make sure you haven’t accidentally added in an extra character like a space.

If you’ve definitely entered the code in correctly and it’s still showing it as invalid, then it likely means there’s something wrong with the game’s servers. Wait for a while and try again to see if the code goes through later.

Check out more of our Gaming coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Disney’s Wizards and Teen Vampire, ‘Wrong Paris’ Romcom, ‘Rainmaker’ in Court, Streaming ‘Warfire’
TV & Streaming

Disney’s Wizards and Teen Vampire, ‘Wrong Paris’ Romcom, ‘Rainmaker’ in Court, Streaming ‘Warfire’

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Disney / Justin Stephens

Wizards Beyond Waverly Place

The sequel to Disney’s Wizards of Waverly Place returns for a second season with back-to-back episodes, featuring a crowded house of young wizards now that protégée Billie (Janice LeAnn Brown) has been joined in the magic trade by Russo brothers Roman (Alkaio Thiele) and Milo (Max Matenko). While Justin (David Henrie) helps train the young wizards for the Family Wizard Competition, expect guest-star appearances by Selena Gomez (reprising her role as Justin’s sister Alex), What We Do in the Shadows alum Harvey Guillén as Gossip Stone and Criminal Minds‘ Kirsten Vangsness as Bigelow McFigglehorn, a member of the Wizard Tribunal. All episodes of Season 2 will begin streaming on Disney+ on October 8.

Kenzi Richardson in 'Vampirina: Teenage Vampire' Season 1 Episode 1

Disney / Mitch Haaseth

Vampirina: Teenage Vampire

The supernatural fun continues on a music-heavy comedy series starring Kenzi Richardson as Vampirina — or as her friends call her, “Vee” — a tween vampire from Transylvania who’s left the crypt to sink her teeth into a performing-arts boarding school. As one does. Living Single‘s Kim Coles costars as the Wilson Hall Academy of the Arts’ Dean Merriweather, with Jiwon Lee as Vee’s perky roommate Sophie and Milo Maharlika as Demi, a 600-year-old ghost sent by Vee’s parents to keep a spectral eye on Vee. The entire season will begin streaming on Disney+ on October 15, with the first single (“Slay”) available today.

Naika Toussaint as Amber, Miranda Cosgrove as Dawn, Madeleine Arthur as Cinderella, Madison Pettis as Lexi, Hannah Stocking as Eve and Pierson Fodé as Trey in 'The Wrong Paris'

Diyah Pera / Netflix

The Wrong Paris

What would Emily Cooper (of Emily in Paris) do? Have a meltdown, most likely. Which is country girl Dawn’s (Miranda Cosgrove of iCarly fame) initial reaction when she signs on as a contestant for the Honey Pot dating show, set in Paris, where she hopes to pursue her art-school dreams. But reality (as in reality TV) sets in when she discovers the show is actually set in Paris, Texas. This being a romcom, you won’t be surprised to learn that the cowboy bootcamp has an upside: the bachelor himself, a hunky hayseed named Trey (Pierson Fodé) who takes a shine to Dawn.

THE RAINMAKER -- Episode 104 -- Pictured: Milo Callaghan as Rudy Baylor -- (Photo by: Christopher Barr/USA Network)

Christopher Barr / USA Network

The Rainmaker

Novice lawyer Rudy (Milo Callaghan) squares off in court on the opposite side of his girlfriend Sarah (Madison Iseman) for a high-stakes evidentiary hearing in a pivotal episode of the legal drama based on John Grisham’s bestseller. Sarah and her new mentor Brad (Wade Briggs) know their jobs at Tinley Britt are on the line, while Rudy keeps trying to prove himself to his boss Bruiser (Lana Parrilla), though he has a risky habit of ignoring all of her advice and warnings. Adding to the anxiety: the results of the bar exam are beginning to come in.

