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League One TV schedule 2025/26: Coverage, TV fixtures and live stream
TV & Streaming

League One TV schedule 2025/26: Coverage, TV fixtures and live stream

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Northampton face Blackpool in the other game in front of TV cameras this weekend.

The 46-game League One season is a gruelling test of endurance where twists and turns are guaranteed, heroes are made, heads will roll, and points are the only currency that matters.

Fans won’t want to miss a minute, and they will barely have to – with more than 1,000 EFL games available to watch live.

RadioTimes.com brings you the complete League One TV schedule, including every game you can watch live in the UK.

Read more: Best players in the world | Best players of all time

League One TV schedule 2025/26

All UK time. Subject to change.

Saturday 13th September 2025

  • Bradford v Huddersfield (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Northampton v Blackpool (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Saturday 20th September 2025

  • Blackpool v Barnsley (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Lincoln City v Luton Town (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Saturday 27th September 2025

  • AFC Wimbledon v Wycombe (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Leyton Orient v Stevenage (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 2nd October 2025

  • Rotherham v Bradford (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 4th October 2025

  • Doncaster v Burton Albion (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Wycombe v Barnsley (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 16th October 2025

  • Huddersfield v Bolton (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 18th October 2025

  • Burton Albion v Peterborough (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Lincoln City v Stevenage (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 23rd October 2025

  • Exeter City v Plymouth (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 25th October 2025

  • Bolton v Cardiff City (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Mansfield v Wigan (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Monday 27th October 2025

  • Port Vale v Stockport (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Thursday 6th November 2025

  • Reading v Stevenage (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 8th November 2025

  • Northampton v Mansfield (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Wycombe v Leyton Orient (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 20th November 2025

  • Peterborough v Stockport (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 22nd November 2025

  • Exeter City v Burton Albion (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Port Vale v Plymouth (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Saturday 29th November 2025

  • Blackpool v Reading (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Stockport v Barnsley (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Saturday 13th December 2025

  • AFC Wimbledon v Mansfield (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Huddersfield v Wigan (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 18th December 2025

  • Reading v Luton Town (8pm) Sky Sports Football

Saturday 20th December 2025

  • Stevenage v Burton Albion (12:30pm) Sky Sports+
  • Wigan v Blackpool (12:30pm) Sky Sports+

Monday 29th December 2025

  • Bradford v Port Vale (7:45pm) Sky Sports+
  • Plymouth v Wycombe (7:45pm) Sky Sports+

Thursday 1st January 2026

  • Wycombe v Cardiff City (3pm) Sky Sports Football

Sunday 4th January 2026

  • Bolton v Northampton (12pm) Sky Sports+
  • Lincoln City v Peterborough (12pm) Sky Sports+

League One TV rights 2025/26

Sky Sports can be added to any Sky TV package for just £22 per month for all nine sports channels, or you can pick up the complete sports package plus Netflix for £43 per month.

Sky Sports + will feature more than 1,000 EFL games throughout the season and is included as part of Sky Sports packages.

NOW is essentially Sky Sports without a contract. You can buy a day membership (£14.99) or month membership (£34.99).

NOW can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones and consoles. NOW is also available via TNT Sports.

By entering your details you are agreeing to our terms and conditions and privacy policy. You can unsubscribe at any time.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

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

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Ariana Grande, Mariah Carey, and Sabrina Carpenter at the 2025 VMAs
TV & Streaming

Full Winners List (Live Updates)

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

The MTV Video Music Awards show has been a yearly hallmark of the music industry for three decades, and the tradition continued on Sunday (September 7) night in New York’s UBS Arena.

The star-studded awards show pre-announced a few key wins — Mariah Carey (with the Video Vanguard Award), Busta Rhymes (Rock the Bells Visionary Award), and Ricky Martin (Latin Icon Award) — but the rest were doled out with shiny moonperson trophies to the voted-in winners of the night’s biggest prizes in real time, in between all of the showstopping performances and tributes.

Here’s a look at all of the 2025 MTV VMAs winners (noted in bold), and keep refreshing for additional updates throughout the night!

Video of the Year

WINNER: Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records
Billie Eilish – “BIRDS OF A FEATHER” – Darkroom/Interscope Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – “Die with a Smile” – Interscope Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island
The Weeknd, Playboi Carti – “Timeless” – XO/Republic Records

Best Collaboration

WINNER: Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – “Die with a Smile” – Interscope Records
Bailey Zimmerman with Luke Combs – “Backup Plan (Stagecoach Official Music Video)” – Atlantic Records/Warner Music Nashville
Kendrick Lamar & SZA – “luther” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Post Malone ft. Blake Shelton – “Pour Me a Drink” – Mercury Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Selena Gomez, benny blanco – “Sunset Blvd” – SMG Music/Friends Keep Secrets/Interscope Records

Best Pop

WINNER: Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Record
Alex Warren – “Ordinary” – Atlantic Records
Ed Sheeran – “Sapphire” – Gingerbread Man Records/Atlantic Records
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – “Die with a Smile” – Interscope Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island

Best Album

WINNER: Sabrina Carpenter – Short n’ Sweet – Island
Bad Bunny – DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS – Rimas Entertainment
Kendrick Lamar – GNX – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – Mayhem – Interscope Records
Morgan Wallen – I’m the Problem – Big Loud Records/Mercury Records
The Weeknd – Hurry Up Tomorrow – XO/Republic Records

MTV Push Performance of the Year

WINNER: January 2025 – KATSEYE – “Touch” – HYBE/Geffen Records
August 2024 – Shaboozey – “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” – American Dogwood/EMPIRE
September 2024 – Ayra Starr – “Last Heartbreak Song” – Mavin Records/Republic Records
October 2024 – Mark Ambor – “Belong Together” – Hundred Days Records/Virgin Music
November 2024 – Lay Bankz – “Graveyard” – Artist Partner Group Inc.
December 2024 – Dasha – “Bye Bye Bye” – Warner Records
February 2025 – Jordan Adetunji – “KEHLANI” – 300 Entertainment
March 2025 – Leon Thomas – “YES IT IS” – EZMNY Records/Motown Records
April 2025 – Livingston – “Shadow” – Republic Records
May 2025 – Damiano David – “Next Summer” – Sony Italy/Arista Records
June 2025 – Gigi Perez – “Sailor Song” – Island
July 2025 – ROLE MODEL – “Sally, When the Wine Runs Out” – Interscope Records

Song of the Year

WINNER: ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Alex Warren – “Ordinary” – Atlantic Records
Billie Eilish – “BIRDS OF A FEATHER” – Darkroom/Interscope Records
Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records
Ed Sheeran – “Sapphire” – Gingerbread Man Records/Atlantic Records
Gracie Abrams – “I Love You, I’m Sorry” – Interscope Records
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars – “Die with a Smile” – Interscope Records
Lorde – “What Was That” – Republic Records
Tate McRae – “Sports Car” – RCA Records
The Weeknd, Playboi Carti – “Timeless” – XO/Republic Records

Artist of the Year

WINNER: Lady Gaga – Interscope Records
Bad Bunny – Rimas Entertainment
Beyoncé – Parkwood Entertainment/Columbia Records
Kendrick Lamar – pgLang/Interscope Records
Morgan Wallen – Big Loud Records/Mercury Records
Taylor Swift – Republic Records
The Weeknd – XO/Republic Records

Song of Summer

WINNER: Tate McRae – “Just Keep Watching”
Addison Rae – “Headphones On”
Alex Warren – “Ordinary”
Benson Boone – “Mystical Magical”
BigXthaPlug featuring Bailey Zimmerman – “All the Way”
Chappell Roan – “The Subway”
Demi Lovato – “Fast”
Doja Cat – “Jealous Type”
Huntr/x: Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami – “Golden”
Jessie Murph – “Blue Strips”
Justin Bieber – “Daisies”
Moliy, Silent Addy, Skillibeng and Shenseea – “Shake It to the Max (Fly) (remix)”
Morgan Wallen featuring Tate McRae – “What I Want”
Ravyn Lenae featuring Rex Orange County – “Love Me Not”
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild”
Sombr – “12 to 12”

Best New Artist

WINNER: Alex Warren – Atlantic Records
Ella Langley – SAWGOD/Columbia Records
Gigi Perez – Island
Lola Young – Island
sombr – SMB Music/Warner Records
The Marías – Nice Life/Atlantic Records

Roy Rochlin / Getty Images for MTV

Best Alternative

WINNER: sombr – “back to friends” – SMB Music/Warner Records
Gigi Perez – “Sailor Song” – Island
Imagine Dragons – “Wake Up” – KIDinaKorner/Interscope Records
Lola Young – “Messy” – Island
mgk & Jelly Roll – “Lonely Road” – EST 19XX/Interscope Records
The Marías – “Back to Me” – Nice Life/Atlantic Records

Best Country (new category)

WINNER: Megan Moroney – “Am I Okay?” – Columbia Records
Chris Stapleton – “Think I’m in Love with You” – Mercury Nashville
Cody Johnson with Carrie Underwood – “I’m Gonna Love You” – CoJo Music / Warner Music Nashville
Jelly Roll – “Liar” – BBR Music Group/BMG/Republic Records
Lainey Wilson – “4x4xU” – Broken Bow Records
Morgan Wallen – “Smile” – Big Loud Records/Mercury Records

ELMONT, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 07: Megan Moroney attends the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards at UBS Arena on September 07, 2025 in Elmont, New York. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for MTV)

Roy Rochlin / Getty Images for MTV

Best R&B

WINNER: Mariah Carey – “Type Dangerous” – gamma.
Chris Brown – “Residuals” – Chris Brown Entertainment/RCA Records
Leon Thomas & Freddie Gibbs – “MUTT (REMIX)” – EZMNY Records/Motown Records
PARTYNEXTDOOR – “N o C h i l l” – OVO Sound
Summer Walker – “Heart of a Woman” – LVRN/Interscope Records
SZA – “Drive” – Top Dawg Entertainment/RCA Records
The Weeknd, Playboi Carti – “Timeless” – XO/Republic Records

Best K-Pop

WINNER: LISA ft. Doja Cat & RAYE – “Born Again” – Lloud Co./RCA Records
aespa – “Whiplash” – SM Entertainment/Virgin Music Group
JENNIE – “like JENNIE” – OA Entertainment/Columbia Records
Jimin – “Who” – BIGHIT MUSIC
JISOO – “earthquake” – Warner Records
Stray Kids – “Chk Chk Boom” – JYP/IMPERIAL/Republic
ROSÉ – “toxic till the end” – Atlantic Records

Best Afrobeats

WINNER: Tyla – “PUSH 2 START” – FAX Records/Epic Records
Asake & Travis Scott – “Active” – YBNL Nation/EMPIRE
Burna Boy ft. Travis Scott – “TaTaTa” – Spaceship/Bad Habit/Atlantic Records
MOLIY, Silent Addy, Skillibeng & Shenseea – “Shake It to the Max (FLY) (Remix)” – gamma.
Rema – “Baby (Is It a Crime)” – Mavin Global Holdings Ltd / Jonzing World Entertainment / Interscope Records
Tems ft. Asake – “Get It Right” – RCA Records/Since ’93
Wizkid ft. Brent Faiyaz – “Piece of My Heart” – Starboy/RCA Records

Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award

WINNER: Mariah Carey

Rock the Bells Visionary Award

WINNER: Busta Rhymes

Latin Icon Award

WINNER: Ricky Martin


Best Pop Artist (new category)

Ariana Grande – Republic Records
Charli xcx – Atlantic Records
Justin Bieber – Def Jam Recordings
Lorde – Republic Records
Miley Cyrus – Columbia Records
Sabrina Carpenter – Island
Tate McRae – RCA Records

Best Hip-Hop

Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records
Drake – “NOKIA” – OVO/Santa Anna/Republic
Eminem ft. Jelly Roll – “Somebody Save Me” – Shady/Aftermath/Interscope Records
GloRilla ft. Sexyy Red – “WHATCHU KNO ABOUT ME” – CMG/Interscope Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
LL COOL J ft. Eminem – “Murdergram Deux” – Def Jam Recordings
Travis Scott – “4X4” – Cactus Jack/Epic Records

Best Rock

Coldplay – “ALL MY LOVE” – Atlantic Records
Evanescence – “Afterlife (From the Netflix Series ‘Devil May Cry‘)” – Netflix Music
Green Day – “One Eyed Bastard” – Reprise Records/Warner Records
Lenny Kravitz – “Honey” – ℗© 2024 Roxie Records Inc. under exclusive license to BMG Rights Management GmbH
Linkin Park – “The Emptiness Machine” – Warner Records
twenty one pilots – “The Contract” – Fueled By Ramen

Best Latin

Bad Bunny – “BAILE INoLVIDABLE” – Rimas Entertainment
J Balvin – “Rio” – Capitol Records
KAROL G – “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido” – Bichota Records/Interscope Records
Peso Pluma – “LA PATRULLA” – Double P Records
Rauw Alejandro & Romeo Santos – “Khé?” – Sony Music US Latin
Shakira – “Soltera” – Sony Music US Latin

Best Long Form Video

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records
Bad Bunny – “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS (Short Film)” – Rimas Entertainment
Damiano David – “FUNNY little STORIES” – Sony Italy/Arista Records
Mac Miller – “Balloonerism” – Warner Records
Miley Cyrus – “Something Beautiful” – Columbia Records
The Weeknd – “Hurry Up Tomorrow” – XO/Republic Records

Video for Good

Burna Boy – “Higher” – Spaceship/Bad Habit/Atlantic Records
Charli xcx – “Guess featuring Billie Eilish” – Atlantic Records
Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records
Eminem ft. Jelly Roll – “Somebody Save Me” – Shady/Aftermath/Interscope Records
Selena Gomez, benny blanco – “Younger and Hotter Than Me” – SMG Music/Friends Keep Secrets/Interscope Records
Zach Hood ft. Sasha Alex Sloan – “Sleepwalking” – Arista Records

Best Direction

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records
Charli xcx – “Guess featuring Billie Eilish” – Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island

Best Art Direction

Charli xcx – “Guess featuring Billie Eilish” – Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
Lorde – “Man of the Year” – Republic Records
Miley Cyrus – “End of the World” – Columbia Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records

Best Cinematography

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records
Ed Sheeran – “Sapphire” – Gingerbread Man Records/Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
Miley Cyrus – “Easy Lover” – Columbia Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island

Best Editing

Charli xcx – “Guess featuring Billie Eilish” – Atlantic Records
Ed Sheeran – “Sapphire” – Gingerbread Man Records/Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island
Tate McRae – “Just Keep Watching (from ‘F1® The Movie’)” – Atlantic Records

Best Choreography

Doechii – “Anxiety” – Top Dawg Entertainment/Capitol Records
FKA twigs – “Eusexua” – Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us” – pgLang/Interscope Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
Tyla – “PUSH 2 START” – FAX Records/Epic Records
Zara Larsson – “Pretty Ugly” – Epic Records

Best Visual Effects

Ariana Grande – “brighter days ahead” – Republic Records
Lady Gaga – “Abracadabra” – Interscope Records
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars – “APT.” – Atlantic Records
Sabrina Carpenter – “Manchild” – Island
Tate McRae – “Just Keep Watching (from ‘F1® The Movie’)” – Atlantic Records
The Weeknd – “Hurry Up Tomorrow” – XO/Republic Records

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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2025 Creative Arts Emmys Winners List: Night Two
TV & Streaming

2025 Creative Arts Emmys Winners List: Night Two

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

With just one week to go before the 77th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards, the television industry started the festivities with the Creative Arts Emmys, two nights of awards for technical and artistic excellence behind-the-scenes of the year’s best shows. Night one honored key players in narrative fiction (though the results don’t hint obviously at next week’s big winners), and night two shifts to reality, variety, nonfiction, and documentary programming.

Many of the September 7 awards went to the HBO documentary “Pee-wee as Himself” (including director Matt Wolf) and NBC’s “SNL50” celebrating half a century of the iconic sketch comedy series. Ted Passon’s “Patrice” won the award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. “The Daily Show” picked up awards for writing and for specific segments, while “Love on the Spectrum” received accolades for Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program and for its casting. The Grammys, Oscars, and Beyoncé Bowl all picked up awards, as did streaming favorites “Cunk on Life” and “The Traitors.”

'Survivor: Australia V The World'

Full Creative Arts Emmy Awards Night 2 winners list below.

OUTSTANDING SHORT FORM COMEDY, DRAMA OR VARIETY SERIES
“The Daily Show,” Desi Lydic, Foxplains; Jennifer Flanz, Ramin Hedayati, Jocelyn Conn, Matt Negrin, Jason O. Gilbert

OUTSTANDING SHORT FORM NONFICTION OR REALITY SERIES
“Adolescence,” “The Making of Adolescence”

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A VARIETY SPECIAL
The Oscars: Misty Buckley, Alana Billingsley, John Zuiker, Margaux Lapresle

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A VARIETY OR REALITY SERIES
“Saturday Night Live”: Akira Yoshimura, Keith Raywood, Joe DeTullio, Andrea Purcigliotti, Patrick Lynch, Sara Parks

OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY FOR VARIETY OR REALITY PROGRAMMING
The Grammy Awards, Robbie Blue

OUTSTANDING MUSIC DIRECTION
Kendrick Lamar, Tony Russell

OUTSTANDING MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A DOCUMENTARY SERIES OR SPECIAL
“Chef’s Table,” Duncan Thum, David Bertok

OUTSTANDING SOUND EDITING FOR A NONFICTION OR REALITY PROGRAM
“Music by John Williams,” Dmitri Makarov, Tim Farrell, Richard Gould, Ramiro Belgardt

OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A NONFICTION PROGRAM
“Beatles ’64,” Josh Berger, Giles Martin

OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A VARIETY SERIES OR SPECIAL
“SNL 50: The Anniversary Special,” Robert Palladino, Ezra Matychak, Frank Duca, Doug Nightwine, Christopher Costello, Caroline Sanchez, Josiah Gluck, Jay Vicari, Tyler McDiarmid, Geoffrey Countryman, Devin Emke, Teng Chen

OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A REALITY PROGRAMMING
“Welcome to Wrexham,” Mark Jensen

OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A REALITY PROGRAM
“Love on the Spectrum” Cian O’Clery, Sean Bowman, Emma Choate

OUTSTANDING EMERGING MEDIA PROGRAM
“SNL 50 Special: Immersive Experience,” Lorne Michaels, Michael DeProspo, Michael Scogin, Rick Rey, Matthew Celia

OUTSTANDING INNOVATION IN EMERGING MEDIA PROGRAMMING
“White Rabbit”

OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A NONFICTION PROGRAM
“The Daily Show Presents,” Jordan Klepper

OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A VARIETY SPECIAL
“SNL 50: The Anniversary Special”

OUTSTANDING HOST FOR A GAME SHOW
Jimmy Kimmel, “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?”

OUTSTANDING GAME SHOW
“Jeopardy!”

OUTSTANDING MAKEUP FOR A VARIETY, NONFICTION OR REALITY PROGRAMMING
“SNL 50,” Louie Zakarian, Jason Milani, Amy Tagliamonti, Rachel Pagani, Young Bek, Stephen Kelley, Joanna Pisani

OUTSTANDING HAIRSTYLING FOR A VARIETY NONFICTION OR REALITY PROGRAM
“SNL 50,” Jodi Mancuso, Cara Hannah, Inga Thrasher, Amanda Duffy Evans, Chad Harlow, Gina Ferrucci, Brittany Hartman, Katie Beatty

OUTSTANDING COSTUMES FOR VARIETY, NONFICTION OR REALITY PROGRAMMING
Beyoncé Bowl

OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR VARIETY PROGRAMMING (SEGMENT)
“SNL 50,” Ryan Spears, Paul Del Gesso, Christopher Salerno, Daniel Garcia, Sean McIlraith, Rhyan McIlraith

OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR VARIETY PROGRAMMING
“Cunk On Life,” Damon Tai, Jason Boxall

OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A NONFICTION PROGRAMMING
“Pee-wee As Himself,” Damian Rodriguez

OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A STRUCTURED REALITY OR COMPETITION PROGRAM
“The Traitors,” Patrick Owen, Seddon-Brown

OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR AN UNSTRUCTURED REALITY PROGRAM
“Welcome to Wrexham”: Sam Fricke, Jenny Krochmal, Mohamed El Manasterly, Michael Oliver, Tim Roche, Matt Wafaie, Steve Welch, Tim Wilsbach

OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A REALITY PROGRAM
“The Traitors,” Siggi Rosen-Rawlings, Matt Wright, Jack Booth, Alex Bruno, Ned Ellis-Jones, Ollie Green, Quin Jessop, Guy Linton, Joshua Montague, Paul Rudge, James Spencer, Matt Thomson, Alex Took, Melvin Wright

OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A NONFICTION PROGRAM
“100 Foot Wave,” Michael Darrigade, Vincent Kardasik, Alexandre Lesbats, Laurent Pujol, Karl Sandrock, Chris Smith

OUTSTANDING DOCUMENTARY OR NONFICTION SERIES
“100 Foot Wave,” Vince Kardasik, Ryan Heller, Michael Bloom, Maria Zuckerman, Zachary Rothfeld, Joe Lewis, Chris Smith, Nancy Abraham, Lisa Heller, Bentley Weiner

OUTSTANDING DOCUMENTARY OR NONFICTION SPECIAL
“Pee-wee As Himself,” Emma Tillinger Koskoff, Matt Wolf, Ronald Bronstein, Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie, Paul Reubens, Candace Tomarken

OUTSTANDING NARRATOR
Barack Obama, “Our Oceans”

OUTSTANDING HOST FOR A REALITY OR REALITY COMPETITION PROGRAM
Alan Cumming, “The Traitors”

OUTSTANDING HOSTED NONFICTION SERIES OR SPECIAL
“Conan O’Brien Must Go” Conan O’Brien, Jeff Ross, Jose Arroyo, Jason Chillemi, Sarah Federowicz, Jessie Gaskell, Mike Sweeney, Aaron Bleyaert, Jordan Schlansky, Matthew Shaw

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A REALITY PROGRAM
“The Traitors,” Ben Archard

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A DOCUMENTARY/NONFICTION PROGRAM
“Pee-wee as Himself,” Matt Wolf

OUTSTANDING COMMERCIAL
“Brian Cox Goes To College,” Uber One for Students

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN/LIGHTING DIRECTION FOR A SERIES
“SNL,” Geoff Amoral, Rick McGuinness, William McGuinness, Trevor Brown, Tim Stasse, Frank Grisanti, Reginald Campbell

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN/LIGHTING DIRECTION FOR A SPECIAL
67th Annual Grammy Awards, Noah Mitz, Andy O’Reilly, Patrick Boozer, Ryan Tanker, Erin Anderson, Madigan Stehly, Will Gossett, Bryan Klunder, Hannah Kerman, Matt Benson, Matthew Cotter, Guy Jones, Kevin Faust

OUTSTANDING TECHNICAL DIRECTION AND CAMERA WORK FOR A SPECIAL
“SNL 50: The Anniversary Special”

OUTSTANDING TECHNICAL DIRECTION AND CAMERA WORK FOR A SPECIAL
“SNL 50,” Bill DiGiovanni, John Pinto, Paul Cangialosi, Anthony Tarantino, Dave Driscoll, Brian Phraner, Daniel Erbeck, Mike Knarre, Ansel Nunez, Rick Fox, Anthony Lenzo

OUTSTANDING TECHNICAL DIRECTION AND CAMERAWORK FOR A SERIES
“Saturday Night Live,” Bill DiGiovanni, John Pinto, Paul Cangialosi, Anthony Tarantino, Dave Driscoll, Brian Phraner, Daniel Erbeck

OUTSTANDING STRUCTURED REALITY PROGRAM
“Queer Eye”

OUTSTANDING UNSTRUCTURED REALITY PROGRAM
“Love on the Spectrum”

EXCEPTIONAL MERIT IN DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKING
“Patrice: The Movie”

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A VARIETY SPECIAL
“SNL 50,” Liz Patrick

OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A VARIETY SERIES
Jim Hoskinson, “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert”

VARIETY SPECIAL (Pre-Recorded)
Conan O’Brien, The Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel Says 'Live In Front of a Studio Audience" Won't Return
TV & Streaming

Jimmy Kimmel Says ‘Live In Front of a Studio Audience” Won’t Return

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Jimmy Kimmel is keeping “Live In Front of a Studio Audience” on a permanent pause. The series of specials, which earned raves and multiple Emmy Awards via three installments in May 2019, December 2019 and December 2021, haven’t been back since the death of icon Norman Lear in 2023. And for Kimmel, it’s probably best to keep it that way.

Kimmel was backstage at the Creative Arts Emmys on Sunday, having just won the award for game show host (via “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?”) when he was asked whether he would want to do another “Live in Front of a Studio Audience.”

“It would be too emotional to do it without Norman. Lear, you know, I don’t know if my heart could take it,” he said.

Part of the draw of “Live in Front of a Studio Audience” was taking Lear’s 1970s-era sitcoms, known for mixing comedy with an honest look at the issues that people face, and noticing more than 40 years later, the subjects are still relevant. Watching modern casts perform the timeless scripts from Lear’s series was a reminder that while the world may change, the good and bad of humanity doesn’t.

The first special recreated the “All in the Family” episode “Henry’s Farewell” and “The Jeffersons” premiere “A Friend in Need.” The second special featured another “All in the Family” episode and an episode of “Good Times.” The third special combined “The Facts of Life” Season 3 episode “Kids Can Be Cruel” with the “Diff’rent Strokes” Season 1 episode “Willis’ Privacy”

This repped Kimmel’s first Primetime Emmy for game show host — but at the Daytime Emmys, in 1999, he and Ben Stein won the outstanding game show host award for “Win Ben Stein’s Money.”

“It was very surprising,” Kimmel said of that win. “When we won that Emmy, we went on the air the same week ‘South Park’ went on the air, and Comedy Central was not a channel that many people watched. And we were up against these titans, the same shows we’re up against now, ‘Wheel of Fortune’ and ‘Jeopardy.’ We didn’t know anyone was watching the show. I think it was the first Emmy Comedy Central ever won. I specifically remember being at that ceremony and seeing Susan Lucci in the front row, and she had lost 15 years in a row. It was like the big story every year. So when we won, I said something to the effect of ‘it seems ridiculous that we would win this in our first year.’ And I handed the Emmy to her, and she later gave it back. She rejected it. At the airport the next day, the lady at the TSA goes, ‘Are you the guy who gave Susan Lucci the Emmy?!’

Meanwhile, in Sunday’s acceptance speech, Kimmel gave a shout-out to original “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” host Regis Philbin.

“Regis was the best at this,” he said. “I don’t think this show would still be on the air if Regis hadn’t hosted it to start with. And he was such an unusual pick at the time. I don’t think people remember that, because it became such a big sensation, not just a hit, but like a cultural phenomenon. I don’t think people thought about the fact that Regis was a very unlikely choice as host for this show that became this big deal. Regis was very nice to me and I liked a lot. It is exciting to to have this and to know that he has this same Emmy somewhere in his family’s collection as well.”

Asked about whether he had thoughts on retiring or leaving his late night talk show. Kimmel joked, “I’m not prepared to answer their question, but it is something I think about a lot, and things have changed a lot over the last what nine years.” He went on to say, “Each day is a new adventure, and I take them as they come. Is that a good way of dodging the question?”

Kimmel was also asked about what it was like being at the forefront of defending democracy along with shows like “Saturday Night Live” and “South Park.” Said Kimmel: “Those are heavy thoughts, and I have a tendency to reject them. I don’t necessarily feel like I’m defending democracy, but I do feel like I’m giving this guy a little poke, and he deserves it, and I enjoy it.”

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Idris Elba, Del Toro & Nina Hoss Urge Empathy
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Idris Elba, Del Toro & Nina Hoss Urge Empathy

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

At tonight’s Toronto International Film Festival Tribute Awards, honorees like Idris Elba, Guillermo del Toro and Nina Hoss urged empathy, invoking the state of the world as in desperate need of human compassion.

The gala, which is an annual fundraiser supporting TIFF‘s core mission of cinema’s transformative power in real life, honored the outstanding impact of leading industry members. This year’s awardees also included Jodie Foster, Hikari, Lee Byung Hun, Kazu Hiro, Channing Tatum, Jafar Panahi, Zacharias Kunuk and Catherine O’Hara.

This year’s event also celebrated TIFF’s 50th Edition.

Though the artists’ statements remained vague in their gesticulations toward various sociopolitical crises currently sending shockwaves through the earth, it’s not difficult to infer veiled references to rising authoritarianism or the wars in Sudan and Gaza, which have led to catastrophic threats of famine.

Hoss, who featured in Hedda and received one of the Performer Awards, said, “We can’t forget what’s going on around us in the world … but I believe in the power of cinema, I truly do. I believe that when we sit in this room together, coming from all kinds of backgrounds — if young or old, it doesn’t matter what education we have — film brings us together because we can dive into, for a little moment in a very intimate way, into another person’s world, another person’s life, and we get challenged, we laugh with the person, we cry and experience his world and in the best way, hopefully we feel empathy. And from empathy, comes kindness, and we need that in this world right now.”

Nina Hoss, recipient of the Performer Award at the TIFF Tribute Awards, speaks to the current state of the world and how more kindness and empathy is needed pic.twitter.com/4YwRveg8C1

— Deadline (@DEADLINE) September 8, 2025

Meanwhile, Frankenstein filmmaker del Toro noted lightheartedly: “Canadians are modest and shy except on traffic and hockey; they go really crazy, yeah? Really violent,” he joked, eliciting audience laughs. “But in the meantime, they don’t like to talk about their achievements, so it takes a Mexican to tell you that Canada is a bastion of hope in the world right now.”

Elba, who received the TIFF Tribute Award in Impact Media, stated: “Even though we don’t really want to talk about it at a celebration of our industry, it is important to acknowledge the pain the world is feeling altogether, and that pain is something that — no matter what you do, whether we make films or you sponsor events like this — you close your eyes at night, you feel that pain because we’re human beings; we’re empaths.”

The multi-hyphenate added that the award is a symbol encouraging people to “make an impact with your lives, make an impact with our world by feeling something, all right? Feel it. No matter where you stand on whatever conflict is going on in the world, feel something, please. Our children, our children’s children — they need to know that we felt something during this time.”

Idris Elba, recipient of the Award in Impact Media at the TIFF Tribute Awards, speaks to the bittersweet moment of accepting this award amidst the current state but encourages people to make an impact in our world pic.twitter.com/C7cvxgjytI

— Deadline (@DEADLINE) September 8, 2025

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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White Lotus Composer Wins Emmy After Mike White Feud
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White Lotus Composer Wins Emmy After Mike White Feud

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

The White Lotus composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer has won the award for best original main title theme music at the 2025 Creative Arts Emmy Awards following a public falling out with the show’s creator Mike White. The win marks de Veer’s third Emmy for the HBO drama, which he’s scored since its premiere in 2021.

In April, de Veer told The New York Times that he would not be returning for the series’ fourth season, saying, “I announced to the [editorial] team a few months ago that I was not coming back, that I was leaving. … At some point, [White] heard about that.”

According to de Veer, he and White butted heads over the show’s opening theme song, specifically the “ooh-loo-loo-loos” that were a part of the season one track. In season three, the sound was removed from the series’ opening credit music, but was still featured on the full version of the track, with de Veer admitting, “I just stuck to what I was doing. And when I was giving versions, it was still the same thing.”

Days after de Veer’s New York Times story ran, White responded to the article in an interview with Howard Stern, saying, “I honestly don’t know what happened, except now I’m reading his interviews because he decides to do some PR campaign about him leaving the show. I don’t think he respected me. He wants people to know that he’s edgy and dark and I’m, I don’t know, like I watch reality TV. We never really even fought. He says we feuded. I don’t think I ever had a fight with him — except for maybe some emails. It was basically me giving him notes. I don’t think he liked to go through the process of getting notes from me, or wanting revisions, because he didn’t respect me. I knew he wasn’t a team player and that he wanted to do it his way. I was thrown that he would go to The New York Times to shit on me and the show three days before the finale. It was kind of a bitch move.”

For his part, de Veer noted his reluctance to take notes from White in the Times, saying, “Maybe I was being unprofessional, and, for sure, Mike feels that I was always unprofessional to him because I didn’t give him what he wanted. But what I gave him did this, you know — [won] those Emmys, people going crazy [for the show],” he said. “That is the main thing that I’m most happy about — it was worth all the tension and almost forcing the music into the show, in a way, because I didn’t have that many allies in there … This was a good struggle.”

De Veer won Emmys for both best music composition and best original main title music in 2022 and best music composition in 2023 for The White Lotus, which received a total of 23 Emmy nominations overall this year. The 2025 award for best music composition went to Severance.

The 2025 Creative Arts Emmy Awards are held on Saturday, Sept. 6 and Sunday, Sept. 7 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. Check out the full list of winners here.

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Amazon picks up rights to Life Is Strange with Kaos creator as writer and showrunner
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Amazon picks up rights to Life Is Strange with Kaos creator as writer and showrunner

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

The games centre around 18-year-old photography student Max Caulfield, who learns that she is capable of rewinding time.

Based on the premise of the butterfly effect, by which changing small things in the present can radically alter the future, the narrative unfolds in different ways depending on how players choose to use this power to interact with the world.

The show is set to be written by Charlie Covell, the writer behind hit shows such as Netflix’s Kaos and The End of the F***ing World, who will also serve as executive producer and showrunner.

KAOS creator Charlie Covell will act as writer and showrunner. Netflix

They will be joined by executive producers Dmitri M. Johnson, Mike Goldberg and Timothy I. Stevenson under their Story Kitchen production company.

The series comes from the game’s original publisher Square Enix, as well as Story Kitchen, Lucky Chap and Amazon MGM Studios producing.

On the project, Story Kitchen’s Johnson and Goldberg said, “Story Kitchen has always believed that Life Is Strange deserved to be more than just a game – it’s a cultural touchstone.

“After a decade-long journey, we’re honoured to be bringing this beloved story to Amazon MGM alongside our incredible partners at Square Enix, our brilliant showrunner/writer Charlie Covell, and the amazing team at LuckyChap.

“Together, this thoughtfully assembled dream team is ready to share Life Is Strange with the world in an entirely new way!”

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Covell was equally enthusiastic about the chance to work on the game, stating “It’s a huge honour to be adapting Life Is Strange of Amazon MGM Studios. I am a massive fan of the game, and I’m thrilled to be working with the incredible teams at Square Enix, Story Kitchen and Lucky Chap

“I can’t wait to share Max and Chloe’s story with fellow players and new audiences alike.”

The original Life Is Strange, first released in 2015, received widespread acclaim from both critics and players, largely for its characters and storytelling.

Since then, Life Is Strange 2, released in two chunks across 2018 and 2019, and 2024’s Life Is Strange: Double Exposure have proven rather more divisive, garnering mixed reviews, having been perceived to lack aspects of what made the original so special.

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

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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VMAs 2025 Red carpet Arrivals
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2025 MTV Video Music Awards Red Carpet Arrival Photos

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2025 MTV Video Music Awards are here. The annual event, which takes place in New York City’s UBS Arena, is being simulcast on its longtime cable network as well as, for the first time ever, CBS.

LL Cool J emcees the event, which will honor legends of music like Mariah Carey (with the Video Vanguard Award), Busta Rhymes (Rock the Bells Visionary Award), and Ricky Martin (Latin Icon Award). The event will also feature performances from artists such as Alex Warren, Busta Rhymes, J Balvin ft. DJ Snake, Ricky Martin, Sabrina Carpenter, sombr, Conan Gray, Doja Cat, Jelly Roll, Post Malone, and Tate McRae.

Among the nominees for the evening’s biggest prizes: Taylor Swift (who is not expected to attend), Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, Kendrick Lamar, ROSÉ, Carpenter, Ariana Grande, The Weeknd, Billie Eilish, and Charli xcx. Presenters include Ashlee Simpson Ross, Brittany Snow, Ciara, Drew Barrymore, KPop Demon Hunter‘s EJAE, REI AMI + Audrey Nuna (Huntr/x), Ice Spice, Jessica Simpson, Latto, Livvy Dunne, Malin Akerman, Megan Stalter, Nikki Glaser, and Paris Hilton.

So, perhaps needless to say, this will be a star-studded event, and you won’t want to miss out on all of the red carpet looks. Find the biggest and boldest arrivals below (and keep refreshing as this will be updated throughout the night).

MTV Video Music Awards 2025, Sunday, September 7, 8/7c, MTV & CBS

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Are We Going to Miss This?
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Are We Going to Miss This?

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Comedies end with weddings. Tragedies end with funerals. But the “Conjuring” franchise just went out on Bring Your Daughter to Work Day in “The Conjuring: Last Rites.” Directed by Michael Chaves, it’s a messy but fun-enough swan song for the cinematic Ed and Lorraine Warren — who’ve helped “Annabelle” and “The Nun” make Warner Bros. more than $2 billion at the series’ lifetime box office.

The married paranormal investigators have been played successfully by Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga ever since James Wan cracked the studio’s concept for a so-called “true story” in 2013. The actors’ fourth “Conjuring” film gives their take on the controversial spiritualists a surprisingly upbeat exit with the Smurl case: a notorious Pennsylvania haunting that devastated a suburban family throughout the ’70s and ’80s. In the film, a vicious combination of demons and ghosts come to terrorize the eight unlucky Smurl souls when an evil mirror enters their home in the form of a possessed gift, given to a girl for Catholic Confirmation.

I Swear
THE CONJURING: LAST RITES, (aka THE CONJURING 4), Mia Tomlinson, 2025.  © Warner Bros. / courtesy Everett Collection
Mia Tomlinson in ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

“Last Rites” should theoretically tie off the “Conjuring” franchise for good, but its script (co-written by Ian Goldberg, Richard Naing, and David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick) leaves that door open by finally casting the clairvoyant Judy Warren as an adult. Scene-stealer Mia Tomlinson could take over the Conjuring Universe from Wilson and Farmiga, no doubt. She’s got real chemistry with her fellow series newcomer, Ben Hardy, who plays the Warrens’ eventual son-in-law Tony Spera. And although she’s just starting to get serious about the exorcism business here, Judy makes for a magnetic hero you want to see more.

With the bullish determination of Ed and the wide-eyed second sight of Lorraine, the Warrens’ only child sells a clear vision of right and wrong when news of the Smurls’ predicament comes their way. Judy’s parents have wanted to retire for years, and ever since their daughter started getting her own spectral signals, Lorraine has done everything she can to convince her to shut them out. But a divine purpose has compelled Ed and Lorraine to fight the devil for decades, and around the time another brave young woman, Dawn Smurl (Beau Gadsdon, also a standout), suddenly starts puking up shards of glass in the family’s kitchen sink, Judy knows the Warrens can’t stop their god-fearing mission now.

THE CONJURING: LAST RITES, (aka THE CONJURING 4), from left: Tilly Walker, Kila Lord Cassidy, Molly Cartwright, Elliot Cowan, Beau Gadson, Rebecca Calder, 2025. © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection
(Left to right): Tilly Walker, Kila Lord Cassidy, Molly Cartwright, Elliot Cowan, Beau Gadson, Rebecca Calder in ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

The real Ed and Lorraine had close ties to the Church, and they’ve been softly praised and heavily criticized for their controversial work with the occult. Ed died years before the original film was made, but the late Lorraine consulted on the first two movies. The overly rosy portrait “The Conjuring” franchise has repeatedly painted of these divisive public figures leaves a lot out.

For one thing, gatekeeping “evidence” in the basement of their Connecticut home has lead several research organizations to claim the Warrens didn’t want their findings properly vetted. What’s more, they’ve been accused of doing more harm than good to family’s in crisis. Over the years, allegations have ranged from reckless misrepresentations of the truth to instances of explicit abuse that will always inform the memory of Ed. Taking time to watch the problematic patriarch and fres-fashed Toby play ping pong — then following Lorraine and Judy to pick out a wedding dress, where an apparition awaits — “Last Rites” is almost egregiously affectionate towards the Warrens in light of that legacy.

Also behind “The Devil Made Me Do It” (2021) and “The Nun II” (2023), Chaves’ third franchise effort is a kind of double-date that should convince audiences with any preexisting feelings about Warner Bros.’ hit-or-miss horror universe to change their minds, one way or the other. If, like me, you were ready to put the “Conjuring” films to rest long ago, “Last Rites” offers the heart the other entries missed — and it might just tempt you back for one more. But if you’re all-in on the familiar haunted house formulas of old, this finale will feel like a sentimental but seriously low-scare disappointment you wish you could put back.

THE CONJURING: LAST RITES, (aka THE CONJURING 4), 2025. © Warner Bros. / courtesy Everett Collection
‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

Assuming you’re able to ignore the morally objectionable realities underpinning “Last Rites,” Chaves captures his cast’s best moments in broad daylight. Wilson and Farmiga are as into each other as ever, and watching the pair scoot down a backcountry lane on a motorcycle, you’ll feel happy the fictional couple got a chance to say goodbye. Sly jokes and cute cameos sprinkle the rest of the film like holy water, and Wan himself even appears in a pleasantly pandering concluding scene that nails the spirit of fan service. And yet, introducing new antagonists through a muddled mystery, the core Conjuring mythology nearly cracks beyond repair.

In competition with Mike Flanagan’s entire career for the single longest fight with a mirror ever put on film (that’s a joke about “Oculus,” look it up), “Last Rites” is interminably goofy. That’s a nice surprise for those of us who are tired of pretending that rocking chairs and flickering flashlights were ever scary — but a brutal slap in the face for anyone still taking these con-artist ghost busters seriously. An exquisite beat of megalophobia resurrects Annabelle in a terrifying light, but Chaves mainly recycles the haunted toy concept to the underwhelming film’s detriment. Suffice to say, I’m rarely one to agree with the current administration, but in this one context, Donald Trump was right, and beautiful 11-year-old baby girls do not need that many dolls.

THE CONJURING: LAST RITES, (aka THE CONJURING 4), Vera Farmiga, 2025. ph: Giles Keyte / © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection
Vera Farmiga in ‘The Conjuring: Last Rites’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

Still, “Last Rites” has a sense of humor and that’s worth watching if you’re up for a laugh instead of a scream. You’ll cackle when a light fixture inexplicably comes crashing down on some poor Smurl’s head at the dinner table, and the decision to zombify CNN’s Larry King for a primetime interview with the fearful Pennsylvania family is bizarre but worthy of a reaction. Canoodling more than we’ve ever seen Ed and Lorraine canoodle before, Wilson and Farmiga also seem to have a blast wrapping up their portrayals in a movie clearly created with their stardom in mind.

Whatever comes next for The Conjuring Universe will be up to Warner Bros. — and maybe the real Judy and Tony Spera. They’re still around and, wait for it, selling Annabelle-themed vodka that’s been aged 30 days in front of the haunted doll’s dusty glass case at the Warrens’ “museum” in Connecticut. Serve it a wedding! Serve it a funeral! Hell, serve it at the next unholy Bring Your Daughter to Work Day — liquor laws, eternal damnation, and divided “Last Rites” audiences notwithstanding.

Grade: C+

From Warner Bros. Pictures, “The Conjuring: Last Rites” is in theaters now.

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 7, 2025 0 comments
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20 International Titles to Track
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20 International Titles to Track

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Led by Cillian Murphy starring “Steve,” which sparked rave reviews, nine of the 10 titles at Toronto’s Platform are non-U.S., a sign of Toronto’s ever more vigorous focus on international titles in the run-up to the launch of a market next year. Multiple Platform titles could have Variety’s list of 20-Plus Titles to Track. Profiled on Saturday, however, they are not included in the cut. Two of the highest profile non-U.S. titles – “Couture;” starring a French-speaking Angelina Jolie, and “Bad Apples,” have already been profiled in Variety’s TIFF: 15 Buzzy Films From Chris Evans, Angelina Jolie, Michaela Coel and More That Have Buyers Circling. They are included but cross-referenced. Otherwise,   

“Amoeba,” (Tan Silyou, Singapore, Netherlands, France, Spain, South Korea, Discovery,)

Inspired by the colonial Singapore gangsters rulers, four girls, at a modern-day regimented elite secondary school form their own gang cam-recording petty acts of rebellion, led by firebrand freethinking lesbian Choo Xin Yu. But how farewell their rebellion really go when academic conformity is the key to get into top-notch colleges? “I set out to make a gang film, a prickly love letter to Singapore that questions the national narrative via four schoolgirls resisting repression with resilience and friendship,” says Tan Silyou. A spirited iconoclastic feature debut attracting an impressive multilateral production partners.   96

“Bad Apples,” (Jonatan Etzler, U.K.)

See Variety’s Sep. 5 article, TIFF: 15 Buzzy Films From Chris Evans, Angelina Jolie, Michaela Coel and More That Have Buyers Circling.

“The Captive,” (Alejandro Amenábar, Spain, Spain, Italy)

1575, Algiers. A young Miguel de Cervantes, who went on to write “Don Quixote,” the world’s first modern novel, languishes in a jail, captured by Ottoman corsairs, where he discovers his gift for storytelling. Starring Julio Peña (“Berlin”), a broad audience jail break adventure movie and Cervantes origins story as a writer and man which marks the latest from Academy Award winning Amenábar (“The Others,” “The Sea Inside”) and one of the biggest movies from Europe world premiering at Toronto. With Netflix acquiring Spain and select foreign territories, “The Captive” has scored a healthy bevy of pre-sales for Global Constellation, including France with Haut et Court. 

“The Condor Daughter,” (Álvaro Olmos Torrico, Bolivia, Peru, Uruguay, Centrepiece)

One of the buzziest titles screened in rough-cut at 2024’s Ventana Sur, and written-directed-produced by Empatia Cinema’s  Olmos Torrico, a helmer-scribe producer in Bolivia’s cinema vanguard. An identity drama, Quechua Clara, 16, her midwife mother Ana’s assistant, Clara leaves her high Andes village to become a big city chincha singer. Ana seeks her out in the city, as, animals doing, crops drying, her village is losing its population. A mother-daughter relationship drama set against rural depopulation knit and stunning, sweeping high Andes. Part of a highly select slate at Bendita Films Sales. 98

“Couture,” (Alice Winocour, U.S., France)

See Variety’s Sep. 5 article, TIFF: 15 Buzzy Films From Chris Evans, Angelina Jolie, Michaela Coel and More That Have Buyers Circling.

“Dry Leaf,” (Alexandre Koberidze, Germany, Georgia)

Catnip for Locarno main competition and at the more out-there end of the spectrum for Toronto, the third film from Koberidze after the breakout ““What Do We See When We Look at the Sky?” is shot on an Sony Ericsson cameraphone, discontinued in 2011. Picked up by Cinema Guild for North America,  “Dry Leaf” was hailed at Locarno by Variety as “a gorgeously eccentric road trip through blurry rural Georgia. Pixelated images tell a pixilated story as Alexander Koberidze’s bizarre and wonderful three-hour feature plays hide-and-seek with reality and memory across the soccer-mad nation of Georgia.

“Egghead Republic,” (Pella Kågerman, Hugo Lilja, Sweden, Discovery, TIFF Next Wave Selects)

One more example that political satire is back, baby – and weirder than ever. Kågerman and Lilja(“Aniara”) pick up Arno Schmidt’s novel and head to a radioactive zone, a no-go area ever since an atomic bomb fell on Soviet Kazakhstan. According to a controversial writer “you cannot tell a story without experiencing it yourself,” so a group of journos – and their unpaid interns – won’t be stopped by little radiation. Soon, they drink from cactuses, kiss topless centaurs and repeat after Tarkovsky’s Stalker: “Welcome to the Zone.”

“Franz,” (Agnieszka Holland, Czech Republic, Germany, Poland, Special Presentations, Luminaries)

A legendary director takes on a legendary writer Franz Kafka, following the punch in the face that was “Green Border.” The results are surprisingly playful. While stunningly shot, this is no usual biopic, with Holland more interested in nightmares than the who, what, when, where and why of a story. She “interviews” the characters on-camera, heads to present-day Kafka Museum and admits her troubled protagonist (newcomer Idan Weiss) would eventually change the world with his writing, but also demand change from a beggar. “An unconventional biopic that’s more puzzle than portrait,”says Variety, as Films Boutique continues to announce early sales. 

“The Furious,” (Tanigaki Kenji, Hong Kong, China, Midnight Madness)

Tanigaki Kenji — the veteran fight choreographer behind “SPL,” “Flash Point” and “Twilight of the Warriors” — takes a turn in the director’s chair with “The Furious.” Produced by Bill Kong (“Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”), the film follows Xie Miao as a father forced to unleash his combat instincts when his daughter is kidnapped, aided by Joe Taslim of “The Raid.” With Tanigaki’s signature mix of bone-crunching choreography and unrelenting pace, the film is a visceral showcase of martial arts cinema at its most uncompromising, the kind that genre fans – and buyers – will want to track closely. XYZ Films handles sales.

“Girl,” (Shu Qi, Taiwan, Centrepiece)

Growing up isn’t easy in Taiwanese screen icon Shu Qi’s debut film as a director – she recently starred in Cannes pick “Resurrection” – it’s all about disappointment and fear. Hsiao-lee’s abusive parents constantly keep her on the edge. She tries her best to disappear, until she meets Li-li. Her new friend isn’t quiet – Li-li is all about joyous rebelling and she’s tempted to join her. It’s the 1980s and her country is changing. Fed up with the silence, she’s hoping she can transform her life, too. Sold by Mandarin Vision Co and Goodfellas, “a heartfelt but scrappy debut,” says Variety. MB

“Ky Nam Inn,” (Leon Le, Vietnam, Special Presentations)

Food has rarely looked better than in this romantic film set in post-war Saigon. That’s how a young translator – working on “The Little Prince” – and a widow start to get close, chopping away and preparing delightful meals. But people are always watching, especially their neighbors, so quick to judge even the purest emotions. Fully embracing charms of retro-ish melodrama, director Leon Le is attracted to kindness, but these are not kind times that he’s portraying. Then again, are any? MB  

“Laundry” (Zamo Mkhwanazi, Switzerland, South Africa, Discovery) 

Set in apartheid South Africa and inspired by the story of Mkhwanazi’s own family, this drama hits hard – but also delivers the joy of music and the gloss of 1990s historical epics. Teenage Khuthala wants to become a musician – his father would like him to inherit their family business instead. Generational struggles give way to something much more sinister, however, as the world they’re living in would rather take away everything. The debuting director believes in dreams, that’s clear. She also knows that not everyone is allowed to have them. 

“I Swear,” (Kirk Jones, U.K.)

In 1983, in Scotland’s Galashiels, John Davidson, 15, begins to feel the first symptoms of Tourette Syndrome when there was still little awareness of the illness. Davidson’s turning point came 13 years later when he meets a neighbor, Lottie, a mental health nurse, who has a clear and compassionate understanding of his condition. “I Swear” charts Davidson’s journey to there and beyond in one of Toronto’s great crowdpleasers from Jones (“Waking Ned Devine”) packing an enormously empathetic performance by Robert Aramayo (“The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power”). “Another Super Hero film, but this hero is human, lives in Scotland and has been living with Tourette’s since he was 15 years old,” says Jones. It has already been pre-sold healthily to multiple major territories by Bankside.       

“Noviembre,” Tomás Corredor (Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, Norway)

Colombian directors – Gala del Sol, Simon Mesa Soto in just 2025 – are winning top-tier fest recognition. Add Corredor to the list. Gripping but reflective, “November” revisits the Nov. 1985 siege of the Palace of Justice, but from the POV of guerrilla fighters, judges and civilians trapped in one of its bathrooms, battling  their fears, driven by a desperate desire to survive. “‘November’ explores human fragility faced by an unmanageable reality: Imminent death. It’s about resistance,” Corredor tells Variety. Lead-produced by two of Latin America’s classiest producer, Colombia’s Burning and Mexico’s Piano, picked up by Cineplex for sales and Prime Video.

“Our Father” ( GoranStankovic, Serbia, Italy, Croatia, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Discovery)

Stankovic’s intense drama – based on true events – mixes religion with violence as recovering addicts head to an isolated monastery. They have already run out of options, or so they think – according to Father Branko (Boris Isaković), “when a man is willing to repent, he can find peace.” He believes in tough love; in religious ardor and horrifying physical punishment these tough men, apparently, subconsciously crave. When they hear him say, “you know the drill,” they submit. But their bodies can only take so much. Picked up by Croatia-based sales outfit Split Screen, the latest from Stankovic, creator of Canneseries winner “Operation Sabre.” MB

“Rose of Nevada,” (Mark Jenkin, U.K. Special Presentations)

Starring George MacKay (“1917”) and Callum Turner (“Masters of the Air”) and bowing at Venice Horizons, the third feature from Jenkin whose 2019 debut “Bait” proved a indie breakout. Something of a commercial turn but still shot in 16mm, a time-looping ghost ship horror fantasy hailed by Variety as a “bewitching, time-surfing voyage.”It added: “Cornish indie auteur Mark Jenkin’s third feature combines the analog throwback approach of his debut ‘Bait’ with the genre experimentation of his follow-up ‘Enys Men,’ to thoroughly satisfying effect.” Sold by Protagonist Pictures. 

“Unidentified,” (Haifaa Al Mansour, Saudi Arabia, Centrepiece)

From the groundbreaking Al Mansour, whose “Wadjda” was the first feature shot entirely in Saudi Arabia, “Unidentified” now weighs in as one of the most eagerly anticipated movies from the Arab after Sony Pictures Classics acquired North and Latin America, Eastern Europe and Australia with Paradise City Film selling out most elsewhere. In it, Noelle Al Saffan, a police department receptionist, pushes back against sexism  and police indifference investigating the discovery of the lifeless body of a teen girl in the desert. “The mystery-thriller ‘Unidentified’ is exactly the type of compelling movie that’s thriving in the theatrical marketplace right now,” SPC has said.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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