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Adolescence Is Hell, and So Is Summer Camp
TV & Streaming

Adolescence Is Hell, and So Is Summer Camp

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Adolescence, and especially at an all-boys summer water polo camp, is hell in Charlie Polinger’s memorably disturbing first feature, “The Plague.” In the psychodrama-meets-body-horror movie, Ben (discovery Everett Blunck), a socially anxious 12-year-old, becomes part of a ritualistic tradition that targets an outcast among them with an illness they call “the plague.”

But as there are real corporeal implications, it’s starting to look as if this imagined social disease might be real. Is the plague in this acne-scarred nightmare an even more horrifying version of puberty? “The Plague” almost feels like an allegory for it, but it’s never predictable. Below, IndieWire shares the exclusive trailer ahead of the film‘s upcoming debut on December 24.

The Perfect Neighbor

Joel Edgerton also stars in the film as the boys’ coach, who turns out to be extremely out of his depth when faced with the cruelties they inflict upon each other. “The Plague” first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, where IndieWire spoke to writer/director Polinger about shooting the film on 35mm during a sweltering summer season. “We were capturing something that felt timeless and, to me, there’s no comparison. It looks so great to shoot on film, and these kids’ faces and closeups just rendered in such a beautiful way,” he said.

That shot-on-film aspect lends to the film feeling like a throwback to classic coming-of-age movies, but with a chilling twist. “I love those movies about boys, though I often feel like a lot of movies about young boys are either a little more sort of bro-y hangout or a little more nostalgic, kind of biking-around-the-suburbs type of thing,” he said. Movies like Bo Burnham’s “Eighth Grade” and Julia Ducournau’s “Raw,” he said, “capture a social dread and vulnerability of your body and something you don’t see as much with boys because it requires a certain vulnerability to be an object of terror in that way… I was even looking at some sort of dread-filled, ‘Shining’ daylight kinds of horror movies, [with] huge imposing spaces.”

From IndieWire’s review out of Cannes: “In his debut feature, filmmaker Charlie Polinger plays with broad riffs on coming-of-age, body horror, and bullying genres before paring these themes back to reveal that two 12-year-old boys — and their contrasting approaches to being different — are really the heartfelt preoccupation of the film.”

Independent Film Company opens “The Plague” in select theaters on Wednesday, December 24 with an expansion to follow on Friday, January 2.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Donald Trump Threatens Legal Action Against BBC Over Speech Editing
TV & Streaming

Donald Trump Threatens Legal Action Against BBC Over Speech Editing

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened the BBC with legal action over documentary program “Panorama’s” editing of the speech he made ahead of the Capitol riots on Jan. 6, 2021.

According to BBC News, the BBC confirmed it has received the letter and will “respond in due course.”

Controversy erupted over the weekend after a leaked memo from former BBC adviser Michael Prescott was published by The Telegraph suggesting that “Panorama” edited a Trump speech to make it sound like he encouraged the Jan. 6 riots. It resulted in the shocking resignations of both BBC director general Tim Davie and CEO of news Deborah Turness on Sunday night.

On Monday, BBC Chair Samir Shah apologized for the edit in a letter to the U.K. culture, media and sport committee and called it an “error of judgement.” Speaking with the BBC’s Katie Razzall following the letter’s publication, Shah said that he has been in contact with Trump’s team and is considering personally apologizing to the president. Asked if Trump will sue the BBC, Shah said: “I do not know that yet, but he’s a litigious fellow so we should be prepared for all outcomes.”

Prescott’s memo said “Panorama” edited Trump’s speech to be: “We’re gonna walk down to the Capitol and I’ll be with you and we fight. We fight like hell and if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not gonna have a country anymore.” Prescott wrote that Trump said the part beginning with “and we fight” 54 minutes after “we’re gonna walk down to the Capitol and I’ll be with you.”

Trump celebrated the news of Davie and Turness’ resignations on Sunday night, calling the organization “corrupt ‘journalists.’”

“These are very dishonest people who tried to step on the scales of a Presidential Election,” Trump wrote. “On top of everything else, they are from a Foreign Country, one that many consider our Number One Ally. What a terrible thing for Democracy!”

In September, Trump sued the New York Times for $15 billion claiming defamation and libel, which was tossed out days later by a judge. Last month, he refiled the suit.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Benan Guz Joins Film Bridge As Managing Director
TV & Streaming

Benan Guz Joins Film Bridge As Managing Director

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Benan Guz has joined Film Bridge International and will assume the newly created position of Managing Director. 

Benan will be responsible for overseeing the daily operations of the business, including business affairs, interaction with producers, and distribution licensing. The company said she will also oversee the company’s expansion into international production. Jordan Dykstra has left the company to produce.

“Benan is an accomplished, talented executive with great experience in international sales, television, and management,” Film Bridge CEO Ellen Wander said. “We are thrilled to be working with her again.” 

Benan returns to Film Bridge following positions at Voltage and VMI, where she served as Vice President of International Sales. In addition to the new hire, Film Bridge has also promoted Michaela Johnson-Carroll to the role of Vice President, Worldwide Sales and Distribution.

