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'Red, White & Royal Blue' Author Clarifies Sequel Update
TV & Streaming

‘Red, White & Royal Blue’ Author Clarifies Sequel Update

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Two years later, fans of Red, White & Royal Blue might be in for a happy ending soon.

After saying at a recent event that “pencils are kind of down for now” on the sequel, the literary source material’s author Casey McQuiston clarified the phrase on social media to put fans’ minds at ease.

“I don’t know who needs to hear this, but ‘pencils down’ is a figure of speech that refers to when you’re taking the SAT or something and it’s time to put your pencil down bc the section of the test is done,” wrote McQuiston on their Instagram Story, according to DNA. “I’ve used this expression, like 100,000 times to describe the feeling of turning in a manuscript, it’s not that deep!”

Last May, Amazon MGM Studios announced they greenlighted development on the sequel after the first became Prime Video’s No. 1 movie in its global debut weekend, holding the position for three weeks.

Noting that there is no sequel to McQuiston’s original 2019 on which to base his sequel, writer-director Matthew López previously told Deadline that the author will still factor into the movie.

Matthew Lopez, Casey McQuiston, Uma Thurman, Nicholas Galitzine, Taylor Zakhar Perez, Rachel Hilson, Sarah Schechter and Greg Berlanti at the Prime Experience Deadline Portrait Studio for ‘Red, White and Royal Blue’ at Nya Studiuos on May 8, 2024 in Los Angeles, California

Michael Buckner for Deadline

“When we were starting this process, I kept saying that we’ll have succeeded at this adaptation…if you feel the same way at the end of the film, as you felt finishing the book,” said López last year. “There’s no book to guide us, but what we have is Casey’s original thoughts and original ideas.”

Taylor Zakhar Perez and Nicholas Galitzine reunite for the sequel, which also sees López returning after making his feature debut with the original, penning the followup alongside McQuiston. Berlanti Schechter Films’ Greg Berlanti and Sarah Schechter will return to produce the film, joined by the banner’s Michael McGrath, as well as López. McQuiston will executive produce.

In Red, White & Royal Blue, President Ellen Claremont’s (Uma Thurman) son Alex (Zakhar Perez) has an embarrassing encounter with Prince Henry (Galatzine), threatening US/UK relations and his mother’s reelection campaign. While attempting to clean up the bad press, the pair is forced to pretend to be best friends, during which the unlikely pair secretly falls in love.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Michael Urie in Shrinking
TV & Streaming

Watch Michael Urie Nail His Self-Taped Audition for ‘Shrinking’

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Michael Urie is a consummate performer, equally comfortable plying his craft on stage, on camera, or in the bedroom of his New York apartment. The Upper West Side pad is where both he and his partner, actor Ryan Spahn, record most of their self-taped auditions, including the one that landed Urie his Emmy-nominated role as manic best friend Brian on the Apple TV+ comedy Shrinking. The video, shared exclusively with The Hollywood Reporter and shown below, reveals just how dialed in Urie was to the character — even as his scene partner, Spahn, read Jason Segel’s lines in a dry, affectless tone to avoid drawing too much attention to himself. (“The only thing in the world we fight about is self tapes,” Urie says. “And so basically anytime he has an audition, I have an audition, like it gets tense for that reason.”)

Between performances of Oh Mary! on Broadway, Urie spoke with THR to describe his self-tape process and why he prefers it to in-person auditions.

“I’m a fan of self tapes,” says Urie. “I know there’s a lot of people who like to go in and audition in person. I guess that they like the feedback. They like to get notes. But I like a self-tape because it is actually more like what working on TV or film is like. You can do takes. You can decide where you want the camera. You can watch it back.”  

And unlike in-person try-outs, where actors often have scripts in hand, self-taping allows auditioners to better prepare and go off book, freeing them up to perform.

The scenes Urie recorded and sent to Shrinking’s producers — Ted Lasso’s Bill Lawrence and Brett Goldstein — were mostly from the second episode of the show’s first season. “It was really easy to memorize,” Urie says. “It was such a good script — and it was already picked up. It wasn’t just a pilot. It was a real-deal TV show with a big ol’ star, Jason Segel.” (Urie did not yet know that Harrison Ford would be joining the cast.) “This felt like a job I could get. And that’s so all those things make it easier.”

When Urie and Spahn shot the tape, they were both starring in Jane Anger, an off-Broadway comedy written for them by their friend Talene Monahon, about William Shakespeare’s getting writer’s block while on lockdown during the plague. (Parallels with COVID confinement were very much the point.) Urie grew a beard for the first time to play the Bard, which is why he sports one in the audition, and why, by extension, Brian has one on Shrinking.

Unlike Monahon’s fictional version of Shakespeare, Urie didn’t let the lockdown keep him down. Early in the pandemic, he livestreamed a solo performance from his apartment of Buyer and Cellar, the critically acclaimed one-man show he premiered in 2013, about an aspiring actor who takes a job as an employee in the entirely non-fictional mini theme park Barbra Streisand built in her basement. “I think I did over six hundred performances, and that was the only time I ever did it without anyone laughing,” recalls Urie.

The experience may have prepared him for his Shrinking audition a few years later, in which he delivered a finely tuned comedic performance to an all but empty room (and if Spahn was laughing, it wasn’t audible).

