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Shawn Hatosy as Brett Richards and Max Thieriot as Bode Leone —
TV & Streaming

Bode’s Future at 42 at Risk, Mysterious Note to Vince

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Bode’s future with Station 42 is in jeopardy as Richards warns Jake that the next battalion chief may need to let the Leone go due to ongoing issues in the latest Fire Country episode.
  • Sharon continues to grieve Vince’s death, distributing his belongings to the town, and shares an emotional moment with Bode as she reveals what his father left him
  • The episode introduces a new mystery when Eve discovers an ominous note in Vince’s guitar case, hinting at unresolved secrets.

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Fire Country Season 4 Episode 3 “The Tiny Ways We Start to Heal.”]

“The next battalion chief will need to cut bait and let him go,” Richards (Shawn Hatosy) warns Jake (Jordan Calloway) at the end of the latest Fire Country. The good news? He’s thinking that chief could be Jake. The bad news? The “him” he’s referring to is Jake’s best friend — sure, they may be on the outs right now, but that’s still true — Bode (Max Thieriot).

This comes after the episode begins with Richards eyeing the two as they discuss him and then fight after Bode learns his father left Jake his ax. Jake heard that Richards is asking around to see which stations need firefighters so he knows where to send people if he disbands 42, and Bode can’t believe he didn’t tell him immediately. Then, he’s upset that Vince gave Jake something that had been in the family for generations. Jake argues that Vince made his will after Riley died, before Bode was a firefighter, and Bode takes offense, thinking that Jake’s calling him out on his previously destructive behaviors. What’s important is they make Richards think they’re a solid house and that means faking it if necessary, Jake stresses.

“Sure, I’ll pretend if my dad had gotten out of that fire alive, he wouldn’t have ended your career right then and there for holding me back from helping,” Bode tells him, and Jake retorts, “I didn’t realize you were back to being the Bode who didn’t give a damn about anything other than himself. And if your dad had gotten out alive, he would’ve kicked your ass out again.”

Eve (Jules Latimer) is the one to clue Jake in on something he forgot: It’s Vince’s birthday. But when Jake tries to talk to Bode about it, the other man brushes him off (“Not your dad,” ouch!) during a call that Richards is looking at for 42 to prove the house isn’t dead and doesn’t need to be disbanded. And the firefighters both do and don’t.

Eike Schroter/CBS

Manny (Kevin Alejandro) continues to really step up, helping Audrey (Leven Rambin) when a victim’s injuries remind her of what happened with Finn in the Season 3 finale, and Richards takes note. (Maybe it’s just us, but Battalion Chief Manny Perez has a nice ring to it…) Jake tries to rein in Bode when he shouts at the guy who got stuck up on the zipline, whose friend fell (but fortunately survived), and who set off fireworks, all for a proposal. Bode’s upset that this guy could have caused another fire that consumed the town and brought them out to risk their lives. Richards finally intervenes and warns Bode to listen to his captain or he’ll be suspended.

Then, near the end of the episode, Richards opens up to Jake about his cats and garden, which he likes and loves and would much rather be with than at 42. He also admits that he thought he would be at 42 for the long haul, but now he’s thinking he can leave sooner rather than later — and that Jake can take over as chief.

“But leaders have to make hard calls, and whoever ends up in charge here is going to have to make a real hard one. 42 has a problem. Bode Leone. Yesterday, you handled him. That’s not going to be every day. I know he came out of con camp, I’m the first person to believe in the power of turning things around. I love a good redemption story. But Leone is not one,” Richards warns Jake. “The way things are going, there’s a damn good chance the next battalion chief will need to cut bait and let him go.” Uh-oh.

Meanwhile, Sharon (Diane Farr) continues to grieve for her husband. Since there are some people in Edgewater who lost everything in the fire, she’s sorting through Vince’s belongings to donate — and his favorite jacket accidentally ends up given away. She and Vince’s ex, Renee (Constance Zimmer), try to track it down, and when Sharon finds someone wearing it, she simply asks for a hug. She also continues to pass out the items that Vince wanted his loved ones to have. For Manny, it’s his challenge coin. (We also continue to get great moments that highlight Sharon and Manny’s friendship, with him offering to stay on her comfortable couch when she admits to struggling sleeping in the house alone and not wanting to ask Bode.)

Bode confides in Audrey that he doesn’t expect there to be anything for him from this father, given where their relationship was when Vince made out his will. But he’s wrong.

Sharon finds Bode in the locker room after he’s returned from the call and remarks he’s inherited his father’s lack of patience for fire hazards. She also wants to know why he hasn’t stopped by the house to find out what he left him. Bode explains he doesn’t expect anything, but Sharon reminds him that he and his dad were in a much better place when they lost him. She and Vince talked about that, Bode, the life he’s made for himself, and how proud they are of him all the time. Vince left Bode his wedding ring. “He loved you so much, right up to the day he died,” Sharon assures a crying Bode and wipes away his tears. “This is so hard,” she admits. “I miss him so much. I miss you, too.” Bode hugs her and tells her not to worry about him. It may be the best scene of the season so far.

Sharon should probably be worrying about Bode, however. The good thing is Manny and Audrey are keeping an eye on him — especially now that Audrey’s told Manny about the pills she found that he did not flush.

Oh, and the episode sets up a mystery. Eve finds a note in Vince’s guitar case (what he left her): “Vince, call me back or I will blow up your life. I have Sharon’s number and I will use it. From R.” Eve thinks it’s from Renee. Is she right? What is this about?!

What did you think of the latest episode? What are your theories about that note? Let us know in the comments section below.

Fire Country, Fridays, 9/8c, CBS

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Barton Explains Feeling Cheated by 'Terrifier'
TV & Streaming

Steve Barton Explains Feeling Cheated by ‘Terrifier’

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Actress Catherine Corcoran just took her breach of contract dispute with “Terrifier” director Damien Leone and producer Phil Falcone to a Los Angeles federal court on Sunday. But allegations that the filmmaking duo has been bullying “Terrifier” contributors out of their fair credit and compensation predate Corcoran’s new claim. Several accusers point to disagreements over “Terrifier” merchandising, a critical element in the pending legal case that may jeopardize the future of the lucrative slasher series.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” said an anonymous source who worked at Dread Presents, the in-house movie studio for the horror brand Dread Central, which released the first “Terrifier” in 2018. “Damien’s a strong personality. I have respect for him. He’s nice enough in person, but when it comes to doing business, he’s savage.”

A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge

“I don’t buy the excuse that they’re from New York or New Jersey or whatever,” said another, who also worked at Dread Presents then. Asked about the sexual harassment alleged in the new lawsuit (Falcone is accused by name of photographing Corcoran nude without her consent while she was stuck in a special effects rig), he said, “I’m inclined to believe Catherine. It seems like something Phil could do.” 

Falcone and Leone have denied the allegations in Corcoran’s claim through The Hollywood Reporter. They did not respond to IndieWire’s request for comment on the additional allegations, despite repeated requests to get in contact with Leone, Falcone, and their defense attorney.

The steel book release for ‘Terrifier’ (2016) — sold for $49.99

Dread Central’s parent company, Epic Pictures, acquired Leone’s lo-fi horror film in 2017 ahead of their new label’s official launch the next year. That was at the height of the #MeToo movement, when “Terrifier” was not popular with everyone inside the company, according to four ex-employees who said Dread was mostly run by women then. They were supported by several men at Dread who reportedly “hated” the movie and specifically took issue with its centerpiece kill featuring Corcoran, as IndieWire learned.