“After eight months at Film Bridge International, Michaela’s contributions have exceeded our expectations.  Not only have our sales skyrocketed, but Michaela continues to bring new clients to us every day,” Wander said.  

Wander added: “These women share the enviable traits of integrity, intelligence, and great positive energy. We are thrilled to be working with them as FBI continues to expand”

Film Bridge will be at AFM with multiple titles, including The Florist, starring Dennis Quaid and Jean Reno, The Dreadful with Kit Harrington and Sophie Turner, and Chum, featuring Alice Eve and Audrey’s Children, starring Natalie Dormer.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Kim Kardashian's 'All's Fair' Represents a New Era in Television
TV & Streaming

Kim Kardashian’s ‘All’s Fair’ Represents a New Era in Television

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

One feature of modern AI systems is that the model does not actually reason. Unlike the older “symbolic” approach, in which humans hard-program a machine to run through a series of options, the current Large Language Models simply synthesize lots of information and predict based on likelihoods. So the model (by definition) cannot conjure up anything of literal substance; it can just regurgitate, sometimes coherently and sometimes nonsensically, based on material it doesn’t understand. 

An odd reference point, perhaps. But it came to mind when watching the first three episodes of All’s Fair, Hulu‘s new dramatic soap from Ryan Murphy. By network report, at least, the show was written by humans, including Jon Robin Baitz, an excellent playwright who has spent parts of the past 20 years trying to find his footing in television. Yet the result is a regurgitation of fragments of images, of plot lines and dialogue, previously thought native only to automated text-predictors — an approach to creativity with the same lack of consciousness as an LLM.

By now you know of the series, if only from the people warning you that you really don’t want to know the series; “atrocity,” “brain dead” and “worst TV show of all time” have been the kinds of terms thrown around. These labels somehow are both too generous and an understatement of the true contribution — dare I say transformation — of the All’s Fair moment. See, the Hulu series is not terrible on the scale of great to awful that television typically runs on. No, it does away with the entire spectrum — in fact, I would argue it overhauls the definition of television itself.

Through either a great act of artistic subversion or (more likely) just a great accident, All’s Fair has entirely recalibrated what a series should try to do. When faced with the increasingly tough Hollywood question of how to make original TV in a world that has seemingly already unearthed every plot and drained the bag of every surprise, Murphy and his team have returned an unexpected answer: junk the medium’s entire premise. In its place, they say, slide in a show whose defining characteristic is recycled emptiness. Thirty years after Seinfeld gave us a show about nothing (which was actually about friendship and frustrations and loneliness and insecurities), All’s Fair has finally come along to make good on the promise. 

By a show about nothing, I don’t mean All’s Fair represents a morally vacuous worldview; that would be reprehensible, but at least a perspective. No, I mean literally nothing. There is a universe in which champagne-clinking pronouncements like “from cocktails to cock rings all in one 24-hour period” mean something. But we don’t live in that universe. We live in this one, and it doesn’t.

A Los Angeles-set series anchored by Kim Kardashian, All’s Fair takes the form of a divorce-themed legal drama in which a set of inspirational girlboss slogans/insults get crossed with the images of an early 2000s perfume commercial. That sounds like a prompt more than a description, and it should; the show contains plotlines and dramatic arcs and character nuances no more than a ChatGPT response about a set of ingredients produces an actual pie. Surely in the history of people saying they didn’t want to do something no one has ever put together a combination of words that read “I wouldn’t do [it] even if I were penniless and starving on a street corner forced to blow a priest with a chlamydia for a bowl of refried beans.” But an LLM doesn’t know that, and when tasked with such an assignment it might just rifle through its training data to arrange them in this way.

This is a show which not only doesn’t know but doesn’t care whether it’s supposed to be an aspirational portrayal of wealth or a satire of it — where a tired husband’s “I’m drowning here with you” is met with “What are you talking about? You’re famous. You have three Super Bowl rings,” and it’s not clear to anyone, least of all the actors saying them, whether these lines are meant to be comedic.

Meanwhile, consumerism, the reliable source of ersatz meaning (and the ultimate goal of LLMs), becomes the go-to in All’s Fair’s many scenes of gourmet-food-picking sister-bonding. Surely it can be no coincidence that when Kardashian’s character (with the decidedly synthetic name of Allura) gets a life-crushing piece of news, this is the monologue that follows:

“Living well is the best revenge, but on the path to living well, looking great matters too. … The other day I did this new miracle laser that makes the tiny microscopic holes in the skin that stimulates collagen. There’s also the most wonderful new long-lasting filler formulated from salmon sperm. And then there is this new check machine that stimulates 20,000 super maximal muscle contractions; it’s like doing 20,000 crunches or squats. But the best thing I did was vaginal PRP.” (You don’t want to know.)

