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Nicolas Cage in Talks for 'True Detective' Season 5
TV & Streaming

Nicolas Cage in Talks for ‘True Detective’ Season 5

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Between Woody Harrelson, Matthew McConaughey, Jodie Foster, Colin Farrell, Mahershala Ali, and Rachel McAdams, “True Detective” has a knack for getting big movie stars onto the small screen, and the latest could be someone who has only recently dipped his toes into television: Nicolas Cage. In fact, the actor hinted way back in 2023 that he may only have a few movies left in him and would’ve wanted to “have left on a high note” before turning to TV.

Cage is in talks to star in the fifth season of “True Detective” for HBO, a source told IndieWire. This season is said to be set in the Jamaica Bay area of New York City, and showrunner and writer Issa Lopez, who took over for creator Nic Pizzolatto for the fourth season, “Night Country,” is back. Any other plot details are still under wraps.

'Peacemaker' Season 2 stars John Cena as Chris Smith, and Danielle Brooks as Leota Adebayo

HBO had no comment.

The only other instance of Cage turning to television as the lead for a series still hasn’t come out yet. That would be “Spider-Noir,” the live-action, black and white series for Amazon that is a spinoff of Cage’s character in the animated “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.” In it he plays a 1930s private investigator/superhero forced to grapple with his past life choices. The series is set to debut in 2026.

Not only was “Night Country” the most-watched season of “True Detective” in its four seasons, it also broke the losing streak for “True Detective” and won its lead Jodie Foster an Emmy and Golden Globe, the first time a lead for the series has won the top industry prizes. Cage would still be a Tony and a Grammy away from EGOT status if he managed the same, but we can dream.

Pizzolatto had teased that Season 1 stars McConaughey and Harrelson were interested in reprising their roles, with Pizzolatto saying he had another idea for their characters Cohle and Hart, but Pizzolatto last wrote for the series in Season 3.

True to form, Cage has been plenty busy in both prestigious projects and lower-budget shlock, starring in last year’s “Longlegs,” “The Surfer,” and “Arcadian,” as well as this year’s “Gunslingers.” In addition to the “Spider-Noir” series set for next year, Cage is playing NFL legend John Madden in a biopic being directed by David O. Russell, he’s starring in a sequel to “Lord of War” from Andrew Niccol, he’ll appear in a horror film called “The Carpenter’s Son,” and he’s in post on “The Prince,” based on a David Mamet script.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Unveils Impact Report for Thailand
TV & Streaming

Netflix Unveils Impact Report for Thailand

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s been less than a decade since Netflix first became available in Thailand and only six years since it made its Thai-based production debut with the drama series “The Stranded” but, as it revealed in its first-ever Impact Report on Wednesday, the streamer is clearly just getting started in the country.

The report, “Netflix in Thailand: Supporting the Future of Local Storytelling,” was unveiled at a press event at the 515 Victory event space in Bangkok with Thai government officials, filmmakers, press members and Netflix executives in attendance.

Netflix invested $200 million in Thai-based productions, which resulted in 20 films and series and employed 13,500 cast and crew across all levels of the creative industry between 2021 and 2024, according to the report, which also pointed out that the streamer has regularly licensed existing Thai titles that have also been a part of the programming slate.

Its 2025 slate consists of nine local originals, including six films (“Ziam,” the just-released “Gold Rush Gang” and upcoming “Same Day with Someone”) and three series (“Dalah: Death and Flowers,” “Mad Unicorn” and the upcoming second season of “The Believers”).

“With a dedicated team in Bangkok, we’re deeply rooted in Thailand’s creative community. Our productions go beyond the beautiful locations of Thailand to tap into the artistry and authenticity of local storytelling. We’re collaborating with exciting local creators to tell stories that they can’t tell anywhere else, and that resonate deeply with Thai audiences,” says Malobika Banerji, head of content in Southeast Asia at Netflix. “Today’s new report showcases how Netflix’s investment contributes to Thailand’s creative economy — highlighting the scale of our support and its impact in creating jobs, building capabilities, and expanding local opportunities,” Banerji continued.

Following the report unveiling, a panel further exploring Netflix’s commitment to Thai productions was held with Ruben Hattari, Netflix’s director of global affairs in Southeast Asia; Prabda Yoon, producer and writer of Netflix’s film “Bangkok Breaking: Heaven and Hell” and series “Dalah: Death and the Flowers;” and Chakrit Pichyangkul, executive director and creative economy agency (CEA) participating.

Hattari said Netflix has been focusing on authentic Thai content to reflect the community and culture not only for the sake of Thai audiences but international audiences that are also watching the programming. In fact, more than 15 Thai originals have landed in the streamer’s Global Top 10 Non-English list.

While horror is a huge draw to Thai audiences, other popular genres in Thailand are comedy drama and BL (Boys’ Love) projects, Yoon said. Hattari added that “One of the wonderful things about Netflix is that we are available in over 190 countries, and we have over 300 million members and no two members enjoy the same taste so when you think about bringing content to our service, we want to make sure that we have as diverse content as possible.” So far, that broad thinking and execution of projects clearly has served the streamer very well. 

“We have seen a growing appreciation for local content not only in domestic markets but across other countries as well,” Hattari said during the panel. “In 2024 alone on our service, roughly more than 750 million hours were spent watching Thai content. Hopefully that number will continue to grow and we can only do that through the wonderful partnerships.” 

Those partnerships come from the country’s generous government incentives but also through partnerships with other companies, like the Creative Economy Agency which also invests in talent and emerging technologies. “Through CEA’s Content Lab, we are nurturing local talent and fueling the growth of Thailand’s creative industries,” says Pichyangkul. “In partnership with Netflix’s Fund for Creative Equity, we empower emerging creators in cities beyond Bangkok, equipping them with skills, fostering inclusion and helping advance Thailand’s ambition to upskill 20 million people by 2027.”

The panelists also agreed that local authenticity can only be achieved by both understanding and being an active part of the creative landscape on the local level. “We want to understand the local nuances and we want to understand the local taste and preference and we can only do that if we have a strong local team,” Hattari said. “We do that by having folks here that are on the ground that really are deeply rooted in the film industry that really understand all of the tastes and also understand the partners, as well.” In addition, he said working in the local ecosystem can also help them maintain the authenticity in their productions now and into the future.

Netflix is also having a big impact on local tourism. The report indeed stressed that productions are not only focused on metropolitan centers like Bangkok but lesser-known areas of Thailand, which has helped boost tourism in those spaces. For example, the 2024 series “Master of the House” filmed at Chateau De Khaoyai in Nakhon Ratchasima, the country’s third largest city, while the 2023 film “Analog Squad” filmed in mountains and beaches found in the south in Phang Nga. 