“I almost quit my first week at Dread Central Presents because I was like, ‘Well, this is misogynist crap and I don’t like it at all. If that is what this label is going to be, then I’m not the right person for this position,” said one source. As seen in the first “Terrifier,” the brutal murder of Dawn (Corcoran) — stripped naked, hung upside-down, and sawed in half from vagina to face — is widely considered the spark that ignited “Terrifier” mania as we know it today. The moment is so shocking it demands to be talked about, and it created buzz that spread far beyond the film’s world premiere at the 2016 Telluride Horror Show.

“The irony is Steve was right,” said the same ex-Dread Central source. That source still doesn’t like the “Terrifier” movies but acknowledges his former colleague, the brand’s co-founder and the site’s former editor-in-chief Steve Barton, as integral to their success. “It obviously became a huge franchise, and I always give him credit for that. I didn’t see it, and I didn’t want to see it, but he was definitely responsible for that one.”

Last year, Barton — who has gone by “Uncle Creepy” online for years — released a memoir titled “A Comedy of Tragedies.” In it, Barton discusses one of his most complicated achievements: getting the naysayers inside Dread and the wary Epic folks who’d just met them to back “Terrifier.”

“I launched a fucking juggernaut,” Barton told IndieWire in a recent interview. “But I was stupid enough to not get anything in writing. So, that’s my fault.” 

(Left to right): Phil Falcone, ‘Terrifier’ actor Elliot Fullam, Damien Leone, actor Kevin Smith, and Steve Barton at a special ‘Terrifier 2’ screening Barton says he organized

Barton is the first to admit he isn’t owed much here legally, but the seasoned genre vet threw his social media reputation and industry connections he’d spent decades building behind “Terrifier.” He said he never asked Leone and Falcone for money, but helped the indie as it was starting to build word of mouth. A similar argument is being made by Corcoran’s legal team, who say they’ve got a written deal on their client’s side that entitles her to 1 percent of “Terrifier” profits across all revenue generated by the franchise.

“My vision for Dread Central was to give the indie filmmaker as much of a voice as the studio filmmaker and level that playing field,” said Barton, speaking to headwinds that have long plagued “Terrifier.” The 2011 short that inspired the feature franchise was also included in Leone’s 2013 anthology film “All Hallow’s Eve,” which gained a lower level of notoriety for the image of a woman kidnapped by Art the Clown (the role was originated by Mike Giannelli) — then kept alive as her limbs and breasts are hacked off. The words “cunt,” “bitch,” “slut,” and “pig” appeared carved into her bare body.

An established name and face in the genre landscape when it wasn’t clear if Art (now played by David Howard Thornton) could ever find a mainstream audience, Barton championed “Terrifier” loudly for several years. The first film was made on a shoestring budget of just $35,000 and funded by producer Falcone after he worked with Leone on his own directorial debut, titled “Joe’s War” (2015). Leone and Falcone have since gained a reputation in the horror world as a fearsome twosome with several sources describing them as “ride or die” partners who earnestly “love” each other. Some say, to a fault.

“Of all the filmmakers I worked with, I loved all of them except the ‘Terrifier’ guys,” said one of the ex-Dread sources. “They’re the only ones that were completely uncooperative every step of the way.”

“Phil is very much Damien’s shield in a lot of ways,” said Barton. “I don’t say that in a bad way. I say that in a very fatherly way. I think Phil really cares about Damien, and Damien knows Phil feels that way about him. In a lot of ways, Phil is the tail that wags the dog. One of the last things I said to Damien was, ‘I always loved you guys. I always will love you guys, but mark my words, Phil is going to sink this ship.’”

TERRIFIER, David Howard Thornton, 2016. © Tubi / courtesy Everett Collection
David Howard Thornton in ‘Terrifier’ (2016)Courtesy Everett Collection

Across “Terrifier” (2018), “Terrifier 2” (2022), and “Terrifier 3” (2024), Barton watched as the beloved black-and-white clown became a global phenomenon, but the multi-hyphenate professional was only involved in promoting the first two films. The sequels were released at Cineverse, exploding as eventized theatrical releases that made millions at the box office and firmly established Art as the first serious addition to slasher head canon since “Saw.” Depending on who you ask, Dread either couldn’t stay competitive in the bidding war for “Terrifier 2” — or Leone didn’t want them to.

“We totally fumbled the ball on theatrical,” said an anonymous source integral to the “Terrifier” release at Dread Presents. “We put it out on 10 screens and that was kind of it.” But even foregoing most movie theaters, “Terrifier” wasn’t a flop. It repeatedly sold out as a Blu-ray release (marked at $19.99), and it even merited a steelbook edition (priced at $49.99), both of which bear Corcoran’s image and the controversial sawing scene on the packaging. 

“I can’t remember a single other Dread title that we needed a second [Blu-ray] order of, and we needed several for ‘Terrifier,’” said the same source, who recalled needing all hands on deck to fill physical media orders fast enough. “It’s the only one that we exceeded our 1,000-order minimum — at least several times over. We could not print enough. It became evidently clear that it was going to be huge, probably the biggest release for us.”

The alternate cover for the ‘Terrifier’ (2016) Blu-ray release

Simultaneously, Barton was pushing the film’s reputation hard online. He used the recognizable Dread Central brand and his own media personality to introduce audiences to a new director he thought would be a lifelong friend. Speaking with IndieWire, he recalled feeling responsible for “Terrifier” viewers even as his own position in the franchise’s history became less clear. 

“I made sure that the fan base, they weren’t just on this ride with us,” Barton said. “They were in the fucking car next to us.” 

Egos abound in Hollywood, and with a success as big as “Terrifier,” it’s no surprise that several folks on the distribution side want credit for first recognizing Art the Clown as the icon he would become through the trilogy. (“Terrifier 4” has not yet begun production or landed a distribution deal.) But Barton bet big by walking away from Dread Central in part because of the movie. He got bought out of his 20 percent share in the company and made supporting “Terrifier” his full-time job. 

Per Barton, he packed and shipped “Terrifier” merchandise out of his basement — while playing watchdog for bootleg products on Etsy and routinely interfacing with fans who had questions about available merchandise. He says he also negotiated major convention appearances for Art the Clown as well as inspired his inclusion in video games and at popular horror events, circles where Barton was already well known but Leone and Falcone were not. Barton was not on set for any “Terrifier” production, but his repeat appearances promoting the franchise were eventually cited by Falcone as proof he had overstated his role.

Barton told IndieWire the email from Falcone “firing” him in November 2023 came as a shock. Going beyond what a typical producer might do, the Dread Central co-founder had always seen his efforts to support the lifecycle of the film as a good thing for a low-budget production. He arranged press features, celebrity-backed screenings, and completed a wide range of office PA duties Falcone and Leone might’ve had to hire someone to do otherwise. Never stepping foot on set, Barton says he still endeavored to support the productions in ways that mattered for the art and its bottom line. The week before he was dismissed, Barton said Leone had been showing him test footage for “Terrifier 3.”