Urie claims he forgot about the audition tape shortly after hitting send. “Over the years, I’ve gotten really good at making the audition, sending it away, and then throwing away the materials. Literally. I literally waste the paper. I will throw it away so it’s not even in my home. I won’t keep it just in case I get called back. I get rid of it.”

Several weeks went by before he got a call from his reps. And it sounded like bad news. “They said, ‘Well, we really thought this might go to a screen test.’” Devastated, Urie asked them what happened. “And they were like, ‘You just got it. That’s all.’” No callback required. “Agents love that. They love doing that.”

With that, he learned that he’d gotten booked for 10 episodes of Shrinking. And there was one more thing: “They let me know that they also hired Harrison Ford,” Urie says with a laugh, “so don’t expect much money.”

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Outlander: Blood of My Blood star was unsure about character romance
TV & Streaming

Outlander: Blood of My Blood star was unsure about character romance

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

“I think Henry’s sort of given up on life, really,” said Irvine. “I think he’s lost all hope and his last throwing out of a lifeline, really, is this open letter which, through the magic that happens in the Outlander universe, happens to land on his soulmate’s desk and they fall in love through words.”

Irvine then recalled the scene where they come face to face for the first time and they “just know, I just know that it’s her”.

“I remember calling [executive producer] Matt [Roberts] up going, ‘No one’s going to believe this. No one’s going to believe it,'” he said. “And Matt went, ‘No, I want there to be this magic about this world.’

“And it was only when I saw it, I went, ‘Oh my God, yeah, you’re completely right.'”

Read more:

“It is heightened, but it’s so lovely in the very cynical world that we live in now, to have this complete lack of cynicism and just lose yourself in that,” added Irvine. “It’s difficult to imagine these days, but I think the poetics of the letter writing of that time also allows that.

“They fall in love before they even meet, and I think there’s something really beautiful in that.”

Hermione Corfield as Julia Moriston, Jeremy Irvine as Henry Beauchamp, Jamie Roy as Brian Fraser and Harriet Slater as Ellen MacKenzie. Starz

That “magic” is also present during Ellen and Brian’s first encounter, which Harriet Slater described as “love at first sight”.

“Not everyone might believe in that, but it was written in the script as a ‘thunderclap moment’, when two souls that are destined to be together finally meet, and so there is an element of fantasy about it,” said Slater.

“These two characters just know, after seeing each other for a split second, that there’s something there,” added Jamie Roy.

“There’s this magnetism that draws them together that they’ve never felt before. There’s just something really, really special there. And hopefully we showed that.”

Outlander: Blood of My Blood will premiere on Saturday 9th August in the UK on MGM+ in the UK. You can buy Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander books on Amazon.

Add Outlander: Blood of My Blood 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 from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Natalie Quarry as Rosalind Clifford and Zephryn Taitte as Cyril Robinson in
TV & Streaming

When Does ‘Call the Midwife’ Season 14 Come to Netflix?

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Call the Midwife is currently on a brief break from filming its upcoming Season 15. The show’s cast and crew are taking a summer vacation after going international to film in Hong Kong earlier this summer. While fans wait for Call the Midwife Season 15 to be completed and come out, U.S. audiences will have the chance to catch up on Season 14 on Netflix quite soon.

Netflix announced its September 2025 lineup of original and non-original titles coming to the streaming platform on Wednesday, August 20. Among the non-originals coming to the streamer in September are Interview With the Vampire Season 2, Orphan Black Seasons 1-5, Nashville Seasons 1-6, S.W.A.T. Season 8 (the final season), Spartacus Seasons 1-4 (September 23), and more. Call the Midwife Season 14 is among the list of shows dropping next month as well.

When does Call the Midwife Season 14 drop on Netflix?

U.S. Call the Midwife fans will be able to watch Season 14 on Netflix on Monday, September 15. The season consists of eight episodes set in the 1970s, which was a time of great change for Poplar. Workers strikes and government red tape caused some of the season’s drama. One new romance was cemented with a wedding, while a new romance bloomed for two beloved characters. A teen pregnancy also became a major storyline for the season.

How many seasons of Call the Midwife are on Netflix?

All previous 13 seasons of Call the Midwife are available to stream on Netflix, including the Call the Midwife Christmas specials.

When does Call the Midwife Season 15 premiere?

Call the Midwife Season 15 will premiere in January 2026 on BBC in the U.K., according to Radio Times. Season 14 premiered in the U.K. in January 2025 and in March 2025 in the U.S. An exact premiere date for Season 15 for both the U.K. and the U.S. have not been announced, but the release schedule will likely follow suit with the previous seasons, meaning that Call the Midwife Season 15 will likely premiere in March 2026 on PBS. The Christmas specials typically come out on Boxing Day (December 26).

There’s also a Call the Midwife movie and a prequel series in the works.

Call the Midwife, Season 15 Premiere, 2026, PBS

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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A24 English Dub of Chinese Animated Epic Is Good, Not Great
TV & Streaming

A24 English Dub of Chinese Animated Epic Is Good, Not Great

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

In a year that’s proven a bit soft at the box office, the biggest story (and just plain biggest film, period) is the monstrous power of “Ne Zha 2,” a Chinese CGI animated feature that, during its theatrical release in January, utterly annihilated the likes of “Fantastic Four,” “Superman,” and even “A Minecraft Movie” to become the highest global earning film this year. The competition isn’t tight, either: with $2.2 billion grossed so far, it has an absurd $1.2 billion lead over “Lilo & Stitch” and is the fifth highest-earning movie ever, no qualifications needed.

