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'John Candy: I Like Me' Review: Colin Hanks Doc
TV & Streaming

I Like Me’ Documentary INTERVIEW

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: This interview was originally published on September 4, 2025 and has been lightly updated for the film‘s streaming release on Friday, October 10.]

On the surface, yes, the idea of making a documentary on the life of John Candy seems like a pretty great idea — I mean, who doesn’t love John Candy? — but as director Colin Hanks points out, well, wait, not so fast.

Now, let’s quickly note that Colin Hanks would know what he’s talking about because he, in fact, did make a documentary about the life of John Candy. And the problem that presented itself was, yes, everyone does love John Candy. As much as this is a man whose life should be celebrated, watching his friends and family talk about how great he is doesn’t necessarily make a riveting narrative for a film. 

'Kokuho'

What Hanks deftly does with his “John Candy: I Like Me” is frame his film around Candy’s anxiety about his own mortality. John Candy’s father died from a heart attack when Candy was only five, so he lived with the notion and mindset that he was possibly living on borrowed time — something that, sadly, came to fruition in 1994. (It’s frankly shocking to think John Candy has now been gone for over 30 years. Even more shocking, Candy’s “Uncle Buck” costar Macaulay Culkin appears as a talking head in this film and reminds the viewer he is now older than Candy was when Candy passed.)

Ahead, Hanks takes us through the process of crafting a film based on a larger-than-life public figure who still means so much to so many people. And why he almost didn’t make the film because of his own personal history with Candy, who he had met on the set of his father Tom Hanks’ film, “Splash.” It was a history that was so special to Hanks that, maybe, it was best to just remember him as he already did.

Obviously — and thankfully — Hanks decided otherwise, and his film will open this year’s Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday night.

The following interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

IndieWire: I had never seen “Yellowbelly.” It’s at least tied with the hardest I’ve laughed watching a movie this year.

Colin Hanks: Right? Conan O’Brien told me that story on the podcast, and I was like, “Oh, I’m going to have to check that out.” And then it wasn’t until we spoke with him for the film that we were able to track the sketch down, and I laughed so hard. Conan says it, the fact that that’s such an Oppenheimer moment for Conan, who is someone that I just admire so much. I’m so glad that a sketch from all the way back then that John was in is one of the hardest times you’ve laughed in a movie this year. That brings me so much joy.

This is your third documentary. How long have you wanted to make this one specifically?

After your first one, you have your list of the ones that you really hope one day that you’re going to make, and then you find out you don’t quite have the currency yet to make that one. The truth of the matter is everyone universally will say like, “insert person’s name,” and they’ll be like, “Oh, someone should make a documentary about him.” And I always go, “OK, but what is the film? What is the story that you’re actually really trying to tell? What is it saying?” Because, otherwise, I don’t want to just do a visual Wikipedia entry.

And you address it with Bill Murray at the beginning when he’s struggling to say anything negative about John Candy.

Exactly. Eventually, I got an email saying, “Hey, Ryan Reynolds wants to get in touch with you.” And so, he and I hopped on the phone, and we started talking. I already knew that Ryan was a massive John Candy fan, and he was just like, “I think there should be a documentary. I think you should direct it.” And that was when I really started to do the due diligence, and when I talked with Ryan, he had mentioned that Chris and Jen Candy were involved. So, I got in touch with them — and I’d known them through social circles for quite some time.

Once I figured out that John passed from the very thing that his father had passed away from? I’m 47. My mom passed when she was 49. John’s dad passed at 35. And John passed at 43. I started really taking a deep dive into my life in my late thirties, early forties. And really sifting through, like, childhood trauma, because everyone has it. That was the launching point for me.

It was really a sort of stupid, basic approach, but when you think of overweight actors who died young, the ones you think of all died of drug overdoses. So, “Wait, John died of a heart attack? His dad died of a heart attack when he was five?” It just became so much more personal, just because I am coming to the age that my mom was when she passed away, and that really puts a lot into focus. And so, to find out, after much, much more digging, that John really had that sense that he was living on borrowed time, and that he wasn’t sure if he was going to live past 35.

John Candy in JOHN CANDY: I LIKE ME
Photo Credit: Prime Video
© Amazon Content Services LLC
‘John Candy: I Like Me’Courtesy of Prime

That’s a really interesting point. John Belushi and Chris Farley both died of drug overdoses at 33 and there’s this everlasting legend about them. John Candy doesn’t have that, even though he also died young.