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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'Peacemaker's Freddie Stroma Worries About Young 'Superman' Fans
TV & Streaming

‘Peacemaker’s Freddie Stroma Worries About Young ‘Superman’ Fans

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

As Peacemaker returns to HBO Max for Season 2, one of the ’11th Street Kids’ is worried about attracting the wrong audience.

Freddie Stroma, who plays Vigilante/Adrian Chase, admitted he’s nervous about young Superman fans being introduced to the mature superhero series now that’s part of James Gunn‘s new DCU.

“It’s weird because it’s a new universe, but it doesn’t really affect us as much,” he told Discussing Film. “I keep thinking about the fact that Superman has come out, and then, if younger viewers are going to come in and see that first episode, I don’t know what they’re going to think.”

Stroma continued, “So, I keep thinking about that with the universe change. I guess that’s just part of it. For us, it’s kind of business as usual. We’re the Peacemaker lot and we do pretty R-rated stuff.”

Superman had its North American digital release on Aug. 15, as Gunn explained he “wanted everyone to be able to see Superman that wanted to, even those people who couldn’t get to a theater before Peacemaker,” which returns Friday to HBO Max.

David Corenswet in ‘Superman’

Warner Bros./Everett Collection

Serving as a precursor for the events of Peacemaker Season 2, Superman supporting characters Green Lantern/Guy Gardner (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl/Kendra Saunders (Isabela Merced) and Maxwell Lord (Sean Gunn) appeared in a teaser for upcoming episodes.

After taking over DC Studios with Safran in 2022, Superman marks the first entry in Gunn’s new DCU franchise, which begins with the ‘Gods and Monsters’ phase.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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‘Office’ Spinoff ‘The Paper’ Getting Binge Release on Peacock
TV & Streaming

‘Office’ Spinoff ‘The Paper’ Getting Binge Release on Peacock

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Peacock is changing the release schedule for its Office follow-up The Paper.

The NBCUniversal-owned streamer says it will make the comedy a binge release, debuting the full 10-episode season on Sept. 4. The Paper had previously been slated to roll out over four weeks, with the first four episodes coming on the premiere day and two per week after that through Sept. 25.

Citing positive responses from people who have previewed the series (though not in print; reviews are embargoed until closer to the premiere), Peacock, Universal Television and the show’s producers decided to make the change and drop the entire season at once. The move will also put the entirety of The Paper in front of audiences several weeks before the start of the traditional TV season makes the premiere calendar even more crowded.

The Paper is set in the same world as The Office, with the documentary crew that filmed the workers of Dunder Mifflin taking on a new subject. It stars Domhnall Gleeson as Ned Sampson, the new editor of the Toledo Truth-Teller, a historic Ohio newspaper that has fallen on hard time. Sabrina Impacciatore, Chelsea Frei, Melvin Gregg, Gbemisola Ikumelo, Alex Edelman, Ramona Young, Tim Key and Oscar Nuñez — reprising his Office role — also star. Duane Shepard Sr., Allan Havey, Nate Jackson, Mo Welch, Nancy Lenehan, Molly Ephraim and Tracy Letts have guest roles. Ikumelo, Edelman, Rahill and Welch are also writers on the series.

Greg Daniels, who created the American Office, and Michael Koman co-created The Paper. They executive produce with The Office creators Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, Howard Klein, Ben Silverman and Banijay Americas.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Jennifer Aniston Spills the Dry Shampoo Mistake You’re Probably Making — Plus, Her Secret Superpower
TV & Streaming

Jennifer Aniston Spills the Dry Shampoo Mistake You’re Probably Making — Plus, Her Secret Superpower

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Good hair and a great sense of humor! Jennifer Aniston hosted a fireside chat with Taylen Biggs at Chief Clubhouse in West Hollywood, California on Aug. 2 to celebrate LolaVie’s Powder Perfect Dry Shampoo — she didn’t hold back on sharing her beauty from the inside out tips. 

The actress, 56, said that while her latest product is “perfect,” she has fallen victim to a common hair blunder in the past. 

“I can only really speak from my own experience, which is using too much [dry shampoo.] It weighs it down and it looks like there’s always sort of a powdery film to your hair.”

NBC Television/Getty Images

Luckily, the Friends star here to save the day for all of us now with her new talc-free, aerosol-free formula. 

“I usually will use it after workouts,” Aniston explained. “It’s good not to wash your hair every day and let your natural oils sort of do their thing. I use it just to sort of have a good refresh. It also gives a little life back to it. It gives a little height.”

And what really sets it apart is its fragrance and magical properties. 

“It’s got a beautiful, fresh scent. It’s got rice starch, and bamboo, and crushed crystals, just to add a little bit of juju,” the Emmy award winner noted.

@lexgallegos 

Beyond providing a magical solution for bad hair days, the founder has another extraordinary ability.  

“My superpower? A sense of humor. … Just a sense of humor because God knows we need it,” she joked.

In addition to using high-quality haircare and providing lots of laughter, The Morning Show star’s ultimate beauty philosophy all comes down to being genuine.

“Authenticity is key. … Staying true to yourself, not caring about what others think. … And loving what you’re doing.”

LolaVie’s Powder Perfect Dry Shampoo is available to shop now for $25 at lolavie.com and ulta.com.

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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Edinburgh TV Awards 2025 winners list in full
TV & Streaming

Edinburgh TV Awards 2025 winners list in full

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

The ceremony saw Netflix named Streamer of the Year in the ceremony, beating off all of its other major competitors in the space.

Meanwhile, Adolescence won Best Drama and young star Owen Cooper took home the award for Breakthrough Performance.

Elsewhere, Jessica Gunning won Best TV Actor – Drama for her acclaimed turn in the streamer’s Baby Reindeer.

Jessica Gunning. John Lamparski/Getty Images

Finally, Netflix also won Best TV Moment of the Year as voted for by the public for THAT carriage scene between Penelope and Colin in Bridgerton season 3.