Joseph Quinn, D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai in 'Warfare'

Murray Close / A24 / Everett Collection

Warfare

Described by the New York Times as “a tough, relentless movie about life and death in battle,” writer-director Alex Garland and Ray Mendoza’s unflinching 2025 real-time war film set during an ill-fated Iraq War mission makes its streaming debut. (The movie premieres on HBO Saturday at 8/7c.) The ensemble cast includes Reservation Dogs‘ D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Shogun‘s Cosmo Jarvis, Heartstopper‘s Kit Connor, Will Poulter (The Bear), Finn Bennett (True Detective: Night Country), and Noah Centineo (To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before).

'Chief of War' Season 1 Episode 8

Apple TV+

Chief of War

War clouds are forming on several fronts in the penultimate episode of Jason Momoa‘s historical epic set in the pre-unification Hawaiian Islands of the early 1800s. Grieving the slaughter on the beach of hundreds of innocent villagers by European invaders, Ka’iana (Momoa) is losing faith in war chief and future king Kamehameha’s (Kaina Makua) resolve. And there’s another enemy within, with the battle-hungry Keoua (Cliff Curtis) on the rampage.

INSIDE FRIDAY TV:

  • True Crime Watch: On ABC‘s 20/20 (9/8c), Stephanie Ramos reports on the 2001 murder of Leslie Preer in her suburban Maryland home, which was only solved nearly 25 years later when DNA under her fingerprints finally found a match. On Dateline NBC (10/9c), Keith Morrison reports on the investigation into the 2014 murder in Calgary, Alberta of Shannon Madill Burgess, an aspiring actress and newlywed.
  • Lost in the Jungle (9/8c, National Geographic): A real-life survival story unfolds in a documentary from Oscar winners Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin (Free Solo, The Rescue) and director Juan Camilo Cruz, recounting the 40-day ordeal of four Indigenous children who are stranded in the Columbian jungle after a 2023 plane crash.

ON THE STREAM:

Get This In Your Inbox Every Day

Subscribe to our Matt’s Worth Watching newsletter:

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Brian Cox Directs Scottish Drama
TV & Streaming

Brian Cox Directs Scottish Drama

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

If you would like to spend time watching Alan Cumming traipse around the Scottish Highlands, I would recommend any season of “The Traitors” on Peacock over the Toronto International Film Festival premiere “Glenrothan.” One of these things has intrigue, murder, thrilling cinematography, and fabulous costumes. The other has a flat script and the tenor of a Hallmark movie. It’s the latter that happens to be getting a glitzy premiere here in Canada. 

This is not just my half-hearted plea for a major cinematic institution to program a “Traitors” marathon. (Put Gabby Windey on a jury! That would be fun!) It’s also a dig at “Glenrothan,” a waste of a talented cast, including Brian Cox, who pulls double duty as director. 

Barrio Triste

In fact, it is because of the promise of Cox stepping behind the camera that eyes are on “Glenrothan” at TIFF, but the venerated performer brings none of the bite of his best performances to this task. One would think a man now most famous for bellowing “fuck off” on “Succession” might have chosen a project with a bit more edge. Instead, “Glenrothan” is a surface-level tale of family drama that isn’t all that dramatic. 

Cox plays Sandy Nairn, the CEO of his family’s prestigious whiskey company in the pristine village of Glenrothan surrounded by rolling green hills. After a blast of discordantly jaunty music, the film opens with Sandy’s voice dictating a letter to his estranged brother Donal (Cumming), encouraging him to return to his homeland. Sandy’s health is failing and he wants to see his kin. Donal, a nightclub owner in Chicago obsessed with the blues, has resisted going back to the land of lochs for reasons that will become only somewhat clear over the course of the run time. Plus, he’s having too much fun singing “One Meat Ball” to an enthusiastic audience.  

Donal eventually relents, however, after his venue burns down in a convenient plot device. So he joins his daughter Amy (Alexandra Shipp) and her young child on their trip. These two visit Sandy regularly, having seemingly established a very close relationship with him despite the fact that Donal has been out of contact for the duration of Amy’s life.