“I feel like Dr. Frankenstein being haunted by his monster, and it breaks my heart,” said Barton, who described feeling conflicted every time he sees “Terrifier” in stores or on screen. “I am still living paycheck to paycheck, and it hurts to look at. Even [on Halloween], I have little kids dressed like Art knocking on my door. I get very sad and upset each time I see it. Because it harkens back to the whole, ‘What did I do wrong? I’m a failure. I should be taking better care of my wife and kids…’ thing.”

A poster Barton says was signed by Leone and Falcone, featuring remarks that call Barton a ‘champion’

By most accounts, Barton’s falling out with Leone and Falcone isn’t actionable and was repeatedly short-handed to IndieWire by sources on both sides as “creative differences.” He wasn’t under any kind of formal contract, and, according to Barton, he wrongly assumed he would be taken care of as the franchise grew. The email and text exchanges that severed the relationship between Barton and Leone/Falcone paint very different pictures of his contribution to “Terrifier.” Falcone claimed Barton was taking credit he was never owed, and Leone backed his partner up, saying, “This is between you and Phil.”

Another anonymous source closer to the production characterized the split differently. Per their account, Barton had seriously overstepped and created a dynamic that was doomed to fail. Similar to Corcoran’s complaint, that POV places the burden of asking for “Terrifier” credit on everyone but Leone and Falcone.

Still, the public connection between Barton and “Terrifier” persists to this day. Even having sold off all of his favorite collectibles — partly from financial need but also out of hurt — in an event he called a “Terri-Fire Sale,” Barton says he still gets tagged endlessly in posts about the killer clown. The same anonymous source said that they weren’t surprised allegations of wrongdoing had surfaced regarding the making and marketing of the film, emphasizing that inexperienced productions often make mistakes as they become more successful.

Barton’s story bears a striking resemblance to the narrative outlined in Corcoran’s legal claim and suggests the franchise was enjoying demonstrable success at a time that could be critical to determining if and how much she is owed. It’s also just the start of a string of similar stories, many from “Terrifier” fans like Barton who have raised the alarm on their own business deals with Leone and Falcone.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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'Parasite' Producer Barunson E&A Backs Indonesia at Tokyo Market
TV & Streaming

‘Parasite’ Producer Barunson E&A Backs Indonesia at Tokyo Market

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Barunson E&A, the production and distribution studio behind “Parasite,” reaffirmed that sharply rising production costs and slowing film revenue in Korea are driving local producers to pivot towards global co-production.

Yoonhee Choi, CEO of Barunson E&A, noted the challenge facing the industry at a seminar on international co-production at TIFFCOM, the market arm of the Tokyo International Film Festival.

“In Korea, the film industry has been struggling, and at the same time, the production costs have risen significantly,” said Choi. “As labor costs and general prices have gone up, average production costs have increased across the board. Since the profit from films has decreased, these investments are becoming more difficult.”

The studio has expanded its business into international markets, with a slate of completed films from Taiwan (“Miss Shampoo”), Vietnam (“Don’t Cry Butterfly”) and Indonesia (“Rangga & Cinta”).

Of particular interest to Barunson E&A is the Indonesian market.

“The country we have been working with the most recently is Indonesia. The reason is that Indonesia is currently the fastest-growing country in the world, and it still has a lot of room for further growth,” said Choi.

“Many talented new directors are emerging in Indonesia. In the past, the genres of successful films were limited to horror, religious dramas, and so on, but recently there is a demand for diverse films, and new talented directors who bring us such projects,” she added.

To solidify its commitment, the company recently signed a two-year slate deal with acclaimed Indonesian director Joko Anwar. Barunson E&A is handling overseas sales for the director’s upcoming “Ghost in the Cell.”

Together with fellow panellist, Japanese producer Kawai Shinya (“Ring,” “Yi Yi”), Choi also offered insights into the sophisticated campaign strategy that propelled “Parasite” to become the first non-English-language film to win Best Picture.

“From the start, we chose overseas distributors that could participate in the Oscar campaign, companies with the experience, the passion and the will to somehow elevate this film,” said Choi. “After winning the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, we immediately started the Oscar campaign in collaboration with the U.S. distributor Neon.

“The Academy campaign is almost like an election campaign. We constantly had to create a justification and basis for Academy to vote for this film. At the time, there was a great drive towards diverse films in the U.S., and director Bong Joon Ho ran a very compelling campaign targeted at Academy members, which I believe contributed to the success.”

Kawai offered a stark counterpoint, reflecting on the inexperienced mistakes that led to the failure of the Academy Awards campaign in 2000, for Edward Yang’s “Yi Yi: A One and a Two,” which had won best director at Cannes.

Despite the film’s critical acclaim, Kawai realized too late that the film was ineligible for the Academy Awards.

“After we won best foreign film from the LA Film Critics Association, I looked at the Academy Award requirements and found a stipulation that a film must be screened for at least two weeks in its home country by the end of December,” said Kawai. “It was already late when I found out, but we decided to try anyway. We hastily screened Edward Yang’s film for one run in Shibuya in December.”

Despite the effort, the film failed to be nominated for the Academy Award because of another technicality.

“We had considered it a co-production, and since the producer was Japanese and most of the financing was Japanese, we thought it would be defined as a Japanese film,” continued Kawai. “However, ultimately, because the director was Taiwanese and most of the locations were in Taiwan, it was judged to be a Taiwanese film. Since it had not been screened in Taiwan, it was deemed ineligible.”

Kawai also had choice words for Japan’s unique Production Committee (seisaku Iinkai) financing system, where committees of companies with gather to invest and share risks.

Kawai was a lead producer for the 2004 film “Rikidozan”, which was planned as a JPY700 million ($4.5 million) co-production evenly split between Japan and Korean investors.

“As the script was being developed, one of the five companies in the Japanese Production Committee said the story was bad. The biggest investor said they absolutely couldn’t do it and pulled out. When one member of the Production Committee pulls out, everyone else pulls out. I felt terrible for the Korean side at that time, but all of Japan’s half of the money ended up being covered entirely by the Korean side, CJ.” said Kawai.

He lamented the inability for quick decision making under the Production Committee system.

“You need the ability to immediately answer, a producer who can make a judgment. The Production Committee system, on the other hand, requires unanimous agreement to move forward. It has its advantages, like risk hedging and using your own media companies for promotion, but when working with overseas partners, issues like speed always arise.”

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Julia Fox Addresses Jackie Kennedy Halloween Costume Following Backlash
TV & Streaming

Julia Fox Addresses Jackie Kennedy Halloween Costume Following Backlash

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Julia Fox is addressing her Jackie Kennedy Halloween costume following backlash.

Fox dressed up at an event as the former First Lady of the United States, but raised eyebrows as she portrayed the outfit Jackie O was wearing after her husband JFK had been shot. The host of the canceled show, OMG Fashun, wore a pink suit with bloodstains and explained the reason behind it.

“I’m dressed as Jackie Kennedy in the pink suit. Not as a costume, but as a statement,” she said in an Instagram post after the heavy criticism. “When her husband was assassinated, she refused to change out of her blood-stained clothes, saying, ‘I want them to see what they’ve done.’ The image of the delicate pink suit splattered with blood is one of the most haunting juxtapositions in modern history. Beauty and horror. Poise and devastation.”

She continued, “Her decision not to change clothes, even after being encouraged to, was an act of extraordinary bravery. It was performance, protest, and mourning all at once. A woman weaponizing image and grace to expose brutality. It’s about trauma, power, and how femininity itself is a form of resistance. Long live Jackie O.”