Edinburgh TV Awards 2025 winners list in full

Best Drama

Adolescence – WINNER
Baby Reindeer
Blue Lights
Lockerbie: A Search for Truth
Rivals
Slow Horses

Best International Drama

After the Party – WINNER
Dope Thief
Mussolini: Son of the Century
Ripley
Severance
The Studio

Best Documentary

7/7: The London Bombings
Bombing Brighton: The Plot to Kill Thatcher
Children of the Cult (Exposure)
D-Day: The Unheard Tapes
Jamali Maddix: Follow the Leader
Our Land: Israel’s Other War – WINNER

Best Comedy Series

Alma’s Not Normal
Big Boys – WINNER
Dinosaur
Ludwig
Mr Bigstuff
We Are Lady Parts

Best Entertainment Series

I Kissed a Girl
Last One Laughing – WINNER
Taskmaster
The Graham Norton Show
The Piano
The Traitors

Best Popular Factual Series

DNA Journey
Getting Filthy Rich
Go Back to Where You Came From
Rob and Rylan’s Grand Tour – WINNER
Sort Your Life Out
Swiped: The School that Banned Smartphones

Best Branded Entertainment

Batch from Scratch : Cooking for Less
Champions Full Gallop
Cooking with the Stars Series
DNA Journey – WINNER
M&S Dress the Nation

Climate Storytelling Award

Big Brother
Emmerdale – WINNER
Gabon: Earth’s Last Chance
Our Living World
Ready Meals, What They Really Mean for You
Spirit Rangers

Best TV Actor – Drama

Danny Dyer in Rivals
Jessica Gunning in Baby Reindeer – WINNER
Katherine Parkinson in Rivals
Owen Cooper in Adolescence
Richard Gadd in Baby Reindeer
Stephen Graham in Adolescence

Best TV Actor – Comedy

Anjana Vasan in We Are Lady Parts
Lucy Punch in Amandaland
Nabhaan Rizwan in Kaos
Oliver Savell in Changing Ends
Philippa Dunne in Amandaland
Sophie Willan in Alma’s Not Normal – WINNER

Breakthrough Performance

Ashley Storrie
Bella Maclean
Maximilian Fairley
Owen Cooper – WINNER
Sekou Diaby
Thaddea Graham

Best TV Presenter – Factual

Joe Tracini – Me and the Voice in My Head
Mobeen Azhar – The Soldiers That Saved Britain
Munya Chawawa – How to Survive a Dictator: North Korea
Poppy Jay – Young, British and Anti-Abortion – WINNER

Best TV Presenter – Entertainment

Anthony McPartlin & Declan Donnelly – Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway
Claudia Winkleman – The Traitors – WINNER
Graham Norton – The Graham Norton Show
Rob Beckett & Romesh Ranganathan – Rob & Rom Vs…

Channel of the Year

5 – WINNER
BBC One
BBC Scotland
BBC Two
Channel 4
ITV1

Production Company of the Year

Big Talk Studios
Clapperboard Studios
CPL Productions
See-Saw Films
SISTER
Warp Films – WINNER

Streamer of the Year

BBC iPlayer
Channel 4
ITVX
Netflix – WINNER
U

Small Indie of the Year

Afro-Mic Productions
Alleycats TV
Black Camel Pictures
Listen
Rockerdale Studios – WINNER
Synchronicity Films

Agency of the Year

Insanity – WINNER
Mirador Talent Group
Strange Town Agency

Production Group of the Year

Banijay UK
BBC Studios Productions
Fremantle UK
ITV Studios – WINNER
STV Studios
Universal International Studios

Outstanding Achievement Award 2025

Sir Lenny Henry

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.

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

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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THE GUIDING LIGHT, Cynthia Watros, 1990s, 1952-2009.
TV & Streaming

‘General Hospital’ Star Cynthia Watros Reveals When ‘I Was Convinced I Might Lose This Job’

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Cynthia Watros marked six years as General Hospital‘s Nina Reeves in June, but her daytime journey began decades before, when she was cast on Guiding Light, and discovered her passion for the genre. “I started off my career in soaps and loved it then, and I love it just as much now,” Watros reflects. “It feels so comforting and rewarding as an actor to be able to play a character for so long. And I fall in love with every character that I’ve played because there’s some sort of lovable quality in them.”

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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The History of Coprophagia in Cinema — for 'Saló' Day!
TV & Streaming

The History of Coprophagia in Cinema — for ‘Saló’ Day!

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

And a very happy “Salò” Day to you, my fellow feces feasters! We’re in the steaming, hot, thick of summer here at IndieWire, where we’re celebrating the 1970s for our annual decade week. Yes, it’s that magical time of year when an offhand joke about arthouse’s most infamous poop munchers can turn into serious research paid for by Penske Media. (Note: If my editors take that line out of this article, then THAT is censorship — and then this holiday was for NOTHING!) 

Anyway, it’s “Salò” Day! Have you put out your Blu-ray case for Pasolini’s ghost to take a shit in yet? 

Being first to any new tradition feels special, but IndieWire’s totally made-up holiday honors a movie that’s notorious for its ravenous use of No. 2. Premiered to shocked Parisian audiences on November 23, 1975, Pier Paolo Pasolini’s “Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom” adapts a sadistic fantasy written by the Marquis de Sade.

SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, John Travolta, 1977
'Anemone'

Penned by the Italian libertine while he was imprisoned at the Bastille from October to December in 1785, it’s a grotesque story that follows a group of nubile captives. Pasolini’s version is set during World War II at a remote mansion, where they’re tortured by fascists in a hedonistic ritual.

Testing your nerves and stomach by watching the “Circle of Shit” sequence is a right of passage for edge-lords, but you’ll find just as many serious cinephiles willing to defend “Salò” as essential arthouse. Provocateurs Bruce La Bruce and John Waters spoke with IndieWire about the misunderstood title’s sordid legacy and its director for “Salò” Day. Pasolini’s final film was released weeks after he died in a brutal attack, during which he was struck repeatedly, run over with a car, and set on fire.

The repulsive-yet-beautiful magnum opus that remained has been tangled up in theories about Pasolini’s murder ever since. Waters — whose commitment to putting scat on screen is storied thanks to the pooch in “Pink Flamingos” — thinks he fell victim to an affair or bad sexual encounter. Equally salacious, many historians prescribe to the idea that Pasolini was assassinated for his political views. Although “Salò” imagines a fictional scene in 1940s Italy, the anti-consumerist masterpiece allowed Pasolini to criticize the modern European society he knew as flavorless, cruel, and full of sewage.

For IndieWire’s giddy, gross, and disturbingly long history of shit-eating on film, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Sadly, we weren’t able to jam any turd-themed “Titanic” references in here, but you’ll be happy that you pulled up your squatty potty when you see the fecal “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, dookie “Jaws,” and other cinematic poop jokes we’ve been cooking up. Plus, the truly brilliant beginnings of a crossover idea for “Ma 2” and “The Help.” (It’s fine if Blumhouse wants to fumble “M3GAN 2.0” — but I draw the line at letting Octavia eat shit.)

