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'The Rainmaker' Interview: Episode 9 Explained
TV & Streaming

‘The Rainmaker’ Interview: Episode 9 Explained

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains spoilers for The Rainmaker Episode 9.]

We’re in the homestretch of The Rainmaker now. The penultimate episode of the USA Network drama finally brought the big case into the courtroom, and of course, nothing went to plan for Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan). There was at least one promising — albeit highly unexpected — development by the end, though, and things did wrap up as well as could be expected for Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) and her father.

The episode began with Rudy and Deck (P.J. Byrne), now separated from Bruiser’s firm, arguing the case against Leo Drummond (John Slattery). Things quickly went off the rails when Rudy decided to scrap his opening statement mid-sentence and instead deliver his true theory of the case — even if it did invite a motion for dismissal of the entire case from Drummond.

To support his assertion that the hospital covered up having a serial killer nurse on staff, Rudy called the elusive Jackie Lemanczyk (Gemma-Leah Devereux) to the stand. As much of a triumph as her very presence was, though, her initial testimony was for naught because her evidence about Melvin Pritcher’s (Dan Fogler) use of the medication dispensation machine was illegally obtained and, thus, inadmissible. Leo, meanwhile, painted the prosecution as simply seeking a villain after a self-inflicted tragedy.

After Rudy and Deck tried to scramble to sign the other victims of Pritcher’s as a Hail Mary to save the case, they found they were once again a step behind Sarah Plankmore (Madison Iseman), who’d already contracted them for silence. Making matters worse, Dot’s (Karen Bryson) testimony, while emotional, also allowed Drummond to paint her son as a habitual liar whose sobriety at the time of his death was very much still in question.

Bruiser, who had to grapple with the feds offering her a deal to help entrap her father, came up with a new plan: Put Jackie back on the stand to testify about the Narpans machine. At first, the plan was a success; Jackie successfully revealed that the machine didn’t erase data, like the defense insisted, and she also suggested Melvin’s behavior around Donny Ray Black was antithetical to usual nursing practices. However, Sarah, who’d already fully crossed the rubicon, was called upon to deploy the firm’s so-called “Nuts and Sl*ts” routine to discredit Jackie by making her seem mentally unstable.

Christopher Barr / USA Network

When Brad (Wade Briggs) objected to Leo making Sarah second chair over him and reminded his boss that he knew where the bodies were buried, Leo smarted back that he wasn’t actually the one who buried them. (“Relax, Brad, you’re still useful as a backup singer, but that girl’s a star,” he said for added effect. Ouch.)

Elsewhere in the episode, Bruiser finally confronted her father, and he insisted, “I’ve done a lot of things, but I didn’t kill that woman. I shouldn’t have to tell you that.” Later, she finally learned the truth about what happened to the young mother Rosalie, who was a whistleblower, and as it turned out, Bruiser’s dad really didn’t kill her. It was just a misunderstanding that led to her death at the hands of one of their associates.

Before he and Prince (Tommie Earl Jenkins) took off to evade arrest, he had one parting gift: Tied up in Prince’s basement was none other than Melvin Pritcher.

So what will happen next? Well, Dan Fogler teased, “He leaves bread crumbs. He lets himself get caught, and then you see him in the basement with, who? … They might team up and use, use some of Melvin’s knowledge to catch the real bad guy. That’s all I’m gonna say.”

As for the absolution Bruiser got about her father, series creator Michael Seitzman said of the development, “Bruiser… wants the truth. Everything with Bruiser is about honesty. ‘First, I want to know the truth, and I want the people close to me to be honest with me.’ … She’s had two problems with her father: One is that he’s been dishonest with her, both by literally lying to her and also lying by omission…. and the other problem she’s been having with her father is that she’s wondering, ‘Did he do something terrible? He did something bad, but he didn’t commit murder, right?’ And so what I think she’s feeling there is relief that he finally told her the truth, which is, in their love language, the truth is, I love you. That’s what she’s been waiting for.

But I think also, she’s feeling relief that he’s not the monster.”