Fox was also criticized by Jackie Kennedy’s grandson, Jack Schlossberg, who took to X to write, “Julia Fox glorifying political violence is disgusting, desperate, and dangerous. I’m sure her late grandmother would agree.”

Jackie wore the Chanel suit on November 22, 1963, the day Lee Harvey Oswald fatally shot JFK while he was riding on a motorcade in Dallas.

See Fox’s social media post below.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Trump Appearing on 60 Minutes, First Interview Post-CBS Lawsuit
TV & Streaming

Trump Appearing on 60 Minutes, First Interview Post-CBS Lawsuit

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

President Donald Trump is returning to 60 Minutes for his first interview since suing CBS, which resulted in parent company Paramount Global settling in a $16 million payout.

Norah O’Donnell sat down with Trump on Friday for an exclusive interview that will air on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Over the summer, Paramount settled a lawsuit Trump filed over the editing of a 60 Minutes interview with 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris. Part of the settlement agreement included stipulations for Paramount to release 60 Minutes transcripts of interviews with presidential candidates post-air.

In addition to returning to 60 Minutes for the first time since his lawsuit, Trump’s sit-down will be his first on the CBS News program as the 47th president and first since David Ellison was named the new Paramount Skydance CEO and The Free Press‘ Bari Weiss was named CBS News editor-in-chief. The president formerly backed out of a planned interview with Scott Pelley in October ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

His lawsuit against CBS claimed “deceptive doctoring” in Harris’ 60 Minutes interview. Before the settlement, legal observers’ predicted that the suit would be dismissed due to industry norms pertaining to interview editing. Sources told The Hollywood Reporter Paramount believed the lawsuit could deter Skydance’s deal to acquire the company, which required regulatory approval, including the transfer of FCC licenses. The merger was later approved in August.

Following the settlement, the legal team for President Trump said in a statement, “With this record settlement, President Donald J. Trump delivers another win for the American people as he, once again, holds the fake news media accountable for their wrongdoing and deceit.”

“CBS and Paramount Global realized the strength of this historic case and had no choice but to settle,” continued the statement. “President Trump will always ensure that no one gets away with lying to the American People as he continues on his singular mission to Make America Great Again.”

Then-CBS co-CEO George Cheeks, meanwhile, said at a shareholders meeting, “Companies often settle litigation to avoid the high and somewhat unpredictable cost of legal defense, the risk of an adverse judgment that could result in significant financial as well as reputational damage, and the disruption to business operations that prolonged legal battles can cause. A settlement offers a negotiated resolution that allows companies to focus on their core objectives, rather than being mired in uncertainty and distraction.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Emmerdale confirms aftermath of April's fatal act as Celia tightens grip
TV & Streaming

Emmerdale confirms aftermath of April’s fatal act as Celia tightens grip

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

This article contains references to child sexual exploitation that some readers may find distressing.

April Windsor (Amelia Flanagan) has become further entwined in Celia Daniels’s (Jaye Griffiths) sickening county lines plot in Emmerdale.

In yesterday’s episode, she was sent out to meet yet another ‘client’, who had paid Celia and her son Ray Walters (Joe Absolom) a sum of cash in exchange for sex with the 16-year-old.

April voiced her worries to the paedophile Callum (Max Lohan), who seemed to take a sympathetic approach towards her. He reassured her that she could leave at any time, but as he’d booked her for the whole night he wanted to get what he paid for.

Amelia killed a client in yesterday’s episode. ITV

She was horrified, and after some drinks, decided against sleeping with him. But Callum wouldn’t take no for an answer and launched himself towards her. In a panic, April grabbed a bottle of vodka and whacked it across his head, killing him instantly.

In today’s instalment she feared for her future and had nobody she could contact for help. Boyfriend Dylan Penders (Fred Kettle) has seemingly disappeared after a run-in with Ray, and there was no way she could explain the situation to dad Marlon Dingle (Mark Charnock) or grandfather Bob Hope (Tony Audenshaw).

With nowhere left to turn, she summoned Celia and Ray. She was on a date with Bob and made her excuses to attend a ‘farm emergency’.

April explained that she had no choice to attack him, and Celia was furious that she’d caused yet another issue with a client. The youngster begged her groomers for help, and Ray headed off to deal with the grizzly crime scene.

Callum was very much dead – still lay lifeless on the bed. Ray ordered someone to come to his house and get rid of his body, while Celia instructed April to take her clothes off so they could get rid of the evidence.

Jaye Griffiths as Celia poses in farmer wear and leans on a stick holding sunglasses for Emmerdale.

Celia warned that she would hurt Bob, Marlon and Dylan ITV

There was no way this was coming back onto her – and as a result, April was off the hook. Ray made it clear that should she think about telling the police, he’d be first to dob her in.

Later, after the mess was ‘cleared up’, Celia told April that her debt still hadn’t been paid off. If she thought about causing another issue, she’d play her version of ‘Snog, Marry, Avoid’ with the three most important men in her life – Bob, Marlon and Dylan.

Her version? ‘Burn, Stab, Drown.’

Will April find the courage to come clean to Marlon in next week’s special episode?

Read more:

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1. Stream on ITVX.

Add Emmerdale 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 Soaps 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.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Tia Mowry and Tamera Mowry in the 2005 Disney Channel film
TV & Streaming

Tamera Mowry Teases Possible Return to the ‘Twitches’ Franchise

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Tamera Mowry confirmed there is interest in making Twitches 3, but emphasized that several factors need to align for the project to move forward.
  • The original Twitches films starred Tia and Tamera Mowry as twin witches and became beloved Disney Channel classics.
  • Tamera suggested a potential plot for Twitches 3 could involve the sisters’ children inheriting magical powers.

It’s been 20 years since Tia and Tamera Mowry starred in the beloved Disney Channel original movie Twitches, and fans are clamoring to see the sisters reprise their roles as twin witches for a third installment.

“I mean, I would love to. I would love to,” Tamera exclusively told TV Insider of doing Twitches 3. “I think there are a lot of things that would have to align. And then, there’s so much pressure when the original was so iconic.”

Tamera’s expectations for a potential third movie are high, but for good reason. “It would break my heart if we were to do another one and it wasn’t as great as the first, and then, now, that’s what people remember.”

According to the actress, fans could see Twitches 3 come to fruition sooner rather than later. “I will say, there is interest,” Tamera teased. “That’s the cool news. We heard that. Now, it’s just making sure that everything aligns.”

Six years after wrapping their six-season run on the sitcom Sister, Sister, Tia and Tamera starred as sisters ​​Alex and Camryn in the 2005 Disney Channel film Twitches. Inspired by the book series of the same name by H. B. Gilmour and Randi Reisfeld, Twitches follows the sisters as they discover each other — and their powers — 21 years after a dangerous force known as the Darkness nearly destroyed the magical dimension of Coventry.

Tia and Tamera reprised their roles for the 2007 sequel, Twitches Too, which saw the sisters adjust to their new lives as Coventry royalty, as well as team up to save their father, whom they previously believed to be dead.

The movies also starred Patrick Fabian as Thantos, Kristen Wilson as Miranda, Kevin Jubinville as Aron, Pat Kelly as Karsh, Jennifer Robertson as Illeana (played by Leslie Seiler in Twitches Too), Arnold Pinnock as David, Karen Holness as Emily, Jessica Greco as Lucinda, Chris Gallinger as Demitri, and Nathan Stephenson as Marcus, among others.

Tamera previously opened up about her desire to do Twitches 3 in an interview with Entertainment Tonight earlier this month. “Disney Channel, Disney+, let’s make it freaking happen. Let’s do it, so I can say, ‘Go Twitches! Go Twitches!’ and, ‘Lame, loser, whatever, moron!’”

John Medland / © DISNEY CHANNEL / Courtesy Everett Collection

As for a potential plot? “My sister and I would definitely have kids. We would have kids, they would have the power, and then, we would be like, ‘Oh, no! Please, no! We don’t want them to go through what we went through,’” Tamera pitched. “And then, obviously, something happens in the world, and we’re like, ‘Oh, wait. We’ve got to fight this evil. So, are you ready to reunite?’”

In an October 3 Instagram post, Tia called it a “blessing” to be a part of a “Halloween classic.” She added, “Sometimes I get so caught up in what’s ‘next’ and then I have to stop and remind myself, ‘Damn Tia, you and Tamera have done some ICONIC things.’ ❤️ Thank you for keeping Twitches alive and loved all these years 🪄✨💞.”

Twitches and Twitches Too, available to stream on Disney+

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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'Godland' Filmmaker's New Oscar Entry
TV & Streaming

‘Godland’ Filmmaker’s New Oscar Entry

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Icelandic filmmaker Hlynur Pálmason has proven to be uniquely skilled at capturing seemingly small moments and making them feel truly grandiose. While his last effort, “Godland,” took that to extreme, gorgeous ends, his newest film narrows the scope down to a single family.

In “The Love That Remains,” Pálmason follows a family during a complex period of change. The filmmaker’s own children (Ída, Grímur, and Þorgils) play the offspring of Anna (Saga Garðarsdóttir) and her fiancé, the endearing Magnús (often shortened to Maggi, and played by Sverrir Guðnason) as they navigate a slow-speed break-up. The film’s first trailer only gently hints at what’s to come, but in a thrilling and oftentimes oddly fun spirit, as if we’re watching a nature video about a nuclear family.

The Beatles Cast

In our review from this year’s Cannes, critic David Katz wrote, “Pálmason is an exacting image-maker, giving us crystalline natural panoramas that apportion their beauty carefully, yet his screenplays are deliberately more fragmented, often to their detriment. In ‘Godland’ and his Cannes Critics’ Week calling-card ‘A White, White Day,’ this shattered sense of trajectory spiraled into hypnotic bleakness; here, he braids various fragments to relate a time-honored story of love lost, yet the immaculacy of the construction doesn’t help us feel it as viscerally as he’d like.”

The film world premiered in the non-competitive Cannes Premiere section in May. Its standout canine star, sheepdog Panda, ultimately won the Palm Dog at the festival. The film’s (human) cast includes Saga Garðarsdóttir (“Woman at War”), Sverrir Gudnason (“Borg vs. McEnroe”), Ída Mekkín Hlynsdóttir (“Godland”), Þorgils Hlynsson (“Nest”), and Grímur Hlynsson (“Nest”).

“The Love That Remains” was selected in August as Iceland’s entry to the Best International Feature Film category for the 98th Academy Awards. Pálmason’s previous film, “Godland,” premiered in Cannes Un Certain Regard in 2022 and went on to be shortlisted as Iceland’s candidate for the 2023 Oscars. While it did not make the final nomination cut, the film was critically beloved, including here on IndieWire.

Janus Films will release “The Love That Remains” in theaters on Friday, January 30, 2026. Check out its first trailer below.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Brandi Carlile Offers a Track-by-Track Look at 'Returning to Myself'
TV & Streaming

Brandi Carlile Offers a Track-by-Track Look at ‘Returning to Myself’

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Brandi Carlile‘s “Returning to Myself” album, her first solo release in four years, is likely to debut in the top 10 when album chart results come in this weekend. Her appearance on “Saturday Night Live” will likely draw even more listeners to the well-reviewed album. As her fans already know, the material runs a little deeper than some of the pop company it’s keeping, and there are fascinating insights to be gleaned from or about every song on the project, which is why (as a bonus to our already-published interview with Carlile) we’re offering this track-by-track guide that has the singer-songwriter talking about each of its 10 tunes.

In this detailed commentary, Carlile talks about working with fellow writer-producers Andrew Watt, Aaron Dessner, Justin Vernon and the Hanseroth twins, with detours to explore pertinent interactions with Joni Mitchell (subject of the song “Joni”) and Elton John (who released a separate duo project with Carlile earlier this year). She goes further into the album’s themes of how we keep sight of love, mortality and the bigger picture amid the temptation to just doomscroll through troubled times. She zeroes in on, among other songs, the explosive rocker “Church & State,” which is sure to be an “SNL” highlight this weekend. (The following commentary was collated from Variety‘s interviews with Carlile about the project as well as song introductions she gave during an album listening event in Nashville.)

1. “Returning to Myself”

The title song, though not the first complete number written for the album, has the first lyric Carlile wrote for it. The day after doing the second of two shows with Joni Mitchell at the Hollywood Bowl in October 2024, she flew to Aaron Dessner’s home back east for a co-writing session that had been suggested by Jody Gerson. After she arrived that night and found herself alone in a bedroom in his barn, she wrote these lyrics as a poem, reflecting on her intention to separate herself from Mitchell professionally for a while and spend time on her own.

Carlile: “This was my North Star for what became this album in a really transitional period in a 40-something-year-old woman’s life… I got to Aaron’s place and he was there with this amazing girl, Bella, an engineer that he works with, and I sat down on the couch and told ’em what I had done the day before. I started to feel really emotional about it. Then he was like, ‘Well, it’s getting late. I’m gonna head off to bed. There’s a blueberry muffin in the kitchen.’ Then he left, and I was just alone in this barn. I went upstairs and I picked a bedroom in the loft to sleep in, and I sat down on the bed. I still had a literal hangover, and was having an existential crisis when I wrote the lyrics to ‘Returning to Myself’ as a poem.

“It’s like [in the opening lines], first of all, who is God? Is God this reckless, leather-jacket-wearing, menacing, James Dean-looking guy just sitting there holding your life between their fingers on fire, and watching it burn down like a matchstick, watching you squirm? Or, are we universally and unconditionally loved? And then, what are we here to learn? Are we really here with all these other people to learn how to exist in solitude and be alone? Is that what it means to be evolved? Is that the point?

“I’m in a generation that is fixated on self — self-preservation, self-care, self-exploration. And I’m antithetical to that, I think to a fault, a bit. That’s not to say that I’m not selfish in my own ways, or at least misguidedly self-important at times. But I don’t know if the journey inward is really the point. I don’t know if that’s really the way to self-discovery. I think who you are in the context of who you love is probably the journey. And that’s kind of what I’m asking myself — because I don’t want to have a made-up mind. I don’t want to be atrophied in my thinking at 45; I want to still be growing and evolving. So, is it necessary for me to take the journey inward? And I think that’s what I did when I made this album. I got it out of my system… I did it, and yeah, and I think I still stand by a preference for connection.”

2. “Human”

The second song on the album was written the night before the 2024 election, focusing on the values that are most important to keep in mind in troubled times, in a short lifetime on earth — versus doomscrolling. Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon is among the contributors.

Carlile: “I had this Emmylou Harris ‘Wrecking Ball’ thing in my mind the whole time I’m making the album — not to be derivative of it, just to keep it as a spiritual North Star in my soul. Justin Vernon gets invited by Aaron to the studio. I absolutely idolize Justin Vernon. He doesn’t know anything about this, because a lot of this I’ve kept to myself and/or the twins now. And Justin turns up with a six-pack of beer wearing an Emmylou Harris ‘Wrecking Ball’ T-shirt. And we made this song, co-produced by Justin Vernonwith a lot of musical touches from him too.

“Phil came up with the melody to the chorus of ‘Human.’ Phil wrote ‘The Story.’ We call him ‘Bitch Lips’ because he’s got beautiful lips and he’s always carrying around a stick of Chapstick. But also, he writes girl melodies. Sometimes he doesn’t even do lyrics. He just sends me a little demo and that’s how he presents melody to me. They don’t always settle in right away, but eventually when I figure out what it is that I want to say, I find that girl melody that Phil sent me and it becomes a power ballad, and that’s what ‘Human’ was.

“’Human’ is about striking a really difficult balance, first recognizing that we’re here for a very short period of time, like the blink of an eye, and that we have got to find a way to be happy in the chaos. We have to find a way for all to be well with our soul while we’re here in this split second. And then we also have to find a way to not be apathetic, inactive, passive and neoliberal about the things that are happening in our world. That is a really difficult balance to strike because one could accidentally block out the things that need work and the things that need activism in order to make themselves happy. Or one could accidentally block out the need to be human, while they are virtue-signaling and running as fast as they can on a treadmill that’s outpacing them. And that balance is the challenge that I’m putting forward with this.”

3. “A Woman Oversees”

One of the most personal and unresolved songs on the album, about a relationship that, in the moment at least, has Carlile oversharing and the other person undersharing. It’s also one of the most Joni-esque songs on the album.

Carlile: “It is a freak moment that I don’t think ever would’ve made it on any of our other albums because somebody happened to hit record while I was writing something along the road. I sat down and I wrote this song stream-of-consciousness, didn’t even know if it would rhyme, and it’s one of my favorite songs on the record. … I think it’s crazy to put it up in the front five songs. But I can’t wait to do it live with SistaStrings.

“Communication could accidentally be a one-way thing, because interested is interesting, and people love being asked about themselves. I read recently that a human being’s favorite sound is the sound of their name. And we can’t even help that. That’s just the case, which means that we love to be asked about ourselves, and if we’re not careful, we may be looking back on two hours and realizing that we didn’t ask any questions back. That could either be because we’re being a narcissist in that moment, or it could be because we’re being sort of mined, or being asked to carry the interaction because there’s something about the other person in the actual interaction where they won’t show up and reveal themselves.

“There’s a nobility in (asking prying questions), because it’s a beautiful thing to ask people questions and be interested in who they are and what they think, but then you have to give something of yourself so that that person doesn’t leave that interaction and spiral, you know? That’s what happens when you’ve been asked questions all night and you’ve gone there and you’re talking about your divorce and you’re having to cry, and then you’re in the the cab on the way home and you’re like, ‘I just cried for two hours, and did I say too much? Did I overshare?’ That other person owes it to you to show up in the conversation with themselves a little bit too. That’s why it’s spelled ‘overSEES,’ because it is pretty dominant, to not be vulnerable when you’re asking someone else to.”

4. “A War With Time”

This is the collaboration with Aaron Dessner on the album that comes closest to echoing the kinds of collabs he has had with artists like Taylor Swift, where virtually everything about the music bed is his, even if nothing above it is.

Carlile: “After I located the blueberry muffin (the first night at his compound) and I went to bed and wrote the poem ‘Returning to Myself,’ I woke up the next morning and came downstairs and learned what it is to write with Aaron Dessner… Aaron’s a man of few words, and he doesn’t take up any emotional space (in the song), which means that uncomfortably, the artist has a lot of room to have a lot of big feelings because his aren’t really there in a intentional way.

“I didn’t know what Long Pond was, either. I thought Long Pond was the name of the town. Everybody kept asking me where I was, and I was like, ‘I was upstate in New York in a town called Long Pond.” I didn’t know! And so when I got up there, he was like, ‘Well, the way I do it is, I’ve got these pieces, and it’s not to say they’re finished — like, you could add to ’em if you want, or take away from ’em — but really they’re kind of a piece. And then if you can and it inspires you, you’ll sing over it.’

“It’s a cool way to co-write, and I’d never heard of it before because I haven’t done any co-writes in my life. It’s just kind of been me and the twins, and a couple of random things here and there for a project, but for the most part, no. ,,, And I’m a producer and I’m a very controlling person; ask my wife — a self-controlling person. At first, I was taken aback about not being able to change anything in the song — you know, chord structures or textures I may not like, or a guitar tone that I think should be different. But he’s kind of unapologetic about the fact that it’s just done. It inspires you and you’ll write to it or you won’t. So if you do, you’re not just writing, but you’re committing to Aaron Dessner as a producer, which is pretty fucking cool and confident. And it freed me up. It just blew my chest open because I was like: I don’t have to think about this. I’m either gonna be inspired by this piece of music or I’m not.

“And this piece that he played me was incredibly inspiring. When I heard it. I heard Bruce Hornsby, ‘That’s Just the Way It Is.’ I heard Mike and the Mechanics, ‘The Living Years.’ I heard Marc Cohn’s ‘Walking in Memphis.’ I heard my younger years, the years where I wasn’t thinking about verse/chorus structure, where I wasn’t thinking about what was cool. I was just thinking about what made me cry.

“It was so strange to not worry about production and to not worry about creation — that it was either gonna come or it wasn’t. And then when it’s done, it’s kind of done. And ‘A War With Time’ and ‘No One Knows Us’ were both really like that.”

5. “Anniversary”

One of the album’s more enigmatic songs explores the idea of some sort of anniversary date looming as important every year — for better or, seemingly, for worse — and then moving past the commemoration of that date carrying any undue weight.

“I was alone up there (at Dessner’s Long Pond complex). This was a strange idea that came to me in the middle of the night… When I played the idea for this for Aaron, he declined to help me with it. He just said, ‘How about I just play guitar and let’s just see how you feel when you sing it.’ And I haven’t really experienced that before. And I wound up feeling really subconscious singing a song in front of a guy I didn’t really know. But I thought of my love of Elliott Smith, and I thought, ‘Well, I’m embarrassed, so I’m gonna double my vocal.’ Well, it turns out you can’t hide even then.”

6. “Church & State”

By far the most out-and-out rocker on the album, with a decided U2 influence. It’s also easily the most topical song, as the title would indicate — a statement of anger amid a record that otherwise tends toward making peace, with oneself if not the world.

“I’m glad that song’s on there. We had a playback recently, and right before that song — I don’t know how to feel about this — I heard a lady lean over and say to her neighbor, ‘She’s not wailing.’ I don’t know if she was complaining or if it was a compliment, but I was like, wait till we get to ‘Church & State.’

“One of my top five favorite albums of all time growing up was ‘The Joshua Tree.’ … I even entered a contest one time as Bono when I was 15 to win a singing competition, singing ‘Running to Stand Still.’ I wore sunglasses and shit and I fell on my knees at the end of it. I already had the lesbian haircut that he has, so it wasn’t much of a stretch. … So Daniel Lanois [who co-produced ‘Joshua Tree’ as well as ‘Wrecking Ball’] was on my mind a lot.

“I got a song from Tim a couple of years ago, this beautiful concept and riff and this drop-D and all of this cognitive dissonance in the song, and I sunk my teeth into it then. And I said, whatever that is, that’s a direction for where I feel like we could go musically. And then I tucked it away in the back of my mind and forgot about it until Nov. 5 [the night of the 2024 presidential election]. We were in the studio as a band, and it wasn’t an introspective night. It was a night where I couldn’t stay off my phone because I was watching myself wake up to a realization about the country that I lived in. And I was listening to ‘Bullet the Blue Sky,’ and I was leaning into my early years and just kind of collecting rage. And we made a burning, searing song that night.

“I was reading a conversation on the First Amendment instead of a guitar solo. I love Andrew Watt so much. Every time we talk on the phone, he’s like, ‘I fucking love “Church & State,” because I love when you read the Declaration of Independence.’… I love Andrew Watt, man. It doesn’t matter where he thought it came from. He agreed with it, he believed in it and it really excited him. He loved that part of the song and he was so encouraging, and he was in the exact same place that we were. He’s a special spirit and he just kind of like morphed into our band in a way that changed everything.

“When the lyrics were coming together for that song, I just couldn’t stop thinking of the wisdom of Thomas Jefferson’s address to the Danbury Baptists. There’s so much wisdom in the Constitution, and even the notations on the Constitution are full of wisdom — the footnotes, if you will. What he said to the Baptist was intended to reassure them that they would be allowed to practice their faith, spirituality, religion, however you wanna refer to it, freely under the Constitution. But he also makes a really important distinction that we aren’t an autocracy. We’re not a theocracy. We can’t rule over people with our interpretation of an extremely opaque scripture and religion as it pertains particularly to the Christian religion. Bow that we’ve seen over time, um, the integration of so many beautiful cultures and faiths in the United States, it’s, it’s a connotation that’s safekeeping for all people, because it allows for law to be secular as it should be. So I find that to be essential and a life-giving part of that text.

“And in my faith, even Jesus was clear about not ruling a people based on an interpretation of religion. Even Jesus said, ‘Give unto Caesar what’s Caesar’s.’ So I can’t get behind rules and laws that I know are secretly based on an interpretation of a religion that I can’t get behind. Even if I agree with the religion.

“When we made that song, all of us together, that bass line, that guitar riff, so many parts of that song as they came together as these individual little parts… We don’t do that on our own. We just see each other. We just play together. There’s no such thing as Phil going, ‘Here’s my part,’ and Tim going, ‘Here’s my part.’ … It kind of sometimes winds up being a little bit of a sonic tornado, but Andrew had this idea for this separate guitar line, this separate bass line, and I think that’s where it kind of hit the U2 button for me. And Matt Chamberlain just endured with that crazy drum riff. That was an aerobic workout.”

7. “Joni”

A tribute to Joni Mitchell, in both lyrics and in the distinctly nontraditional but familiar-seeming music approach. It presents Mitchell not as someone who has been a shoulder for Carlile to cry on, necessarily, but a healing force with her steady companionship, nonetheless.

Carlile: “Oh my God. If I turned up there crying, she would look at me like I had two heads. There’s no world where I’m gonna go cry on Joni’s shoulder. But I have gone out there very, very stressed and sat across from her while she plays solitaire, and just listened to the stories. Because she tells stories, and the stories have decompressed my mind in times that have been really stressful and upsetting times for me, whether I was sharing that or not. And I imagine that that’s what people have been doing in their bedrooms with Joni’s stories since the early ‘70s, and before. I just got to be a little closer up. But, you know, there’s healing there and there’s soothing there. It’s just not in traditional sense that one would expect from a woman.

“This song is so sacred because my good five or six years with Joni are just so formative to who I’ve become. I just will never be the same person or songwriter because of my time with her. And I won’t even write a song anymore if I can’t drive up to that gate and walk in that kitchen and play it for Joni — I won’t do it. Which means I write very few songs. But she’s just such a singular and powerful woman, and she’s been such a force in my life without imposing anything on me or asking for anything.

“I wrote this song from such a pure place. I played her ‘Returning to Myself’ and played her ‘A Woman Oversees,’ which she loved. And then I played her ‘Joni,’ and I worked up to it because I was so nervous about it. … There’s a couple little references that I thought she’d like, but I didn’t know. Nobody knows with Joni. So I played this song and she was just listening to it with like a furrowed brow, and she was putting clips in her hair and just sort of like staring ahead and listening. And she wasn’t smiling for quite a long time. There’s that whole first verse about ‘laughing at the pop stars,’ and she doesn’t even crack a smile or make eye contact or say anything. Then it gets to that chorus where it says: ‘When I tell you “I love you,” and you tell me, “Okay.”’ And she just started to laugh — like, just straight out of nowhere, she full-on laughed — and then she goes, ‘You asshole!’ And I loved it, because I knew that she got all of those references, and it was just a really, really great moment. Then she asked at the end of the song, ‘Why do you think I’m a wild woman?’ And I got to explain it to her. It’s not very often that she’ll sit there and let you really give her a compliment, but she asked, so I got to tell her why I think she’s so wild.

“The first line of the song says, ‘I knew a wild woman who threw a party on her grave. She went there tapping her cane and sipping champagne’ — that’s some literal shit… She has a grave in Hollywood at that famous cemetery, and her grave is just sitting there with a blank headstone, and she goes there frequently with champagne and she has these little parties, just her and a couple of friends, eating sandwiches and just chilling out on her grave and making jokes… One day they just sent me a picture and I just thought, ‘What a cool fucking woman. She just laughs at mortality in every way.’

“Actually watching everybody try to play to that guitar part was just hilarious, especially Chad Smith — I mean, it’s nowhere near strapped to time. It’s in total outer space because I sang it and played at the same time, and they couldn’t be separated. I was hanging on for dear life because I knew I couldn’t make a song called ‘Joni’ that had typical chord progressions in it. So I had to take my time, and at times I rushed, out of the anxiousness of getting to the next chord. and so you just wind up with this song that’s in total free time. That was based on my ability, not based on any musical decision. And then everybody else having to feel that free time and figure out where I was gonna land was just kind of one of those beautiful things that can happen only in a studio.

“That’s Blake Mills playing fretless guitar and Mark Isham playing the tenor sax, which was part of the core of the Joni Jam band. … Those guys coming in and playing on that song feels more like something they did for her than something they did for me. I think that was them signing off on that song as a worthy tribute for Joni and joining it, I bet if I had sent them that song and they didn’t like it, they wouldn’t have played on it. They have such discernment and taste, just like Joni has.”

8. “You Without Me”

A tender song about detaching a little from children as they inevitably find their own identity. It first appeared, in identical form, on the Elton John/Carlile collaborative album “Who Believes in Angels?,” which was recorded in late 2023 and released in early 2025.