Why Are Fascist Fudge Nuggets a Delicacy in Arthouse Cinema? 

The Marquis de Sade’s obsession with consuming feces won’t make sense to everyone. Statistically speaking, whether you’re the shitter or the eater, “coprophagia” — a word that means the act of eating feces, derived from ancient Greek — is among the least common sexual interests out there. Not only because the kink is still so, so taboo but because it’s extremely dangerous. 

We’re only saying it once: IndieWire is not encouraging you to eat poop! Try to research this stuff and you will end up in a sea of extremely upsetting reports about several serious health conditions, including side effects from consensual scat snacking as well as tragedies that befall people with psychosis and dementia. Poop was also used in some of the earliest experiments for biological warfare.

Once more, in the spirit of late-stage capitalism, do not pass go, do not collect $200, DO NOT EAT POOP! (Even for a movie, unless you’re Divine!) Ahem. Now, then. 

The belief that sex, power, and fluids of any kind are inextricably linked has been around since the dawn of sadomasochism, so named for the Marquis de Sade. Emotions are an opaque science, but psychologists who study extreme fetishes have argued that humiliation is among the strongest feelings you can have… and inflict.

That’s the point of “Salò,” or at least part of it. 

A scene from 'Saló'
A scene from ‘Saló’ (1975)Screenshot: Criterion Collection

Disturbed by the degradation of culture he saw in Rome in the mid-20th century, Pasolini grappled with political adversaries for much of his life. He was passionate about being Italian but early clashes with censors — memorably, including some over positive movie reviews from when he was a film critic — put Pasolini at odds with the government from an early age. He collaborated with Federico Fellini as a young filmmaker and wrote at length about taking up his mantle as a visual storyteller because he wanted to reflect forces he saw in the world but felt words could not describe

Poor Europeans have been rolling around in poop and mud since before Shakespeare’s days — see “Monthy Python and the Holy Grail,” also in 1975 — and force-feeding the masses garbage because your society runs on poison is a motif we’ve seen explored in everything from “Soylent Green” (1973) to “Delicatessen” (1991) to “Snowpiercer” (2013). Still, the shocking nature of “Salò” got Pasolini’s film banned in several countries and it wouldn’t reach the U.S. for another two years.

Could it really have gotten him killed? 

The case is technically still open, but even depicting fake political prisoners from a war that was already over eating fascist shit (chocolate, really) would’ve been explosive socially. The “Circle of Shit” from “Salò” lives on in infamy, having broken the seal on a dramatic representation of subjugation spiraling out of control that’s ultimately just as embarrassing for the oppressors as it is for the victims. Yes, the horror begins with a crying blonde girl being given a spoon and pushed to her knees to eat feces in front of a cackling audience. But by dinner time, everyone gets the skidmark munchies and the shit soup is on.

A scene from 'Saló'
A scene from ‘Saló’ (1975)Courtesy of the Criterion Collection

In “Salò,” coprophagia serves as an on-ramp to genocide. Inspired by “Dante’s Inferno,” the “Circle of Blood” sequence cranks up the intensity and turns lethal in a vicious display of eye-gouging, genital mutilation, skin branding, and more acts of violence. Arguably, those are the images that should bother viewers the most — but jump ahead to the year 2025, when the West has widely prioritized mass consumerism and the social media dopamine drip over basic human rights, and the “Circle of Shit” still reigns supreme. 

Why? Movie scholars have as many theories about that as they do about Pasolini’s death. Still, there’s something to be said for one scenario being objectively worse than the other. Death is death, and the pain might stop if you stop with it. But isn’t it scarier if the thing that’s telling you it’s going to kill you spends 120 days feeding and fucking you first?

Tom Six Presents “The Lord of the Rings” for Forced Feces Eating

Grotesquerie and eroticism continued to commingle on screen throughout the 1980s and 1990s, mostly through home video and early internet platforms. An especially intense contingent of splatter and smut creators came out of Germany, Japan, and Brazil, making works that were supposedly so disturbing that word of their existence spread further than the footage ever did.

Not all of these movies — genre flicks, experimental pornos, arthouse efforts, and honest-to-god crimes — were meant to be political. But poop, nudity, and xenophobia have a knack for inspiring major censorship panic regardless of the maker’s intent. Denying someone access to provocative art, even art that was meant to be viewed in public, feels like an invasion of privacy. That’s not only a political conflict by its very nature, but it’s also a great way to get a film free advertising. 

It’s not a direct line, but you can eventually connect the dots between the underground “video nasties” in the UK (shocking physical media artifacts that circulated in and around London decades earlier) to edgelord fads like the “2 Girls 1 Cup” video that swept online in 2007. Still, you’d expect to find more coprophagia in full-on horror movies made after 9/11 than you do. 

Mainstream “torture porn” franchises like “Saw” mostly haven’t touched the subject, while extreme genre auteur Takashi Miike made his mark on fecal film with “Visitor Q” (2001) through a poop scene that’s unforgettable but not edible. (Sigh. Look, this guy is having a sex with a corpse and she suddenly defecates all over him. You are reading this article. Leave if you want!)

With the help of IFC Films, Tom Six finally righted that wrong with “The Human Centipede” in 2009. The sporadically hysterical body horror — about a Nazi-coded German surgeon (Dieter Laser) who sews three kidnapping victims together, mouth-to-anus — got a limited theatrical release in the U.S. That was all “The Human Centipede” needed to become an epic trilogy, even as the nasty reputation of the “one digestive tract/dog training” movie kept most folks away. 

A scene from
A scene from ‘The Human Centipede’ (2009)Courtesy IFC Films

At a time when even the biggest scaredy cats were lapping up the details of “Final Destination” Wikipedia pages, Six created a steady font of sadistic depravity that was quietly self-respecting. “The First Sequence” does the concept right with sharp editing, distinct production design, and a visual comedy language that culminates in a killer twist: If the Human Centipede wants to escape, then it has to take the… stairs?! Not long after that, Lindsay (Ashley C. Williams) — AKA “the middle piece,” AKA the unluckiest final girl in film history — is abandoned with a front, dead from suicide (Akihiro Kitamura), and a back, dead from blood poisoning (Ashlynn Yennie). 

