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Hostage ending explained: Who was behind the kidnap? What happens to Abigail?
TV & Streaming

Hostage ending explained: Who was behind the kidnap? What happens to Abigail?

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Things remained ever tense as the penultimate episode of the series wrapped up, leading us into unchartered territory for the finale.

With it becoming all too apparent who exactly is at the heart of the plot to take down Abigail, it was also clear that he’s only at the behest of bigger orders and a wider plan to disarm Abigail entirely.

But who is the one pulling the strings of this sinister plan? And how do things wrap up for Abigail and her family? One thing’s for certain – things end in quite a surprising way for Abigail and her loved ones; maybe not in the way you might expect.

Read on for a full breakdown of the finale of Hostage, with some additional insight from the cast and series creator/writer Matt Charman.

Hostage ending explained: Who was behind the kidnap plot?

Ashley Thomas as Alex Hostage. Ollie Upton/Netflix

The finale starts with a flashback to many years prior, where Abigail and Alex (Ashley Thomas) are hosting a birthday party for young Sylvie.

It’s interrupted by a surprise phone call, which Abigail – who worked as a junior minister at the Foreign Office at the time – takes in private. She’s told that there’s an escalating situation unfolding in Belize and they need an immediate decision over the evacuation of British troops.

As the most senior minister available, she’s told that her clearance is needed to leave behind the Belizean locals who have been assisting British troops. Although it’s a tough decision and one she knows could result in the death of the locals, she orders for the British planes to be put in the air quickly.

In the present, we see Abigail and her family being rushed into an underground bunker. Although Abigail is relatively alright, the same can’t be said for Vivienne, who unfortunately died in the blast.

Shagan’s (Martin McCann) plot to blow up Downing Street was a rogue step and one not authorised by the person who’s been pulling the strings of this operation all along: General Livingstone (Mark Lewis Jones).

In a tense phone call, it’s revealed that Livingstone has actually been planning to take down Abigail for months. He admits that, although he never has wanted her dead, he has wanted her out of the way.

Once Shagan learns that Abigail is actually alive, his plans to get out of the country change. Saskia (Sophie Robertson) starts becoming increasingly confused about the direction the plan is going in, especially seeing as Shagan lied about the orders to blow up Downing Street.

Plans are made to evacuate Alex and Sylvie to a secure location with Matheo (Corey Mylchreest), who has a place that his friend said he could use. Once they’re gone, Abigail reassembles her team (Ayesha, Zadie, Tristan and Kofi) as she realises this has always been a coup plot.

Once they start digging into things, they realise the crossover between Shagan and Livingstone, with Abigail recognising Shagan from the press conference before the bomb exploded and Ayesha recognising him from CCTV footage of the riots.

They find out that Shagan was a solider deployed to Belize but was medically downgraded due to mental health and depression. Abigail informs her team about her orders to extract troops but still holds guilt about leaving locals behind. But knowing Shagan won’t have been able to pull off this whole plan by himself, they soon realise that Livingstone was his commanding officer in Belize.

Abigail travels with her team to confront Livingstone herself at the Ministry of Defence, with Livingstone implicating himself by revealing his intel about the laptop. He explains that it’s all been because of his growing frustration at Abigail’s military budget cuts, which, in his words, leave the UK “exposed and vulnerable”.

Livingstone is removed and placed in custody by order of Ogilvy, who is the interim prime minister.

Back at the hideout mansion, Shagan and Saskia break in and hold Alex, Sylvie and Matheo hostage. Shagan forces Alex to call Abigail so he can order her to come to the house as well. As she arrives, Saskia finds out that Matheo has made a silent 999 call and the pair get into a fight, allowing Sylvie to run free. A police unit is dispatched but Saskia hands the phone to Matheo willingly and runs away.

What happens to Abigail?

Suranne Jones as Abigail wearing a navy blue suit and waving while standing at a lectern.

Suranne Jones as Abigail in Hostage. Des Willie/Netflix

Abigail arrives in the living room, where Shagan is holding Alex at knifepoint, and it’s then that Shagan reveals his motivations for wanting Abigail dead. He tells her that his fiancée was a local translator in Belize and was left behind to be, at the behest of a local government, shot and killed while she was six months pregnant.

The police arrive and, with mounting pressure, Alex runs at Shagan to try and get the knife out of his hands. Abigail screams for help as the armed police officers make their way to the house, but Sylvie is seen approaching the room with the gun she stole from Saskia.

