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Premiere Date, Trailer, Cast, Plot, and More Details
TV & Streaming

Premiere Date, Trailer, Cast, Plot, and More Details

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

At New York Comic Con, Peacock unveiled its new sci-fi spy thriller The Copenhagen Test, created by Thomas Brandon and starring Simu Liu. The streamer debuted both a teaser and the show’s premiere date. The espionage drama follows an intelligence analyst who discovers his brain has been hacked, granting the perpetrators access to everything he knows.

Produced by horror-meister James Wan and costarring In the Heights and Scream star Melissa Barrera, the eight-episode series promises a gripping blend of espionage, high-tech paranoia, and richly layered characters woven into an intricate narrative.

Here is a rundown of everything we know thus far about the series, including the trailer, plotline, and cast.

When does The Copenhagen Test premiere?

The Copenhagen Test premieres on December 27, 2025, only on Peacock.

What is The Copenhagen Test about?

The official logline for the series reads: “This espionage thriller series follows first-generation Chinese-American intelligence analyst Alexander Hale (Liu), who realizes his brain has been hacked, giving the perpetrators access to everything he sees and hears. Caught between his shadowy agency and the unknown hackers, he must maintain a performance 24/7 to flush out who’s responsible and prove where his allegiance lies.”

Who stars in The Copenhagen Test?

The cast includes Simu Liu as Alexander Hale, Melissa Barrera as Michelle, Sinclair Daniel as Parker, Brian d’Arcy James as John Moira, Mark O’Brien as Cobb, Kathleen Chalfant as St. George, and Adam Godley as Schiff.

Who is behind The Copenhagen Test?

Thomas Brandon from Legacies is the creator, co-showrunner, writer, and executive producer. He shared duties with Jennifer Yale from See and Outlander, who acts as co-showrunner, writer, and executive producer.

Filmmaker James Wan from The Conjuring Universe, Insidious, and M3GAN fame will exec produce with Michael Clear and Rob Hackett for Atomic Monster. Executive producers also include Mark Winemaker and Jet Wilkinson, who also helms Episodes 1 and 2. Liu is set to both executive-produce and star.

Is there a trailer?

Yes! A teaser debuted at New York Comic Con on October 12, along with a series of first-look images. You can watch the trailer above and check out the images below.

The Copenhagen Test, Series Premieres December 27, Peacock

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Idris Elba on Playing the U.S. President in 'A House of Dynamite'
TV & Streaming

Idris Elba on Playing the U.S. President in ‘A House of Dynamite’

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Although “A House of Dynamite” star Idris Elba did say at the Netflix release’s Venice Film Festival press conference that he “does not have the courage to be in politics,” he certainly does not shy away from playing heads of state on film. Over a decade after his Golden Globe-nominated performance as Nelson Mandela, former President of South Africa, in “Long Walk to Freedom,” the British actor has played both the British Prime Minister in “Heads of State,” and the President of the United States in the new political thriller from Best Director Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelow.

Speaking to IndieWire over Zoom, Elba said that while he is still not interested in being a politician, “I’m not shy of perhaps bringing my voice to something, bringing my soapbox in some way and articulating what I’d like to see happening.” But in accepting the presidential role in “A House of Dynamite,” he was not driven by some pain point he wanted to address, as much as he was excited to work with the people behind the film.

Diane Keaton at the Ralph Lauren Spring 2024 Ready To Wear Fashion Show at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on September 8, 2023 in Brooklyn, New York. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/WWD via Getty Images)

Diagnosing why exactly he seems like the right person to play political leaders, the seven-time Primetime Emmy nominee said, “You see actors oftentimes get into civil roles because of [the] skillset transfer into these things, but it’s really not something good that I’m going for.” He added, “I read this thing that said, ‘Typically we choose our leaders because of height and length of forehead.’ And I was like, ‘Well, yeah, I’m tall and I do have a forehead, so maybe that’s what’s going on here.’”