Six should’ve walked away then, but the Dutch filmmaker came back with a vengeance in “The Full Sequence” (2011). The plot of the original movie made the director the subject of serious cinematic ire — Hollywood was having its own prudish panic as a kind of low-level backlash to the extremism of the aughts — and that first sequel delivered subtle commentary from Six about the uninformed audiences he thought got his work wrong. Shot in black and white, “The Full Sequence” ups the number of victims from three to 12 and follows a “Human Centipede” superfan (Laurence R. Harvey) as he fails to replicate the events of the first film. 

Posters for
Posters for ‘The Human Centipede’ trilogy (2009, 2011, 2015)IFC Films

Boiled down to a thoughtless pervert by the public, Six became one. The sequel also adds more sexual violence and crushes the skull of a newborn baby, for no reason — producing the kind of movie cinephiles thought “The First Sequence” was without seeing it. Six gets in some decently fun licks by bringing Yennie back as herself; the actress (whose feet get shown a lot in the original) flies to her captor thinking she’s got an audition for a Tarantino movie. But the diminishing returns leave even that sparky world-building in desperate need of nutrients. 

Completing the math on his personal vivisection, Six came back with the third and final “Human Centipede” in 2015. Set inside a maximum-security prison with an insane warden (Dieter Laser, recast!) working toward a 500-person human centipede, “The Final Sequence” was almost universally panned by critics. When it was selected to play as a “secret screening” that year at Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas, the title was revealed and at least a third of the audience reportedly walked out. You know, upright.

Funny or Serious Coprophagia? Try the Poop Eater’s Turing Test!

There are funny moments in both “Salò” and “The Human Centipede,” but you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone who would be willing to let you classify them as 100 percent comedies. Fecal foodies have appeared in lighter cinematic fare for decades, and if gross-out laughs are your thing, there is something amusing about watching a person put in what someone else just put out.

Still, it’s a dark subject and shock humor can be confusing. So, we’ve devised an easy way to tell if the shit scene you’re watching was meant to be giggle-worthy or gag-inducing — at its very core. I call it the Poop Eater’s Turing Test, and we’ll use the pool scene from “Caddyshack” (1980) as an interesting example of an edge case so you can try it out for yourself.

In this clip from Harold Ramis’ beloved sports comedy, a bunch of country-clubbers are taking a dip when a mysterious brown log appears in the waves. Mere seconds after a little girl screams out, “Doodie!,” chaos ensues. Later, a man in a hazmat suit is examining the contaminant. Wouldn’t you know? It’s Carl Spackler (Bill Murray), here to conduct our Poop Eater’s Turing Test.

Scenes from 'Caddyshack' (1980)
Scenes from ‘Caddyshack’ (1980)Screenshot: Prime Video/Warner Bros.

Taking a big bite of the alleged turd, the greenskeeper announces, “It’s no big deal!” He then checks the rest of the drained oasis for a second Baby Ruth candy bar. A guy getting paid by the hour eating chlorinated faux shit for the bit? Talk about “Salò” Day — and that scene passes, for sure.

Have you’ve figured out the secret to Poop Eater’s Turing Test yet? Let’s do one more.

Throughout the “Terrifier” franchise, Art the Clown (David Howard Thornton) brutalizes his victims and routinely finger-paints around their corpses using his own shit. The evil entertainer has yet to force-feed or directly torture any of his unwitting audience members with excrement. But he did put a live rat inside of that one woman for “Terrifier 3,” and filmmaker Damien Leone’s sadistic franchise pretty much exists because people heard a different lady got carved from vagina to face in “Terrifer” (2016).

A scene from
A scene from ‘Terrifier 2’ (2022)Cineverse

Accounting for the fact that I have personally called Art “the Buster Keaton of killer clowns,” do we think that the “Terrifier” movies should be categorized as comedies? Survey says, no! It does not pass the Poop Eater’s Turing Test because even left on the walls, that shit is what? HUMAN.

Animal Bowel Bites, from “Step Brothers” to “Anchorman” to “Scary Movie 2”

There’s no reason to think we’re headed for a poop-laden apocalypse like we might really be with A.I. (wait, hear me out, fecal “War Games“?!) — but the Poop Eater’s Turing Test is called that because, God forbid a character does end up eating shit onscreen, what the poop is made of narratively matters.

A similar joke to the pool moment from “Caddyshack” plays out in Kevin Smith’s “Mallrats” (1995) when the comedy combines chocolate-covered pretzels and human ass-sweat as a form of revenge. Tricking someone into unwittingly eating your butt perspiration through a sugary confection pushes the envelope on black comedy a bit, but the scene manages to stay funny by leaving full-blown human poop out of it.

Of course, if the Depp v. Heard trial taught us anything, it’s that there are infinite ways you could theoretically torture someone using animal poop. However, if the dung that comes out of a dog, cat, bird, or another critter with four legs and/or wings on screen, then it’s usually ingested for laughs.

A scene from 'Scary Movie 2' (2001)
A scene from ‘Scary Movie 2’ (2001)Screenshot: Dimension Films

Yes, these disgusting gags may require the more erudite among us to take some intellectual Imodium – but there’s a special place in hell for anyone who thinks a pack of children making Will Ferrell lick white dog shit at a public park in “Step Brothers” (2008) isn’t funny. Brennan knows he’s doing it, obviously, but he’s terrified of his pint-sized captors, and even reset in fascist Italy, that’s good comedy.

“Scary Movie 2” (2001) takes the cake for the most nauseating use of liquid animal shit — mixing bird crap and fresh mashed potatoes with an ableist gag that hasn’t aged well. In “American Wedding” (2003), Stifler (Sean William Scott) is, uh, “forced” to eat a fresh dog turd he’s just picked up using a candy wrapper to avoid an awkward social situation. Feces on film hit Ferrell before too, when “Anchorman: The Legend of Run Burgundy” (2004) made us ask if it was worse to eat cat shit or have your dog poop in your refrigerator.

Scenes from 'Step Brothers' and 'American Wedding'
(Left to right): Scenes from ‘Step Brothers’ (2008) and ‘American Wedding’ (2003)Screenshots: Sony Releasing/Universal Pictures

There are exceptions to the Poop Eater’s Turing Test. The one that keeps coming to mind is the sex worker who takes a dump on the living room floor in Mila Kunis’ apartment on a dare in “Ted” (2012)? Still, the science mostly stands. Take it from Divine and the pals of Johnny Knoxville, who complicated the subject by showing the controversial act unsimulated.