She bursts in with the gun pointed at Shagan, who starts to goad her into shooting him. He admits to killing her grandfather (James Cosmo) and continues to taunt her about it, which leads Sylvie to shoot him. In shock, we then see the police enter the room and handcuff Sylvie, leaving a shaking Abigail and Alex to see Shagan take his last breath.

Speaking exclusively to RadioTimes.com about the surprise killing of Shagan by Sylvie, Jones said: “When you get to the very end, what happens with Sylvie is shocking because the cost of what Abigail and her family have had to go through for what she wants to achieve for the country and to not stand up to terrorists is huge. But she didn’t give in, she’s a fighter.

“I think we will judge her because she’s a woman and the choices that she makes in this, but I also think that’s really interesting.”

We then flash forward by three months and things seem to be relatively alright for Abigail and her family as she prepares to make an official announcement outside Downing Street.

Asking for reassurance from her husband and daughter, she goes out to deliver the message that she will be calling a general election in order to create a new mandate to help fix the country and create more honesty between her and the public.

Who dies at the end of Hostage?

Suranne Jones as Abigail (left) and Julie Delpy as Vivienne (right) in Hostage. Kevin Baker/Netflix

Suranne Jones as Abigail (left) and Julie Delpy as Vivienne (right) in Hostage. Kevin Baker/Netflix Kevin Baker/Netflix

The finale starts off with the news that Vivienne died in the explosion at Downing Street, but by the end of the finale, Shagan also dies at the hands of Sylvie.

While some viewers may be left wondering if he actually is dead, series creator Matt Charman assures us that he definitely thinks Shagan is gone for good.

Chatting exclusively with RadioTimes.com, Charman revealed: “I think Shagan’s dead. It was completely intentional around Sylvie because I think, truthfully, those ripples are… they never stop.

“If you do that, if you’re in a situation where you do something that completely crosses a line as human being, there’s no end to that trauma or that sense of who am I now, who was I before? That would be fun to explore, what that does to a person as they enter adulthood.”

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Hostage is now streaming on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Add Hostage to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Drama 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.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Emmy Statue
TV & Streaming

Date, Host, Nominations & More

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The biggest night celebrating TV in 2025 is quickly approaching as the 77th Emmy Awards are around the corner.

In addition to having a date set, nominations for the ceremony, a host, and other exciting details for the 2025 Emmys have already been unveiled. Below, we’re breaking down everything we know about the annual ceremony honoring the best in television. Scroll down for a closer look at when and where it will air, which shows are up for big prizes, and much more.

When and where will the 2025 Emmys air?

The 77th Emmy Awards will officially broadcast live on Sunday, September 14, airing coast-to-coast at 8/7c. The ceremony will be televised on CBS and is set to stream live and on demand via Paramount+.

Who is hosting the 2025 Emmys?

Nate Bargatze will officially host the ceremony, as CBS unveiled his upcoming role. The comedian said of the gig, “It’s a huge honor to be asked to host such an iconic awards show and I’m beyond excited to work with CBS to create a night that can be enjoyed by families around the world.”

Neilson Barnard / Getty Images for Vanity Fair

Where will the 2025 Emmys take place?

The event will unfold at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.

Which shows are eligible for 2025 Emmy nominations?

The eligibility period for the 2025 Emmys was June 1, 2024, through May 31, 2025.

Who is nominated at the 2025 Emmys?

Nominations for the ceremony were announced on July 14 and revealed that frontrunner shows at this year’s ceremony include Severance, The Studio, The White Lotus, Hacks, The Pitt, Slow Horses, and The Bear, among others. You can see the full list here.

When are the 2025 Creative Arts Emmy Awards?

The Creative Arts Emmy Awards will precede the Emmy Awards ceremony as they take place on Saturday, September 6, and Sunday, September 7.

Who puts on the 2025 Emmys?

The Television Academy is responsible for putting on the annual event. The Television Academy works to shape and advance the dynamic television landscape, cultivating a diverse, inclusive, and accessible professional community. Through various events and programs, the Television Academy works to foster and empower storytellers.

Stay tuned for much more on the highly anticipated awards ceremony as we approach September, and let us know what you hope to see at the 2025 Emmys in the comments section below.