No person, no matter how dermatologically inclined, would have that reaction to learning about a shattering tragedy. Ah, but that presumes this show is attempting to portray people, not serve as a vessel emptied of meaning. If that is the aim, odes to filler formulated from salmon-sperm is exactly how you would respond to your newly ruined life.

In another era, the era of Rocky Horror Picture Show or The Room, we might expect All’s Fair to be reappropriated and valorized as camp. But the beauty, or at least the fireproofing, of this era is that the cultural techno-machine has already done all that work, processing and reprocessing heightened nonsense so much that there is nothing left for a midnight audience to do.

A temptation hovers to see all this as the logical downward endpoint of Ryan Murphy — that after the transgressive frisson of Nip/Tuck gave rise to the feelgood freshness of Glee which yielded the baroque heavyhandedness of American Horror Story that birthed the empty cosplay of American Crime Story, this marks the only place he could end up, in the commedia dell’arte of Kim Kardashian and her friends describing revenge in terms of chopped-up and force-fed ram scrotums. (Yeah, that’s in the show too.)

It would even be reasonable to find here an inexorable end to Kardashian herself, who, having increasingly turned from any sort of conventionally defined reality-star or social influencer into a meme — an abstract idea of what a public personality can be — now must evolve into the only state available to her: a simulation of a human character.

But that would actually feel like too mild an ambition for what I think might really be happening here, which is an attempt, with the specter of the AI slop machine looming over Hollywood, to destroy the storytelling medium before a personalize-the-IP Sora can get its hand on the gun — a kind of pop-culture cyanide-pilling. When the history of 21st-century entertainment is written, I believe we will look at All’s Fair as a watershed, the moment that television itself, as a place where new and coherent stories were for decades told, began to give way to something more meaning-free, more recycled, more nothing. As 6 7 gets named word of the year precisely due to its emptiness, and perpetrators of political violence toss out deliberately incoherent Internet memes, the small screen now enters the fray too, appropriating the nothingness and re-packaging it in its own bejeweled casing. With ratings so good, expect to see more like it. Broadcast created news-variety and basic cable created reality TV and streaming creating prestige TV and social media created outrage-opinion TV. AI will create tropal-emptiness TV trained on all of the above but adding up to, like All’s Fair, much less than it.

Murphy’s show has an almost laughable number of executive producers (I counted 15, including Kris Jenner), which at first confounds; surely in a group this large someone knows how to produce a passable television show. But then an explanation snapped into place: the abundance of voices is exactly what leads to All’s Fair anti-televisuality. Each producer cancels the other out, blender-like, just as a broad data set reduces an LLM’s outputs to meaninglessness.

I’m not certain if any of these 15 people or the cast (which also includes Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash-Betts, Teyana Taylor, Sarah Paulson and Glenn Close) understood their epically disruptive aim (attempts to reach one of the executive producers ended with a redirection to Murphy, who for now isn’t talking). But there were hints at least of a subconscious understanding that what is being streamed here is not television in a classic sense. Because the cast has engaged with this empty memified world on-screen by extending the drama into a meme-land off of it. 

First Close on Thursday posted a hand-drawn doodle in which critics are boiled in a stew while the cast gleefully stands around and watches (a legendary actress trying to Fatal Attraction journalists was not on this year’s bingo card). The meme seemed to perfectly capture the dynamic on-screen too, the show’s principals burning down the avatars of meaning in a pot of hot-water nothingness.

And then Kim Kardashian offered an Instagram post that asked if followers “had tuned in to the most critically acclaimed show of the year?!?!?!?” and went on to cite the awful reviews in a way that recontextualized them as good. She, even more than Close, seemed in on the joke: “This whole idea of professionals producing television and a set of cultural gatekeepers evaluating it is now so meaningless we can pretend the evaluation is anything we want.” Algorithms are turning information into personalized bits, shaped into whatever we individually find most digestible, so why not grab a hammer and fragment the mass medium of television into subjective smithereens? I have no idea who the insult “I’m surprised your ancestors were actually allowed on the Mayflower but I guess that’s one way to rid the place of half-wits, mouth-breathers and perverts” is supposed to roast. But more important, the show’s creators don’t either, and aren’t particularly troubled by the question. It means whatever you want it to mean.

There’s something fitting about the author all of this. Who better than Ryan Murphy, who for so long embodied and powered a cable/streaming ethos with his prestige-flecked airplane reads, to come in and say that era is over? The new moment involves models, for now in human form but eventually, cost-effectively, run by the machines themselves. For years it’s been a good creative run, filled with wonderful and long-lasting filler. But now it’s time to let the salmon sperm take over.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Where was The Sunshine Murders filmed? 5 crime drama location guide
TV & Streaming

Where was The Sunshine Murders filmed? 5 crime drama location guide

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’re looking for a new cosy crime series to get stuck into, The Sunshine Murders might be one for you.

The drama, now available to stream on My5, follows an unlikely crime fighting duo made up of two sisters who have never met before.

The series kicks off with Shirley (Emily Corcoran), a farmer from New Zealand, travelling to Athens and meeting her half-sister, detective Helen (Dora Chrysikou). The pair soon develop and unlikely way of solving crime, aided by Peter Andre’s pathologist, Dr George Constantinos.