“Ne Zha 2” isn’t the first Chinese film to challenge Hollywood productions in terms of success, with the country having established itself as a highly important market for global productions. But its sheer impact still heavily outpaces any other Chinese film ever made. By comparison, the second-highest-grossing Chinese film of all-time is 2021’s “The Battle at Lake Changjin,” which “only” grossed a lowly $913 million. Even more impressive is “Ne Zha 2” managed to make all that money with barely any help from North American markets: the movie received a limited eight-week U.S. release by CMC Pictures in February, where — per Box Office Mojo — it managed around $20 million.

SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, John Travolta, 1977

Which is where A24 comes in. With U.S. audiences still largely ignorant of what exactly “Ne Zha” is, the indie distributor acquired the rights to the film and gave it a glossy English dub for a second introduction to the market, complete with an IMAX rollout to better appreciate the film’s stunningly detailed backdrops and fight scenes.

What unsuspecting viewers will find at the theater is a film that’s not really anything like the animated films Hollywood produces: glossy and operatic in its scale, “Ne Zha 2” has a mammoth 150-minute running time that’s longer than expected for the average kids’ attention span (or the average attention span of a TikTok-rotted adult brain, to be frank). But in its emotional viewpoint and its streak of gleeful potty humor, “Ne Zha 2” is also quite blatantly a movie for children. The closest comparison to make isn’t Pixar’s “Elio” or Disney’s “Zootopia,” but the world of battle Shonen anime like “Dragon Ball Z” or “Naruto,” long shows characterized by excitable teen boys engaging in nonstop, over-the-top brawls with their own specialized power sets.

Like many products of this genre, “Ne Zha 2” can occasionally veer on the numbing, its barrage of setpieces blending in together into one amorphous blob. But at the same time, you can’t help but admire the sheer scale of the canvas director Yang Yu (alternatively credited as Jiaozi) uses to paint, and the often jaw-dropping artistry and detail of the animation speaks for itself.

NE ZHA 2, (aka NEZHA: MO TONG NAO HAI), 2025. © CMC Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Ne Zha 2’Courtesy Everett Collection

As its title makes clear, “Ne Zha 2” is a sequel, and anyone who hasn’t taken the time to study up on the original 2019 “Ne Zha” is going to inevitably be a bit confused by this one, which starts with a very brief recap of the first movie, but nonetheless plunges the audience directly into this fantasy version of China with little context or effort to handhold. For American audiences this will inevitably jar, given how much the characters and story takes inspiration from the 16th-century novel “Investiture of the Gods” and various mythological and folk figures from Chinese history. After an opening that starts immediately after the first film introducing the titular Ne Zha and his best friend Ao Bing as spirits whose bodies need to be rebirthed, followed by a massive war sequence between characters just introduced, you would not be forgiven for getting a headache trying to keep up.

Once the movie slows down, the uninformed are able to ease more readily into the plot of the film. The first movie covered the story of how Ne Zha — a foul-mouthed, raccoon-eyed, rebellious youth who was born to demon hunters as the feared reincarnation of a demon orb — befriended the serene, properly mannered Ao Bing. In “Ne Zha 2,” master Taiyi Zhenren recreates their bodies, only for Ao Bing to lose his body in an attack from the dragons — led by the main villain, the sniveling but sympathetic Shen Gongbao — who mistakenly attack their hometown under the belief he is dead. With Ao Bing’s spirit now in Ne Zha’s body, the two manage a truce with dragons to venture to the land of the heavenly Chan sect and complete three tasks that will grant them immortality and restore Ao Bing’s body.

That journey to and through the divine world is long, and a plot synopsis in a review can’t really capture all of the characters and moving parts to this tale. There’s just too much of it. At 2 hours and 24 minutes, the movie sags in pacing, with a protracted first act to get to the real meat of things that could use a serious edit, jokes that linger a second too long, and fight scenes that drag to the point that you sometimes lose the emotional stakes of the story. The sheer amount of toilet humor — there’s a lot of mucus, snot, and jokes about people drinking piss stuffed into one film — often proves more annoying than fun.

Luckily, things click into place when Ne Zha begins his trials, and the tension between using Ao Bing’s greater power to win and remaining true to his own misfit self begins to wear at him. It’s also the point in which the often bratty, off-putting character clicks into place, and his simple desire to be accepted and prove his worth emerges as the real emotional heart of the story. The other characters emerge as complex figures rather than stock archtypes, as the Chan sect holds obvious secrets and biases towards demons while Shen Gongbao’s hidden soft side comes to light.

Most importantly, the trials gives “Ne Zha 2” a framework to showcase some of the most impressive and vibrant 3D animation that has been seen on film in quite some time. The product of roughly 138 Chinese companies and around 4,000 individual animators, “Ne Zha 2” looks vibrant and alive in every frame, striking an unusual balance between anime-inspired exaggeration and realism that works shockingly well in practice. The environments — from the white jade walls of the Chan sect palace to the dusty town of talking bandit moles that Ne Zha begins his trials in to the rushing waterfall where he fights a shapeshifting water demon — are astonishingly ornate and detailed, while the characters that inhabit them are creatively imagined and varied, from cartoonish old fat men to dragons with scales that shine like they’re truly alive.