“Pink Flamingos,” “Jackass,” and the (Weak) Argument for Using Real Shit on Movie Sets

You really, really, really should not eat shit — but the legendary John Waters and illustrious late drag queen Divine made the best case for practical poop with the revolutionary “Pink Flamingos” in 1972. The transgressive work of satire aimed to push past every boundary previously encountered by the Pope of Trash, and angel that she was, Divine ascended to the grueling task.

A scene from Pink Flamingos' (1972)
A scene from ‘Pink Flamingos’ (1972)Screenshot: Criterion Collection

The dog shit scene is genuinely hard to take. You watch the turd come out of the pooch. Divine gets on her knees to scoop it and — well, yeah, then she pops it in her mouth. The feces contrast with her teeth in a way that inexplicably clashes with her eyeshadow, and the vignette is instantly burned in your brain. It’s like a bad memory that makes you laugh? Blurring the Poop Eater’s Turing Test with proof that at least one half of this mouth-to-anus fiasco is very much human, “Pink Flamingos” will forever be remembered as a faucet for Waters’ brilliant and polarizing artistic diarrhea.

Scenes from 'Jaackass'
(Left to right): Scenes from ‘Jackass Forever’ (2022) and ‘Jackass 2’ (2006)Courtesy MTV

The “Jackass” boys followed suit in the 2000s, completing a slew of stunts involving the feces. In the appropriately named “Jackass Number Two,” Dave England put on a straw hat and went out to a field with Three 6 Mafia to eat horse shit for $200. Commenting on the experience in real time, he proclaimed, “It’s dry.” The crew would later, uh, “milk” a horse and drink it in that same film. The TV and movie franchise remains home to one of the most beloved stunt casts ever formed. If you’re gonna be dumb, you gotta be tough — in sickness and in shit.

Minny’s Poop Pie from “The Help” (and, The Gaping Hole Only Porn Can Fill for Some Scatologists)

Leave it to the Oscar-winning Octavia Spencer to bring our shiny and textured history of cinematic coprophagia to a close. The gift that kept on giving and giving and giving (in a way I should really talk to my therapist about), “Salò” Day could come once a year and I’d never get bored. The psychology of these scenes and our reactions to them are fascinating, and at time when Americans could really use Pasolini’s perspective on revisionist history, “The Help” (2011) pushes out an all-time great poop-eating scene with fiery tenacity.

Minny’s Chocolate Pie — a devilish baked good with a stinky secret in the center — crystallizes a seriocomic canon that’s stretched all the way from “Salò” to “South Park.” Fed up with her racist employer, Hilly (Bryce Dallas Howard), in the Jim Crow-era south, Black housemaid Minny (Spencer) serves her tormenter the seemingly tasty treat. Then, she declares victory, saying, “Eat my shit.”

A scene from 'The Help'
A scene from ‘The Help’ (2011)DreamWorks Pictures

Despite its success in the awards circuit, and the revelation that was and is Viola Davis, “The Help” is not remembered entirely fondly. It’s been criticized for its main event (a white savior narrative with Emma Stone) and reconsidered as an overly simplistic feel-good take on a societal problem that is far from fixed. And yet, Minny’s recipe for vengeance continues to bring film lovers joy.

A scene from 'Saló'
A scene from ‘Saló’ (1975)Courtesy Criterion Collection

Empathy is a strength, not a weakness — and it’s worth remembering that the libertines of “Salò” ultimately found a way to imprison themselves, too. Stuck in a vicious cycle of shit-fuck-eat-hurt, the fascist offenders and their young trainees manage to survive the events of the film, but we watch their souls depart their bodies in a kind of mesmerizing and profoundly emotional loop. Speaking with Men’s Health in 2022, three fetishists shared why poop turned them on, and though there was plenty of talk about dominance and submission, the main themes were absurdism and acceptance. No shit.

IndieWire’s ‘70s Week is presented by Bleecker Street’s “RELAY.” Riz Ahmed plays a world class “fixer” who specializes in brokering lucrative payoffs between corrupt corporations and the individuals who threaten their ruin. IndieWire calls “RELAY” “sharp, fun, and smartly entertaining from its first scene to its final twist, ‘RELAY’ is a modern paranoid thriller that harkens back to the genre’s ’70s heyday.” From director David Mackenzie (“Hell or High Water”) and also starring Lily James, in theaters August 22.

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Early Oscar Predictions From Fall Festivals: No Frontrunner Yet
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Early Oscar Predictions From Fall Festivals: No Frontrunner Yet

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Nine months into 2025, the machinery of Oscar campaigning has reached peak operational velocity. But beneath the familiar choreography lies something unprecedented: genuine uncertainty about who will emerge victorious.

The Academy has lit the first torch of awards season with the release of its initial wave of digital screeners. Seven modest offerings have been uploaded to its portal: “Becoming Led Zeppelin,” “Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight,” “Hello Beautiful,” “How to Train Your Dragon,” “KPop Demon Hunters,” “The Luckiest Man in America” and “The Ugly Stepsister.” These appetizers now populate the Academy Screening Room for more than 11,000 voting members — the first course in a sprawling feast of hundreds more titles set to drop weekly leading up to the 98th Academy Awards.

Yet this season, and also hinted by the past few years of Oscar predicting, we’re witnessing nothing less than the collapse of Hollywood’s established hierarchy.

For the first time in recent memory, no cinematic deity seems to be dominating the early landscape. There’s no Spielberg, no Scorsese — no filmmaker whose mere attachment to a project prompts industry genuflection before principal photography even begins. This absence of an ordained frontrunner has created something resembling actual democracy — unpredictable, messy and thrilling for awards obsessives, even as it unnerves studio strategists.

Unless Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” emerges from Venice with the force of “undeniability,” or Chloé Zhao’s period drama “Hamnet” delivers Shakespearean gravitas at Telluride, we’re confronting a field where previous Oscar winners may be relegated to spoiler status rather than frontrunners.

And let’s be honest, we should welcome that.

Peter Mountain/Netflix

In an industry long governed by the assumption that past success predicts future triumph, this shift levels the playing field — at least somewhat — for up-and-coming auteurs and actors to make a meaningful impact.

Netflix is executing what insiders call a strategy to focus on its “holy trinity” of hopefuls. Noah Baumbach’s dramedy “Jay Kelly” pairs George Clooney with Adam Sandler — a calculated bridge between generations designed to spark cultural conversation. Alongside it stands Kathryn Bigelow’s thriller “A House of Dynamite,” bolstered by Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson. And, of course, del Toro’s much-anticipated “Frankenstein.”

Netflix has long understood that a successful Oscar campaign requires portfolio diversification — multiple entry points into voters’ consciousness rather than banking on a single prestige title.