Well, welcome to the creative process that I was going through. That was part of the initial, “Well, why is that? What is that?” And one of the things that I landed on was that John is so beloved by so many people, because of his everyman qualities. Everyone looked at him, and just went, “That guy. I like that guy. I want to spend time with him.” And he had that very salt of the Earth, blue collar — you just wanted to be with him.

What was your first introduction to John Candy as a kid? And I know the obvious answer is probably “Splash,” but I don’t want to assume.

Well, technically, “Splash,” yeah, but John was someone that my dad worked with. So, I didn’t necessarily think of him as John Candy.

Oh, I see.

I just saw him as like, that’s one of my dad’s friends. They work together. But, look, I have very, very vivid memories of being on the set of “Splash.” And seeing John, and Eugene Levy, in fact, and them all working together. So, that was my initial introduction. And then, obviously, “Volunteers” was also part of John being around. I have some very fond memories of John, a couple of dinner parties, and being at my dad and Rita [Wilson]’s wedding.

John left an impression on me even as a kid. Macaulay Culkin speaks to it in the movie when Mac says, “He made you feel important.” Even as a kid, he made you feel like your opinion mattered, and your emotions mattered. And that’s 1,000 percent accurate, because that was definitely how John made me feel. And then eventually then it becomes, oh, yeah — seeing him in “Spaceballs,” or “The Great Outdoors.” Like, “Yeah. That’s John. I know that guy.”

I feel like a really interesting perspective for you. A lot of filmmakers making this film can get the same interviews, can get the same footage, but you’re in an interesting position where he was your dad’s co-worker and met him. You have a memory of how he treated you.

Yeah. Very, very true. In fact, in a strange way, I think that was one of my initial reasons not to do it.

Why?

Just because, well, I met him, I have these memories of him, I don’t know if I want to dig into that. I’d much rather just have those memories as opposed to spend however many months or years of my life now collecting other people’s memories and going from there. But Chris and Jen [Candy] were so adamant. I don’t want to put words in their mouth, but they let it be known that it was their opinion that they felt like I was one of the only guys that can do it. Then that just made me go like, OK, well, let’s set myself aside here and do some digging.

John Candy in JOHN CANDY: I LIKE ME
Photo Credit: Prime Video
© Amazon Content Services LLC
‘John Candy: I Like Me’Courtesy of Prime

You mentioned a film that I’ve seen a million times, “The Great Outdoors”…

Yes.

I think you did something really poignant when you put that scene of him on the boat, and he’s giving his family ring to his son [Chris Young], who says, “Oh, like you spent with your dad out here, and he did this for you.” And the way John Candy reacts to that, “Yeah.” And I can now tell he’s really sad.

But you know that he didn’t do that with his dad.

Honestly, I even watched it three weeks ago, because it’s on cable still nonstop. It hit me so hard.

Look, I felt like that was one of the things that we landed upon that ended up becoming, I think, a little bit of a responsibility. You don’t want it to just be like, “And then he made this movie.”

Right.

And I know this, as an actor: If I’m going to spend time away from my own family, and if I’m going to spend time away from my life, and, basically, put my life on hold to go make this movie? And the way that movies are made, basically, you don’t have a life. You wake up in the morning, you go straight to work and then you go home. And then you do the exact same thing the next day. You’ve got to find something in there to make that worth it. You know?

[Laughs] Sometimes you just need the money. But you want it to be worthwhile! And when Jen Candy was speaking to that idea, that he really did look for roles, and took roles that spoke to a specific slate that he wanted to sell people, a certain mentality, a certain way to be, that really made a whole lot more sense.

With “The Great Outdoors”…

What is ostensibly just a funny film, “The Great Outdoors”…

Right…

To be able to then find a moment where I’m watching a scene I’ve seen countless times, but I’m seeing it in a completely different way? That’s the kind of stuff that we really wanted to highlight. And I think we were able to accomplish that with a handful of moments from his films. But that one lands for me a lot. I’m actually really, really happy that you mentioned that, that particular point. Because that always really resonates with me.

He’s in a lot of movies. How did you pick the films to concentrate on? One I’m glad you did was “Summer Rental.” I’m a big fan. It’s a Carl Reiner film. And It’s his first starring role and I think it really shows what he can do.