The Rainmaker, Fridays, 10/9c, USA Network

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Bradley Cooper Directs a Midlife Crisis
TV & Streaming

Bradley Cooper Directs a Midlife Crisis

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

“I think we need to call it,” Tess (Laura Dern) tells Alex (Will Arnett), standing over the bathroom sink while brushing her teeth, a serious ask embedded in a moment of profound mundanity. She’s referring to their marriage, which, more than 20 years in and with two small children between them, has run its course. Tess, a former Olympic volleyball player, and Alex might not be unhappy with their marriage, but they’re certainly not happy in their marriage, or in their own lives creatively or professionally. Their split spurs Alex’s unconventional midlife crisis, one without fancy muscle cars or a hot young babe on the arm.

AFTER THE HUNT, from left: Ayo Edebiri, Julia Roberts, 2025. ph: Yannis Drakoulidis /© Amazon MGM Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection

That crisis is the foundation of Bradley Cooper’s blandly reassuring, at times tedious and tunnel-visioned new directorial effort “Is This Thing On?” That midlife crisis also involves a hairpin career pivot, and no, I’m not talking about Cooper’s move into directing, starting with 2018’s Oscar-winning “A Star Is Born,” then the handsomely staged, Oscar-bait Leonard Bernstein biopic “Maestro” two years ago.

That pivot is in Alex’s sudden move toward becoming an amateur stand-up comic, using the stage and the microphone as therapy platforms for his anguish. (But is it anguish he’s feeling pre-divorce? He doesn’t register much on the emotional Richter scale.) He stumbles into the Olive Tree Cafe in the West Village and, sure, why the hell not, what do I have to lose, signs up to perform almost as a lark, but his comedy becomes something the movie intends to endorse as being successful or funny, even when that’s not always the case for those in the audience for this film. For a film about comedy as part of its elevator pitch, “Is This Thing On?” is curiously unfunny, with Cooper preferring to linger on the film’s melancholy, “Marriage Story”-lite core as Alex and Tess eventually, through a bit of movie magic in the shape of a screenplay, find their way back to each other.

But the general shape of “Is This Thing On?” is based on a true story that would seem contrived were it not real. A couple of decades ago, the English comedian John Bishop (who gets a “story by” credit here, along with Cooper’s co-writers Will Arnett and Mark Chappell) was working as a pharmaceutical rep, his marriage imploding, when he tried open-mic standup to avoid paying the establishment’s entry fee. And now look at him: Since then, he’s created multiple BBC One series. Perhaps also like this film’s director, both John and the fictional character of Alex found what they discovered to be their truer calling later in life.

Alex and Tessa’s friend group, meanwhile, is one of mixed ambitions. There’s Christine (Andra Day) and her seemingly permanently stoned-to-the-gills actor husband Balls (Cooper himself, and, yes, this is unfortunately the character’s name), who are staring down the barrel of their own empty nest and a marriage that’s pushing up against its expiration date. Cooper winds up giving himself the majority of the laughs, like when he suspects Alex might be seeing someone new. Alex says, “I’ve been doing standup.” Balls goes, “Is that her handle?”

IS THIS THING ON?, from left: Will Arnett, Laura Dern, 2025.  ph: Joseph McDonald / © Searchlight Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Is This Thing On?’©Searchlight Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Cooper, again working with cinematographer Matthew Libatique (who cameos as a comic in the Olive Tree Café), operates the camera himself, which appears to create a less visible illusion of immediacy or intimacy, with the 1.66:1 aspect ratio giving the film the physical dimensions of a European character study. The price of Cooper taking the camera into his own hands, no matter how closely he smooshes it onto his actors’ faces, is self-indulgence. There are takes that drag on and on, such as one of Dern biting into a weed cookie, that could have used more editorial discipline. “Is This Thing On?” very much has a “let’s let the cameras roll and catch lightning in a bottle!” feel, with Cooper falling perhaps a little bit too in love with the performances to rein in his naturalistic impulses. The actors here are predictably strong, with a swept-back, Cooper-coded Arnett digging into what is likely the most dramatic material of his career.