Then there’s the action, which melds influences from anime, wuxia, and good old-fashioned “Looney Tune” pratfalls to create some jaw-dropping setpieces that zig and zag in new directions; you never know how a brawl will resolve or what a character will do next, and that unpredictability allows for real exhilaration. The climax, an operatic conflict that manages to successfully merge emotion with spectacle in a way the rest of the film sometimes struggles with, is a particular feat. In one stunning shot, two hordes of warriors on rival sides of a conflict are seen from afar, like two waves crashing into each other. And yet, the detail, attention, and artistry of every pixel in frame is very evidently displayed. In many respects, watching “Ne Zha 2” feels akin to viewing the “Avatar” films, as the film provides a visual experience that’s the absolute peak of what its medium is capable of.

It also benefits from a solid dubbing effort that gratifyingly features a mostly Asian cast and a absence of stunty A-list gets. The sole exception is Michelle Yeoh, who’s appropriately warm and heartbreaking as the title character’s mother Lady Yin. The rest of the cast is mostly unknowns or professional voice actors, including Crystal Lee and Aleks Le, a winning double act as Ne Zha and Ao Bing. Occasionally, the dialogue doesn’t quite match up with the character’s mouth flaps, but it’s a minor distraction in a mostly seamless experience.

All dubbing inevitably invites a debate over whether or not it’s necessary or if English speakers should learn to appreciate subtitles, but “Ne Zha 2” has a good case for why it’s necessary. When a movie is as stuffed with detail and action as this, better to make sure the audience has their eyes on the whole screen rather than just a tiny third of it.

Grade: B

A24‘s “Ne Zha 2” is currently playing in theaters.

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

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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'Ethical AI' and a Rerecorded 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow'
TV & Streaming

‘Ethical AI’ and a Rerecorded ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Sphere is promising to take audiences over the rainbow, down the yellow brick road and into an entirely new type of cinematic experience. It’s “The Wizard of Oz” as you’ve never seen it before — not only digitally enhanced but expanded to fit the Las Vegas entertainment complex’s massive 160,000-square foot screen.

“It’s pushing the visual medium,” Jane Rosenthal, one of the new film’s producers, says. “It’s pushing the exhibition of shows and concerts in a way that’s singular, and it’s exhilarating.”

And it’s also controversial, at least among cinephiles, sparking fierce debate ahead of its Aug. 28 premiere about whether you should muck around with a classic. That’s because this “Wizard of Oz” adds characters to scenes (we didn’t see you there, Uncle Henry!) and extends the images projected on screen to fit Sphere’s sprawling canvas. The team behind the film combed the archives at both the Academy and Warner Bros., looking through shot lists, sketches and notebooks from the 1939 original that could inspire and shape their work.

“Some of the things we did were just organic and authentic to what the original filmmaker’s intent was,” says Jennifer Koester, president and chief operating officer of Sphere.

But it’s also true that none of this would be possible without AI — a technological advancement that many in Hollywood worry will cost jobs.

Rosenthal has heard the criticism, but she argues that the use of AI in storytelling is nothing new, likening it to CGI: “Anyone who is talking about this hasn’t seen it, so you’ve got the blind talking to the blind, and they’re upset about AI. AI in the film industry has been used for many years. It’s been used on ‘Jurassic Park,’ ‘Avatar,’ ‘Benjamin Button.’”

The Sphere team says it’s using “ethical models” that have been trained on “The Wizard of Oz” footage, as well as original props and designs, all with the permission of the rights holders.

It also promises a full sensory experience, such as giant wind machines to drop the audience inside a tornado or a boom sound that ricochets around Sphere’s 167,000 speakers as Dorothy taps on the Tin Man’s heart.

“The whole idea of it is you’re not passively watching — you are actively feeling like you’re in it,” Carolyn Blackwood, head of Sphere Studios, says.

The Sphere team is excited for audiences to hear Dorothy singing “Over the Rainbow.” “We ended up rerecording with an orchestra, on the original MGM lot, and in the soundstage where they had recorded the original music. We were able to split the tracks. You can now hear her voice. It’s still her voice, but you’re hearing it pure,” Rosenthal says.

Ultimately, the hope is that presenting “The Wizard of Oz” on the biggest, widest and most decked-out screen imaginable won’t just delight fans; it will introduce new audiences to the story of a little girl from Kansas who came to realize there’s no place like home.

“For people that haven’t seen it before, this is going to totally blow them away,” Koester says.

The Women of Oz – Jane Rosenthal, Jennifer Koester and Carolyn Blackwood
BRIAN FRIEDMAN

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Edinburgh TV & Film Fest Reports
TV & Streaming

Edinburgh TV & Film Fest Reports

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

We’re here again, Insiders, as we come to the close of another week. Jesse Whittock here guiding you through a round-up of the most notable stories from the past week. Sign up for the mailing list here.