The series is set amidst the backdrop of the Mediterranean, offering a sunny escape as audiences enter the winter months.

“We needed to find a location that gave that really great level of escapism and the variety and diversity for the audience at home who may be sitting in the living room while it’s raining outside,” creator Emily Corcoran told RadioTimes.com and other press.

So, where was The Sunshine Murders filmed? Scroll on to find out more.

Where was The Sunshine Murders filmed?

Emily Corcoran, Dora Chrysikou and Peter Andre. Piers Allardyce

The Sunshine Murders was filmed across several locations in the Mediterranean and in the UK.

The sun-soaked mystery was set in New Zealand, Greece and Cyprus, with filming taking place in the latter two countries and in the United Kingdom.

Read on for a breakdown of some of the filming locations in The Sunshine Murders.

Paphos, Cyprus

The final two episodes of The Sunshine Murders were filmed in Paphos in Cyprus, specifically Asimina Suites Hotel, a luxury five star-property part of the Constantinou Bros Hotels.

“It was an honour to welcome the production of The Sunshine Murders to our hotel,” said Aristos Diomedous, general manager, on behalf of Constantinou Bros Hotels. “Partnerships like this not only showcase this superb property but also highlight Cyprus as a world-class filming and holiday destination.”

In addition to the three key cast members, Stephanie Beacham, Camilla Rutherford, Nina Wadia, Marina Sirtis, Alexander Vlahos and Nick Moran all featured in the episodes filmed in Cyprus.

Larnaca, Cyprus

When not filmed in the hotel, the production explored Cyprus further, especially when a “murder” took place.

Corcoran explained that as part of the agreement to film in Asimina Suites Hotel, no one was allowed to be fictionally killed, and so the crew filmed near a cliffside in Larnaca.

She told RadioTimes.com and other press of choosing Cyprus as a filming location: “Initially, I gravitated towards Cyprus for more practical reasons, which is becoming much more common now in television. Like many TV shows, well more and more, we are independently financed, so we’re an independent production, and so we have to kind of find ways to piece the financing together. And it was fairly modestly budgeted as well.

“And we found the Cypriots in general to be extremely enthusiastic, and all of the local businesses as well were.”

The Sunshine Murders is available to watch on My5.

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

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

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Andy Muschietti, Chris Chalk, and More Talk Key Scenes (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Andy Muschietti, Chris Chalk, and More Talk Key Scenes (Exclusive)

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The cast and creators of It: Welcome to Derry break down key moments in the latest episode.
  • “Now You See It” features a major cameo, a flashback, and a trip to Pennywise’s lair.
  • Plus, the new Losers Club hatch a new plan to prove there’s something supernatural terrorizing the kids in town.

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for It: Welcome to Derry Episode 3, “Now You See It.”]

There’s a familiar face that ushers us all into the twisty world of It: Welcome to Derry‘s latest episode. Andy Muschietti, cocreator of the series, cameos as a carnival pianist in a flashback to a 1908 town fair.

Muschietti told TV Insider that he did so at the request of the episode’s director, Andrew Bernstein — “He twisted my arm into playing that role, and I begrudgingly did it,” he joked. (He also teased that fans will see him again in Episode 8.)

Also present for the scene is a kid version of Francis Shaw, who takes in the oddities before exchanging his slingshot for a bottle of water from a young Rose. The two become fast friends and play in the woods together before things take a dark turn; he goes too far and comes face to face with a one-eyed demon and has to use the slingshot to take out the creature’s other eye and escape.

They’re soon parted when Francis’ father is stationed elsewhere, and she gives him the slingshot back as a token of remembrance — even though she knows he’ll forget her once he leaves Derry. It takes 50 years, but remember, he does, and the very grown-up Francis (James Remar) and Rose (Kimberly Guerrero) have a very warm reunion at her store.

He’s there to ask for her help with his mission after finding a car from the Bradley Gang massacre with the help of Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), but he lies and says he wants her to help him avoid sacred lands in a military dig.

“That’s classified,” James Remar explained of Francis’ decision not to tell Rose the truth, even after their shared childhood experiences. “We’ve got to get it done, but it’s still a military secret. In my mind, it’s protective of her. I’m not going to say, ‘We’re looking for some entity, and we’re going to take over the world.’ It’s clandestine. It’s a military secret. And military secrets at that time, things that were highly classified, was just a matter of course. I mean, it was the Cold War, Strategic Air Command, Khrushchev, the Soviets. It wasn’t personal. I don’t feel like I was lying as such to my friend Rose.”

Thanks to that encounter, Rose convinces her fellow tribe members to take a wait-and-see approach about what Shaw and his team are doing, and they’re able to embark on a new mission — this time, with Leroy (Jovan Adepo) piloting a helicopter as Dick plays human compass with the slingshot providing him new insight into It. Dick goes into a trance and mentally visits Pennywise’s sewer lair, where his grandmother appears to tell him to leave, and It senses him as he almost jumps out of the back of the bird, with Leroy stopping him just in time.