A24’s potential masterstroke is the company’s attempt to recast Dwayne Johnson as a dramatic actor and legitimate Oscar contender in Benny Safdie’s “The Smashing Machine,” a sports biopic that pairs him with Emily Blunt, fresh off her “Oppenheimer” nomination. It’s audacious cultural arbitrage — leveraging Johnson’s populist appeal to expand the Academy’s demographic comfort zone. If successful, it could further redefine what Oscar-worthy casting looks like. How many of us thought the Academy would ever nominate a body-horror film like “The Substance” or and its star, Demi Moore?

Over at Venice, several international specialty titles serve as tactical wild cards. GKids’ anime “Scarlet,” Gianfranco Rosi’s Neapolitan nonfiction “Below the Clouds,” and Park Chan-wook’s South Korean drama “No Other Choice,” acquired by Neon, could all shake up category expectations.

Meanwhile, Alberto Barbera, Venice’s artistic director, has curated an out-of-competition section that could now function as sophisticated reputation management. Gus Van Sant returns with “Dead Man’s Wire” — his first major play since 2008’s “Milk” — starring Bill Skarsgård and Colman Domingo. Julian Schnabel’s “The Hand of Dante,” arriving 18 years after “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” will provide a new chance to see his name in the marquee.

Oscar Isaac appears in both Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” and Julian Schnabel’s upcoming film. This dual presence may renew awareness that, despite acclaimed performances in “Inside Llewyn Davis” (2013) and “A Most Violent Year” (2014), Isaac has yet to receive an Oscar nomination. His co-star Jacob Elordi could also emerge as a viable contender in what looks to be a highly competitive supporting actor race, going head-to-head with his Netflix counterpart Adam Sandler, who is rumored to deliver a standout turn in “Jay Kelly.” Let’s not forget Stellan Skarsgård is already an early frontrunner after Neon’s “Sentimental Value,” directed by Joachim Trier, was the runner-up at Cannes and will also play various fall festivals on the circuit.

Telluride’s secretive lineup continues to generate speculative — albeit organic — buzz. The Aug. 26 lineup, curated by Julie Huntsinger, is expected to include Edward Berger’s gambling thriller “Ballad of a Small Player,” starring Colin Farrell, and Scott Cooper’s Bruce Springsteen biopic “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” featuring Jeremy Allen White, who’s riding a two-Emmy streak (and a possible third) from “The Bear.”

While Netflix and Neon boast deep arsenals, it’s Focus Features that’s presenting its most audacious and dynamic lineup of contenders in years. In addition to Oscar winner Chloé Zhao’s “Hamnet,” the indie studio will premiere Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest film, “Bugonia,” at the Lido at Venice, with Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone and newcomer Aidan Delbis — all rumored to deliver standout turns. Then comes the return of three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis, who emerges from an eight-year retirement for the family drama “Anemone,” set to premiere at the New York Film Festival. He co-wrote the film with his son, Ronan Day-Lewis, who makes his directorial debut.

One A-lister set to command attention is Julia Roberts, making a triumphant return to the big screen in Luca Guadagnino’s “After the Hunt” from Amazon MGM Studios. The film, which premieres at Venice, marks the Oscar winner’s first major awards vehicle since “August: Osage County” (2013), following her Academy Award win for “Erin Brockovich” (2001). Early buzz suggests it could be a real head-turner, with a trailer that evokes the psychological tension of “Notes on a Scandal” and the artistic intrigue of “Tár.”

This season is sure to be challenging to navigate. And not only for strategists but for pundits alike.

The traditional awards season journey, from the National Board of Review to the Golden Globes and major guilds, will be disrupted by shifting timelines and evolving demographics. BAFTA and the Writers Guild of America have scheduled its nomination announcements until Tuesday, Jan. 27 — five days after the Oscar nominations are revealed. That means not a single industry-driven screenplay nomination, which would include those with AMPAS overlap, will be named before the Oscars’ big reveal.

As many know, the screenplay category has long been a vital component of a film’s chances at winning best picture. Only seven films have won best picture without a screenplay nomination: “Wings” (1927), “The Broadway Melody” (1928), “Grand Hotel” (1932), “Cavalcade” (1933), “Hamlet” (1948), “The Sound of Music” (1965) and “Titanic” (1997).

Studios are expected to mount highly focused and concentrated campaigns to ensure their screenwriters are not overlooked, in order to not making their ultimate Oscar goal, anymore difficult.

Nonetheless, in the last decade, simply following “Oscar stats” has proven less reliable. Consider “CODA’s” best picture win for Apple with zero technical nominations, or how “Everything Everywhere All at Once” transformed from quirky genre piece to a cultural juggernaut. Traditional metrics are becoming archaeological relics in the predicting world.

I’ll admit, predictions made in August are little more than sophisticated brand positioning. Early frontrunner status tends to reflect industry esteem — not necessarily voter enthusiasm for films nobody has watched yet. Remember: Few pundits had 2016’s “Moonlight” on their radar before it premiered at Telluride and went on to topple the musical “La La Land” in the eleventh hour.

The Academy’s demographic transformation has created ideological and generational rifts that go beyond artistic taste. Kleber Mendonça Filho’s “The Secret Agent,” bolstered by a Cannes best director win, could challenge American dominance in storytelling with another strong Brazilian entry. Jafar Panahi’s Palme d’Or winner “It Was Just an Accident” can do the same — especially from an auteur who has been imprisoned for his art. That’s a narrative that can go far if it manages to become France’s official submission, if it can fend off Richard Linklater’s “Nouvelle Vague,” which Netflix picked up at Cannes.

The monthlong marathon from Venice to the New York Film Festival remains the industry’s most transparent meritocracy — where artistic quality can still (occasionally) overcome marketing budgets and studio influence. Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus’s decision to thread their Seymour Hersh documentary “Cover Up” through all four major festivals signals either supreme confidence or strategic necessity. That film will be looking for a U.S. distributor along the way.

The newly introduced best casting category adds another layer of uncertainty and complexity. Whether it becomes a stepping stone to best picture — perhaps like film editing — or might stand alone like BAFTA’s casting category, it will reshape campaign planning for years to come.

What emerges from this analysis is a simple truth: Oscar season has evolved beyond prediction models into something closer to a real democracy, believe it or not. It’s messier, less predictable and far more compelling. The festival circuit remains the battleground where artistic merit can triumph over institutional power. A long standing ovation can launch a campaign. A muddled response can tank one.

May the best story win.