“Glenrothan” is full of puzzling details like these, in which it seems like the script by David Ashton is just finding lazy ways to get its characters all into the same place. There’s a clunkiness that pervades the entire enterprise. The dialogue is particularly wooden and the actors struggle through mixed metaphors like, “Be careful on time, it can creep up on you like a shitstorm.” That line is spoken by Cumming with zero irony. 

The reasons why Donal has avoided this gorgeous place all of these years is teased out over a series of heavy-handed flashbacks where we learn, essentially, that his father was hard on him and he was very close to his mother, who died. There is no shocking trauma in Donal’s past, just a father who put a lot of pressure on him. It all makes his behavior seem petulant rather than rooted in some great pain. Not that the townspeople, who treat him like some sort of true pariah, are much better. 

All the principal actors in the cast appear lost. Shipp is tasked with scolding her father and delivering leaden exposition. Cumming truly only comes alive when he’s singing. Blessedly, there are a couple of moments when the natural showman gets to croon and they are the most enjoyable. Otherwise, Cumming has to externalize all of Donal’s feelings, as the screenplay has him speaking out loud to himself instead of letting him show his strife. Perhaps the performer done dirtiest is Mike Leigh and Kelly Reichardt veteran Shirley Henderson, playing Donal’s former best friend and Sandy’s now right hand. Too often her character requires her to fall into hysterics. 

Perhaps most confusing is Cox’s apparent disinterest in his part, considering he is the one that chose this material. Maybe he was relishing the chance to play someone with far more warmth than Logan Roy, but Sandy is just a vaguely nice guy who Donal resented for many years for reasons that are unclear. Cox at least gets to sneer the word “wastrel” at some point — the only beat where you see a hint of what makes him usually such a thrilling presence. (He also farts. So there’s that.) 

As a director Cox also seems lost. During a sequence in which Donal starts jamming with a band at the local pub, Cox doesn’t know where to place the camera, quick cutting between fingers playing instruments in a harried fashion. Elsewhere the action is statically staged. Cinematographer Jaime Ackroyd certainly captures Scotland’s majesty, but there is no character to the frames, which look like they could be plucked out of a commercial from a tourism bureau. 

By the end of the lugubrious 97 minutes any issues the Nairn family had — as undeveloped as they are — are neatly resolved. There’s far more humanity in display in an episode of “The Traitors.” 

“Glenrothan” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

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

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Reese Witherspoon on Big Little Lies Season 3: Gang Is Back Together
TV & Streaming

Reese Witherspoon on Big Little Lies Season 3: Gang Is Back Together

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Reese Witherspoon confirmed that “Big Little Lies” Season 3 is a go during an appearance on “The Tonight Show” on Thursday, telling Jimmy Fallon she’s excited to “get the gang back together.”

“We might be working on Season 3. Yeah, I mean, they’re writing it,” Witherspoon teased. “It’s exciting too, just to get the gang back together and have everyone start talking about it. It’s really fun.”

It was revealed earlier on Thursday that a third season of the hit HBO series was finally in the works, with “Mr. and Mrs. Smith” co-creator Francesca Sloane on board to write the first episode of Season 3 and executive produce. Alongside Witherspoon, “Big Little Lies” has an all-star cast including Nicole Kidman, Shailene Woodley, Zoë Kravitz, Laura Dern, Meryl Streep, Adam Scott, Alexander Skarsgård and more. Based on Liane Moriarty’s novel of the same name, it follows five women and their young children who become involved in a homicide investigation. Season 2 of the show, which was based on original material by Moriarty, aired its finale in July 2019.

Witherspoon added that it’s “been a minute” since the cast has all been together and nearly a decade since the first season was filmed. “It’s been about 10 years, maybe nine years?” she said. “All those little kids [who] were in second grade, they’re all teenagers now. And being a mom of a teenager, it’s a lot of big little lies.”