Shonda Shines

Star power and spice: Jake and Max have been pounding the halls of the Edinburgh International Conference Centre the past four days for the 50th anniversary of the Edinburgh TV Festival, an event that struck a positive chord after a 2024 characterized by doom and gloom. There was more of a creative buzz around the fest this year and it was helped along by some serious American star power in the form of Shonda Rhimes, who won an inaugural fellowship award – as she warned there are genuine fears U.S. networks are self-censoring in the Trump 2 era – and Tina Fey, who is speaking with Graham Norton in arguably the fest’s splashiest session as this email hits your inbox. Last year’s Edinburgh was defined by chatter over the “squeezed middle” – the death of mid-budget programming and the detrimental impact this was having on the sector – but attendees this year told us there was a distinctly “new normal” feeling to proceedings, and this was welcome. Not that Edinburgh didn’t come without its bit of spice. During the opening debate, Channel 4 news chief Louisa Compton set the agenda for the entire thing in one fell swoop as she claimed Netflix had behaved like “TV tourists” by commissioning Adolescence – a show created by talent that Channel 4 had been training up for years. There were audible ‘oohs’ as she delivered her line. Netflix scripted exec Mona Qureshi later hit back, saying: “I don’t think I’m a tourist – I’ve been around.” There were more ding-dongs as the week went on, including frustration from BBC, ITV and 5 chiefs when Channel 4 content boss Ian Katz slammed rivals for being “timid.” It was all very enjoyable to watch, and, to stress, remained good natured throughout. Elsewhere, big show announcements came in the way of HBO-Sky legal thriller War starring Dominic West and Sienna Miller, Channel 4’s reimagining of Army of Shadows from Top Boy creator Ronan Bennett, and ITV’s Traitors-esque gameshow Nobody’s Fool. All our coverage can be found here.

Anti-Bullying Body Funding Failure

Russell Brand, Gregg Wallace, and Noel Clarke

TV stars Russell Brand, Gregg Wallace, and Noel Clarke have faced misconduct allegations. All deny serious wrongdoing

Getty

CIISA refuseniks: On the first morning of Edinburgh, Jake broke the news that several major players in the UK were refusing to fund the Creative Industries Independent Standards Authority (CIISA), an independent body set up to deal with harassment and complaints in the British TV industry in the wake of several high-profile scandals. Channel 4, Disney, All3Media, Fremantle and Banijay have all declined to pay the voluntary fees, we understand, while Netflix and Paramount-owned 5 wouldn’t confirm either way. The BBC, Warner Bros. Discovery, Sky and ITV are among those who are funding. The understanding is the refuseniks are seeking more clarity on what the funds will be used on – CIISA is yet to deliver on its central pledge to launch a misconduct hotline, and several industry sources I’ve spoken to in the wake of Jake’s scoop have questioned why the body’s costs for 2026 are an estimated £2M ($2.7M). Whether that’s necessary or not, it’s a bad look PR-wise to be the guys who aren’t supporting an anti-bullying initiative. This is an intriguing story that looks set to keep running.

Why You Can’t Replace De Niro’s Voice

Robert De Niro in ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

Paramount Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection

Dubble take: The TV set weren’t the only screen professionals in Scotland’s capital this month. Before Jake and Max travelled up for the television confab, Zac journeyed north for the Edinburgh International Film Festival, which ran from August 14-20. Among several notable talks, three-time Oscar-winning film editor Thelma Schoonmaker railed against the use of dubbing in international film releases during a talk about her late filmmaker husband, Michael Powell. “How do you replace Robert De Niro’s voice?” she queried, before answering her own question, “It’s just impossible.” Not only that, but she called the process of sending a film to her European counterparts “painful.” Sorry Euro friends. To be fair, when you’ve edited all of Martin Scorsese’s films since Raging Bull, you’re entitled to your own opinions. In Zac’s report, Schoonmaker addressed Powell’s legendary filmmaking partnership with Emeric Pressburger, which spawned films such as The Red Shoes, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp and Black Narcissus. “Their friendship was remarkable,” she said. Lots more Edinburgh Film Fest content flooded in through the week, including stories on Kevin MacDonald, Paul Sng and Two Neighbours director Ondine Viñao. Read more.

Ray Guns For Marvel

Mike Marsland/WireImage

Not so Marvellous: Ray Winstone‘s trip to the Sarajevo Film Festival was, as it turns out, as memorable as you might have expected. In town to receive an Honorary Heart of Sarajevo award, the veteran actor recalled during one talk a bruising experience doing reshoots for Marvel’s 2021 pic Black Widow. “I told them they should recast,” he recalled. “But I was contracted to do it.” So he did. It’s fair to say Winstone isn’t a huge fan of what the Marvel Cinematic Universe and other superhero franchises are doing to the wider ecosystem of filmmaking. “There is room for it and it’s fun, but it takes away from getting cultural films made, which are best for the actors and are really good acting parts,” he opined. Lots more from Mr Winstone about his fascinating career is here, including a story about Martin Scorsese and a famous leather jacket. More Sarajevo stories from Diana here, including a fun talk from Nosferatu actor Willem Dafoe, as the festival comes to an end today.

Daniel Dae Kim‘s Korea Highlight

Courtesy of Prime Video

‘Butterfly‘ effect: Daniel Dae Kim may have been a favorite on American TV shows for the past two decades on Lost and Hawaii Five-O, but his new Prime Video thriller series Butterfly provided the actor with something none of his past work could. “Shooting something in Korea has always been a goal of mine,” he told Sara in an interview published earlier this week. So keen was Kim to shoot in the country of his birth that he actually asked the head of publisher Boom! Studios whether a TV series could move part of the action from the U.S. and Europe, where the comic books on which Butterfly is based on are set. The recently-named honorary citizen of Seoul got his wish, and the series would shoot in numerous South Korean locations, including in the mountains, countryside and the capital. “I love that we got to shoot in Busan too, which is where I was born,” he recalled. The choice was clearly a good one, as Butterfly this week reached top spot in Prime Video’s U.S. charts, marking both and on- and off-screen success for Kim, who also exec produced through his production company 3AD and a development deal with Amazon MGM Studios.