HBO

Later, the two debrief after dinner with Charlotte (Taylour Paige), and Leroy says he knows Dick was there snooping around in his mind during the masked attack in his bunk. Dick says, based on what he saw, he wouldn’t ever want to cross Leroy again.

“I think when Dick looks into Leroy’s head, there’s a respect for what he has endured,” Chris Chalk told us about the scene. “But also there’s something nice about being seen, almost… Dick gets caught, and it’s like, ‘Oh, will you be my friend?’ It’s like, ‘I can tell you things now because, you know I can do things.’” Chalk added, “I think, for Dick, the first time, going, ‘Is this an ally? Is this person a person I might actually depend on?’ And then, as you watch the show, you find out if it happens or not, if they become allies or not.”

The other storyline of the episode is that of Lilly (Clara Stack), upon returning from Juniper Hill, committing to helping Ronnie (Amanda Christine) exonerate her father, Hank (Stephen Rider), whose alibi has now been contradicted. They decide that they need proof beyond Lilly’s account, so they work with Will (Blake Cameron James) and Rich (Arian S. Cartaya), after the latter says he knows of a ritual they can use in the graveyard.

Welcome to Derry Clara Stack, Arian S. Cartaya, Blake Cameron James, Amanda Christine

HBO

Though his prayer for the dead was bogus, they were still greeted by the ghosts of Teddy, Phil, and Suzie as the cemetery began to erupt in an earthquake, as the kids tried to get away on their bikes while taking photos of the spirits on the way out. Once they developed the film, they saw that they’d captured the specters perfectly — along with a clown.

Watch the full aftershow with even more cast and creative commentary on the latest It: Welcome to Derry episode above!

Welcome to Derry, Sundays, 9/8c, HBO

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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2025 Critics Choice Documentary Awards Winners List
TV & Streaming

2025 Critics Choice Documentary Awards Winners List

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Yes, folks, we’re not even to Thanksgiving, and awards season is already in full swing. Currently in the spotlight: the year’s best documentaries, care of this year’s Critics Choice Documentary Awards, which took place on Sunday, November 9, 2025 at The Edison Ballroom in Manhattan. Geeta Gandbhir’s lauded feature “The Perfect Neighbor” was the evening’s big winner, walking away with not just a Best Documentary Feature win and a Best Director win for Gandbhir, but also Best Editing for Viridiana Lieberman, Best Archival Documentary, and Best True Crime Documentary.

Hosted by award-winning actor, writer, and producer Aasif Mandvi, the annual event hosted a variety of leading filmmakers, industry professionals, and special guests for an evening celebrating excellence in documentary filmmaking. Other big winners included “Mr. Scorsese,” “Ocean with David Attenborough,” and “Orwell: 2+2=5,” which each won two awards. 

"Little Amélie or the Character of Rain"

The evening also honored legendary documentarian Ken Burns, who received the Critics Choice Impact Award, which was presented by acclaimed actor Christine Baranski; and visionary “Folktales” filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, who received the CCA’s Pennebaker Award (formerly the Critics Choice Lifetime Achievement Award), presented to them by Pennebaker’s widow and collaborator, Chris Hegedus.

“Ten years in, and the art of documentary storytelling has never been more vital or vibrant,” said Christopher Campbell, Vice President of Documentary at the Critics Choice Association in an official statement. “This year’s filmmakers show, through their creativity and courage, just how powerful documentaries can be in shaping our view of the world.”

The Critics Choice Documentary Awards honors the year’s finest achievements in documentaries released in theaters, on TV, and on major digital platforms, as determined by the voting of qualified CCA members (at IndieWire, that includes yours truly, David Ehrlich, Anne Thompson, and Marcus Jones). Nominations were determined by the voting of qualified CCA members with expertise in the documentary field. The 10th annual awards ceremony was produced by Bob Bain of Bob Bain Productions and Joey Berlin of Berlin Entertainment. 

Check out the full list of this year’s winners below. All nominees are listed, and winners are indicated in bold.

Best Documentary Feature

“2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Frontline Features / The Associated Press)
“The Alabama Solution” (HBO Max)
“Apocalypse in the Tropics” (Netflix)
“Cover-Up” (Netflix)
“Deaf President Now!” (Apple TV)
“Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon)
“Pee-wee as Himself” (HBO Max)
“The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix) WINNER
“Riefenstahl” (Kino Lorber)
“The Tale of Silyan” (National Geographic)

Best Director

Mstyslav Chernov – “2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Frontline Features / The Associated Press)
Petra Costa – “Apocalypse in the Tropics” (Netflix)
Nyle DiMarco and Davis Guggenheim – “Deaf President Now!” (Apple TV)
Geeta Gandbhir – “The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix) WINNER
Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman – “The Alabama Solution” (HBO Max)
Raoul Peck – “Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon)