Carlile: “This is a song for anybody that has kids or nieces and nephews. There’s this moment this transition period. I think we try not to be narcissists. We try not to project ourselves onto our children. We tell ourselves that we know we’re not raising a Mini-Me, and that that’s not what’s important. But on some level, I think we do think we are raising a Mini-Me until the moment we know we’re not. And that moment is because they did something that went against your beliefs. Maybe they just broke a tiny rule. Maybe they took a stand. Maybe they wouldn’t come with you somewhere that you used to love to spend time at. And they stand on their own two feet and they use a different voice and they make a different face. Maybe it’s something you witnessed from far away, that it happens with one of their friends. But that moment of realizing that your child has departed you and become their own person is simultaneously devastating and also makes you so proud at the same time. And it’s such a fucking twisted feeling that I, of course, being the sick lesbian I am, could not help but write a sad song about it.

“I wrote this song about my daughter the first time I saw that happen. And it’s on the album that I did with Elton, but Elton doesn’t believe it belongs there, and/or he believes it belongs somewhere else too. So he expressed a really strong opinion and told me that it belonged on this album, that it is actually part of this body. I think the exact thing he said was, ‘I will spank you if you don’t put it on.’ So I decided to honor his request because I don’t want to get spanked by Elton John.”

9. “No One Knows Us”

The singer reaches out to a friend who may be depressed, emphasizing the ongoing importance of their relationship, a bond unique among all the billions of other bonds in the universe.

Carlile: “It’s the second-to-last song and should be track three. But I wanted to put it near the end of the record because it should be track three, but I love that it’s second-to-last. I’ve never loved an album in the way I love this one, and the sequence is so important to me. This is one of maybe only three or four songs on this album that are a jam.

“It started with a Brandi-and-Aaron moment up at Long Pond, upstate of New York, and I called Aaron a couple weeks after we’d written it and I said, ‘You know what? I’m so sorry, but it’s a band song. Can we change it?’ And he says, ‘Uh, uh, okay.’ ‘Can we fly to L.A. and play on it and then co-produce it with Andrew Watt and all get in the same room at Henson and totally change your piece of art?’ And the man was so generous that he got on an airplane and came to Los Angeles and he brought Justin Vernon and him, and they, Andrew and we and the band all got together like a band and we played this song the way that I was feeling it. I think it’s a banger.

“In all honesty, if Aaron had his way, he would strip the band off that song right now, and it would just be the the initial thing that he and I wrote. And in fact, it’s so fucking cool, the initial thing, that I will eventually release, because I want people to hear that too. It was really, really special. But at the end of the day, the way I feel that song and the way I want to do that song out in life is how it sounds on the record. It’s kind of like, in my shows, ‘Pride and Joy’ or ‘Give Up the Ghost.’ You know how ‘Pride and Joy’ is an acoustic song on the album, but then live, it’s like a huge Radiohead song?, I don’t regret the way I recorded ‘Pride and Joy’ on the album. But I knew that I was gonna turn around and make ‘No One Knows Us’ and do a massive rock ‘n’ roll moment in my show, so I really wanted it to be that way on the album. But yeah, Aaron, I think if he had his way, je would have it back down in the Long Pond world. So one day that will come out just like that. But Andrew’s contribution to that was bombastic and fucking rad.

“For reasons that are important to me, this song is about the keepers. This song is about the people in your life that are there forever. … It is one of those connections that the world would think is dysfunctional because you’re communicating through a shared experience and you’re saying ‘No one knows us but us.’ And it doesn’t matter if the world thinks that that’s dysfunctional or we’re too close or that we need fucking boundaries. It’s like: ‘Hey — can you get out of bed today, or do you need me?’ And I think really what matters is that the world is full of people that have that someone that sometimes it’s their job to get them out of bed. And there’s nothing wrong with that. There’s no lack of boundaries in being that connected to someone that you are their person, sometimes.”

10. “A Long Goodbye”

She bookends this album-closer with some obviously autobiographical material — referencing at the start her first plane trip with a girlfriend from Seattle to Idaho, as a young adult. But in-between come mentions of how easy it is to slip off this mortal coil, context that brings more poignance to the embrace of mortality in the coda. Fans will notice that an Indigo Girls reference slips in as the song is reaching its touching end.

Carlile: “No one returns to themselves alone. It’s not possible. And the last song could have been the first song, and the first song could have been the last song, but I just couldn’t bear letting go of the beauty of an album that ends on the word goodbye — it’s on the nose. But if you could write a memoir in three and a half or four and a half minutes, it’d be this song.

“At the end, swirling moment that is a lightening up of my soul, and hopefully the person’s soul who’s listening to it. We talked about some heavy shit, but then you just sort of feel this lift come up: Let it go, keep it light, let it snow, let the wind blow. It’s only life after all, you know — it’s a long goodbye. It is supposed to just be that: lightening up.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Benicio del Toro And Cameron Diaz To Star In 'Reenactment'
TV & Streaming

Benicio del Toro And Cameron Diaz To Star In ‘Reenactment’

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Fresh off his critically acclaimed performance in One Battle After Another, Benicio Del Toro has found his follow-up project as he is set to star in Reenactment with Cameron Diaz in talks to co-star. Grant Singer wrote the original screenplay and will direct.

Production is set to begin soon in Los Angeles and plot details are being kept under wraps. Molly Smith, Trent Luckinbill and Thad Luckinbill of Black Label will produce along with Patrick Wachsberger of 193, a Legendary company. Black Label’s Rachel Smith will executive produce along with Ashley Stern of 193 and LBI’s Rick Yorn and Scott Greenberg.

Patrick Wachsberger’s 193 will also handle international sales. This project reunites Grant Singer with Black Label Media and Benicio Del Toro following Singer’s 2023 directorial debut Reptile. Following its world premiere at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival, the film was released by Netflix where it topped streaming charts.

Del Toro can most recently be seen in Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another. He is repped by LBI Entertainment, Range Media Partners and Hansen, Jacobson, Teller.

Diaz can most recently be seen in the 2025 Netflix action comedy Back in Action opposite Jamie Foxx. Netflix recently reported the feature was the most watched film of 2025 so far. She is repped by LBI Entertainment and Jackoway Austen Tyerman.

Black Label is also in development on The White Van, with Singer attached to direct. He is repped by CAA, LBI Entertainment and attorney Steve Burkow.

Black Label Media is behind the highly anticipated Lynne Ramsay film Die, My Love starring Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson. The film, which they also financed, premiered at Cannes, where it was acquired by Mubi in a bidding war for $24 million. It will be released in theaters on November 7. Next up, Black Label will reteam with director JD Dillard for The Strange, for which casting is underway.

193 is a stand-alone joint venture with Legendary and has support from Legendary’s resources and divisions. At its inaugural Cannes Film Festival in 2025, 193 secured international sales for four marquee films, reflecting the quality of its burgeoning slate. These included the biggest sale of the festival for psychological thriller Die My Love, from four-time Cannes prize winner Ramsey.

193’s other 2025 Cannes sales were: drama biopic Scandalous!, the directorial debut of two-time Academy Award nominee Colman Domingo, starring Sydney Sweeney and David Jonsson; action franchise-starter The Surgeon, starring Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh, from physician and acclaimed filmmaker Roshan Sethi, reuniting Wachsberger with his John Wick collaborator Basil Iwanyk; and The Toxic Avenger, a darkly comedic reimagining of the 1984 cult classic. Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner Macon Blair wrote and directed the film, which stars four-time Emmy winner Peter Dinklage alongside Kevin Bacon, Elijah Wood, and Jacob Tremblay.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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