The Essentials

Laura Donnelly

Agency courtesy

🌶️ Hot One: Laura Donnelly will star in ITV and Poison Pen serial killer drama The Dark.

🌶️ Another One: More big names join the second season of Disney+ ‘bonkbuster’ Rivals, with Hayley Atwell and Rupert Everett signing up.

🥵 Third One: MK2 Films boarded sales on Laura Poitras’ doc Cover-Up ahead of its world premiere Out of Competition at the upcoming Venice Film Festival.

☀️ Sunny fest: Nine films were added to the San Sebastian line-up including Ballad of a Small Player, the latest from Edward Berger, who sat down for a chat with our Editor-in-Chief, Film, Mike Fleming Jr.

🚪 Exit door: Jack Oliver is leaving his role as Head of Co-Productions at Sky.

💃 Re-jig: All3Media International upped Jennifer Askin and drafted in Whitney Muroff, as long-serving Americas chief Sally Habbershaw stepped down.

📋 Listed: Submissions for the Best International Feature Film award at the Oscars are coming in thick and fast.

🤝🏽 Deal: Parasite maker Barunson E&A struck a two-year agreement with Come And See Pictures, the production house run by Indonesian filmmaker Joko Anwar.

⚽ Ball, ball, ball, footie, footie, footie: A YouTuber has been selected among the broadcasters of the 2025/26 German Bundesliga season.

👀 First look: At Will Sharpe’s transformation into Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for the White Lotus actor’s new Sky series.

📅 Release date: For Culpa Nuestra (Our Fault), the concluding part to Prime Video’s hugely popular rom-dram feature trilogy.

International Insider was written by Jesse Whittock. Max Goldbart contributed and edited.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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'Long Story Short' Review: Satisfying 'BoJack Horseman' Follow-Up
TV & Streaming

‘Long Story Short’ Review: Satisfying ‘BoJack Horseman’ Follow-Up

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Television has long had a Jewish mother problem.

From The Goldbergs (Gertrude Berg’s medium-spanning landmark) to The Goldbergs (Adam F. Goldberg’s barely Jewish ABC hit), TV’s Jewish characters have too often seemed to emerge from the same mother — and I’m not talking about the mystical concept of the shekhinah, or the divine feminine.

Long Story Short

The Bottom Line

Not ‘BoJack,’ but rich and distinctive in its own way.

Airdate: Friday, August 22 (Netflix)
Cast: Ben Feldman, Max Greenfield, Abbi Jacobson, Paul Reiser, Lisa Edelstein, Nicole Byer
Creator: Raphael Bob-Waksbrg

Small-screen characterizations have too frequently leaned into one form of maternal representation for Jewish characters, a brash and clingy archetype fixated on marrying off their daughters, emasculating their sons and manipulating affections through occasionally grotesque culinary endeavors. These TV Jewish mothers are all played by Tovah Feldshuh or Susie Essman or Linda Lavin, or at least feel like they are. It’s not that this stock character is inherently bad, but I’ve seen more than a few otherwise admirable Jewish snapshots undone by an insufficiently explored version of it.

For at least half of the 10-episode run of Long Story Short, the new animated series from Raphael Bob-Waksberg, it seems that the animated dramedy is also going to have a Jewish mother problem.

Naomi Schwartz (Lisa Edelstein), matriarch to the show’s central clan, is a demanding guilt ninja, a sultan of smothering, an exacting critic of rabbinic sermons and the life choices of her offspring alike. Naomi holds her family together and tears it apart in ways that feel instantly familiar in unsettling or reductive ways.

Shame on me, I suppose, for doubting Bob-Waksberg, whose BoJack Horseman is, it becomes increasingly clear with each passing year, the best show to be birthed under the Netflix banner.

As the series’ title implies, Long Story Short is a nesting doll of small stories that builds, lovingly, to something more emotionally resonant by the end of the first season, and whether she’s the protagonist or antagonist, Naomi Schwarz is the series’ linchpin. The ways that she comes across as a caricature are real, but like everything in Long Story Short, they’re a matter of perspective, of memory and of subjective myopia.

The character’s evolution and expansion are mirrored throughout the storytelling in Long Story Short, which marks Bob-Waksberg’s first solo series creation since BoJack. (Amazon’s Undone, which he co-created, was really Kate Purdy’s baby, while Tuca & Bertie, which he executive produced, belonged in spirit to Lisa Hanawalt.) The whole, which left me teary for much of the finale, is far more than the sum of its parts, which are generally entertaining and sometimes quite funny, though occasionally a bit forgettable.

Jumping around in time and geography, Long Story Short is primarily about siblings Avi (Ben Feldman), Shira (Abbi Jacobson) and Yoshi (Max Greenfield), children of Elliot Cooper (Paul Reiser) and the aforementioned Naomi Schwartz (Edelstein). The kids have taken the last name “Schwooper,” a thoroughly Bob-Waksbergian portmanteau, just one piece of the wordplay that will instantly remind fans of banter from BoJack Horseman, even if little in the overall tone or style of the Hanawalt-conceived animation is otherwise an exact match.