Best First Documentary Feature

“Art for Everybody” (Tremolo Productions)
“Grand Theft Hamlet (Mubi)
“My Mom Jayne: A Film by Mariska Hargitay” (HBO Max) WINNER
“Seeds” (Interior Films)
“Stiller and Meara: Nothing is Lost” (Apple TV)
“Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror” (Margot Station)

Best Cinematography

Ben Bernard – “Architecton” (A24)
Jean Dakar – “The Tale of Silyan” (National Geographic)
Elizabeth Lo – “Mistress Dispeller” (Oscilloscope)
Lars Erlend Tubaas Øymo and Tor Edvin Eliassen – “Folktales” (Magnolia Pictures)
Brittany Shyne – “Seeds” (Interior Films)
Toby Strong, Doug Anderson (Underwater Photography) – “Ocean with David Attenborough” (National Geographic)WINNER

Best Editing

Michael Harte – “Deaf President Now!” (Apple TV)
James Lester and Oz Rodríguez, John MacDonald (Music Montage) – “Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of SNL Music” (NBC)
Viridiana Lieberman – “The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix) WINNER
Page Marsella – “The Alabama Solution” (HBO Max)
Michelle Mizner – “2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Frontline Features / The Associated Press)
Alexandra Strauss – “Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon)

Best Score

Alexei Aigui – “Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon) WINNER
Kris Bowers – “The Eyes of Ghana” (Breakwater Studios / Higher Ground Media)
Laura Heinzinger – “The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix)
Claudia Sarne – “Love + War” (National Geographic)
Sam Slater – “2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Frontline Features / The Associated Press)
Paweł Szymański – “Trains” (EPF Media / Drygas Film Production)

Best Narration

“2000 Meters to Andriivka” (Frontline Features / The Associated Press)
Written by Mstyslav Chernov
Performed by Mstyslav Chernov

“The American Revolution” (PBS)
Written by Geoffrey C. Ward
Performed by Peter Coyote

“The Americas” (NBC)
Written by Michael Gunton, Holly Spearing, Steve Cole, Kathryn Jeffs, Matt Richards, Giles Badger, Victoria Buckley, Alex Griffiths, Hannah Hoare, Poppy Riddle, Gillian Taylor, Nikki Waldron, Evie Wright, Charlotte Bostock, Victoria Bobin, and Ingrid Kvale
Performed by Tom Hanks

“Apocalypse in the Tropics” (Netflix)
Written by Petra Costa
Performed by Petra Costa

“Octopus!” (Prime Video)
Written by Gabriel Bisset-Smith
Performed by Phoebe Waller-Bridge

“Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon) WINNER
Written by George Orwell, Adapted by Raoul Peck
Performed by Damian Lewis

Best Archival Documentary

“One to One: John & Yoko” (Magnolia Pictures)
“Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon)
“The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix) WINNER
“Riefenstahl” (Kino Lorber)
“Trains” (EPF Media / Drygas Film Production)
“WTO/99” (Foghorn Features)

Best Historical Documentary

“The American Revolution” (PBS) WINNER (TIE)
“Cover-Up” (Netflix)
“Eyes on the Prize III: We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015” (HBO Max)
“Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time” (National Geographic) WINNER (TIE)
“Number One on the Call Sheet” (Apple TV)
“Riefenstahl” (Kino Lorber)

Best Biographical Documentary

“John Candy: I Like Me” (Prime Video)
“Love + War” (National Geographic)
“Mr. Scorsese” (Apple TV) WINNER
“My Mom Jayne: A Film by Mariska Hargitay” (HBO Max)
“Pee-wee as Himself” (HBO Max)
“Stiller and Meara: Nothing is Lost” (Apple TV)

Best Music Documentary

“Becoming Led Zeppelin” (Sony Pictures Classics) WINNER (TIE)
“Billy Joel: And So It Goes” (HBO Max)
“Bono: Stories of Surrender” (Apple TV)
“It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley” (Magnolia Pictures)
“Ladies & Gentlemen… 50 Years of SNL Music” (NBC)
“Sly Lives! (aka The Burden of Black Genius)” (Hulu) WINNER (TIE)

Best Political Documentary

“The Alabama Solution” (HBO Max) WINNER
“Apocalypse in the Tropics” (Netflix)
“Deaf President Now!” (Apple TV)
“The Librarians” (Independent Lens)
“My Undesirable Friends: Part I – Last Air in Moscow” (Marminchilla)
“Orwell: 2+2=5” (Neon)

Best Science/Nature Documentary

“The Americas” (NBC)
“Checkpoint Zoo” (Abramorama)
“The Last Rhinos: A New Hope” (National Geographic)
“Ocean with David Attenborough” (National Geographic) WINNER
“Octopus!” (Prime Video)
“Pangolin: Kulu’s Journey” (Netflix)

Best Sports Documentary

“America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” (Netflix) WINNER
“America’s Team: The Gambler and His Cowboys” (Netflix)
“Big Dreams: Little League World Series 2024 (ESPN Films)
“Full Court Press” (ESPN+)
“Southpaw: The Life and Legacy of Jim Abbott” (ESPN)
“We Beat the Dream Team” (HBO Max)