Below, Elba shares what it was like to not only play a President who must react to a nuclear missile headed for the United States but also what it was like to watch the movie as an audience member, without prior access to the full scope of the film, which also features strong performances from a star-studded cast that includes Rebecca Ferguson and Tracy Letts.

The following interview has been condensed for length and clarity.

IndieWire: Earlier this year, we saw you play the British Prime Minister in “Heads of State,” and now you play the President of the United States in “A House of Dynamite.” When and how did you become the go-to guy to play a world leader?

Idris Elba: When Morgan Freeman said, “I ain’t doing that no more.”

That’s a better answer than anything I could have thought.

Yeah, I snuck in there. It’s not by design. I found it very funny playing the Prime Minister and knowing that I am about to play the President. I was thinking about [how] the films are going to be in a similar cycle. So I was like, “OK, people are going to ask me about this. What am I trying to say?” I’m not trying to say anything. I’m not running for politics or anything like that.

If you’re following Morgan Freeman, the next step is deities. Are you ready for that?

I don’t know.

As far as how this film relates to more of your past work, I was wondering if you were attracted to “A House of Dynamite” as a story giving audiences a peek behind a power structure, similar to how “The Wire” informed audiences about the goings-on of different institutions. Are you particularly intrigued by scripts about how these systems and processes work?

There’s always a curiosity when I’m playing characters, especially characters that have a complexity to them. Maybe a natural contradiction in what they are and what they need to do, and who they are and what they need to say, and who I am and what I look like playing this character. The complexities are really interesting to me. John Luther is a detective who is pretty much a crook at the same time.

I guess I’m attracted to that type of character, but at the same time, I don’t really feel there’s a sort of real formula to the way I go for characters. And probably I should have a formula, but I don’t. I actually go for, “Have I done it before? Could I do a good job? What would I learn from this? Is there a skill set that I get out of it?” I’ve learned to do all kinds of crazy things, from sword-fighting to driving cars really fast by way of these different characters.

Writer Noah Oppenheim, Idris Elba, and their guests attend the Netflix film 'A House of Dynamite', NYFF Main Slate Premiere and Q&A on September 28, 2025 in New York City.
Writer Noah Oppenheim, Idris Elba, and their guests attend the Netflix film ‘A House of Dynamite’, NYFF Main Slate Premiere and Q&A on September 28, 2025 in New York City.Getty Images for Netflix

Was there at all a message in this project that you were attracted to? In terms of wanting people to see this film because of what it means?

Not in the beginning, if I’m really honest. I was just like, “I’d like to work with Kathryn Bigelow.” A bucket list opportunity. When I got to understand what the film was about and who my character is, I definitely latched onto the idea that [when] we elect a leader, I wonder, do we think long and hard enough about what and who we’re electing, and what will happen if we put our lives in that person’s hands?

I suppose playing the character as a human being as opposed to a POTUS, big, strong guy, [who’s] got to make all the decisions… Just someone that actually is a human being, wants to talk to his wife, doesn’t have the answers, isn’t afraid to ask, his shoe’s a little tight, his coffee’s a little cold. Playing that human side hopefully reminds the audience that, actually, when we do decide who’s our leader, just remember they’re human. And this is what it looks like when they have to make a very complex decision on all of our behalfs. This is what it looks like.

Would you say there’s any sort of partisanship applied to your character?

We definitely ignored that. We tried to show none whatsoever. And I don’t know, as an audience member, what did you think? Did you think that he was there on one side or the other?

I found it pretty objective. There’s things you can read into, but it does not fully imply he’s this war hawk. You talked about the goal of him being human, the work reflects that. But shifting gears, do you know if you were one of the first actors cast in this film?

I’m not sure, actually. I don’t know. I remember Kathryn talking about wanting to know who her president would be, and that might help her put together some of the other pieces. But I wasn’t clear if I was the first person. I know that she said to me quite frankly that she didn’t want to speak to any other actors about it, just wanted me, and to that I was like, “Wow, no pressure. You sure you don’t want to speak to Morgan Freeman?”