In vignettes closer to the present day, we see the difficulties facing Avi, his gentile wife Jen (Angelique Cabral) and daughter Hannah (Michaela Dietz); the reproductive challenges of Shira and partner Kendra (Nicole Byer), a Jew-by-choice; and Yoshi’s general complications finding his personal and spiritual place in the world. Those scenes are juxtaposed against moments from their upbringing, often but not always related to their Jewishness.

Long Story Short isn’t as visually or narratively audacious as Undone — one of many ballsy shows that Amazon deserves credit for developing and demerits for never knowing how to promote — but you can see that show’s fingerprints all over how Bob-Waksberg approaches memory, causality and the illusion that any of our lives is entirely linear. We’re impacted by things that happened before we were born and by events that we weren’t initially party to. One person’s formative trauma is another’s nostalgic footnote. We sit with each other at shared resting points or destinations, but we don’t always remember that we took different paths to get there.

It’s impossible for me to predict how non-Jews will respond to Long Story Short, any more or less than I could have predicted how people outside of the Hollywood bubble would respond to BoJack. But it’s nearly as hard for me to assert that there’s going to be any uniform reaction from Jewish viewers. This is by design.

At one point, Kendra, whose path to Judaism is traced in the superb seventh episode, observes, “There’s no one right way to be Jewish,” to which Naomi quickly interjects, “But there is! A progressive, egalitarian, conservative Judaism with an emphasis on ritual and community over faith and blind practice. That’s literally the only way it makes sense.”

In Long Story Short, Judaism is religious, but it’s as often treated as cultural, mystical and epigenetic, a series of practices and traditions that connect a disjointed people to happiness and trauma, that bring comfort and discomfort alike. There’s a lot of sincerity and layered introspection to how the show approaches Judaism, but it wouldn’t be a Bob-Waksberg show if you didn’t simultaneously have characters confusing minyans and Minions.

And I guess if you’re scared or alienated by the prospect of a show this overtly Jewish, I can tease plenty of parody Christmas songs, an episode featuring literal and metaphorical wolves, and a theme party emporium called BJ Banana Fingers, but also caution that death and divorce play a major role. I don’t think the frames in Long Story Short are as packed with as much rewatch-rewarding humorous depth as your typical BoJack episode, but it’s a beautiful and visually chaotic world full of color and detail, while the characters are expressively and likably rendered and shift over time in subtle and appealing ways.

It’s a lively voice cast, with several of the actors — Feldman, Jacobson and Greenfield in particular — aging up their characters in nice and understated ways. Within the deep ensemble, guest voices including Dave Franco, Gina Rodriguez and Danny Burstein pop in supporting roles. Edelstein has the most difficult of the series’ tasks, playing Naomi as the broad and cartoonish cliché that we’ve grown to expect and then re-contextualizing the character beyond those initial expectations. She and Bob-Waksberg don’t fully correct television’s Jewish mother problem so much as they expose how lazy other shows — sorry, Nobody Wants This — are when they start in the most obvious of places and fail to go anywhere more refined.

Long Story Short works more frequently on a “smile and nod in recognition” level than a “laugh out loud” one, and it doesn’t shy away from placing moments of sadness and joy side by side in ways that aren’t always easily digestible. We laugh at funerals. We’re miserable at prom. A bat mitzvah can be devoid of religious merit and a dingy motel room can be a holy place. The villain of a short story can be the hero of a novel.

Long review short, Long Story Short might not hit with everybody who loved BoJack Horseman, but it’s full of small, immediate pleasures before delivering something potent and completely relatable by the end.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix's Long Story Short is a worthy successor to BoJack Horseman
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s Long Story Short is a worthy successor to BoJack Horseman

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

That’s when the anthropomorphic animals and silly cutaway gags started to give way to a darkness hidden just below the bright pastel animation and endless sight gags.

That’s not the case this time around with Raphael Bob-Waksberg’s long-awaited follow-up, Long Story Short.

Far removed from the depravity of Hollywood, this story of a Jewish family navigating life together is immediately endearing in its emotional honesty. Upon meeting the Schwoopers at a special weekend get-together, the first episode jumps ahead in time for one last scene that hints at a much wider story told over seven decades.

From the 1950s through to the 2020s, Long Story Short spends time with each family member and the various relationships they form, weaving an expansive yet easy-to-follow timeline that organically captures the complexity of family dynamics with warmth, yes, but also painful truths as well.

Dead characters come back to life and seemingly insignificant details become infinitely more important later on, upon finishing the season as a whole.

This temporal juggling is especially moving in regard to Naomi Schwartz, the matriarch who obsessively loves her children, but can’t stop criticising them regardless. Other standouts include her son, Yoshi, who struggles to fit in, and her daughter, Shira, who provides a rare example of Judaism and queerness intersecting on screen.

Said Judaism is as integral to Long Story Short as the altar of celebrity and influence is in BoJack Horseman.

It’s there in the use of specific Jewish language — “Dude, your davening was on point! Mr Leibowitz was kvellin’ like a felon!”. It’s there in the humour, which includes a few dark Holocaust jokes only Jewish people could make. And most crucially of all, it’s also there in beautiful discussions of identity, particularly at the end of the season when Avi’s daughter questions if she was “Jewish enough” for Grandma.

Each example feels unapologetically Jewish in very specific ways without alienating wider audiences. Quite the opposite, in fact.