Best True Crime Documentary

“The Alabama Solution” (HBO Max)
“Gone Girls: The Long Island Serial Killer” (Netflix)
“The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix) WINNER
“Predators” (MTV Documentary Films / Paramount+)
“Unknown Number: The High School Catfish” (Netflix)
“The Yogurt Shop Murders” (HBO Max)

Best Short Documentary

“All the Empty Rooms” (Netflix)
“Classroom 4” (PBS)
“The Devil is Busy” (HBO Max)
“Exodus” (Message Pictures)
“Fiddler on the Moon: Judaism in Space” (Ironbound Films)
“Sallie’s Ashes” (Robi Creative)
“Saving Superman” (Switchboard) WINNER
“Shanti Rides Shotgun” (Voyager)

Best Limited Documentary Series

“The American Revolution” (PBS)
“Eyes on the Prize III: We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015” (HBO Max)
“Gone Girls: The Long Island Serial Killer” (Netflix)
“Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time” (National Geographic)
“Magic City: An American Fantasy” (Starz)
“Mr. Scorsese” (Apple TV) WINNER
“SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night” (Peacock)
“The Yogurt Shop Murders” (HBO Max)

Best Ongoing Documentary Series

“30 for 30” (ESPN Films) WINNER
“American Masters” (PBS)
“The Reluctant Traveler” (Apple TV)
“Solo Traveling with Tracee Ellis Ross” (Roku Channel)
“Trafficked with Mariana van Zeller” (National Geographic)
“Trainwreck” (Netflix)

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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'The Leaves Hang Trembling' Finds Hope in One Serbian Teacher's Story
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‘The Leaves Hang Trembling’ Finds Hope in One Serbian Teacher’s Story

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Serbian filmmaker Stefan Djordjević is prepping his sophomore feature, “The Leaves Hang Trembling,” a hybrid docufiction that explores the impact of a teacher’s life and work on the people around her. The project took home the top prize last week at the Crossroads Co-Production Forum in the Thessaloniki Film Festival’s industry section, Agora.

As with Djordjević’s feature debut, “Wind, Talk to Me,” which premiered at the Rotterdam Film Festival this year before winning the top prize at Sarajevo, “The Leaves Hang Trembling” is a cinematic ode to the director’s late mother, who he describes as “the most important person in my life.”

Djordjević’s first film — a deeply personal attempt to reckon with his mother’s death — earned a rapturous review from Variety’s Guy Lodge, who praised the “marvelous” docufiction for how it worked through grief “with wit, grace and imagination…weav[ing] fact, fiction and memory into a heart-bursting tribute to [the director’s] late mother.”

“The Leaves Hang Trembling” is a companion piece to that film, broadening its scope beyond the four walls of the Djordjević family home. “‘Wind, Talk to Me’ was about how [my mother] inspired my family,” the director told Variety. “But with ‘The Leaves Hang Trembling,’ we can also see how she touched others as well.”

The film documents the life of Djordjević’s mother, Negrica Neca Đorđević, who in 2002 was hired by a local elementary school, where she worked for more than a decade as a beloved teacher, community leader and president of the teachers’ union. Fourteen years later, she was summarily dismissed without cause, “leaving her devastated emotionally,” and with the sense that “her faith in community and loyalty [had been] betrayed,” according to the director.

In her darkest moment, however, Neca’s students rallied behind her and rose up in her defense, rekindling her hope and her faith in her community. Using direct quotes from her diaries and letters, as well as contemporaneous audio recordings of the events as they unfolded, “The Leaves Hang Trembling” will tell the story of an inspirational woman “who gave so much of her energy, and also dedication and caring and love” to her family, her students and her community. 

Djordjević said the film “explores what it means to care beyond rules, to connect with others in ways that endure,” while also urging audiences “to feel the courage and compassion of the teacher, to witness the quiet strength of everyday care, and to leave believing in the transformative power of human connection.”

“The Leaves Hang Trembling” is being produced against the backdrop of a broad, student-led protest movement that for the past year has galvanized the Serbian public against President Aleksandar Vučić. It began last November, after the collapse of a railway station canopy in the city of Novi Sad that killed 16 people, sparking outrage over the endemic corruption and the culture of impunity that many Serbians blamed for the disaster.

At this week’s industry award ceremony in Thessaloniki, where “The Leaves Hang Trembling” won the top prize in the Crossroads Co-Production Forum, producer Dragana Jovović, of Belgrade-based Non-Aligned Films, who’s producing the film in co-production with Vanja Jambrović of Restart, dedicated the win to Dijana Hrka, the mother of a 27-year-old man, Stefan, who was killed in the Novi Sad tragedy. Earlier this month, Hrka launched a hunger strike in front of Serbia’s National Assembly, demanding a “real investigation” into the events at Novi Sad and calling for “the liberation of all arrested students during the protest,” according to Jovović.