Did you have any say in your cabinet? Because if you’re someone coming in early, are you able to then say, “Well, I think this person would be good for this role.” Or anything along those lines?

No. Again, I didn’t have any exposure to who was going to be in the movie, and by the time I got to shoot that segment of the film, they had already shot everything else. But needless to say, it’s Kathryn and her taste for amazing actors to pick the characters that she creates is good. She has high standards.

Idris Elba as POTUS in 'A House of Dynamite'.
Idris Elba as POTUS in ‘A House of Dynamite’Eros Hoagland/Netflix

Outside of Jonah Hauer-King and Brian Tee, who were around you physically? Did you actually get to work with this whole cast? Or were you acting opposite someone reading lines as, say, Tracy Letts?

No, I was pretty isolated, apart from the characters that were in my story. And I got to listen to playback for the questions and, honestly, I was lucky that I got Tracy Letts’s performance as my driving material. And they had my performance, even though I hadn’t performed it. They had me [do] a telephone run of my lines before I even shot it, which was a bit like, “Oh, I don’t even know what I’m going to do.” But I just trusted the script, and they used that in their side of the coverage.

In terms of your character’s First Lady, who is away in Kenya, had you ever met Renée Elise Goldsberry? Because that’s such an emotional moment in the film, but it sounds like that might’ve also been playback.

Yeah, actually, that was the one casting opportunity that Kathryn sort of asked [for] my opinion, and we were really lucky to get Renée, she was amazing. And I did. She came to set, but she shot all of her stuff in Kenya, but we were lucky to speak to each other and just look each other in the eye and have a quick connection, I guess.

What level of improvisation was part of this film? Hearing you talk about the basketball game, that wasn’t all lined up in the script? You guys were building that as you went along?

Yeah, it very much felt like a documentary. I think Kathryn wanted that. She didn’t want to know what I was going to say or what I was going to do, and of course, the lines that were written, I say those lines, but if I decided to take off my shoe and say, “Hey, what’s going on with the shoe?” That was completely improvised. She encouraged that. When I meet the girls on the basketball court and I’m telling them a story, I just made one up, and then I had to remember what I made up because we did it a couple of times, and I actually really felt quite liberated by that because it just meant that I was really in the character, in the moment. There’s cameras everywhere, and you don’t know where they all are, so there’s no point acting, just being is what it is and being reactive.

And there were scenes, there were some lines where Jonah and I were in the middle [of talking], and one of them made it into the scene; where he’s talking and I stop him and I say, “How old are you, son?” And Jonah was so great, he  just made it up. I said, “You married?” And he goes, “Yes, sir.” And just that break in the lines brought a certain realism, and Barry [Ackroyd] was on camera, and he’s trying to find this. “Hell, this isn’t written down, what is this?” And it really just helped the realism aspect of it.

Speaking of how real things got, did you actually have a close look at what you say is a diner menu of nuclear options that this president has to review? Would an actual POTUS see that to a T?

We wouldn’t know if it was to the T, but [we] very much designed on what we understood to be fact, the choices the POTUS has in that box all the time. And it is a menu of counterstrikes, thinking in an emergency. And yeah, even though it wasn’t to the T as we might understand it, it was very much close, and it was shocking. And many choices of what to do [were] mind-blowing for me. When we shot it, he opened it up, and here’s this long incredible speech about it, and I’m like, “What?!”

So you’re taking a look at it for the first time in the scene, not quite beforehand?

No, it was all real.

Tracy Letts, Greta Lee, Idris Elba, Kathryn Bigelow, Rebecca Ferguson, Anthony Ramos, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris at the 'A House Of Dynamite' photocall at The 82nd Venice International Film Festival on September 02, 2025 in Venice, Italy.
Tracy Letts, Greta Lee, Idris Elba, Kathryn Bigelow, Rebecca Ferguson, Anthony Ramos, Gabriel Basso, Jared HarrisEarl Gibson III/Deadline

An authentic surprise. Now that you’ve seen the whole film, what is it like watching it and dealing with its entertainment factor versus its realism?

I watched the film as an audience member because I didn’t know much about the first two acts. I had read them obviously, but I didn’t know what to expect. I didn’t know who was cast. I didn’t know what the atmosphere would look like and feel like. So when I watched the movie, I was like anyone who watched it for the first time, and even my segment was like, “Oh my. . . It blew my mind.” I sat there [for] probably about three or four, five minutes just in silence afterwards. “What did I just watch? Was that a movie or was that a documentary?”

Some of the experience is a bit of frustration with your character until we actually see what’s going on with him. Did you know that when you were playing him, or did you not pick up on that until you were actually watching the film?

I didn’t know that, actually. From my character’s perspective, “You’re telling me I need to get on the phone, the phone is not working. Who am I talking to? Who is this guy? Wait, you’re waiting for me? I’m busy, I’m doing something. I was in the middle of something. What’s happening here?” Playing catch-up. And then when I watched the movie, I was like, “The president needs to get on the phone. What is he doing?!”

And then you watch the movie, “Is it a basketball game? Wait, what?” I felt the frustration for the audience because it was like, “Isn’t he supposed to be on the phone right now? Why is his phone not working?” But there you go, again, that’s probably very close to how it would go down.

I believe you’ve directed or are going to direct a couple upcoming features, “Above the Below” and “Infernus,” since working on “A House of Dynamite.” Did you have any takeaways on that front from working with Kathryn Bigelow?

I’m directing my next film now. I’ve learned a lot working with Kathryn. She has this incredible, observant perspective on how she makes films. It makes me think about my story, my characters, my environments much deeper, and I’m really looking forward to getting behind the camera, having now worked with one of my directing heroes.

“A House of Dynamite,” a Netflix release, is now in select theaters on Friday, October 10. The film will begin streaming on Netflix on Friday, October 24.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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SNL 'Veteran' Ken Aymong Returns to Show After 2021 Retirement
TV & Streaming

SNL ‘Veteran’ Ken Aymong Returns to Show After 2021 Retirement

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Ken Aymong, one of a handful of key lieutenants to executive producer Lorne Michaels at NBC‘s “Saturday Night Live,” made a surprise cameo on the program’s latest episode — in the credits.

Aymong, who retired from “SNL” in 2021 after joining the venerable program in the mid-1980’s, has returned to the show as a supervising producer for the show’s current 51st season, according to a person familiar with the matter. His name scrolled by during the show’s credits early Sunday morning as it closed out its second episode. Details on what spurred him to return to the fold could not immediately be learned, but Aymong had been brought back to help out with some of the landmark events in “SNL“‘s 50th season, which included a massive concert at Radio City Music Hall.

Aymong has long been known not for booking guest hosts or writing celebrated sketches, but for something perhaps more important: maintaining the business of the TV institution. ““I always look at the financial perspective of the show,” Aymong said in “Live From New York,” an oral history of the program by Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller. “I want it to go on forever.”

NBC declined to make producers available for comment. LateNighter previously reported on Aymong’s return to “SNL.”

Aymong’s return comes as “SNL” has been giving new duties to some of Michaels’ top deputies. Erin Doyle, a longtime producer, was elevated at the start of the season to the top echelon of senior staff. Erik Kenward, another member of that circle, has taken on head-writer duties this season with a band of other “SNL” veterans. Michaels, who turned 80 in November of last year, has given no signal that he wants to step back from the show he has managed and influenced for nearly half a century, but has given some indications that others will take up day-to-day duties he might once have done himself.