Long Story Short. Netflix

BoJack Horseman was very consciously presented as a TV show, be it through fourth wall breaks, the ironic humour, and, of course, the fact that many of the characters were talking animals.

Long Story Short abandons that “crutch” (as Bob-Waksberg described it to Variety) to ground the storytelling in something much more “realistic”. That’s true even with the seemingly simpler animation, which is more ‘cartoony’ in its impressionistic, less defined scribbles, which makes it easier for us to see ourselves in the unfolding dynamics.

That’s not to say BoJack Horseman lacks intimacy. In fact, the emotional depths of that show were often uncomfortable and verged on unbearable precisely because of how real they felt. BoJack was deeply unlikeable in some aspects, especially as more truths were revealed later down the line, but that’s what made this talking horse so human.

Bob-Waksberg has never been afraid of plumbing those depths when it comes to writing characters with real emotional candour. As such, the Schwoopers can also be unlikeable sometimes (although not to those extremes). This family often argues, as real families do, and they can really hurt each other in the ways that only those who know you best truly can.

One particular gut-wrenching confrontation between Naomi and her children left me in tears. Because even when your heart is in the right place, what might feel like small differences or misunderstandings can eventually tear families apart without even meaning to.

It’s in the layers of traumas large and small, self-inflicted and inflicted on others, where BoJack Horseman and Long Story Short share the most common ground. Well, that and the frequent moments of absurdist humour and wordplay.

Because yes, when Yoshi starts selling mattresses that shoot out of a tube for work, the company does of course have a “soft launch”. And when wolves, actual wolves, show up in Hannah’s school, only Naomi’s oldest son, Avi, reacts in the way you might expect.

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The combined result of all this is another show that’s unmistakably the work of Bob-Waksberg, even if it looks, acts and sounds different from BoJack Horseman. Both stories are simultaneously moving and devastating, deeply intimate and wildly ambitious all at once.

At the risk of jumping ahead, much like the show itself often does, there’s scope here for Long Story Short to reach those same heights that BoJack Horseman did and maybe, just maybe, become another contender for best animated series of all time.

At the very least, it’s hard to imagine another show this poignant coming anytime soon. If only we could glimpse ahead in time, as Bob-Waksberg does with the Schwoopers, to see how this series will ultimately be remembered.

Long Story Short is available to stream now on Netflix – sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Add Long Story Short 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 Comedy coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Angel Batista and Dexter in Dexter: Resurrection
TV & Streaming

Dexter Almost Gets Caught Red-Handed

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for Dexter: Resurrection Episode 8, “The Kill Room Where It Happens.”]

Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall) got rather sloppy on the latest episode of Dexter: Resurrection, and it could cost him everything. After failing to clock the fact that Angel Batista (David Zayas) would and did plant a tracking device in his car — a pair of earpods that he used to keep tabs on Dexter’s usual driving routine — he almost got caught with a man on his table and then did get caught at a very different kind of table.

The episode began with Angel making a recording of himself on the case, following Dexter’s every move just as he, as “Red,” made a plan with Al (Eric Stonestreet) to meet up after he caught a showing of Hamilton. After Dexter decided on a temporarily closed beauty salon to become his next kill room, Angel took note of the location since it was out of the norm for him and started snooping around the block.

Things went sideways when Al decided Hamilton wasn’t his bag, and he headed back to Wisconsin with his new #1 Dad license plate and I Heart NY souvenirs, thus leaving Dexter’s mission incomplete and his kill room unvarnished. It didn’t take Dexter long to find a new occupant for the space, though.

Vince (Steve Schirripa), the landlord of Harrison’s (Jack Alcott) friend Elsa (Emilia Suárez), was still giving her the runaround about the mold that was making her son sick. After Dexter tried to reason with the guy, to no avail, he decided to snatch him and give him a wakeup call on the table. That effort was interrupted, however, by Angel, and although Dexter escaped, his setup was left for Angel and Detectives Claudette Wallace (Kadia Saraf) and Melvin Oliva (Dominic Fumusa) to sniff around in.

The trouble for Angel was that he didn’t see Dexter, and Vince ran off before he could describe his captor, who’d been masked anyway. As Angel described his theory, the detectives became skeptical of Angel’s story, and when Claudette called Joey Quinn (Desmond Harrington), she learned that Batista was no longer an active law enforcement officer. So even though Angel was exactly, 1000% right about everything he said, the others didn’t seem to believe him.

Despite Angel’s setbacks, Dexter still had other problems to grapple with. First, he accidentally betrayed Blessing (Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine) by revealing his backstory about being a child soldier to his daughter, leaving their relationship in the mud, possibly forever. Secondly, and more importantly, he got a visit from Leon Prater (Peter Dinklage) right in the middle of a celebratory dinner with Harrison.

Prater, who was otherwise busy planning a gala for injured police — that both detectives may be going to, by the way — fielded pressure from Charley (Uma Thurman) about her suspicions of “Red.” Though he resisted them at first, she must have persisted because he somehow ended up crashing Dexter’s meal with a smile and saying, “Red, I didn’t know you have a son.”

We’ll have to wait to see what Leon’s arrival means for Dexter, whether the detectives will buy into Angel’s story at last, if Blessing will retaliate in some way, and if Al is gone for good, but for now, it seems like Dexter’s got his work cut out for him to keep his feet on solid ground.

Dexter: Resurrection, Fridays, Paramount+

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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