77th Emmy Awards, Sunday, September 14, 8/7c, CBS and Paramount+ 

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Raphael Bob-Waksberg on Long Story Short and Following Bojack Horseman
TV & Streaming

Raphael Bob-Waksberg on Long Story Short and Following Bojack Horseman

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: The following interview contains spoilers for “Long Story Short” Season 1.

“Long Story Short” opens with the Schwooper siblings — neurotic eldest son Avi (Ben Feldman), sarcastic middle child Shira (Abbi Jacobson), and free-spirited youngest Yoshi (Max Greenfield) — in the backseat of their parents’ car, driving away from their grandmother’s funeral. In the final episode of the first season, a good 20+ years and another funeral later, the three come back together as adults with their loved ones to share their memories from that day. In between that opening scene in 1996 and the closing episode set in 2022, the show moves back and forth along the timeline, tackling life events both big and small in this trio’s lives, from bar mitzvahs and failed interventions to child dance recitals and the COVID-19 pandemic.

'Long Story Short' cast includes Ben Feldman as Avi Schwooper, Abbi Jacobson as Shira Schwooper and Nicole Byer as Kendra

“When we were writing Episode 1, we knew that we were going to come back to this in Episode 10,” Raphael Bob-Waksberg said in an interview with IndieWire. “I think a lot of the breaking of the season for me was just coming up with a lot of different kind of stories I wanted to tell, and then figuring out what’s the proper order for these, how am I going to bounce around and bounce through them? I liked the idea of feeling like we’ve gone on an emotional journey with these characters by the end of it, and coming back around to where we started. In a show like this, where you can go in any direction, and there isn’t like a linear narrative to it necessarily, I felt like that would make it feel whole and make the season feel complete.”

Bob-Waksberg came to prominence for “BoJack Horseman,” his acclaimed early Netflix hit — so early that the sheer concept of a Netflix Original was still something of a novelty upon its 2014 premiere. “Long Story Short” isn’t his followup exactly — he also did the similarly time-bending series “Undone” for Amazon Prime with Kate Purdy — but it’s his first for Netflix since “BoJack,” and features some creative overlap — most notably in Bob-Waksberg’s longtime childhood friend and “Tuca & Bertie” creator Lisa Hanawalt, who along with Allison Dubois designed the pleasing hand-drawn, graphic novel aesthetic for the series that he compares to “Peanuts” cartoons and the works of Chris Ware.

‘Long Story Short’

The story of a horse that’s also a washed-up sitcom actor, “Bojack Horseman” was a study in contrasts: It indulged in wacky, heightened humor, while also telling a dark and brutally realistic story of depression and addiction. “Long Story Short” certainly has traces of fantastical cartoon antics, and tackles heavy themes of family tension, grief, and aging. In practice though, the series feels completely separated from “BoJack” tonally, telling a more grounded story that exists somewhere in between that show’s two extremes.

“I wanted to focus the spectrum a little bit. BoJack was the whole range of colors, and on this show, I wanted to zoom in a little bit on this on this middle section, and go not quite as zany and cartoony and also not quite as bleak and Greek tragedy,” Bob-Waksberg said. “I wanted to feel more in the area of the real world, quote, unquote, and then fill that up, play the whole spectrum of that. Almost like on a cop show, you zoom in and then you enhance. I wanted to zoom in and enhance, and play all the notes of that octave.”

Each episode of “Long Story Short” is an example of that “zoom in and enhance” practice: While the series covers almost 30 years of time, each episode is — somewhat unusually for a Netflix binge release — a very self-contained tale. The installments all feature a cold open scene, generally but not always set in the childhood of the Schwooper siblings, before diving into a main story set in a different year, with the vignette usually having some direct or indirect relationship to the events at hand; a scene at the beach between Avi and Shira as kids opens an episode where the incident is discussed between them as adults, for example.

Bob-Waksberg referred to the framing device as an “appetizer” that keeps the episodes standalone while carrying the time-jumping format across the show. The episodes are then ordered so that, while they work on their own, they tell a coherent story throughout the season.

“It is more art than science, feeling what’s the proper order for these episodes. And we did want to be deliberate about the order. I mean, we didn’t want to be a thing where the show comes out and you get 100 articles like, ‘Watch this episode first,’” Bob-Waksberg said. “What’s the right way to watch this show? In order. Real easy for our audience. It’s not a choose your own adventure. Just start at the beginning and let it all wash over you.”

Running through the show and giving its basic structure is the kids’ relationship with their mother Naomi (Lisa Edelstein), which is strained and complex for all of them, especially Avi. Not every episode focuses on Naomi or even directly features her — the third episode “There’s a Mattress in There” is more centered on Yoshi’s relationship with their dad Elliot (Paul Reiser), while episodes like “Shira Can’t Cook” or “Wolves” are set after her death — but most of the siblings’ various hangups can be traced to Naomi’s strict parenting and high expectations for their children, and the last three episodes of the season foreground their dynamic.

Season 1 ends with a mild note of catharsis for the Schwoopers, as they reminisce about their mother and open up about the pain they feel now that she’s gone, but their feelings about her still remain painfully mixed — a lack of resolution Bob-Waksberg felt was deliberate: “I think one of the conversations within the show is that grief is a process, and that everybody attacks it differently, and it attacks everybody differently,” he said.

‘Long Story Short’

None of the show’s time-hopping structure would work if the characters weren’t well-formed and specific, and “Long Story Short” benefits from texture and details drawn partially from Bob-Waksberg’s own life, although he’s clear it’s not a show about his own family. He was inspired to make the series after having children of his own, which caused him to begin thinking of his own childhood, and the concepts of family traditions and peoples’ different identities as partners and parents and siblings.

Much like Bob-Waksberg himself, the Schwoopers are Jewish, and their heritage informs much of the show, from the shivas and Jewish Community Center galas the cast attends to the resentment toward his upbringing that propels much of Avi’s arc to the knishes that Shira spends an entire episode trying to make. Similarly, both Bob-Waksberg’s family and the Schwoopers are from Northern California, and the show derives a lot of flavor from its setting. According to Bob-Waksberg, the pilot initially didn’t have a set location, and the location was only set when Hanawalt designed the location with houses resembling those from their childhood.

“It allowed me to be very specific about the geography and thoughtful. The other writers in the room would sometimes make fun of me because they would pitch a story where Shira drives by to see Avi, and then goes back to see her parents and I said ‘No, geographically, that makes no sense, she wouldn’t drive from Oakland to Santa Rosa down to the South Bay,”” Bob-Waksberg said. “And they’re like, ‘OK, we don’t know. And no one’s gonna care about any of those.’ But to me, being true to that, and thinking about that specificity, I think, gives it a flavor.”

Another aspect of the show that lent authenticity was the casting. With the exception of Shira’s wife Kendra (Nicole Byer), whose conversion to Judaism forms the arc of a stellar spotlight episode, the majority of Jewish characters were voiced by Jewish actors. Bob-Waksberg is slightly ambivalent about the topic, referring to having the cast match the heritage of their characters as “important-ish,” but he also admits to having taken into account his experiences from “BoJack Horseman,” which attracted some controversy throughout its run for the casting of Alison Brie as the Vietnamese Diane.

“I don’t think that was a deal breaker, but I think it helps, and I also think it’s nice for them. I think a lot of them are happy to be playing these Jewish characters and to use this experience that they have had and they don’t always get to play,” Bob-Waksberg said. “I learned a lot from making ‘BoJack’ and the experience of not necessarily being as conscious on that show of the makeup of the cast versus the makeup of the characters. I don’t think there are hard and fast rules to it, but I think it helps.”

Although Season 1 of “Long Story Short” tells a relatively complete picture of this family and their relationships, it’s not the last time audiences have seen the Schwoopers. The series has already been renewed for a second season, and there are certainly key moments in the characters’ lives not yet portrayed on screen — Naomi’s death from COVID, which looms over the last episode in particular, and Avi’s divorce, most notably. Bob-Waksberg refers to these events as “cards to play later on,” although he also confesses an enjoyment to boomeranging the audience around the big moments to invest more in the family’s day-to-day lives. It’s also part of the reason for the show’s time-jumping format, allowing him and the writers to continue to surprise the audience with new stories about the family.

“It would take me too long to get to all I wanted to show,” Bob-Waksberg said. “If I started the project now and did it in chronological order, it would take me 15 seasons to get to some of the episodes.”

All 10 episodes of “Long Story Short” are now streaming on Netflix.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Walker vs. Zhang, How To Watch Online Livestream
TV & Streaming

Walker vs. Zhang, How To Watch Online Livestream

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

The Ultimate Fighting Championship travels to China for UFC Fight Night. Brazilian Johnny Walker (21-9-0) takes on Chinese fighter Zhang Mingyang (19-6-0), as the main card’s light heavyweight marquee matchup.

On Saturday, Aug. 23, UFC Fight Night Shanghai: Walker vs. Zhang takes place live from Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai, China. Prelims began at 3 p.m. ET/12 a.m. PT. The main card starts at 6 a.m. ET/3 a.m. PT. If you want to watch UFC Fight Night, the MMA event livestreams online on ESPN Unlimited.

To livestream UFC Fight Night: Walker vs. Zhang online, you can log in with your ESPN Unlimited subscription. Don’t have a subscription? Sign up now for ESPN Unlimited for just $29.99/month and get instant access to watch the event live online from home.

Your subscription price renews at $29.99/month. However, if you don’t want to go monthly, then you can go with an annual ESPN Unlimited subscription for $299.99/year. This is nearly a 17% savings from the month-to-month price and the best deal to watch UFC Fight Night (as well as, ESPN Unlimited live sports, originals, programming, documentaries, events and much more) online.

In addition, you can go with a subscription to the Disney Streaming Bundle — which includes ESPN Unlimited, Hulu and Disney+ — starts at $29.99/month for 12 months, an almost 40% savings on all three services. This mean you’re basically getting Hulu and Disney+ for free for a whole year.

Livestream UFC Fight Night Shanghai: Walker vs. Zhang on Saturday, Aug. 23 on ESPN Unlimited. Sign up now and get instant access to stream the MMA event online from your phone, computer, tablet or TV with up to three streams at the same time (via the ESPN app).

Meanwhile, there’s going to be plenty of fireworks with the fight card and there may be some special surprises, as well. Check out the full UFC Fight Night Shanghai fight card below:

Main Card, 6 a.m. ET/3 a.m. PT — ESPN Unlimited

  • Light Heavyweight: Johnny Walker vs. Zhang Mingyang — Main Event
  • Catchweight: Brian Ortega vs. Aljamain Sterling
  • Heavyweight: Sergei Pavlovich vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta
  • Flyweight: Su Mudaerji vs. Kevin Borjas
  • Welterweight: Taiyilake Nueraji vs. Kiefer Crosbie

Prelims, 3 a.m. ET/12 a.m. PT — ESPN Unlimited

  • Lightweight: Maheshate Hayisaer vs. Gauge Young
  • Flyweight: Lone’er Kavanagh vs. Charles Johnson
  • Lightweight: Rong Zhu vs. Austin Hubbard
  • Middleweight: Michel Pereira vs. Kyle Daukaus
  • Featherweight: Yi Zha vs. Westin Wilson
  • Bantamweight: Xiao Long vs. You Su-young
  • Light Heavyweight: Uran Satybaldiev vs. Diyar Nurgozhay
August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Maher Teases Trump Support Over Marijuana
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Teases Trump Support Over Marijuana

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

As Donald Trump flirts with reclassifying marijuana, Bill Maher appears to be done flirting with his support for the twice-impeached president and ready to commit.

On Friday’s episode of Real Time, the comedian seemed to finally pledge his allegiance to the MAGA party, teasing that “finally, he got around to me” with the announcement that he’s considering following through on President Biden‘s push to reschedule cannabis as a less dangerous substance under federal law.

“I told ya so,” he said during his ‘New Rules’ segment. “I’ve been telling Democrats for years, the Republicans are gonna steal pot from you as an issue.”

Maher added, “What did you expect? He’s the master at winning votes from small groups who are passionate about one issue, picking up a couple percent here, a couple there, until on election Night, it’s ‘Y-M-C-A!’”

As he closed out the episode, Maher appeared to come out as one of those “one issue” voters, comparing his support to Black voters showing up for Trump in 2020.

“Did he win the Black vote?” asked Maher. “Not even close, but he doubled what he got in 2020, and in places like Philly, Detroit and Milwaukee, that was the difference. And now he’s gonna do it with pot. Finally, he got around to me.”

Following the Biden administration’s plans to reclassify marijuana, Trump said he should have a decision in the “next few weeks,” which could serve as a boost for the cannabis industry. As a co-owner of the West Hollywood cannabis lounge The Woods, Maher would certainly benefit from that boost.

Back in April, Maher swore he “didn’t go MAGA” during his dinner at the White House with Trump and mutual friend Kid Rock.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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(L-R) Patrick Gibson as Dexter Morgan and Christian Slater as Harry Morgan in 'Dexter: Original Sin.'
TV & Streaming

No Season 2 Despite Earlier Pickup

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The Dexter prequel Original Sin won’t get a second season, despite an announcement to the contrary earlier this year. The Dexter franchise is still a going concern, however, with a writers room for season two of Dexter: Resurrection set to begin work in the near future.

Showtime announced a second season renewal for Dexter: Original Sin in April, six weeks after the 1991-set series following a young Dexter Morgan (played by Patrick Gibson) ended its 10-episode first season. Sources say, however, that the show had been on hiatus since production wrapped, and no start date for production on a second season was ever scheduled.

With a change in leadership at Paramount following the Skydance merger, the Dexter franchise moved from Showtime/MTV Entertainment into the reborn Paramount Television Studios under Matt Thunell. The decision then came to focus on Resurrection, which continues the present-day Dexter’s (Michael C. Hall) story from the original 2006-13 series and the 2021-22 follow-up Dexter: New Blood.

A writers room for a potential second season of Resurrection is set to open soon, with the intent being a renewal, sources tell THR — though season two has yet to be formally greenlit. The series has been performing well for Paramount+ Premium and the linear Showtime channel. The premiere episode drew 3.1 million viewers over its opening weekend and grew to 4.4 million after seven days; Paramount says the Aug. 15 episode drew the show’s largest audience of the season.

Sources also note that Paramount remains invested in the Dexter franchise but is directing its efforts toward the unfolding story of Resurrection rather than filling in more of the character’s life in a continued prequel series.

Variety first reported the news.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Hostage creator confirms season 2 hopes and shares how show could evolve
TV & Streaming

Hostage creator confirms season 2 hopes and shares how show could evolve

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Having ended with Sylvie’s (Isobel Akuwudike) surprise murder of Shagan (Martin McCann), the series then pans to a three-month flash-forward with Abigail (Suranne Jones) calling a surprise general election.

She does so in order to foster a more trusting relationship with the British public and it is clearly a decision her team and family are both behind. But ending Hostage in such a way surely opens up the potential for more.

We asked series creator Matt Charman about a possible Hostage season 2 and it’s something he would be keen to explore.

Chatting exclusively to RadioTimes.com, Charman revealed: “Look, I would love to tell more of this story, partly because I love writing for Suranne. But I also think there’s something really exciting about who she might go up against next. What her next opposite number might be, you know?

“Yeah, if we were lucky enough, I’d love to take this story on.”

Julie Delpy as Vivienne and Suranne Jones as Abigail in Hostage. Des Willie/Netflix

When asked if season 2 would seek to replicate another hostage situation (as per the title of the show), Charman said: “Well, ‘hostage’ means different things. When I think about the show, I don’t really think about Alex, I think more about the two leaders, I think of Suranne and Julie’s characters.

“They’re the hostages, they’re the ones being held and they’re the ones that are being blackmailed. So, it’s really about riffing on that word ‘hostage’, what does it mean to be under someone else’s control? So I think that’s where I would kind of explore further.”

Would a future season of Hostage include Jones once again? “I love working with Suranne, I’d do anything with her,” Charman added. “So yeah, for me, that would be fun.”

Read more:

The series marks Jones’s first stint on Netflix, not only leading the cast of the new five-parter but also serving as an executive producer.

With a general election being called in the Hostage finale, we could find Abigail re-elected in a potential season 2 or she may have forged an entirely new political career path for herself.

Either way, it would be interesting to see how the word ‘hostage’ could factor into any future episodes.

Charman also teased to RadioTimes.com that it would be “fun to explore” the impact of Sylvie’s decision to shoot Shagan.

He said: “It was completely intentional around Sylvie because I think, truthfully, those ripples are… they never stop.

“If you do that, if you’re in a situation where you do something that completely crosses a line as a human being, there’s no end to that trauma or that sense of who am I now, who was I before? That would be fun to explore, what that does to a person as they enter adulthood.”

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Hostage is now available to stream on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Add Hostage to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Drama 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.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - MAY 13: Hayes Warner attends the 2025 BMI Pop Awards at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on May 13, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
TV & Streaming

Cast, Premiere Date, More Details on Ryan Murphy FX Series

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Ryan Murphy is about to take us back to 1980s Los Angeles. The TV producer mogul is adapting Bret Easton Ellis’ psychological horror novel The Shards, and he’s assembled quite the cast.

The Shards, which was released in 2021, is loosely inspired by the American Psycho author’s own life growing up. A TV adaptation initially started out at HBO, but those plans fell through. Now, Murphy has taken The Shards over to FX.

On July 16, key cast members were revealed. Who is playing the fictional version of Bret Easton Ellis? What about the mysterious Robert Mallory? TV Insider is breaking down all the updates about The Shards TV series.

When is The Shards coming out?

The Shards doesn’t have a premiere date yet. We first heard about the show’s move to FX back in May. Given the casting news, production will likely get underway this year. The earliest The Shards would premiere is 2026.

Who has been cast in The Shards?

Igby Rigney has been cast as a young Bret Easton Ellis in The Shards, per Variety. Rigney is best known for his roles in the Mike Flanagan TV universe, including Midnight Mass, The Fall of the House of Usher, and The Midnight Club.

Homer James Jigme Gere will play Robert Mallory, the new kid at the posh Buckley prep school that Bret attends. The 25-year-old is the son of Richard Gere. The Shards will mark his first major role.

In a Ryan Murphy-style twist, the young Gere will star alongside Kaia Gerber in The Shards. Gerber is attached to star in the series, but the character she’s playing remains unclear. Gerber’s mom, Cindy Crawford, was married to Richard Gere from 1991 to 1995.

Hayes Warner has also been cast in the adaptation as a series regular. The singer will play popular girl Debbie Shaffer, another student at the exclusive prep school. Deadline first reported the news on August 22.

Graham Campbell will play Bret’s best friend, Thom. The series will be his first TV role.

What is The Shards about?

The Shards takes place primarily in 1981, Bret’s senior year of high school. An older Bret recalls what happened that fateful year when he met Robert Mallory and the “Trawler” terrorized Los Angeles. Bret becomes obsessed with the serial killer who is seemingly targeting young women in the Los Angeles area. As Robert Mallory is welcomed into Bret’s friend group, Bret becomes convinced this enigmatic young man is hiding secrets.

The Shards was initially serialized by Ellis as an audiobook through his podcast before he traditionally published in 2021.

The Shards, TBA, FX

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Ron Howard's Darkly Funny Adult ‘Lord of the Flies’
TV & Streaming

Ron Howard’s Darkly Funny Adult ‘Lord of the Flies’

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Vertical releases “Eden” in theaters Friday, August 22, 2025.

Dr. Friedrich Ritter (Jude Law) is loath to repeat anyone else, so when his writer’s block finds him spitting out quotes from bigger, better, far more well-known philosophers, he knows things are going badly. Things have, in fact, been going badly for a very long time, as is prone to happen when someone moves to an uninhabited island and attempts to carve out a new world order. Still, had Friedrich — a very real person — been a bit more comfortable with the idea of repeating someone else, he likely would have found plenty of comfort in Jean-Paul Sartre’s perpetually prescient observation that “Hell is other people.”

Lurker

Such is the thrust of Ron Howard’s darkly funny “Eden,” a fact-based story that follows what happened after Friedrich and his partner Dora Strauch (Vanessa Kirby) moved to a Galapagos Island (Floreana, to be precise) after the end of World War I (and the start of all the stuff that would lead to World War II) in search of a very different way of living, only to find that they simply can’t shake the stuff that tends to make society so unbearable (read: other people). Frederich likes to act as if he’s above it all, but at a certain point, he started sending out missives to the outside world touting the paradise he and Dora have created, so they shouldn’t be so surprised when people start showing up, seeking a similar life.

Oh, but are they ever. Frederich’s dream is to, by his own admission, “save humanity,” but the furthest he got in that process was to move away from the entire world to bang away at his typewriter, dreaming up nonsense philosophy he’s completely (and hilariously) unable to live out himself. While he and Dora (who has MS, which they try to clear with meditation, sex, and hard living) have carved out a bit of a living on Floreana, it’s precarious by every measure. “Everything on this island can kill you” Dora tells their newest visitors, and it’s perhaps the most true thing anyone says throughout Noah Pink’s clever screenplay.

Those new visitors? The Wittmer family: father Heinz (Daniel Bruhl), second wife Margret (Sydney Sweeney, who gets one hell of a go-for-broke sequence in this film), and ill son Harry (Jonathan Tittel). The family has been enthralled by what they’ve read in the German papers of Friedrich and Dora’s adventures, and they want in. They show up in kicky little camp clothes, toting butterfly nets, starry-eyed at the whole affair. Friedrich and Dora promptly send them up the hill to a notoriously infertile slice of the island — Dora’s beloved burro helps, and that will be the last time that happens — and expect they’ll abandon the whole affair in weeks. They don’t.

Eden
‘Eden’Courtesy TIFF

Things are already feeling “Lord of the Flies”-y enough already, but with a distinctly adult bent and plenty of unexpected humor, and that’s before “Baroness” Eloise Bosquet de Wagner Wehrhorn (Ana de Armas, a scream in a cast filled with standout performances) shows up, all delusional big talk about building the world’s most luxurious hotel (for millionaires only!), most of it helped along mightily be her dedicated cadre of manservants and lovers (including Felix Kammerer and Toby Wallace). On an island filled with blinkered people (and that’s being generous), Eloise is queen. Well, that’s the plan.

As she starts pulling strings between her friends and neighbors — all of it both obvious and understandable, and truly entertaining enough that you’ll laugh out loud when Law proclaims “deus ex machina!” at a plot twist that is precisely that — Eden collapses. “Eden” does not. Howard and his stacked cast keep the entire thing chugging right along toward the inevitable, and even that doesn’t feel so expected, if only because of how damn funny this trip straight to Hell feels.

A certain amount of creative license helps — goodness knows, no one on Floreana looked quite this good as they were coming undone in increasingly dark manners — even as occasionally bloodless drama feels like a whiff. Listen, for a film in which Sydney Sweeney fights off a pack of feral dogs while giving birth by herself, things could (and maybe even should) feel a lot more fucked up than what we get in “Eden.”

But what we do get from Howard’s latest is a strong reminder of his handle on not just craft and casting, but also story and tone. No film about the utter demise of a supposed utopia — a real one, to boot! — and the utter infallibility of human beings should be this fun, but we’re lucky this one is. It helps the hard truths go down easier, especially about who we all are as people (you know, hellish).

Grade: B

“Eden” premiered at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Vertical releases the film Friday, August 22, 2025.

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 reviews, streaming picks, and offers some new musings, all only available to subscribers.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Glaser Weil Attorney Was 65
TV & Streaming

Glaser Weil Attorney Was 65

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Harrison Dossick, a longtime entertainment and media litigator and partner at Glaser Weil, died unexpectedly on Aug. 14 in Los Angeles. He was 65.

Over nearly four decades, Dossick represented major film studios, creative talent, distributors and media companies.

Among his notable cases were his successful defense of Angelina Jolie in the copyright infringement case concerning “In the Land of Blood and Honey” and his representation of FilmDistrict Distribution in false advertising claims over “Drive.” He also repped Paramount Pictures in copyright and idea submission claims related to “What Men Want,” and Sony Pictures Entertainment in a profit participation dispute over a sequel to “Basic Instinct.”

Dossick also represented Sony’s Screen Gems in a profit participation and likeness dispute over “The Partridge Family,” and Volvo over a misappropriation and copyright action involving social media use of photographs.

Recently, he had represented a prominent screenwriter and director involving a major film project and advocated for a prominent boxing manager in a commission dispute against a sports promotion company.

“Harrison was an exceptional lawyer and a treasured colleague and friend,” said Peter Weil, Managing Partner of Glaser Weil. “He combined intellectual brilliance with warmth, humor, and integrity, earning the trust of his clients and the deep admiration of everyone who worked alongside him. Harrison’s sudden passing is an immeasurable loss to our firm and to the legal community. We will miss him greatly, and we extend our heartfelt condolences to his family and all who loved him.”

Prior to joining Glaser Weil, Dossick served as a partner at Reed Smith from 2012-2023, Katten Muchin Rosenman from 2000 to 2012, and Hill Wynne Troop & Meisinger from 1988 to 2000.

He has been recognized by the Legal 500 and Best Lawyers in America, and was named a Southern California Super Lawyer by Los Angeles Magazine and Southern California Super Lawyers Magazine (2006-2010 and 2014-2018).

He is survived by his wife, Joanne, and children Artie and Carly.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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