Michaels has developed a coterie of key aides over the years. In addition to Aymong, Doyle and Kenward, they also include Steve Higgins, another top producer who also works on NBC’s “Tonight Show” and Mike Shoemaker, a former “SNL” producer who currently runs “Late Night with Seth Meyers” behind the scenes. Others in the past have included Lindsay Shookus and Marci Klein, both of whom are no longer with the show. Aymong’s duties aren’t the glitziest, but are quite crucial as “SNL” manages its production budget for special effects, set design, and many other elements that help the show stand up under intense linear, streaming and social-media scrutiny week after week.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Tilly Norwood And AI Confusion Will Shape Looming Guild Talks, Top Copyright Lawyers Say
TV & Streaming

Tilly Norwood And AI Confusion Will Shape Looming Guild Talks, Top Copyright Lawyers Say

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

In the looming contract talks between Hollywood studios and above-the-line unions, confusion around AI and issues raised by the debut of synthetic actress Tilly Norwood are certain to be key themes.

“The negotiating cycle is starting and the DGA is probably negotiating their contract within a month,” said Jonathan Handel, an entertainment and technology lawyer at Feig/Finkel. SAG-AFTRA and the WGA are also also heading into negotiations ahead of the mid-2026 expiration of their current contracts with studios and streamers, with the wounds barely healed from the dual strikes of 2023.

Norwood, whose arrival last month stirred up an industry tempest, is “a difficult situation,” Handel added, “and the union did not get anything on completely synthetic characters in the last round. So maybe they will this time.”

Handel and Mishawn Nolan, managing partner of intellectual property law firm Nolan Heimann, shared their perspectives during a panel Friday afternoon at Infinity Festival in Los Angeles.

Digital scanning of human actors, for the purposes of using their likenesses in film and TV projects is another tricky area for the unions given how untested the legal questions are, the attorneys agreed.

“I actually have a client right now,” Nolan said, whose body is being scanned. “What I received [from the company] was just a sort of standard certificate of engagement. It was all rights, just like you would normally use. And I said, ‘Well, what are you gonna do with the data? What is the scope of the use?’”

Because of the intense pressure on productions to move quickly, Nolan said, “everyone would like to just turn around [a talent agreement] tomorrow.” But the complexities of copyright issues raised by AI, which is evolving at a breakneck clip, require a lot more thought, she argued. “The way that we’ve always done business can’t be done in the future. It can’t be done instantaneously,” she continued. “You have to take a moment and think about, what are you doing? What are you capturing? What are you going to use it for? How are you going to use it? How long are you going to have access to it? And what happens in the long term? Who holds onto it? Is it safe? Is it gonna be destroyed?”

The scanning of human actors, Handel said, “very much implicates what SAG-AFTRA negotiated” in its last contract, and insisting on the data being destroyed isn’t necessarily a solution. “Twenty years from now, the company may say to the celebrity, ‘You know, we really like to do a reboot of that thing with you de-aged, but the ideal de-aging is actually the data from when you were younger,’” he posited. “And the celebrity might say no, or the celebrity might say, ‘Hey, that’s great, more money for me, and I’m gonna reboot my career.’ And then they’re like, ‘Oh fuck, my talent lawyers insisted that you throw away the data. So we don’t have the data anymore.’ But on the other hand, you don’t want the necessarily want the production company or studio to have the right to store the data indefinitely.”

Another vexing area is the trove of unproduced screenplays whose copyrights are owned by studios and streamers. They could potentially be used to train AI models, Handel said. “The union agreements, as of two, two-and-a-half years ago, did not address, ‘Hey, what about retroactivity?’ That may come up in the in the current situation. It’ll be very hard fought because, you know, it’s obviously a big potential source of monetization for the companies, but also something that, OK, well, if you’re going to do that, just like when you rerun a movie, you’ve got to pay residuals.”

The use of generative AI tools in production is also problematic, Handel and Nolan noted. There are different copyright issues facing the input (text submitted to a model like OpenAI’s Sora, for example) and output (the video that is produced as a result.)

“The trouble and the confusion is that the technology and the workflow have advanced so quickly and are gonna continue to advance,” Handel said. There can be hundreds of prompts, and revisions of prompts, resulting in video sequences with some resemblance to protected work, but the eye is sometimes in the beholder. “That is going to force at some point more nuanced court decisions, and it’s going to be very difficult to figure out, you know, where’s the line?” he said.