While Djordjević said he wants to make a “universal film,” he also recognizes that the events of “The Leaves Hang Trembling” and the current political crisis in Serbia are connected. Since last year, many Serbian teachers and university professors have been summarily dismissed for supporting the student protests; in many cases, noted Djordjević, the students have rallied in their teachers’ defense.

That’s why the director sees “The Leaves Hang Trembling” as not only a testament to his late mother and the lives she touched, but as a part of his country’s “collective memory” — a history that continues to be written in real time.

The events depicted in the film “didn’t just happen nine years ago,” Djordjević said. “It’s still happening, and on a bigger level.”

The Thessaloniki Film Festival runs Oct. 30 – Nov. 9.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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John Oliver Bids Adieu To 'Deeply Weird' Eric Adams, Welcomes Mamdani
TV & Streaming

John Oliver Bids Adieu To ‘Deeply Weird’ Eric Adams, Welcomes Mamdani

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Last Week Tonight honored its native New York City as John Oliver conducted an audit of Eric Adams‘s scandal-ridden mayoralty — and welcomed recently minted mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, an introduction that led to resounding cheers from the live audience.

As Oliver discussed Mamdani’s triumphant speech — which he characterized as an “entirely earned victory lap” and “pretty satisfying” — he noted that some, such as CNN’s Van Jones, critiqued the words as “sharp” and a “character switch.”

“He just weathered one of the most Islamophobic campaigns in recent memory,” the late-night host countered. “‘I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private live’ is a frankly superhuman level of grace to extend to a man who has yet to pronounce your name correctly once.”

After concluding his story for the night — on how America’s singular felony murder laws exacerbate mass incarceration — Oliver returned to the topic of his show’s home city, delivering a eulogy of sorts for the outgoing Adams administration, scheduled to depart Jan. 1.

Calling the leadup to the NYC mayoral election “truly insane from start to finish” — as best exemplified by a viral debate question concerning parades — Oliver mulled over the fact that one local news segment couldn’t locate a single resident to express disappointment in Adams dropping out of the race.

“They couldn’t find anyone! This city has 8 million people. I’m a 1000% sure I could find someone who would vote for a pigeon fucking a bagel in Central Park, but no takers for Eric Adams — that has got to hurt,” he quipped.

In offering “one last look at Eric Adams because he is a deeply weird man,” the political comic paid homage to Adams’s amusing flag-raising ceremonies, in which he has repeatedly stated that New York is the [insert given nation’s capital city] of America.

Though Adams began as a popular candidate with an over 60% approval rating, his stats dropped over 40% in the span of two years. Oliver outlined “the true hallmark of the Adams administration was its constant scandals,” going over a laundry list of corruption, bribery and conspiracy charges faced by a number of admin officials.

“This is a great city, but that is not because of you [Adams] and sometimes it is in active spite of you,” Oliver concluded. “You know, if I could sum up Eric Adams’s mayoralty in one word, it’d probably be: New York, because this is a place where every day you wake up you can experience a plane crashing into our Trade Center, to a fake vegan, non-Alabaman leaving a ghost-filled Gracie Mansion to lecture all of us on family, business, public safety and, of course, clitoral stimulation.”

And though Oliver made sure to include the “soundbite bonanza” that was Republican Curtis Sliwa’s campaign — from his anecdotes about his historical clashes with organized crime to his shots at Andrew Cuomo — the host did forget one gem from the Adams administration: his much-memed, bizarre anti-drug PSA video.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Seth Rogen in The Studio
TV & Streaming

Why Seth Rogen Turned Down Favorite Directors for The Studio Cameos

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Seth Rogen has been having to make some tough decisions.

The star and co-creator of the Emmy-winning series The Studio recently told GQ that he had to “turn down” some of his favorite directors who have asked for cameos in the show’s second season.

“It does feel like I’m running a fake movie studio at times,” Rogen admitted. “I’m having directors’ agents call me to pitch their clients to be the directors of fake movies on our show, which is very weird and very meta. And I’m having to actually turn down directors I’m a big fan of because the movie, the fake movie, maybe isn’t quite right for the fake package we have in our heads. So yeah, it’s gotten very strange.”

The Studio‘s debut season, which ended up being a critically acclaimed success, featured quite a few famous guest stars. The series centered on a fictional Hollywood movie studio, Continental Studios, working to survive in a world where it is increasingly difficult for art and business to live together. Rogen stars as Matt Remick, a movie executive who gets promoted to president of the studio.

Though season one was packed with some iconic cameos, the Platonic actor still had plenty of people decline to make an appearance. However, some have since regretted that decision.

“I had a few people come up to me at the Emmys saying they regret it, which was very meaningful to me,” he said. “That’s all I want — for people to regret not working with me.”

In addition to all the cameos, Rogen has previously admitted that some of the characters and episodes in The Studio have been inspired by real Hollywood people or situations.

“Yes, I’ve been yelled at three times in the last week,” the Good Fortune star told Stephen Colbert earlier this year when asked about how people reacted when they eventually realized it was based on them. “Some of them are pleased, some of them are not pleased, I will say.”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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