It remains unclear how the third season of “Big Little Lies” will address the time gap after Season 2, but a sequel novel from Moriarty is due out next year.

Watch Witherspoon’s full appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” below.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kenneth Branagh Has Talked 'The Tempest' Play & A 'Henry V' Anecdote
TV & Streaming

Kenneth Branagh Has Talked ‘The Tempest’ Play & A ‘Henry V’ Anecdote

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Kenneth Branagh is a master of the Shakespearean stage but things haven’t always gone swimmingly for the Oscar-winning star of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s (RSC) upcoming version of The Tempest.

Speaking to the BBC’s Today program this morning, Branagh recalled a time when things went badly wrong for the budding young thespian during a production of Henry V in Stratford-upon-Avon when he was just 23 years old.

“I forgot the gloves that I needed to return to the character at the last part of the play upon which much of the plot depended,” Branagh admitted. “So I made up a lot of the Shakespeare [lines] and I thought I had got away with it.”

Branagh, who went on to be twice-Oscar nominated for 1990’s Henry V movie, thought all was fine but on his way home, “a car slowed down and someone yelled out, ‘Very nice performance, seamless… oh by the way loved the gloves’.”

Branagh recalled the charming anecdote as a rallying cry for people to go and watch Shakespeare in the theater rather than spending time viewing content on their phones, because they will be able to “experience things going wrong that no one else will ever see.” The titan of the stage will play Prospero next year in the Richard Eyre-directed Tempest, and he will join Oscar-winning Helen Hunt who makes her RSC debut in Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard. Our Breaking Baz interview with Hunt and Eyre can be found here.

Branagh said he relishes the challenge of convincing today’s audience to turn up for Shakespeare. “It makes the battle more lively,” he said. “We have to work harder to earn the audience’s attention but the thrill and surprise is the arrival of the audience and there is nowhere with a greater sense of adventure than the Royal Shakespeare Theater at Stratford-upon-Avon.”

The Tempest will run from May 13 – June 20 at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Matthew Rhys
TV & Streaming

’Presumed Innocent’ Season 2 Casts Matthew Rhys

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The second season of Apple TV+’s legal thriller Presumed Innocent is adding another Emmy winner to its cast.

Matthew Rhys has joined the anthology series. The Americans and Perry Mason star joins Rachel Brosnahan and Jack Reynor in season two, which will be based on author Jo Murray’s forthcoming book Dissection of a Murder.

Presumed Innocent is the second Apple series Rhys has signed onto recently. He’s also starring in Widow’s Bay, about the residents of a seemingly cursed New England seaside town.

The first season of Presumed Innocent was based on Scott Turow’s novel of the same name (previously adapted for a feature film starring Harrison Ford) and starred Jake Gyllenhaal, Ruth Negga and Peter Sarsgaard. In renewing the show, Apple TV+ and the show’s creative team, which includes executive producers David E. Kelley and J.J. Abrams, opted to make the series an anthology.

The streamer is keeping plot details about season two quiet. Publisher Pan Macmillan’s description of Dissection of a Murder says the story will follow an attorney (Brosnahan) who is defending a man accused of murdering a judge.

Rhys will next be seen in Netflix’s The Beast in Me with Claire Danes; the limited series is set to premiere in November. He’s also set to star with John Krasinski in a serial-killer drama called Silent River at Prime Video. He is repped by CAA, Anonymous Content and United Agents.

Abrams’ Bad Robot Productions and David E. Kelley Productions produce Presumed Innocent in association with Warner Bros. Television. Kelley and Erica Lipez are co-showrunners of season two and executive produce with Abrams and Rachel Rusch Rich for Bad Robot, Matthew Tinker for David E. Kelley Productions, Dustin Thomason, Brosnahan and Gyllenhaal. Turow and Murray are co-EPs.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,606)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • The Black Beauty Club Is Turning a Block Party Into a Shopping and Discovery Experience

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming