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Henry Hager and Jenna Bush Hager in Rome, Italy, Instagram, August 25, 2025.
TV & Streaming

Jenna Bush Hager Shares Family Vacation Photos Amid ‘Today’ Absence

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Jenna Bush Hager is enjoying her time off from Today across the Atlantic.

The Today With Jenna & Friends host gave fans a glimpse into her family’s Italian vacation via her Instagram Story on Monday, August 25. “My travel guru (and friend! @markellwood recommended @romecavalieri for our trip!” she captioned a snap of a statue on the grounds of the Rome Cavalieri Waldorf Astoria.

Bush Hager went on to share several photos of the hotel, including the picturesque city view from the outdoor pool, stunning wall art, and chic interior design. “10 minutes from Roma center and heaven … pools and gardens to spend afternoons after touring!” she wrote over a clip of the pool view.

Bush Hager’s Monday Instagram Story posts also included some photos of her family. In one pic, she photographed her husband, Henry Hager, and 6-year-old son, Hal, writing a note at a desk. Bush Hager also took a snap of Hal sitting on a couch with his big sisters — Mila, 12, and Poppy, 10 — in one of the hotel’s common areas.

Courtesy of Jenna Bush Hager/Instagram

Bush Hager concluded her Monday photo treat for fans by sharing a sweet pic of herself and her husband posing on a balcony with a view of Rome behind them.

Bush Hager’s absence from Today began on August 14, as that day and the following day’s new episodes with guest host Erin Andrews were both prerecorded. The break continued into last week, which aired “best-of” episodes featuring previously recorded segments and celebrity interviews.

Per Today‘s website, the “best-of” prerecorded episodes will continue through Friday, August 29. (TVI Insider previously reached out to Today regarding when Bush Hager will be back in Studio 1A.)

Monday’s episode of Jenna & Friends opened with a new (yet prerecorded) conversation between Bush Hager and Sunday Today‘s Willie Geist, followed by past segments featuring celebs such as Bowen Yang, Kenan Thompson, Michelle Buteau, Ego Nwodim, and Atsuko Okatsuka.

A teaser at the end of Monday’s episode revealed that the Tuesday, August 26, episode of Jenna & Friends will re-air past segments with Hager, Jonathan Bailey, Mahershala Ali, and Dwyane Wade.

Jenna Bush Hager's family vacation in Rome, Italy, Instagram, August 25, 2025.

Courtesy of Jenna Bush Hager/Instagram

Bush Hager is one of many Today hosts who are currently on a summer break from the NBC morning show. Craig Melvin shared on Monday that Al Roker will return to Today on Tuesday following his week-long vacation in Italy with his wife, Deborah Roberts.

Meanwhile, Weekend Today‘s Laura Jarrett has filled in for Savannah Guthrie since Thursday, August 21. On Monday, Melvin stated that Jarrett would be replacing Guthrie for the whole week. The reason for Guthrie’s absence was not shared, though she shared pics and clips of herself and her husband, Michael Feldman, attending the US Open via her Instagram Story on Sunday, August 24, and Monday.

Today With Jenna & Friends, Weekdays, 10 a.m. ET, NBC

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Must-See Films at Venice, TIFF, NYFF
TV & Streaming

Must-See Films at Venice, TIFF, NYFF

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Ah, what’s that chill in the air? It’s movies. As the summer blockbuster season winds down, cinephiles are already turning their attention to the fall film festivals — where some of the year’s most anticipated and awards-worthy titles will begin to make their mark (or, in the case of plenty of gems from Sundance, Berlin, and Cannes, get a second wind).

The trifecta of Venice, Toronto, and New York (and, of course, that wily and secretive Telluride) once again promises a compelling lineup of international auteurs, breakout discoveries, and major studio contenders. In the coming weeks, we will see (and tell you all about) new films from filmmakers like Luca Guadagnino, Yorgos Lanthimos, Sofia Coppola, Chloé Zhao, Steven Soderbergh, Park Chan-wook, Noah Baumbach, Mamoru Hosoda, Nia DaCosta, Rian Johnson, Mona Fastvold, and Romain Gavras, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

'Good Boy'

More exciting? All those names we don’t yet know, or are just about to learn. That’s what makes this seemingly typical annual event — picking new movies to look forward to — so fun and so imprecise. Behold, some seriously educated guesses, with infinitely more names to add soon.

Bookmark this page for IndieWire’s list of 42 films we can’t wait to see at the Venice, Toronto, and New York film festivals this fall. 

David Ehrlich, Marcus Jones, Ryan Lattanzio, Anne Thompson, and Christian Zilko contributed to this list. 

“After the Hunt” (Venice, NYFF)

Luca Guadagnino turns slightly away from his usual subjects, sex and love, in this provocative original from actress-turned-screenwriter Nora Garrett. The psychological thriller stars Julia Roberts as Alma, a Yale philosophy professor whose ordered life is uprooted when her protégé (Ayo Edebiri) makes assault accusations against her close friend and colleague (Andrew Garfield), who in turn charges her with plagiarism. Who to believe? Alma also fears that a secret from her own past will come to light.

Michael Stuhlbarg plays Alma’s psychiatrist husband in this Venice world premiere, which will also open the New York Film Festival. Cinematographer Malik Hassan Sayeed shot the film on 35mm over six weeks in London and at Cambridge University in the summer of 2024. “Challengers” and “Queer” composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross rejoined Team Guadagnino. Guadagnino has said that Roberts gives the “best performance” of her career in this timely cultural commentary. —AT

‘Bad Apples’Courtesy of TIFF

“Bad Apples” (TIFF)

If you’re of the school of thought that Saoirse Ronan can do anything (read: the only correct school of thought), Jonatan Etzler’s satirical and darkly funny English-language debut is a tasty treat made just for you. Based on Rasmus Lindgren’s debut novel “De Oönskade,” screenwriter Jess O’Kane adapts the story of one very maligned teacher (Ronan as Maria) and the decision that will change her life (and just about everyone else in her close-knit elementary school) forever.

Much of the film’s delight is found in just how unpredictably it plays out (surprises galore, the kind that guarantee uncomfortable laughs from an engaged audience), but without spoiling too much, here goes: when Maria makes a shocking choice that leads to the excision of her class’ worst student, it has unexpected consequences. What happens when you forcefully remove a supposed bad apple from an otherwise healthy bunch? And who are you to decide who is said bad apple? This is all, we promise, very funny, but the canny casting of Ronan also helps it to feel palatable and possible, until the real world comes calling. —KE

“Ballad of a Small Player” (TIFF)

“All Quiet on the Western Front” director Edward Berger returns to Netflix with his latest, which Rowan Joffé adapted from a Lawrence Osborne novel into an awards season hopeful starring Colin Farrell as debt-ridden card shark Lord Doyle and Tilda Swinton as a private investigator on his tail.

Adapted from the 2014 Osborne novel, Berger’s first post-“Conclave” feature follows Doyle as he tussles with a fierce gambling habit in the deluxe casinos of Las Vegas and Macau. The secretive casino employee Dao Ming (Fala Chen) offers him a lifeline, but it may not save Doyle from Swinton’s relentless P.I. As the movie premieres at the fall film festivals, Farrell will accept the Golden Icon Award in Zurich. Oscar-winning cinematographer James Friend shot the film in Macau and Hong Kong. —AT

Jesse Plemons stars as Teddy Gatz in director Yorgos Lanthimos' BUGONIA, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.
‘Bugonia’Courtesy of Focus Features © 2

“Bugonia” (Venice)

Adapted by Will Tracy from the lauded 2003 Korean film “Save the Green Planet!” from director Jang Joon-hwan, who was going to direct the English-language version but was replaced by Yorgos Lanthimos, “Bugonia” brings back Emma Stone for a fifth turn with Lanthimos, in a role originally written as a man, the CEO of a Big Pharma company. Two conspiracists (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis) believe that she is an evil alien who plans to destroy Earth. So they kidnap her and shave her head. (For real.)

Ari Aster joined the project as producer and hired Tracy to adapt; by February 2024, Lanthimos came on as director, and Stone joined as both actress and producer. Plemons joined the cast that May during Cannes, when Focus Features picked up the film for distribution. For his fourth go-round with Lanthimos, Irish cinematographer Robbie Ryan shot the film with 35 mm VistaVision cameras last summer in Milos, Greece and High Wycombe, England. —AT

“The Christophers” (TIFF)

Steven Soderbergh continues to bolster his reputation as the fastest worker in Hollywood. Just months after his smart spy thriller “Black Bag” hit theaters, the workhorse director returns to TIFF with a dark comedy about the children of a deceased painter who reconnect to oversee a forgery operation that allows them to liquidate his unfinished works. With a screenplay by frequent collaborator Ed Solomon (who also wrote Soderbergh’s “No Sudden Move” and his TV projects “Mosaic” and “Full Circle”) and a cast that includes Ian McKellen, Michaela Coel, James Corden, and Jessica Gunning, “The Christophers” should be a hot title in Toronto. —CZ

“Christy” (TIFF)

Sydney Sweeney takes her first swing at a prestige biopic with “Christy,” which sees the “Euphoria” star playing Christy Martin, one of the first major female boxers to break into mainstream sports culture. Martin’s private life was marred by turmoil, most of which stemmed from her marriage to boxing coach Jim Martin (played here by Ben Foster).

Australian filmmaker David Michôd directs the biopic, which promises to shine light on all of the ugly details of Martin’s life, including her struggles with drugs and the domestic violence that plagued her marriage, while still showcasing her inspirational battle against the odds to reach the top of her industry. —CZ

“Cover-Up” (Venice)

Laura Poitras is back at Venice after winning the Golden Lion in 2022 for her Sackler pharmaceutical family by-way-of-Nan-Goldin takedown “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed.” The Oscar-winning, co-directing with longtime “Frontline” producer Mark Obenhaus, is out of competition this time with “Cover-Up.” The made-in-secret documentary, as virtually all of Poitras’ films are obliged to be due to their intelligence-breaking investigations, charts the legacy of investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, who exposed the cover-up of the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam, and covered the Watergate scandal and other U.S. misdeeds throughout his career, including the torture of Abu Ghraib prisoners for The New Yorker. Films like “Citizenfour” and “Risk” proved the former Intercept co-founder was a sharp investigative journalist; “All the Beauty” proved she was a bracingly cinematic filmmaker capable of harnessing truthful emotion. —RL

‘Dead Man’s Wire’Stefania Rosini SMPSP/Courtesy of TIFF

“Dead Man’s Wire” (Venice, TIFF)

Independent film maverick Gus Van Sant’s recent run of releases, from “Sea of Trees” to “Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot” met mixed results with critics and audiences. With “Dead Man’s Wire,” the Academy Award-nominated “Milk” director returns to fact-inspired filmmaking, casting Bill Skarsgård as Tony Kiritsis, who in 1977 entered the Meridian Mortgage Company offices with a sawed-off shotgun to hold its president (Dacre Montgomery) hostage. The ripped-from-the-headlines story feels eerily similar to recent news breaks that have turned assassins fighting for the working class into folk heroes. Austin Kolodney pens the script, with Arnaud Potier (“Aggro Dr1ft”) handling cinematography. Colman Domingo, Al Pacino, Cary Elwes, and “Industry” breakout Myha’la also star. —RL

“L’Etranger” (Venice)

Prolific French filmmaker François Ozon has tackled cinephile-tailored I.P. before, including the Rainer Werner Fassbinder-inspired “Peter von Kant” from 2022. With his latest film “L’Étranger,” he adapts Albert Camus’ 1942 existentialist novella, about a disaffected French settler in Algiers who kills an Arab man amid a search for meaning in an indifferent world. Ozon reunites with the young French actor Benjamin Voisin, here playing Mersault after breaking out as one half of a gay romance in the director’s lush coming-of-ager “Summer of 85.” The cast also includes Rebecca Marder, Pierre Lottin, Denis Lavant, and “Anatomy of a Fall” internet boyfriend Swann Arlaud, with Belgian cinematographer Manu Dacosse (“Let the Corpses Tan”) shooting in black-and-white to match the novel’s eerie, dislocated World War II-era setting. —RL

“Hamnet” (TIFF)

Marking “Nomadland” Oscar winner Chloé Zhao’s return to indie filmmaking after a Marvel detour for “Eternals” in 2021, “Hamnet” was adapted by Zhao and author Maggie O’Farrell from her 2020 bestseller. (It’s her first book to make it to the big screen after 25 years.)

Set during the Elizabethan age in the home of Agnes and William Shakespeare (Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal), “Hamnet” tracks their early romance and the devastating loss of their 11-year-old son Hamnet (Jacobi Jupe) to the plague. Emily Watson plays Hamnet’s grandmother. Zhao convinced the reluctant O’Farrell to work with her on the script. Produced by Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment, the film was shot by cinematographer Łukasz Żal in Wales and will premiere at the fall film festivals. —AT

“In the Hand of Dante” (Venice)

Painter and New York filmmaker Julian Schnabel (“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” “Basquiat”) continues his run of history-inspired period pieces after 2018 Oscar nominee “At Eternity’s Gate,” which starred Willem Dafoe as Vincent Van Gogh. His decade-in-the-making “In the Hand of Dante” teams him with Oscar Isaac, who plays both a hard-living novelist in present day and Italian poet Dante Alighieri in 14th-century Florence. Nick (Isaac in the 21st century) is tasked by John Malkovich to locate what’s believed to be the originally handwritten manuscript of “The Divine Comedy,” while accompanied by a quirky mafia assassin played by Gerard Butler. Schnabel tussled with financiers for final cut on the black-and-white and color, two-and-a-half-hour epic, and he got it. The cast also includes Gal Gadot and Jason Momoa in what looks to be the most ambitious screen project of Schnabel’s career. —RL

Hedda
‘Hedda’Prime Video

“Hedda” (TIFF)

The next few months are poised to be very big indeed for filmmaker Nia DaCosta, who not only bows her imaginative Henrik Ibsen adaptation with star Tessa Thompson at the festival, but will soon bring her very own “28 Years Later” sequel to cinemas in January. DaCosta has always enjoyed good buzz, but suddenly, it seems her incredible range and deep emotional wells are the talk of the town.

In “Hedda,” Thompson takes on the classic, iconic, and titular role of Hedda Gabler with plenty of twists: in DaCosta’s telling, she’s a bored society doyenne manipulating everyone around her for her own fun and games. And perhaps more? The film’s first trailer hinted at something frisky and fun and glossy, with a thrilling underbelly, a sexy and wild outing that will put Ibsen in an entirely new light. DaCosta, too. —KE

“A House of Dynamite” (Venice, NYFF)

Eight years after “Detroit,” Oscar winner Kathryn Bigelow (“The Hurt Locker”) is back with another powderkeg political thriller, written by NBC news president Noah Oppenheim (“Zero Day,” “Jackie”). The contemporary narrative is set at the White House as officials scramble to deal with an incoming single unattributed missile attack on the U.S. How to respond? The sprawling cast includes Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Jared Harris, Greta Lee, and Bigelow regular Jason Clarke (“Zero Dark Thirty”). Among other projects over the last eight years, Bigelow spent time developing an adaptation of David Koepp’s novel “Aurora” for Netflix, but scrapped it in 2022.

Bigelow believes in using entertainment as a “delivery method for meaningful messaging,” she told IndieWire in 2017. The film will world premiere in the main competition of the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on September 2, 2025, where it’s nominated for the Golden Lion. —AT

“How to Shoot a Ghost” (Venice)

Oscar-winning surrealist filmmaker Charlie Kaufman reunites again with poet/writer Eva H.D., who provided both a poem for his 2020 Netflix head trip “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” and the script for his 2023 short “Jackals and Fireflies.” The Venice-premiering short film “How to Shoot a Ghost” also reteams him with “Ending Things” star Jessie Buckley, who plays a blue-haired, newly dead woman wandering the streets of Athens with the also-dead Josef Akiki. In a blend of street photography, historical footage, and new material shot by Michał Dymek (“The Girl with the Needle,” “EO”), this evocative meditation on memory and loss recalls the hybrid fiction works of Chris Marker or the ruminative, temporal poetry of Alain Resnais’ “Hiroshima, Mon Amour.” Kaufman has given the film to free library streaming service Kanopy for distribution after its festival bow. —RL

“Father Mother Sister Brother” (Venice, NYFF)

Cannes was apparently not interested in Jim Jarmusch’s globe-trotting triptych “Father Mother Sister Brother” despite regularly hosting the filmmaker for decades. Skipping the Croisette enabled Jarmusch to take a film to Venice for only the second time (“Coffee and Cigarettes” played out of competition there in 2003) before he gets a Centerpiece showcase at the New York Film Festival. Three chapters set in New Jersey, Dublin, and Paris — with Frederick Elmes and Yorick Le Saux splitting cinematography duties — center on adult children and their relationships with their aging parents. The stacked cast includes Jarmusch fave Tom Waits, plus Cate Blanchett, Adam Driver, Mayim Bialik, Vicky Krieps, Charlotte Rampling, Indya Moore, and Luka Sabbat in what the director describes as an “anti-action film.” But any anti-action film from slow cinema poet Jarmusch is more thrilling than most actual action films these days. —RL

“The Fence” (TIFF)

Claire Denis hasn’t directed a new film since her 2022 double feature of “The Stars at Noon” and “Both Sides of the Blade,” but she’s set to make a big return to the festival circuit with “The Fence.” Her adaptation of Bernard-Marie Koltès’ play “Black Battles with Dogs” takes place on a European-owned construction site in Cameroon, following a supervisor (Matt Dillon) who has to deal with an enraged villager after one of his workers dies on the job. It has all the makings of another Denis classic, featuring some of the auteur’s favorite themes like colonial influence in Africa and the obsessions of men who are left to work together while isolated from the outside world. —CZ

‘Frankenstein’

“Frankenstein” (Venice, TIFF)

When it was announced that Guillermo del Toro would be directing a “Frankenstein” movie for Netflix, you’d be forgiven if your knee-jerk reaction was to hastily check IMDB to confirm that he hadn’t already made one. By now, the Mexican director’s favorite themes — namely that monsters are often misunderstood creatures who serve as vehicles for the true evil lurking in the hearts of the humans who control them — are so well-established that it feels like he’s been directing “Frankenstein” movies for his entire career. But a direct take on Mary Shelley’s classic novel has eluded him until now, and the $120 million passion project could put him right back in the heart of the awards race.

Oscar Isaac stars as a flamboyant version of the eponymous doctor that is loosely inspired by Mick Jagger, while Jacob Elordi plays the monster he brings into existence. The film is almost certain to have some of the best below-the-line craftsmanship you’ll see all season, and watching a living legend dive even deeper into his favorite material is an opportunity that every cinephile should cherish. —CZ

“Franz” (TIFF)

Possibly the first movie about Franz Kafka since Steven Soderbergh’s “Kafka” in 1991, and definitely a more straightforward portrait of literature’s most name-brand surrealist, Agnieszka Holland’s “Franz” seems poised to offer the “Metamorphosis” author a somewhat traditional biopic treatment. Emphasis on somewhat. A crafty and rebellious filmmaker who’s coming off one of the most vital works of her career (“Green Border”), Holland supposedly embraces the strictures of the biopic subgenre only so that she can subvert them in turn, as the traditional coming-of-genius stuff (which stars Idan Weiss as a young Czech Jew who’s trying to make his way through the world of pre-war Prague) runs parallel to a present-day timeline in which Kafka is forced to reckon with his legacy.

It should be fascinating — and bleakly hilarious — to see what he thinks of a 21st century that seems to have hatched straight out of his worst nightmares. —DE

“Ghost Elephants” (Venice)

If filmmaker Werner Herzog is going to do one thing, it’s make a film centered on a figure willingly going on a Sisyphean quest. The latest documentary from the German director, who will also be receiving the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at this year’s Venice Film Festival, focuses on Dr. Steve Boyes, whose “Moby Dick” is in the form of a herd of giant elephants in the highlands of Angola. Though he has gone so far as to recruit master trackers from Namibia to find the elusive animals, the film’s synopsis teases that the endeavor may lead to Boyes’ second-guessing if the elephants are ever meant to be found. —MJ

“Girl” (Venice, TIFF)

World renowned Taiwanese actress Shu Qi, who won the prestigious Golden Horse Award for Best Supporting Actress in the film “Your Place or Mine,” which also stars Tony Leung, makes her directorial debut with what is said to be an artistic drama centered on a young girl who finds a new friend with a similar name to hers, living the life she would like to live.

In addition to her almost three decades of acting work, Qi has been on several international film festival juries, meaning she already has an idea of how to show her film in the best light that would help it stand out among other more publicized competition titles at this year’s Venice Film Festival and Toronto International Film Festival. —MJ

'Good Fortune'
‘Good Fortune’Lionsgate

“Good Fortune” (TIFF)

A few things have changed about the world since Frank Capra released “It’s a Wonderful Life” in 1946, and Aziz Ansari has apparently decided that we needed another guardian angel movie that reflects the anxieties of 2025. Enter “Good Fortune,” which stars Ansari as a gig worker who loathes his ultra-wealthy employer (Seth Rogen) until a guardian angel (who else but Keanu Reeves) arrives and attempts to teach them both a thing or two about the way the other half lives. Ansari’s directing career has gotten off to a few false starts (through no fault of his own), but “Good Fortune” could be the film that signals the “Master of None” creator’s entry into the indie film stratosphere. —CZ

“Is This Thing On?” (NYFF)

Bradley Cooper’s directorial career thus far has been defined by heavy stories of musical geniuses who struggled to control their vices and avoid tragedy. But for his third feature behind the camera, he appears to be taking things in a lighter direction. “Is This Thing On?” is set inside the world of standup comedy, starring Will Arnett (who co-wrote the film with Cooper and Mark Chappell) as a recently divorced man who tries his hand at comedy as a way of coping with a midlife crisis. Cooper also stars alongside Laura Dern, Sean Hayes, Amy Sedaris, and Peyton Manning. The film will have its world premiere at the New York Film Festival, where fans will get their first look at how far Cooper’s directorial range extends beyond his favorite subjects. —CZ

“Jay Kelly” (Venice)

In a fun bit of art imitating life, Noah Baumbach is bringing his latest Netflix film, in which George Clooney begrudgingly attends a European film festival to accept a prestigious tribute, to the competition at the Venice Film Festival 2025. Co-written with actress and screenwriter Emily Mortimer, the cast of the highly anticipated dramedy is filled out by Kelly’s publicist Liz, played by Laura Dern, whose last collaboration with Baumbach earned her an Oscar nomination, and the actor’s manager Ron, played by Adam Sandler, who is coming off a year of successes ranging from a spotlight moment on “SNL 50” to long-awaited sequel “Happy Gilmore 2” (also a Netflix film). —MJ

“Kim Novak’s Vertigo” (Venice)

Swiss-American filmmaker Alexandre O. Philippe more than demonstrated his cinema savvy with the film-centric essay films “Lynch/Oz,” which traced David Lynch’s career-long fascination with “The Wizard of Oz,” and “78/52,” which gave a frame-by-frame close reading of the “Psycho” shower scene. He turns back to Hitchcock for “Kim Novak’s Vertigo,” premiering in Venice where the namesake subject will receive the Golden Lion for career achievement. Philippe funnels his obsession with Hitch’s heady psychosexual mind-bender “Vertigo” into a tapestry of the life and career of Novak, who of course played both Judy (the object and victim of James Stewart’s perverse fixation) and her made-up alter-ego Madeleine” — inadvertently or intentionally, however you want to dice it, commenting on a director’s controlling and manipulating Svengali-like influence over an actress. But this documentary shows us Novak as the fiercely independent iconoclast who left Hollywood on her own terms. —RL

“Late Fame” (Venice, TIFF, NYFF)

Influential film critic and programmer Kent Jones made a seamless leap to the other side of the screen with his quietly shattering narrative debut, “Diane,” which towered over the rest of the competition at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, where it premiered. His follow-up is deservedly swimming in some deeper waters, with some much bigger fish, as “Late Fame” will debut at Venice before screening at TIFF and in the main slate at NYFF, where Jones once served as the chairman of the festival’s selection committee. 

Boasting a cast worthy of this brighter spotlight (and a script adapted from the Arthur Schnitzler novel of the same name by “May December” breakout Samy Burch!), the film stars Willem Dafoe as Ed Saxberger, a forgotten New York poet who’s spent the last 40 years of his life working at the post office. But obscurity has a way of inflaming enthusiasm in this town, and all it takes is one extroverted kid with esoteric tastes (Edmund Donovan) to launch Ed back into the arts scene, where he’s forced to contend with a new generation of aspirant creatives led by a Greta Lee. It’s hard to say how things will pan out for Ed, but Kent’s chances of whiffing on his second at bat seem just about nil. —DE

Maddie's Secret
‘Maddie’s Secret’TIFF

“Maddie’s Secret” (TIFF)

All we need to know: semi-secret film from John Early, in which he directs himself as the titular Maddie: a wannabe influencer who has built her life on all manner of lies. The film promises to be very funny indeed, but with a dark and wise center about actually heady matters. No fake followers here. —KE

“Marc by Sofia” (Venice)

Director Sofia Coppola and fashion designer Marc Jacobs, a pair of longtime friends and icons who transcend past the artistic trades that they are known for, team up for the former’s first-ever documentary feature. Though there are few public details about the film, which will have its world premiere at Venice, even the prospect of a filmed conversation between them would be a fashion lover’s dream, involving insights on brands ranging from Chanel and Louis Vuitton to Gap and Perry Ellis. What a rare treat to see someone’s muse turn the spotlight back toward them. —MJ

“Mile End Kicks” (TIFF)

In addition to programming the obvious heavy-hitters and big-time Oscar players, TIFF also excels at championing rising Canadian cinema, offering up true discoveries and fresh features alongside the usual suspects. Three years after debuting her first film, “I Like Movies,” at the festival, Chandler Levack returns with another feature pulled from her rich background of loving (and making) all sorts of art.

Barbie Ferreira stars as Grace, our Levack surrogate, who is spending the summer in Montreal writing music criticism (something Levack herself did in 2011 and thereabouts, in which the film is set with hilarious detail) and dealing with all sorts of personal and professional upheavals. While Levack adopts the shape and form and feel of a rom-com or a coming-of-age comedy, the specificity of her story lends her sophomore debut real gravitas. If you ever read a David Foster Wallace novel not just to impress some bro, but to feel as if you’re part of a cultural conversation not necessarily welcoming to you, “Mile End Kicks” will really speak to you (just like it spoke to me). —KE

No Other Choice
‘No Other Choice’Neon

“No Other Choice” (Venice, TIFF, NYFF)

Perhaps the most dazzlingly operatic auteur in the world, Park Chan-wook loves to torture us by making a masterpiece — the most recent of them being 2022’s “Decision to Leave” — and then abandoning the cinema for a few years in favor of television, a medium whose production schedule and narrative structure are anathema to his clockwork genius. It’s even more frustrating because Park is only growing more confident and ambitious as a filmmaker as he gets older. 

Needless to say, his diehard fans couldn’t be more excited to see him return to the movies with a project he’s been dreaming about since 2005: A darkly comic adaptation of Donald Westlake’s “The Ax,” starring Lee Byung-hun as a man so desperate to find a job that he starts murdering all of the other applicants. And just in time for Trump to crater the economy! Brace for another virtuosic profile of humanity at its worst and most mounded. —DE

“Normal” (TIFF)

Ben Wheatley was once among the most promising directors on the planet, but recent years have been a bumpy ride for those of us who went all in on his stock after “Kill List.” “Meg 2: The Trench” and his Netflix adaptation of “Rebecca” were both dire in their own ways, but Wheatley’s “In the Earth” was a resourceful pandemic riff that suggested he still had some gas in the tank, and it does seem like only a matter of time before a filmmaker of his talent manages to make good on it again. 

Enter: “Normal,” a neo-Western starring Bob Odenkirk as the new sheriff of a small town that’s in the clutches of a vast criminal organization (Henry Winkler is the presumably overmatched mayor). Written by “Nobody” and “John Wick” screenwriter Derek Kolstad, and promising to combine ultra-violent action with Hitchcockian mystery, “Normal” has the potential to be a coiled blast of midnight fun — and the potential to restore our faith in Wheatley’s orgiastic approach to genre thrills. —DE  

“Nuestra Tierra” (Venice)

Argentine filmmaker Lucrecia Martel’s (“Zama,” “The Headless Woman”) first documentary feature is her long-gestating true-crime-and-then-some portrait of the 2009 murder of Indigenous leader Javier Chocobar in her home country. The Chuschagasta native tried to defend his community’s ancestral land against three mining entrepreneurs who claimed ownership of the territory, armed with firearms. The film integrates chilling cell-phone footage of the movie that feels ripped from a found-footage horror movie, as well as recordings of the court proceedings as they opened in 2018 and innovative, self-reflexive drone camerawork for a panorama of colonial unrest that spans generations. The men were all freed shortly after their sentencing, but Martel still makes the case that this was a hard-won act of defiance and self-reservation by the Chuschagasta people. —RL

“Orphan” (Venice)

Nearly a decade after his holocaust film “Son of Saul” won the Oscar for Best International Feature on behalf of his native Hungary, director László Nemes returns with a coming-of-age story involving the Communist occupation of Budapest circa 1957. The new project premiering in competition at the Venice Film Festival stars a young Jewish boy named Andor, played by Loppert Martin Tibor, and later Bojtorján Barabas, who begins to question everything he knows about his family after meeting a brutish man bearing earth-shattering news.

In his director’s statement, the filmmaker reveals that the historical drama mines from his own family’s trauma, linking the effects that both the holocaust and the rise in communism in Hungary had on him and his loved ones. —MJ

“Rental Family” (TIFF)

What looks to be the most tender film of this year’s TIFF, Oscar winner Brendan Fraser stars as an American expat who has long lived and worked in Tokyo, but is struggling to find work as an actor. In HIKARI’s feature, that struggle brings Fraser’s character into an unexpected job: taking on roles from a “rental family” agency that slots him in where he’s seemingly needed most. We suspect he’ll find what he needs to, and that audiences will likely spark to what looks like a feel-good feature for all. —KE

Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst star in Paramount Pictures' "ROOFMAN."
‘Roofman’Davi Russo

“Roofman” (TIFF)

After almost a decade away from the big screen (and with one thrilling stopover in TV land, care of “I Know This Much Is True”), Derek Cianfrance is poised to make his triumphant return to features this fall with “Roofman,” a true‑crime dramedy that’s already generating serious buzz. While the film might not sound too Cianfrance-y at the outset (Channing Tatum stars as Jeffrey Manchester, a former Army Ranger who robbed dozens of McDonald’s by breaking in through their roofs and ultimately went on the lam, ultimately hiding inside a Toys “R” Us for six months), early reports hold that the filmmaker’s emotional realism is more pronounced here than originally expected.

As he told IndieWire’s Screen Talk last year, the film has been a long-time passion project, and fans of the “Blue Valentine” director should be just as excited for it as movie-goers who simply love a true crime story (with a little “Career Opportunities” flair). —KE

“Rose of Nevada” (Venice, TIFF)

One of the buzziest discoveries heading into this year’s fall festival corridor, “Rose of Nevada” promises a time-traveling, sci-fi-tinged mystery from Cornish director Mark Jenkin (“Enys Men,” “Bait”). The filmmaker, known for crafting atmospheric landscapes keener on mood than narrative, directs George MacKay and Callum Turner as fishermen on a boat that has returned to harbor after disappearing 30 years prior. The voyage, though, takes them back in time, finding themselves mistaken for the original crew. “Rose of Nevada” bloomed during the pandemic as Jenkin observed the resilience of his Cornwall community; it’s first world-premiering in the Orizzonti section at Venice, dedicated to edgy titles and emerging filmmakers that push cinematic form. —RL

“Sacrifice” (TIFF)

An inspired heist thriller that never got the U.S. release that was dumped on Netflix after its riotous debut at Cannes, 2018’s “The World Is Yours” made it abundantly clear that Romain Gavras was ready to move beyond his father Costa-Gavras’ shadow. Four years later, the even more incendiary (if less substantial) “Athena” made it just as clear that the former music video auteur had become one of modern cinema’s most formidable stylists. 

Now Gavras’ English-language debut represents his best chance to put it all together and connect with a wider audience, as the explosive action-comedy — anchored by Anya Taylor-Joy as the leader of a doomsday eco-cult who storm a celebrity-studded environmental conference and begin offering celebrities as a blood sacrifice to mother nature — has all the ingredients for the filmmaker’s hypnotically confrontational brand of shock-and-awe social commentary. Billionaires in peril? Check. Chris Evans as a self-embarrassed movie star? Check. A supporting performance by Charli XCX and a presumably banging soundtrack to match? Check check check. If one TIFF premiere has a shot at stealing the spotlight from the more broadly anticipated likes of “Wake Up Dead Man” and “Frankenstein,” it has to be “Sacrifice.” —DE

“Scarlet” (TIFF, NYFF)

The last time Japanese animator Mamoru Hosoda released a film, he dazzled anime lovers around the world with his cyberpunk take on a tale as old as time with the “Beauty and the Beast” update “Belle.” Now he’s set to return with another princess saga that might even be more ambitious in scope. “Scarlet” takes place in between the realms of life and death, following a murdered princess who is forced to do battle in the afterlife to prevent her soul from perishing forever. Hosoda’s mastery of his medium makes any film he releases a must-see event, and “Scarlet” could emerge as one of the year’s best animated films. —CZ

“Silent Friend” (Venice, TIFF)

Hungarian director Ildikó Enyedi has run hot and cold after returning from an 18-year hiatus with 2017’s Golden Bear-winning “On Body and Soul” (her follow-up, “The Story of My Wife,” was so pummeled at Cannes that it never made it across the ocean), but her latest epic boasts what might be the single best premise of any movie this year: What if Bertrand Bonello’s “The Beast” had co-starred Tony Leung? It would be almost impossible to improve on George MacKay’s performance in that film, but we don’t have any complaints if one of modern cinema’s greatest actors wants to give it a whirl. 

Less romantic than “The Beast” but similarly compelled by inter-generational connections and the invisible forces that shape our world, Enyedi’s “Silent Friend” is another three-part, century-spanning epic starring Léa Seydoux as a woman with a complicated relationship with the past. Only here, the French actress — along with the rest of the cast — is confined to a single timeline, as the story’s only constant across its 1908, 1972, and 2020-set chapters is a Ginkgo biloba tree that can live for 1,000 years. Here’s hoping it bears fruit. —DE

'The Smashing Machine'
‘The Smashing Machine’A24

“The Smashing Machine” (Venice, TIFF)

The idea of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson fronting A24’s awards season kickoff at Venice did not sound plausible even five years ago, when the WWE superstar emeritus was more focused on starring in the types of CGI-heavy blockbusters that are $1 billion-or-bust. But leave it to Benny Safdie, in his solo feature directorial debut, to showcase a new side of Johnson as an actor, playing early Ultimate Fighting Championship favorite Mark Kerr.

Sharing a name with the 2002 documentary that spotlighted the fighter who came to fame right as UFC was gaining global appeal, the sports biopic also reteams Johnson with his “Jungle Cruise” co-star Emily Blunt, in what already seems to be another scene-stealing performance as Dawn Staples, Kerr’s wife at the time. —MJ

“The Testament of Ann Lee” (Venice)

Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold have a good thing going. The creative and life partners have found success co-writing each other’s films while taking turns in the directorial spotlight, most notably with Corbet’s 2024 masterpiece “The Brutalist.” Now Fastvold returns to the director’s chair with a film that appears to be every bit as ambitious in terms of artistry and historical scope. “The Testament of Ann Lee” is a musical drama about the Shaker movement, starring Amanda Seyfried as the eponymous founder of the utopian sect of Evangelical Christianity.

Shot on 70mm film and featuring a supporting cast that includes Thomasin McKenzie, Lewis Pullman, Christopher Abbott, and Tim Blake Nelson, “The Testament of Ann Lee” should be one of the cinematic events of the season for arthouse enthusiasts. —CZ

“Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery” (TIFF)

It’s a tradition now: a twisty new Rian Johnson murder mystery at TIFF, all big names and better surprises, playing to a very enthusiastic crowd. That’s all we’d need to know to get excited for Johnson’s third “Knives Out” movie, but we’ll give you still more to get jazzed about.

This one, hinted to be a bit darker than Johnson’s previous entries, boasts a secretive plot (of course) and a murderer’s row of stars, including Daniel Craig back as private detective Benoit Blanc, with Josh O’Connor, Glenn Close, Josh Brolin, Mila Kunis, Jeremy Renner, Kerry Washington, Andrew Scott, Cailee Spaeny, Daryl McCormack, and Thomas Haden Church. Let’s solve a crime, but, more importantly, let’s have fun while doing it! —KE

“The Wizard of the Kremlin” (Venice, TIFF)

Once more famous for his looks than for his film performances (despite being a rather excellent actor right from the jump), Jude Law has made a meal of middle age by re-establishing himself as a virtuosic character actor with extraordinary range. Henry VIII. Captain Hook. The hot Pope. But not even the most chameleonic of Law’s previous roles — nor the most receding of their hairlines — has sufficiently prepared us for the idea of watching him play an upstart Vladimir Putin in an epic Olivier Assayas thriller set during the final years of the Soviet Union. 

Adapted from a Giuliano da Empoli novel and starring Paul Dano as a fictional artist who rises high in the ranks of the Russian government while coming across all sorts of disreputable figures in the process, “The Wizard of the Kremlin” finds Assayas mounting his most outwardly ambitious — or at least his longest — feature since “Carlos” in 2010. The movie’s ensemble also includes Alicia Vikander, Jeffrey Wright, and Tom Sturridge, but this is said to be Dano’s show, with Law’s Putin a malevolent presence who shadows his every move. —DE 

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Wynton Marsalis to Premiere 'Afro!,' to Open Jazz at Lincoln Center
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Wynton Marsalis to Premiere ‘Afro!,’ to Open Jazz at Lincoln Center

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Jazz at Lincoln Center will launch its “Mother Africa” season with the world premiere of “Afro!,” a new commission by managing and artistic director — and jazz legend — Wynton Marsalis, on Sept. 18–20 at 7:30 p.m. in Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s New York home, Frederick P. Rose Hall.

Performed by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Marsalis, Djembefola (master of the djembe drum) Weedie Braimah, and vocalist Shenel Johns, “Afro!” opens Jazz at Lincoln Center’s 2025-26 season of concerts, education programs, and other events celebrating Africa’s influence on jazz.

Following its New York premiere, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis alongside drummer Herlin Riley, Braimah, and Johns will take Afro! and other selections from its celebrated repertoire on the Orchestra’s first multi-city tour of Africa.

Nearly 20 years ago, in 2006, Marsalis premiered “Congo Square,” which evoked the spirit of the historic New Orleans site — at one time, the only place in America where African slaves were allowed to dance and play drums. Composed for the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and Odadaa!, a nine-piece Ghanaian percussion and vocal ensemble, the piece celebrated the cultural roots and mythic birthplace of jazz.

“Afro!” explores the deep ties between jazz, the African continent, and its diaspora, a leitmotif that the Orchestra previously addressed in other past Marsalis opuses as “Blood on the Fields” (1996), “Ochas” (2014), and the fresh big band arrangements comprising its “The South African Songbook” concert (2019).

Tickets for Wynton Marsalis’ Afro! with Weedie Braimah and Shenel Johns: The Ertegun Jazz Concert include access to a pre-concert lecture in the The Agnes Varis and Karl Leichtman Studio at 6:30 p.m. on Sept.18-20. Audiences are welcome to a free performance by the Zwelakhe-Duma Bell le Pere Quartet in the Ertegun Atrium at 6:30 p.m. and during intermission on Sept.18 and 19. Ticket prices begin at $30.

The Sept. 18 performance will live stream exclusively on jazzlive.com.

In addition to concerts in convention centers and open-air venues, the Orchestra will perform or collaborate with local musicians in each city, and host education initiatives at local schools.

“The earliest and most fundamental human mythology is African,” Marsalis says. “From Venda to Igbo to a host of other belief systems across the continent, there are viable solutions to today’s challenges.” 

“Our ancestors had cogent and powerful thoughts on who we are as individuals as we pass through the natural cycles of life, how we should relate to one another socially, and how to be one with the universal spirit that inhabits all,” he continues. “In their globally influential music and dance concepts, we can perceive how to find harmony and balance with nature, how to perceive and interact with the supernatural, and how to create endless variations on fundamental themes in pursuit of a good time.”

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Tour Dates

Thursday, September 18-Saturday, September 20, 2025
Rose Theater in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall

New York, NY

Friday, September 26, 2025
Standard Bank Joy of Jazz
Johannesburg, South Africa

Sunday, September 28, 2025
Standard Bank Joy of Jazz
Johannesburg, South Africa

Wednesday, October 1, 2025
BC International Jazz Festival
Tamarind Tree Hotel: Misumi Garden  
Nairobi, Kenya

Thursday, October 2, 2025
BC International Jazz Festival
Tamarind Tree Hotel: Misumi Garden 
Nairobi, Kenya

Sunday, October 5, 2025
Landmark Centre
Lagos, Nigeria

Friday, October 10, 2025
+233 Jazz Bar and Grill / Ghana Jazz Foundation
Accra, Ghana

Saturday, October 11, 2025
+233 Jazz Bar and Grill / Ghana Jazz Foundation
Accra, Ghana

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix House Sets Opening Dates For Philadelphia & Dallas Venues
TV & Streaming

Netflix House Sets Opening Dates For Philadelphia & Dallas Venues

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The countdown is on for the opening of Netflix‘s first two permanent year-round entertainment destinations. Netflix House will open in Philadelphia at King of Prussia Mall on November 12, 2025 and in Dallas at Galleria Dallas on December 11, 2025. 

The more than 100,000-square feet Netflix House venues will feature experiences inspired by some of the streamer’s most popular shows and films including Wednesday, Squid Game, One Piece, Stranger Things, KPop Demon Hunters, Love Is Blind, Sakamoto Days, A Knives Out Mystery franchise and more.

Netflix House Philadelphia features Top Nine Mini Golf where each hole is themed to characters and stories from popular series and events, including Bridgerton, Is It Cake?, Stranger Things, WWE, Squid Game and more. Fans also will be able to play as the main character inside the worlds of Netflix shows and movies with immersive VR games.

Netflix RePlay at Netflix House Dallas includes interactive and fresh takes on traditional arcade games. Shows and films featured include Sakamoto Days, Floor is Lava, Love is Blind, Army of the Dead, Big Mouth, among others.

New immersive experiences specifically created for the venues include Stranger Things: Escape the Dark and Squid Game: Survive the Trials in Dallas, and Wednesday: Eve of the Outcasts and One Piece: Quest for the Devil Fruit in Philadelphia. 

Tickets go on sale for the Philadelphia site on October 17 and for the Dallas location on November 18. A waitlist for early access to tickets for preferred experiences at each location is available here.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Janelle James
TV & Streaming

Janelle James on Abbott Elementary, Fame, Emmys

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s not easy to make audiences fall in love with a character who behaves terribly, but that has been the bread and butter of the guest on the 600th episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter, which was recorded in front of an audience at Chapman University: stand-up comedian and actress Janelle James, who is best known — and currently Emmy-nominated for the fourth time — for playing Ava Coleman, the narcissistic, incompetent, morally compromised, toxic, but somehow still lovable principal at a Philadelphia K-8 school on Quinta Brunson’s hit ABC comedy series, Abbott Elementary.

Over the course of the conversation, James, 45, reflects on her early years in St. Thomas, coming to New York and then, in Illinois, stumbling into stand-up comedy. She speaks about touring with Chris Rock, Amy Schumer and David Cross and writing for BET’s The Rundown With Robin Thede (2017) and Showtime’s Black Monday (2020-21), the latter of which also led to her acting for the first time. And she dishes about the casting process that led to her winning the part of Ava on Abbott Elementary, which has brought her not only Emmy nominations but also nominations for SAG, Golden Globe, Critics Choice and Spirit awards and, along with her castmates, the best comedy ensemble SAG Award.

She also candidly discusses the pros and cons of sudden celebrity and wealth, and of acting on a network show, as opposed to a cable or streaming program (as is the case for every one of her fellow 2025 best supporting actress in a comedy series Emmy nominees). She lifts the veil on some of the comedic and physical challenges of playing Ava. And she breaks down her assignment on the fourth season of Abbott — during which Ava reconnected with her father, found a love interest and lost her job — and concurs with the host’s assertion that it is the season for which she made her strongest case yet to take home an Emmy.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Matt Smith reveals how he had one of his ‘greatest days on a film set’ in new movie Caught Stealing
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Matt Smith reveals how he had one of his ‘greatest days on a film set’ in new movie Caught Stealing

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Indeed, speaking exclusively to RadioTimes.com ahead of the film’s release, Smith revealed that there was one day in particular that he had especially enjoyed: filming a high-octane car chase sequence.

“That was one of my great days on a film set,” he said. “I loved that day, because what we had is this thing called a biscuit, which I’ve never seen anything like. And basically, you’re attached to a rally car engine with a rally car driver, and they’ve got this sort of… how do you describe… like, a winch on the back.

“So then you’re in, like, this fairground ride, you’ve got a rally car engine and a rally car driver on the front!”

Aronofsky added, “Yeah, you don’t have to really worry about it… you can just sit there and scream at the top of your lungs!”

Smith added that Aronofsky also let him do a bit of driving for himself – after a couple of lessons – with the director explaining that he wanted to have some grounding to the chase scene.

“It was great because, like, so many action films have kind of taken the physics of it totally bananas and insane – as if that’s the way to engage audiences well,” he said.

“I’m not critiquing that, but there’s something about returning to real physics and real broken bones and real dented cars that is exciting, and you can still find energy in it.”

Caught Stealing follows events after Austin Butler’s ex-baseball player gets caught up in the criminal underworld of ’90s New York when he is asked to look after Smith’s character’s cat, with Zoë Kravitz, Regina King and Liev Schreiber among the other stars with key roles.

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And while the film includes plenty of the trademark intensity found in Aronofsky’s other acclaimed films – which include Requiem for a Dream, Black Swan and mother! – there’s also a more freewheeling sense of fun that feels quite new for the filmmaker.

But Aronofsky says that he more or less approached this film the same way he approaches all his projects.

“I think I approach them all the same, but I always think making films is a lot of fun, and I wanted to have a lot of fun making this film,” he said.

“There was definitely an intention to leave audiences with a feeling of joy and [that they] have a good time at the end of it. But still, I guess it is an intense ride as well. So maybe you get the best of both worlds!”

Caught Stealing releases in UK cinemas on Friday 29 August 2025.

If you’re looking for something to watch tonight, check out our TV Guide and Streaming Guide or visit our Film hub for all the latest news. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Ram Sidhu (Phaldut Sharma) in
TV & Streaming

Who Is Ram Sidhu? Character Makes Shocking Return

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Unforgotten Season 6 Episode 1.]

A new cold case has been reopened in Unforgotten, and this time, the case is getting personal. Season 6 premiered on Sunday, August 24, on PBS, and the crime drama opened with Detectives Sunny Khan (Sanjeev Bhaskar) and Jess James (Sinéad Keenan) being called to investigate very limited human remains (a spine and a leg, specifically) discovered on Whitney Marsh.

Pathologist Leanne Balcombe (Georgia Mackenzie) helped determine that the body was a male’s, that it must have been dismembered before being strewn in the marshes in which they were found, and that the victim had to have lost considerable blood beforehand as well. What they didn’t expect was for the clues to lead them to a corrupt cop from Sunny’s past. That is none other than Ram Sidhu (Phaldut Sharma), who was last seen in Unforgotten Season 4. What the episode’s final moments revealed was that Ram is now in prison and could be connected to this season’s murder. Ram’s return was previously teased in photos from Season 6, but the nature of his return was unknown. (For a deeper look at what’s to come this season, see here.)

Four new potential suspects were introduced in the episode we all. And as always with Unforgotten (which is one of the few shows on PBS that’s completely original and not based on a book franchise), the season will slowly reveal how these four suspects are possibly connected to the cold case.

This season’s suspects includes a controversial TV commentator Melinda Ricci (MyAnna Buring), who we learn is engaged to man trying to regain his ability to walk after a bad injury. Melinda received bad news that it was unlikely that her husband-to-be would ever walk again.

There’s also a London college professor, Juliet Cooper (Victoria Hamilton), whose husband died by suicide and the trauma is causing her teen daughter, Taylor Cooper (Pixie Davies), to act out in school. Juliet was also threatened with disciplinary action at work after a white student reported her for recommending a big that used a racial slur in the title. The book, Juliet explained to her boss, was written by a Black woman and the shocking title served a specific purpose pursuant to the book’s subject. The student felt it was wrong nonetheless. Juliet was very defensive when told she had to take a sensitivity course.

Sam Taylor

Another suspect is Martin Baines (Maximilian Fairley), an autistic man who’s struggling to keep his life organized with a mother at home who needs constant physical care. Their house is in complete disorder and they struggle to keep it clean in the aftermath of the death of Martin’s father. Martin has a hard time connecting with new people, but he has people in his life who are empathetic and helpful as well, such as the desk staff at a neighborhood clinic. He also spends considerable time in online chatrooms with extremists.

The final suspect is Asif Syed (Elham Ehsas), who was preparing to take his U.K. citizenship test. Asif helps illegal immigrants get into the U.K. This reunited him with a friend, Hassan (Ahmad Sakhi), a trained doctor who’s now considering applying for asylum in the hopes of better career opportunities. Asif warned that he “risked his life” for a similar hope and he was still forced into a detention center.

Sunny and Jess were having personal struggles of their while investigating the cold case. Sunny was struggling to find time to see his family, and Jess was suspicious of her husband, who uncharacteristically and unexpectedly made her a fish dinner. The next night, he was gone from their home.

As for the investigation, Sunny and Jess had already determined that the victim had to have been murdered within the last 13 years. The spine and leg turned out to be a match, and the DNA was matched with Gerrard Samuel Cooper, Juliet’s husband and Taylor’s father. Sunny remembered this case well. He said Juliet was the one who called in Gerrard’s disappearance, but a body was never found. His death was labeled a suicide by jumping into the Thames River. With Gerrard’s remains finally found, the suicide has turned into a homicide. But that’s not where the twists ended.

The officer in charge of the Cooper case has been in jail since 2022 on multiple counts of corruption. Sunny charged the man, Ram, himself. The cold case is bringing up skeletons from Sunny’s own past in Unforgotten Season 6, with the premiere ending on a shot of Ram in Ashbourne Prison.

Ram was one of the suspects in Season 4’s murder investigation. While he wasn’t revealed to be the killer in the end, he was booked for preventing a lawful burial of a body and for ties to the killer’s cocaine smuggling operation. Is he now a suspect in the Cooper murder as well?

Unforgotten, Sundays, 10/9c, PBS

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Camp's Favorite 'Presumed Innocent' Scene Is with His Wife, Duh
TV & Streaming

Bill Camp’s Favorite ‘Presumed Innocent’ Scene Is with His Wife, Duh

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The beloved character actor credits his writer David E. Kelley, director Anne Sewitsky, and co-star (and wife) Elizabeth Marvel for elevating his Emmy-nominated performance. But the longer you spend examining one scene, the clearer his pivotal contributions become.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Yash's 'Toxic' Gets J.J. Perry and All-Indian Stunt Team for Shoot
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Yash’s ‘Toxic’ Gets J.J. Perry and All-Indian Stunt Team for Shoot

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

While most productions would batten down the hatches during Mumbai’s punishing monsoon season, the makers of “Toxic: A Fairytale for Grown-ups” are doing the opposite — leaning into the chaos with what’s being touted as one of Indian cinema’s most audacious action shoots to date.

At the eye of this creative storm is J.J. Perry, the Hollywood action architect behind the bone-crunching choreography of “John Wick” and “Fast & Furious.” The stunt veteran is currently deep into a 45-day action marathon that’s redefining the playbook for Indian cinema spectacle.

But here’s the kicker: Perry, who typically assembles international dream teams of stunt specialists, has gone fully local this time around — handpicking an entirely Indian crew after witnessing their chops firsthand.

“This Indian crew is world-class. That’s precisely why I chose to work with them,” Perry says. “We’re tackling a major sequence right now, and I’m super stoked about taking this on. It’s a challenge, but I love a great challenge — and this team is meeting it head-on. We’re here to push boundaries together — and that’s what filmmaking is.”

J.J. Perry, Yash
KVN Productions/Monster Mind Creations

The high-octane sequence currently in production is the culmination of months of meticulous pre-production ballet between Perry, superstar Yash (who’s also producing), director Geetu Mohandas, VFX house DNEG, and producer Venkat K. Narayana. The Yash-Narayana combine has unlocked the massive war chest needed to mount one of the most Indian ambitious projects in recent memory.

The prep work reads like a masterclass in modern action filmmaking: extensive storyboarding, previz sessions, tactical rehearsals, and creative pow-wows aimed at creating an action language described by the production as “immersive, visceral, and new to Indian cinema.”

“Toxic” is positioning itself as a genre-bending spectacle that marries Perry’s globally-honed sensibilities with Yash’s box office magnetism and Mohandas’ distinctive auteur vision. Yash is white hot after the “K.G.F” franchise as is Mohandas, following Sundance title “Liar’s Dice” and Toronto selection “Moothon.” Yet beneath the pyrotechnics, the filmmakers are gunning for emotional resonance that transcends the visual fireworks.

“In my 35 years of doing this, I’ve worked in 39 countries. I’m a fan of Indian cinema — it’s creative, artistic, and bold,” Perry says. “Getting the chance to work with Yash, Geetu, Venkat and their incredible team has been a highlight. Geetu has great vision, and everyone from cinematographer Rajeev Ravi to the production designer and art team has been fantastic.”

J.J. Perry, Yash. Geetu Mohandas
KVN Productions/Monster Mind Creations

The Mumbai shoot marks another industry first: “Toxic” is being lensed simultaneously in the Kannada and English languages — a bilingual approach that’s rare at this scale — with additional dubbed versions rolling out in Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, and Malayalam. The strategy positions the film not just as a pan-Indian event but as a legitimate global play.

“India’s culture is ancient, rich, and layered. As an American whose culture is only a few hundred years old, coming here and blending global cinematic grammar with Indian storytelling has been very exciting,” Perry notes. “I don’t just want to replicate what’s been done — I want to create something unique. And ‘Toxic’ is giving me that chance.”

Jointly bankrolled by Venkat K. Narayana and Yash under KVN Productions and Monster Mind Creations, “Toxic: A Fairytale for Grown-ups” is targeting a worldwide theatrical rollout on March 19, 2026.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Per Holst Dies: Danish Filmmaker-Producer Was 86
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Per Holst Dies: Danish Filmmaker-Producer Was 86

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Danish filmmaker-producer Per Holst, who worked with fellow auteurs and countrymen Lars von Trier, Nils Malmros and Bille August, has died at the age of 86.

The Hollywood Reporter cited one of his four sons, actor Morten Holst. A cause of death was not given.

According to Denmark’s government-owned broadcast channel TV 2, son Anders Holst explained his father died peacefully in his sleep Saturday morning. “He leaves behind a cultural legacy that we are proud of on his behalf,” Anders Holst told the outlet, adding, “He has been active until the end. Of course not like in his youth, but to the extent he could. He loved to read, watch and talk about films.”

As a prolific producer of dozens of films beginning in the late ’60s, Holst helped bring to life the visions of Trier (1987’s The Element of Crime), Malmros (1981’s Tree of Knowledge, 1983’s Beauty and the Beast, 1992’s Pain of Love and 1997’s Barbara) and August (1983’s Zappa, 1984’s Twist & Shout and 1987’s Pelle the Conqueror, which won the 1988 Palme d’Or at Cannes Film Festival and the 1989 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, giving Denmark a consecutive win in the category after the previous year’s Babette’s Feast).

Holst also directed 1985’s Walter and Carlo — Up on Daddy’s Hat, the first in the ’80s buddy comedy film series, which still occupies the No. 4 slot on the list of highest-grossing Danish films.

In 1965, he founded his own production company, Per Holst Film, and under that banner broke through as a producer with the cartoon Benny’s Bathtub in 1971. Throughout the years, he has held a number of posts at leading film organizations, including as the chairman of the board of the European Film Academy (2000-05) and director of distribution company Nordisk Film (1991-2002, where he first began his career).

Holst is survived by his wife and sons.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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