The first official charts for best actor have been published. The overall Oscar predictions updates are below.

Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in “Frankenstein” directed by Guillermo del Toro.
Photo Credit: Ken Woroner / Netflix

Ken Woroner / Netflix

*** = PREDICTED WINNER
(All predicted nominees below are in alphabetical order)

Best Picture
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“Bugonia” (Focus Features)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***
“Is This Thing On?” (Searchlight Pictures)
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
“Marty Supreme” (A24)
“Sentimental Value” (Neon)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Director
Noah Baumbach, “Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
Ryan Coogler, “Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
Guillermo del Toro, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Joachim Trier, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Chloé Zhao, “Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***

Actor
Timothée Chalamet, “Marty Supreme” (A24)
Oscar Isaac, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Dwayne Johnson, “The Smashing Machine” (A24)
Wagner Moura, “The Secret Agent” (Neon)
Jesse Plemons, “Bugonia” (Focus Features) ***

Actress
Jessie Buckley, “Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***
Rose Byrne, “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” (A24)
Cynthia Erivo, “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)
Renate Reinsve, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Julia Roberts, “After the Hunt” (Amazon MGM Studios)

Supporting Actor
Aidan Delbis, “Bugonia” (Focus Features)
Jacob Elordi, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Paul Mescal, “Hamnet” (Focus Features)
Adam Sandler, “Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
Stellan Skarsgård, “Sentimental Value” (Neon) ***

Supporting Actress
Emily Blunt, “The Smashing Machine” (A24) ***
Zoey Deutch, “Nouvelle Vague” (Netflix)
Elle Fanning, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Ariana Grande, “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)
Teyana Taylor, “One Battle After Another” (Warner Bros.)

Original Screenplay
“Is This Thing On?” (Searchlight Pictures) — Will Arnett, Mark Chappell and Bradley Cooper
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Noah Baumbach and Emily Mortimer ***
“The Secret Agent” (Neon) — Kleber Mendonça Filho
“Sentimental Value” (Neon) — Joachim Trier and Eskil Vogt
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Ryan Coogler

Adapted Screenplay
“Bugonia” (Focus Features) — Will Tracy
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Guillermo del Toro
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) — Chloé Zhao ***
“Nuremberg” (Sony Pictures Classics) — James Vanderbilt
“Train Dreams” (Netflix) — Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar

Casting
“Bugonia” (Focus Features) — Jennifer Venditti
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Robin D. Cook
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Douglas Aibel and Nina Gold
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Francine Maisler ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) — Tiffany Little Canfield and Bernard Telsey

Animated Feature
“Arco” (Neon)
“In Your Dreams” (Netflix)
“KPop Demon Hunters” (Netflix)
“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” (GKids)
“Zootopia 2” (Walt Disney Pictures) ***

Production Design
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Nouvelle Vague” (Netflix)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Cinematography
“F1” (Apple Original Films/Warner Bros.)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Train Dreams” (Netflix)

Costume Design
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Kiss of the Spider Woman” (Lionsgate/Roadside Attractions)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Film Editing
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
“Marty Supreme” (A24)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***

Makeup and Hairstyling
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) ***
“Mother Mary” (A24)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“The Smashing Machine” (A24)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Sound
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“F1” (Apple Original Films/Warner Bros.)
“A House of Dynamite” (Netflix)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) ***

Visual Effects
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios) ***
“The Fantastic Four: The First Steps” (Marvel Studios)
“How to Train Your Dragon” (Universal Pictures)
“Superman” (Warner Bros.)
“Tron: Ares” (Walt Disney Pictures)

Original Score
“After the Hunt” (Amazon MGM Studios) — Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Alexandre Desplat
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) — Max Richter
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Nicholas Britell
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Ludwig Göransson ***

Original Song
“Dear Me” from “Diane Warren: Relentless” (Greenwich Entertainment)
“Sinners” from “Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters” (Netflix)
TBA Elphaba Song from “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) ***
TBA Glinda Song from “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Documentary Feature
“Cover Up” (U.S. Acquisition TBD) ***
“The Eyes of Ghana” (U.S. Acquisition TBD)
“Love + War” (National Geographic)
“The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix)
“Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk” (U.S. Distribution TBD)

International Feature
“It Was Just an Accident” from France (Neon) ***
“Palestine 36” from Palestine (U.S. Distributor TBD)
“The Secret Agent” from Brazil (Neon)
“Sentimental Value” from Norway (Neon)
“Sirât” from Spain (Neon)

Top 5 projected Oscar leaders (films): “Sinners” (13); “Frankenstein” (12); “Wicked: For Good” (10); “Hamnet” (9); “Jay Kelly” and “Sentimental Value” (7)

Top 5 projected Oscar leaders (studios): Netflix (28); Warner Bros. (17); Focus Features (14); Neon (13); Universal Pictures (11)

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Blake Lively To Star In 'The Survival List' Rom-Com At Lionsgate
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Blake Lively To Star In ‘The Survival List’ Rom-Com At Lionsgate

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

After working with Blake Lively on the Another Simple Favor films, Lionsgate has acquired the Tom Melia spec The Survival List as a starring vehicle for the actress, which she’ll also produce, Deadline has confirmed.

An action rom-com, the film follows Annie, a highbrow reality TV producer who against her wishes, is assigned to a new show hosted by famous survival expert Chopper Lane. However, when a shipwreck strands them on a deserted island, Annie discovers Chopper is a fraud and knows nothing about survival, leaving her in charge of figuring out how to keep them alive. Forced to work together, they begin to discover an unlikely chemistry.

Marc Platt, the Oscar nominee behind the Wicked films and the recent live-action How to Train Your Dragon, is in talks to produce alongside Lively. Scott O’Brien will oversee the project for Lionsgate.

Recently caught up in a legal battle with Justin Baldoni surrounding their hit Sony film It Ends with Us that continues to unfold, Lively has just been seen starring in Amazon MGM & Lionsgate’s Another Simple Favor, where she reteamed with director Paul Feig and co-star Anna Kendrick. The sequel premiered on Prime Video in May after premiering at SXSW.

Set to release sequel Wicked: For Good via Universal in November, after seeing Wicked gross over $756M worldwide, Platt’s other recent global hit How to Train Your Dragon made over $626M in thesters.

Melia is a British writer best known for Rye Lane, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and was nominated for Outstanding British Film at the 2024 BAFTAs, also scoring 16 nominations at the British Independent Film Awards. He’s also written for the Sky drama series Brassic, as well as the Sky comedy Bloods.

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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