But “Is This Thing On?” feels like it doesn’t really get going until hour two — and those long takes can feel like gaping maws of silence that leave you begging for music or a score to be inserted so as to at least point you in the direction of feeling something. The first scene in which you start to feel like, ah, yes, there is some spark underneath the hood here involves Alex scrambling to get his kids a sitter— he ultimately leans on his parents, played by Christine Ebersole and Ciarán Hinds, and their seemingly dysfunction-free marriage a little too much amid the separation — so that he can take another standup gig. That very same night, Tess is on what turns out to be a date with a friend who is recently single, and they happen to go to that very comedy club Alex is performing in. During his set, he goes into exquisite, vivisecting detail about the intricacies of his marriage breakup. You see the frisson, the lust even, flash across Tess’ face, electrified by his candor, perhaps giving her a glimpse of the Alex she once knew, the Tess she once was.

All of this really happened to John Bishop, who ended up on reconciliation’s way with his wife after she saw his own soul-bared open-mic performance. So, too, do Alex and Tess start to find their way back to teach other, starting up what I suppose you’d call an affair, as they’re keeping the relationship a secret from their kids and their friends while Alex continues to live in a bachelor pad, with Tess in their upstate home while dreaming of becoming a volleyball coach as a way back into her old sport. What makes “Is This Thing On?” work when it does is the chemistry exchange happening between Arnett and Dern, who are adept at going at it one minute and then making out the next. Not that Cooper’s film is by any means some kind of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” nor does it have the requisite throwdown temper tantrum on the level of “Marriage Story.”

Frankly, this film could have used one. It never feels like there’s any kind of catharsis, any release at the end of the crescendo, other than one taped on with a children’s chorus-led cover of Queen and David Bowie’s “Under Pressure,” a song that always gives you that feeling of “I want to run toward my future.”

Though often lethargic and listless, “Is This Thing On?” does stir up a vivid portrait of the New York City underground comedy milieu, even when New York City as a character feels more like the afterthought it isn’t supposed to be. Cooper casts actual comedians in roles, from Amy Sedaris as the club’s peppy emcee to a dry-as-a-bone Jordan Jensen as Alex’s first sexual partner post-divorce. But his commitment to naturalism and immersion takes a chunk out of your soul after what feels like a very long 124 minutes; it could’ve used more spring in its step. Isn’t joie de vivre what a midlife crisis is all about?

Grade: C+

“Is This Thing On?” premiered at the New York Film Festival. Searchlight Pictures will release the film on Friday, December 19.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Daryl Dixon' Tease Season 4
TV & Streaming

Daryl Dixon’ Tease Season 4

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

AMC Networks has unveiled the newest cast additions to “Anne Rice’s The Vampire Lestat,” which is set to premiere in 2026.

“The Vampire Lestat,” which is the third season of “Interview with the Vampire,” will introduce Sheila Atim (“The Woman King”) as Akasha, Noah Reid (“Schitt’s Creek”) as Larry, Ryan Kattner (“Destroy All Neighbors”) as Salamander, Seamus Patterson (“Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities”) as Alex, and Sarah Swire (“The Boys”) as TC. The announcement was made during the Annie Rice’s Immortal Universe panel at New York Comic-Con.

The panel featured cast members Sam Reid, Jacob Anderson, Eric Bogosian, Assad Zaman,  Jennifer Ehle and executive producers Mark Johnson and Hannah Moscovitch to introduce the casting news and an exclusive first look teaser, which can be seen below.

Previously, Christopher Heyerdahl (“Under the Banner of Heaven”), Jeanine Serralles (“Apples Never Fall”), Ella Ballentine and Damien Atkins were announced as new cast members for the upcoming third season during San Diego Comic Con. 

The conversation also included first look clips at “Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order” ahead of the two-episode premiere on Oct. 26. That clip can also be seen below.

In addition to the Anne Rice shows, cast members of “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon” spoke about the upcoming third season finale with star and executive producer Norman Reedus, “Walking Dead” Universe Chief Content Officer Scott M. Gimple, showrunner David Zabel, and director Greg Nicotero, who also serves as an executive producer on the series. The panel also included a behind-the-scenes first look inside the production of Season 4 as well as a sneak peek at the third season finale.

“The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon” follows Daryl (Reedus) and Carol (Melissa McBride) as they continue their journey towards home in search of finding their loved ones.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Daryl Dixon' Season 3 Finale Clip, Season 4 BTS
TV & Streaming

Daryl Dixon’ Season 3 Finale Clip, Season 4 BTS

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

As The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon prepares to wrap up its penultimate season, AMC teased fans at New York Comic Con with what’s to come.

During the show’s Season 3 panel, the audience was treated to a clip of Daryl (Norman Reedus) and Carol (Melissa McBride) sharing a heart-to-heart in the final episode, as well as a behind-the-scenes glimpse at Season 4.

A scene from the Season 3 finale episode ‘Solace of the Sea’ shows Daryl confiding in Carol on a beach about his need to constantly run, revealing that he’s scared he won’t be able to stay in one place when they get home.

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‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’ Renewed For Fourth & Final Season

In the Season 4 clip, Reedus and McBride share a glimpse at some of the scenes they’re filming o-location in Spain. “We hope that you all will keep watching. It’s going to be even better than Season 3,” said McBride, as Reedus raved they’re “killing it on Season 4.”

Friday’s panel featured star/executive producer Reedus, as well as Walking Dead Universe chief content officer Scott M. Gimple, showrunner/EP David Zabel and EP/director Greg Nicotero.

The fifth spin-off of The Walking Dead (2010-’22), TWD: Daryl Dixon follows Daryl and Carol on their journey home to their loved ones after washing up in France, where the zombie virus originated.

In July, the show was renewed for its fourth and final season.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Daniel Dae Kim in Butterfly and Jensen Ackles in Countdown
TV & Streaming

‘Butterfly,’ ‘Countdown’ Canceled by Prime Video

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Prime Video has canceled a pair of first-year series, Butterfly and Countdown.

The Amazon MGM Studios series had summer debuts and each spent a short time on Nielsen’s top 10 U.S. streaming charts, but neither will return for a second run. The cancellation of Butterfly, starring Daniel Dae Kim, comes about two months after it premiered as a binge release. Countdown, led by Jensen Ackles, premiered in June and had a longer rollout, wrapping its 13-episode season in early September.

Butterfly, based on a graphic novel by Arash Amel and Marguerite Bennett, is a spy thriller that stars Kim as a former U.S. intelligence agent who comes out of hiding in South Korea to help his daughter (Reina Hardesty), who’s also a spy. The show spent two weeks on the Nielsen streaming charts following its Aug. 13 premiere.

Countdown, from Chicago Fire co-creator Derek Haas, stars Ackles as an LAPD detective who’s brought into a task force involving several agencies that’s working against time to stop a potentially devastating conspiracy. Jessica Camacho, Eric Dane, Violett Beane, Uli Latukefu and Elliot Knight also star.

Like Butterfly, Countdown had a two-week run on the Nielsen streaming charts shortly after its premiere. It didn’t keep up that momentum as the season continued, however.

Kim (via his 3AD company) and Ackles (through his Chaos Machine banner) both have first-look deals at Amazon MGM Studios. Ackles stars in the forthcoming Vought Rising, a prequel to The Boys.

Deadline first reported the cancellations.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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The Woman in Cabin 10 star reacts to character's "bittersweet" ending
TV & Streaming

The Woman in Cabin 10 star reacts to character’s “bittersweet” ending

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

The film follows Lo (Keira Knightley), a journalist who is covering on a maiden voyage of a luxury yacht. Early on, she believes she sees someone thrown overboard – but her concerns are brushed off given that every member of the crew and the guests are all accounted for.

The suspected murder mystery (which has all the trappings of an Agatha Christie work) also sees Lo reunited with her ex-boyfriend, Ben (David Ajala).

Ben is a photographer, there to capture the splendour of the trip, and initially sits on the fence about helping Lo follow her “journalist instincts” due to her lack of evidence. But one of the most shocking moments comes when he finally picks a side, which has deadly consequences for him.

“I think it was a wonderfully surprising moment to read,” Ajala explained to RadioTimes.com in an exclusive interview.

“Because without judging the character, I was very taken by how this guy became the sacrificial lamb for this lady. I love seeing when characters are revealed in their actions and that was such a massive thing to do.”

He added: “I don’t think Ben weighed up the weight of the sacrifice as he was in it, but he made a decision to do it and commit to it for Lo. [It happens so quickly] so you don’t have time to process, but you see the conviction that he has to go, ‘I’m doing this for the better good.’ But then it is bittersweet because there’s nothing heroic about it because he doesn’t win.”

Ajala’s co-star Guy Pearce, who plays the billionaire philanthropist Richard, added: “You’re going to get so many more fans after this… But our audience then within the translation of it, they then get to feel the loss of you.”

Guy Pearce as Richard Bullmer in The Woman in Cabin 10. Parisa Taghizadeh/Netflix

Ajala was interested to explore a character who “operates in a very grey area” who is both with the wealthy, but disconnected from their world at the same time.

Meanwhile, Pearce was “fascinated” by Richard as a billionaire who carries a “number of secrets” but has a “relaxed way” about him.

“The idea of greed and this idea of once you have money, then you want more and you don’t want to let go of what you’ve got, and it corrupts your sense of compassion and empathy etc, that stuff I’m interested in,” Pearce explained. “And I’m interested in playing a character like this who perhaps once upon a time was a more empathetic and thoughtful and considerate human being.

“But in the nature of where he’s got to at this point in his life, he’s grabbed onto something that’s seemingly working for [him] and he doesn’t want to let that go. I feel like I see that a lot.

“That’s why the world is the way that it is, that greedy people just get greedier and richer people just get richer, the imbalance of that is fascinating to me and it was interesting to play a character that embodies that.”

The Woman in Cabin 10 is now streaming on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

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 11, 2025 0 comments
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Amber Oliveras (Jessica Camacho) and Mark Meachum (Jensen Ackles) in
TV & Streaming

Jensen Ackles Reacts to ‘Countdown’s Cancellation: ‘It’s a Bummer’

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Prime Video’s drama Countdown has been canceled after one season, and Jensen Ackles understands your disappointment.

“Well, as some of you may have seen already, Countdown did not get picked up for another season. Amazon’s gonna let it go, and it’s a bummer. I had such a such an amazing time making that show. I had an absolute blast with the cast and the crew,” Ackles said in a video he shared across his social media platforms. “Thank you to Derek [Haas] for making the show and writing those characters. Thanks to Amazon, for giving us the opportunity, especially Vernon Sanders, for being such a champion for that show. But sometimes you can set out to do your best and check all those boxes, and ultimately, it’s out of your hands. That’s the way it goes in this industry.”

He continued, “So, anyway, that’s the end from Mark Meachum and Oliveras and Finau and Bell and Shepherd and Blythe. But I’m thankful for the experience. 
I really am, and we’ll see you down the road on something else, I guess. So, have a great weekend.” Watch the video below.

Ackles’ Supernatural costar, Jared Padalecki, commented on the post. “Their loss brother. You were amazing in it. Which is no surprise to ANYBODY,” he wrote. (See a screenshot below.) “I’ll still be re-watching. And I can’t wait to see what you do next.”

Jensen Ackles/Instagram

Meanwhile, Ackles’ costar on The Boys, Jack Quaid, commented, ” Love ya man❤️” and fellow Supernatural alum Rob Benedict wrote, ” Sorry buddy. Onward and upward my man. 💪🏼 ❤️”

Countdown followed a task force comprised of members from various law enforcement agencies. In addition to Jensen Ackles, it starred Eric Dane, Jessica Camacho, Violett Beane, Elliot Knight, and Uli Latukefu. The first season ended on a major cliffhanger, as the sniper they’d been after kidnapped Camacho’s Oliveras.

Ackles told TV Insider after that finale cliffhanger, he expected “Meachum kind of just lose his s**t and go a bit ballistic, which I think will then possibly prove to not just Amber, but also to him, how he holds her.”

Meachum and Oliveras hit a hard pause on their slow burn during the first season. As for where they could have gone in Season 2, “First, she’s got to survive this,” Haas pointed out to us. “After that, I don’t know, I think it could get super hot or it could not.”

Ackles can next be seen in the two-part Tracker premiere, guest starring as the brother of Justin Hartley‘s Colter Shaw. They will be his third and fourth episodes on the CBS drama.

Are you going to miss Countdown? Let us know what you wanted to see in a Season 2 in the comments section below.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Martin Scorsese Calls on Streamers to Champion Iranian Cinema
TV & Streaming

Martin Scorsese Calls on Streamers to Champion Iranian Cinema

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

After initially being canceled due to visa issues, New York Film Festival audiences on Friday were treated to a warm and wide-ranging conversation between Jafar Panahi and Martin Scorsese. The two titans of cinema took to the stage of the Walter Reade Theater (plus Panahi’s translator) to discuss the Iranian filmmaker’s career, including the many incidents that have forced him to work in secret, plus his latest film, Palme d’Or winner “It Was Just an Accident.”

Panahi’s latest is his first feature since he was incarcerated for several months in 2023 for criticizing the Iranian government. As he has often been forced to do in recent years, Panahi shot the film in secret. The film was inspired by his own experiences in prison.

Anne Thompson, Daniel Battsek, Ryan Lattanzio

At the conclusion of the hour-long-plus discussion, Scorsese asked Panahi what he thinks the future of Iranian cinema is these days, particularly in light of the departure (and exile) of many of Panahi’s contemporaries, such as Bahman Ghobadi and Mohammad Rasoulof.

“After the revolution, these waves of migration, forced migration almost, started as unwanted exile,” Panahi said through his translator. “Many of the actors and directors who were at the height of their careers were forced to leave Iran. … This became more and more and it was really difficult to bear, especially in the first decade after the revolution. … All the backbones of Iranian filmmaking are out. I really miss all those films that they could have made in Iran and that they didn’t. Some of them were able to adapt and stay [there] and work [there], but then there are others like myself who cannot leave Iran.”

As our own Anne Thompson told it best in her recent profile of “It Was Just an Accident” filmmaker and auteur Panahi: “Over the past 15 years, [he] has been imprisoned, blindfolded, interrogated, and put under house arrest with a 20-year ban on making films” by his native country. But on Friday, Panahi was firm: He’s not leaving Iran, and he’s excited about the filmmaking community that endures.

It Was Just an Accident
‘It Was Just an Accident’Neon

“I don’t have the courage and I don’t have the ability to leave Iran and stay out of Iran,” Panahi said. “I have stayed there and I am going to work there. But there is something else I want to add, there are a lot of young filmmakers who are coming and who are making the best films of Iranian cinema in the same style that we are making films. And they are not going to accept censorship whatsoever. And it has become so common that even within the film circles in Iran, everyone is talking about taking these people seriously, people making films clandestinely, whereas there was a time that no one really paid attention.”

He added, “Although we are not concerned about the future of Iranian cinema, we very much would love for all of our friends who left to return one day,” noting that Rasoulof in particular is looking for ways to return to his home country to work.

Scorsese, who is clearly a huge admirer and fan of Panahi and his work, was quick to offer his ideas for how the work of these rising filmmakers can and should be seen: in short, widely.

“This has to be supported by the international distribution [world], I would think, streaming platforms, film festivals, et. cetera, these films have to be supported that way, for us to see them,” Scorsese said. “Streamers have a lot of room, and they throw things that are just not up to the same level [on to their platforms]. There’s no reason why a Criterion, a Mubi, an Amazon, all of that couldn’t show these films.”

The filmmaker and champion of film also noted that the impact could be profound, not just on cinema, but Iran itself.

“I mean, neorealism from Italy in 1945, it gave the heart back to the Italian people that was destroyed during the war and with everything that happened,” he added. “The film themselves, it gave their soul back, through cinema, and that was neorealism. So cinema can be very powerful, everybody can see that. So it’s really getting to see these films. It’s not just putting them on something, and putting them up on, what are they called? Tiles? You have to kind of curate them, so you know where you’re going, you know what you’re looking at.”

Scorsese and his light disdain for streamers’ homepage tiles was greeted with applause, and both Scorsese and Panahi, who ended their chat with a long hug on stage, were met with a standing ovation. This one was worth the wait.

Neon will release “It Was Just An Accident” in theaters in New York and Los Angeles on Wednesday, October 15, with a national rollout to follow.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Knightfall' Animated Films Set at Warner Bros. Animation
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Knightfall’ Animated Films Set at Warner Bros. Animation

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

A multi-part animated film adaptation of “Batman: Knightfall” is currently in production, Variety has learned.

The announcement was made at New York Comic-Con at the end of the Warner Bros. Animation panel “The Art Knight: Batman in Animation.” The first part of”Batman: Knightfall” is slated to debut in 2026, with an exact premiere date to be announced at a later time.

The film is based on the Batman comic book arc of the same name that was released in three parts between 1993 and 1994. It was created by Doug Moench, Chuck Dixon, Alan Grant, Dennis O’Neil, Peter David, Jo Duffy, Jim Aparo, Graham Nolan, Norm Breyfogle, and Jim Balent.

It is widely regarded as one of the best Batman stories of all time.

The official logline states, “When the mysterious behemoth known only as Bane frees Batman’s entire Rogue’s Gallery from Arkham Asylum, the Caped Crusader is pushed to his mental and physical breaking point.”

“Batman: Knightfall Part 1: Knightfall” is directed by Jeff Wamester and written by Jeremy Adams. Rick Morales serves as supervising producer alongside producers Jim Krieg and Kimberly S. Moreau. Sam Register and Michael Uslan are executive producers.

“Knightfall” has never been directly adapted for the screen, though it has been referenced in numerous Batman projects over the years. Perhaps most famously, elements of the storyline were incorporated into the film “The Dark Knight Rises” starring Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne/Batman and Tom Hard as Bane.

Previous Batman animated films include “Batman: Death in the Family,” “Batman: The Killing Joke,” and “Batman: Under the Red Hood.”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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'After The Hunt', 'Urchin’, ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’
TV & Streaming

‘After The Hunt’, ‘Urchin’, ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The awards seasons is heating up with high-profile limited releases in Luca Guadagnino’s After The Hunt, Harris Dickinson’s directorial debut Urchin, and Sundance and Berlin premiering comedy-drama If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. They join Kathryn Bigelow’s A House Of Dyamite on 200 screens and Jennifer Lopez-starring Kiss Of The Spider Woman movie musical in wide release. Documentary The Dating Game from China, a favorite on the festival circuit, is in LA. Neon doc Orwell: 2+2=5 by Raoul Peck expands to 51 theaters.

Amazon MGM Studios begins the rollout Guadagnino’s psychological thriller After The Hunt starring Julia Roberts at six locations in New York (Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn, Angelika, Lincoln Square) and Los Angeles (AMC Burbank, The Grove, Century City), expanding next week. With Ayo Edebiri, Andrew Garfield, Michael Stuhlbarg and Chloë Sevigny, it premiered at the Venice (see Deadline review) and was the opening night selection at the New York Film Festival. Roberts is a college professor who finds herself at a personal and professional crossroads when a star student levels an accusation against one of her colleagues, and a dark secret from her own past threatens to come into the light. Written by Nora Garrett.

Cannes-premiering Urchin starring Frank Dillane opens in limited release in NY (IFC Center) and LA (AMC Burbank, Century City). At 96% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, Deadline review here. On the streets of London, Mike is hustling to get by. Roadside evangelizers won’t let him sleep in peace, his slippery friend won’t pay up the money he stole, and before long, he finds himself in trouble with the law. As he struggles to reintegrate into society, shuffling between gigs as a line cook and a trash collector, he must balance a newfound sense of community with his own itch for self-destruction. Distributed by 1-2 Special, the new label launched by Jason Hellerstein, a co-founding executive of Sideshow where he worked on acquisitions and marketing of Drive My Car, EO, All That Breathes, All We Imagine as Light and Flow. Expands regionally next week.

A24’s Sundance-premiering If I Had Legs I’d Kick You by Mary Bronstein toplined by Rose Byrne with Conan O’Brien opens on four screens in NY (Lincoln Square, Angelika) and LA (The Grove, Century City). Byrne has been heralded for her performance, winning the Silver Bear for Best Leading Performance at the Berlin International Film Festival. Byrne stars a woman with her life crashing down around her attempting to navigate her child’s mysterious illness, her absent husband, a missing person and an increasingly hostile relationship with her therapist (O’Brien). Certified Fresh at 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. See Deadline review.

Roadside Attractions is out with Jennifer Lopez-starring film adaptation of 1993 Tony-winning musical Kiss of the Spider Woman on 1,330 screens from. Premiered at Sundance, Deadline review here. Dreamgirls and Beauty and the Beast director Bill Condon returns to the movie musical. Valentín (Diego Luna), a political prisoner, shares a cell with Molina (Tonatiuh), a window dresser convicted of public indecency. The two form an unlikely bond as Molina recounts the plot of a Hollywood musical starring his favorite silver screen diva, Ingrid Luna (Lopez).

Netflix is giving Kathryn Bigelow’s nuclear thriller House Of Dyamite a 200 screen release including the Paris, Angelika and Alamo Drafthouse in NYC, and The Egyptian, iPic Westwood, Alamo Drafthouse, and Los Feliz in LA, ahead of its Oct. 24 streaming debut

Premiered at Venice, Deadline review here. The Oscar-winning director and producer of 2008 Best Picture-winner The Hurt Locker and 2012 Best Picture nominee Zero Dark Thirty is back with with her first feature since Detroit eight years ago. Written by Noah Oppenheim, former journalist and NBC News president. When a sole missile is launched at the United States, a race against time begins to determine who is responsible and how to respond as the clock ticks with less than 20 minutes before it hits its target. Stars Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson and Gabriel Basso.

The Dating Game, the Sundance documentary by Violet Du Feng that’s received a riotous welcome on the festival circuit, is set in China where eligible men vastly outnumber women. It follows Zhou, Li, and Wu, three bachelors embarking on a seven-day dating camp led by Hao, one of China’s most sought-after dating coaches, in a last-ditch effort to find love. From Fish + Bear Pictures, it starts a series of U.S. screenings with a weeklong run at Laemmle Glendale in LA.

Picturehouse opens Re-Election, written and directed by and starring Adam Saunders, in NYC at Regal Union Square. High school haunts everyone in one way or another. For Jimmy Bauer (Saunders), it was losing the race for class president senior year, 1995, which caused him to drop out. Now a 40-something underdog working in a memorabilia store owned by his dad (Tony Danza), Jimmy heads back to high school for his missing class credits and to finally win the election.

Doppelgänger Releasing, the genre label of Music Box Films, is out with Mr. K limited as of Oct. 8 in New York at the IFC Center, expanding after. Directed by Tallulah H. Schwab. Stars Crispin Glover as a down-on-his luck traveling musician stuck in a maze-like, remote hotel. Glover will appear at the IFC or Q&As this weekend and at the American Cinematheque Los Feliz 3 in LA October 21.

Yoav Potash documentary Among Neighbors from 8 Above opens at the Quad in NYC, expands to LA next week. One of the last living Holocaust survivors from the small Polish town of Gniewoszów, along with an aging eyewitness, break decades of silence about Jews who were murdered there six months after the Nazis were defeated. Their stories are brought to life with hand drawn animated sequences and touches of magical realism.

There Was, There Was Not from Suncatcher Productions and Watermelon Pictures, Emily Mkrtichian’s debut feature documentary, opens at the DCTV Firehouse in NYC for a weeklong run. Follows four Armenian women fighting the erasure and ethnic cleansing of their homeland of Artsakh. At LA’s Laemmle Glendale next week and rolling out with opening Q&A’s in all markets.

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