Media giants like Disney, NBCUniversal and Warner Bros. Discovery have sued various AI players in order to enforce their copyrights. OpenAI’s Sora 2, introduced less than two weeks ago, has created an uproar that some stakeholders believe will only die down once lawsuits are filed there as well.

It all adds up to a business environment defined by profound uncertainty, Nolan said.

“The way that you’ve operated for the past year, the past five years, the past 10 years, you cannot assume that that is the business environment in which you can operate moving forward,” she said. “A lot of the foundations and assumptions that you have been relying on, you cannot rely on them moving forward.”

One example is the tried-and-true staple of all contract law: the multi-year agreement. “How do you do a five-year deal when the law and the technology can be different next week?” Nolan asked.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Charli XCX Makes Surprise SNL Appearance During Role Model Song
TV & Streaming

Charli XCX Makes Surprise SNL Appearance During Role Model Song

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Charli XCX wasn’t supposed to be Saturday Night Live‘s musical guest, but that didn’t stop her from making a surprise appearance on the late night show Saturday night.

Role Model, who served as the official musical guest of the second episode of season 51, hit the stage where he performed a rendition of his track, “Sally, When The Wine Runs Out.” When performing the song at his live shows, the artist typically brings out a special guest of his own, known better to fans as the “Sally girl.”

In the past, Role Model has chosen artists like Conan Gray and Charli XCX’s dear friend and Sweat Tour co-headliner Troye Sivan to serve the role. The two have taken joking jabs at one another on social media due to faux “Sally girl” drama, which included Role Model featuring the “Rush” singer during one of his shows.

However, it appeared Charli XCX and Role Model officially worked it out on the remix (or SNL stage) as she delivered a surprise cameo during his performance of the beloved song. Eagle-eyed fans also pointed out that the “360” singer wore the same shirt Role Model had on during promo shots that were released earlier this week for the episode. The shirt read, “max’s kansas city.”

The “Look At That Woman” singer made his SNL debut on Saturday night, where he was joined by host Amy Poehler. The second episode of season 51 proved to be a star-studded night in terms of appearances, as former cast members Tina Fey and Seth Meyers also made unanticipated cameos.

Charli XCX hosted SNL for the first time last year, where she also doubled as musical guest. The Grammy winner is known to spotlight fans and (sometimes) surprise celebrities during special segments of her concerts. Set to her track “Apple,” Charli XCX regularly picks a concertgoer or public figure to be platformed on the big screen of her shows, where they often recite the popular TikTok dance to the tune of her song.

Her SNL appearance comes amid speculation of an alleged feud with Taylor Swift. The latter singer’s latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, featured a track entitled “Actually Romantic,” which some fans believe is a response to Charli XCX’s 2024 track “Sympathy is a knife.”

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Wicked: For Good director teases "extraordinary" reveal
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Wicked: For Good director teases “extraordinary” reveal

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s only a matter of weeks until the release of Wicked: For Good, the anticipated follow-up to the box-office-smashing Wicked: Part One.

The film will see Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande reprise their leading roles as Elphaba and Glinda, with this second instalment set to be more emotional than the first. The recently released trailer surprised many fans with just how much was included, including the appearances of the Tin Man and the Scarecrow.

And it’s those character reveals that are really set to take viewers’ breath away, according to director Jon M. Chu.

Speaking during a panel talk at the London Film Festival 2025, Chu shared: “Wait until you see the Tin Man and the Scarecrow. These are not digital effects. These are real, physical makeup and hair. And it is extraordinary.

“I couldn’t show anybody here, but when you see it, when you look at it, know that there was no room for error on it. And the team that did it is just incredible.”

The glimpses we get of both characters in the trailer are definitely ones for the books, and the fact that they’re not digital effects makes them that bit more impressive. We’ll just continue patiently counting down the days until the release of Wicked: For Good for now!

After the dramatic ending of Wicked: Part One, things took quite the turn for Elphaba and Glinda as the true intentions of both the Wonderful Wizard of Oz (Jeff Goldblum) and Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) became all too clear.

With the whole of Oz being indoctrinated to think of Elphaba as wicked, this upcoming second film will dig even further into the consequences for both women, who were once best friends.

Read more:

Cynthia Erivo told Variety of the second part: “We’re diving deeper into the consequences of the characters’ choices. The story is richer, and the stakes are higher. It’s not just a continuation; it’s a transformation.”

Speaking about what it was like to shoot the second film, Ariana Grande also told Variety: “Shooting For Good was unlike anything I’ve ever experienced.

“It was such a long and emotional process. I kind of left my body. We filmed it over the course of a week, and it stayed with me. I haven’t even seen the final cut yet because I’m not sure I’m ready to feel all of it again.”

Wicked: For Good is scheduled for release on 21st November 2025.

Check out more of our Film 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 12, 2025 0 comments
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Simon and Daphne in
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Which Couple Has the Best Love Story of the Shows So Far?

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Ah, Bridgerton. It’s been over a year since we last got our fill of the romantic period drama, and needless to say, we are absolutely starving for more content. Can we at least know when Season 4 comes out, Netflix? Please and thank you!

We know that it’s likely at least a few months until Benedict (Luke Thompson) and Sophie’s (Yerin Ha) Cinderella-esque story hits screens, so what better way to satiate ourselves in the meantime than reflecting on seasons past? It’s mean of us to make you choose, Bridgerton fans, but we’re going to ask you to pick anyway: Which Bridgerton couple so far has the best love story?

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Screen Talk with Daniel Battsek at NYFF
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Screen Talk with Daniel Battsek at NYFF

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Earlier this week at the New York Film Festival, IndieWire’s “Screen Talk” podcast hosted Film at Lincoln Center president Daniel Battsek to talk about our favorite films at the festival and the state of the industry today. Battsek joined Film at Lincoln Center in May after a history as a producer and acquisitions executive. His past credits include Palace Pictures, Miramax, Cohen Media Group, National Geographic Films, and, most recently, as chairman of Film4 in the U.K.

While the live conversation of course gave us the chance to catch up on NYFF, we also just had to ask about Battsek’s former days working alongside the likes of Charles Cohen and Harvey Weinstein. That included acquiring both the Coens’ “No Country for Old Men” and Paul Thomas Anderson’s “There Will Be Blood” for Miramax — and they were scripts he received over the same weekend, and greenlit by Monday.

Battsek also walks through how the festival chased and landed certain titles — including world premieres like “Gavagai,” “Anemone,” and “Is This Thing On?”

We also polled him for his thoughts as a producer and festival director on the compressed landscape for festival acquisitions overall — increasingly out of festivals, films are sitting in limbo awaiting distribution, especially documentaries. As far as the financing and distribution landscape for indies, is there reason for hope? For despair?

Listen to the episode in the audio below.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Sean Penn Honors Jack Nicholson at Lyon's Lumière Festival
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Sean Penn Honors Jack Nicholson at Lyon’s Lumière Festival

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Introducing “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” the curtain-raiser at this year’s Lumière Film Festival in Lyon where he is guest of honor, Sean Penn gave an emotional speech about his friend, the film’s lead actor Jack Nicholson. 

“I heard my name a lot tonight,” he said. “But I’ve been very comfortable with it in the sense that knowing “Cuckoo’s Nest” was going to play, there was no question I was going to be able to find great humility under the circumstances. One of the great, magic moments in my life in cinema was the first time I saw Jack Nicholson in Miloš Forman’s ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.’”

 “I was very privileged in so much as being able to have worked with Jack twice,” he continued. With both ‘The Pledge’ and ‘Crossing Guard,’ he was an angel on my shoulder and I still can’t quite get over, I still can’t quite imagine that McMurphy [Nicholson’s character in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”] has worked with me,” he smiled.   

The film has more than stood the test of time, Penn told the crowd, recalling the first time he saw it as a teenager in Los Angeles when it was released in 1975. 

“There was a little cinema out by the beach in Los Angeles where I would go. At the time, in the late ‘70s, it seemed that each film that came out was sort of an event. But still, today, I wouldn’t think twice about sharing this movie with a 16 or 17 year-old because it would hold up – even with those that get bored very quickly,” he quipped, drawing chuckles from the crowd gathered in Lyon’s 5,000-seat Tony Garnier show hall, one of the festival’s key venues.   

Asked by Lumière director Thierry Frémaux, who also heads the Cannes festival, whether it is still possible to make films like that today, Penn replied: “I have been part of the culture of complaint about where cinema has been going for a long time. But then things happen: there are two films that I am sharing here at the festival – ‘Manas’ and ‘Sentimental Value’ – and [when] you see what an independently minded director still does, ignoring all the complaints, you see it’s all still possible.”   

Earlier in the day, Penn attended the Lyon premiere of this year’s Cannes Grand Prix winner “Sentimental Value” together with director Joachim Trier. He will also present Marianna Brennand’s debut feature, “Manas,” which he executive produced. 

Penn has a packed schedule while in Lyon, where he will present a new subtitled copy of his 2007 hit “Into the Wild” and sit down for a masterclass with a Lumière audience. Taking the stage to introduce the opening film, the actor-director seemed momentarily lost for words in the vast, sold-out concert hall: “I didn’t expect… [Thierry] didn’t explain to me how big this situation is, I didn’t realise it was like this….” 

The remark echoed the feeling of many first-timers at Lumiere, which draws several hundreds of thousands to see classics and contemporary films on big screens across some 30 venues. 

Walking the red carpet ahead of the opening ceremony, director Scott Cooper – who will premiere his new film “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at Lumière – said: “It’s wonderful, I wish we had more [festivals like this] everywhere,” prompting a cry of: “Lyon, the birthplace of cinema!” from Jeremy Allen White, the two-time Emmy winner who stars as The Boss in Cooper’s film.

Faithful to tradition, the festival’s 800 volunteers were feted with a walk-around the concert hall to the sound of a brass band, before guests were invited to the stage to officially open the festival by reading a sentence in unison – a joyous cacophony that drew complicit laughter from the crowd. 

Among the celebrities crowding the stage alongside Penn, Cooper and White were Taiwanese actor and filmmaker Shu Qi, Travis Knight, the head of Laika Studios, Costa-Gavras, Valeria Golino, three-time César-winner Dominique Blanc, and one enfant terrible of French cinema Bertrand Bonello (“Saint Laurent,” “The Beast”).

The Lumière Film Festival runs in and around Lyon until Oct. 19.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Weekend Update Reunites Amy Poehler, Tina Fey & Seth Meyers
TV & Streaming

Weekend Update Reunites Amy Poehler, Tina Fey & Seth Meyers

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

It was old home week on SNL‘s Weekend Update desk as Amy Poehler was joined by Tina Fey and Seth Meyers to trade yuks with Colin Jost and Michael Che.

In the joke-off, everyone had to find new, knee-slapping ways to make fun of a real-life headline about a Tennessee woman who broke a hospital record by giving birth to a 13 pound baby. Poehler started the competition by saying how the baby was so big, “he slapped the doctor on his ass.”

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Fey followed with “a woman gave birth to a 13 pound baby and and the new baby’s name is AHHHHH.” Meyers picked up the baton by joking, “a woman gave birth to a 13 pound baby. Damn, did she give birth to it? Or did it drive out?”

It was Che’s turn next. “Here’s a fun fact. The second the baby was out, the woman zipped around the room like a deflated balloon.” Fey followed up with, “a woman in Tennessee gave birth to a 13 pound baby because it’s Tennessee and the baby was also pregnant.”

Another highlight from the jam-packed session behind the Update desk was Che making an AI joke at the expense of Jost. He talked about the infamous Sora app and how it allows “users to create cameos of themselves in videos, and they’re pretty realistic. I mean, I made this one before the show.”

Replied Jost, “really excited for that to be out there.”

SNL via YouTube

Check out the sketch above.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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