Well, here’s the weird thing, there are so many of John’s films that I have not seen, because he was in a bunch.

True.

But “Summer Rental,” I’ve always thought of as one of the quintessential John Candy movies. And the fact that that was his first leading role, it felt like it was really important. And also it shows that in his first leading man role, he’s tapped by Carl Reiner.

Right…

Who is a legend and says, “I want to work with this guy.” And loves it so much that then he tells his friend, Mel Brooks, another comedy legend, “Oh, you’ve got to work with this guy. You’ve got to meet this guy. Not only is he great, he’s a great human being.”

John Candy in JOHN CANDY: I LIKE ME
Photo Credit: Prime Video
© Amazon Content Services LLC
‘John Candy: I Like Me’Courtesy of Prime

You’ve made two prior documentaries. When you’re trying to get people to talk to you for this one, does that help? Do people say, “I know who you are but have you made a movie?”

Well, if they do, they don’t really tell me. But there are two bonuses here. I remember Marty Short, whom I’ve known for a very long time, he’s one of the very first people I approached about, “Should I do this?” He was like, “No one is going to say no to you. They’re all going to want to do it.” And so, that was helpful, but that doesn’t necessarily mean everyone is available.

In the film you spent some time on his role in “National Lampoon’s Vacation.” There’s always that story out there where they did reshoots for the ending, which is true, but gave John one million dollars to come in for his role. Is this true? He didn’t seem like a place in his career yet where that would happen.

I call this “the Bill Simmons conspiracy,” because that was how it first came to my attention, hearing Bill Simmons talking about it at some point. Not that he coined it. No, I don’t believe that’s true. In fact, I talked about it with Chris, and I don’t think that’s true. I think, logistically, that doesn’t make much sense.

It doesn’t.

If you’re doing re-shoots on a movie, you’re not spending a million dollars willy-nilly.

Right, his biggest movie at the time was “Stripes.” “Let’s get the fourth lead from ‘Stripes’ and just pay him whatever he wants.”

[Laughs] No.

Now, five years later, that makes perfect sense.

Yeah. Exactly. Exactly.

Earlier you said, “You say someone’s name, and, oh,  we should make a documentary about them.” Macaulay Culkin is amazing in this. As an interviewer, I’m just like, the stuff he’s saying to you is incredible. I would watch a Macaulay Culkin documentary, because that guy has to have some stories.

Yeah, he does. His life is incredibly well-chronicled in that way. And it’s interesting, Mac’s interview was a good reminder to me of just try and grab as much as you possibly can. Because it was late in the process, we were getting close to the wire, and I was just like, look, at the end of the day, he was a little kid. How much is he going to be able to express to us that speaks to our important themes?

And, of course, he actually reminded me of what my experience was meeting him. It was a really, really great reminder to just … You never know. To take a shot. Find out. His insight was just, honestly, profound.

It was. I was riveted. The way he openly talks about his own father, but then how John Candy would come over and like, “Hey. Everything OK at home?” That just says so much about John Candy, that he could pick up on that, even on “Uncle Buck.”

Well, it also says a lot about Mac. You know what I mean?

I do.

The fact that he realizes that now. And, by the way, let’s also talk about the two really big mind-blowing things that he reveals is that. A, he’s now officially older than John was when he passed away

I was going to bring that up. And he’s now eight years older than he was when John Candy was in “Uncle Buck.”

Wow. That’s crazy. But then his insight into John Hughes and John Candy’s relationship. And the fact that that’s the connection you should actually really make. Everyone thinks it’s Molly Ringwald, or him, but it really should be John.

But your instinct isn’t wrong. I’m sure at some point he may make a documentary, but who knows. I’m always a big proponent of … and this is something that was very adamant early on, just from day one, of the Tower Records documentary, I’m not in the business of ruining anyone’s life. Or trying to drag someone through parts of their life that they don’t want to go through.

That’s what I liked about you talking to Macaulay Culkin, because he, obviously, just wants to talk about this.

Yeah.

Some of the stuff I’m sure is probably hurtful to him, but it seemed like a positive experience? It didn’t feel like you were going somewhere with him that he didn’t want to go.

What’s interesting was, with “All Things Must Pass,” I really wanted to make the movie. It was a passion for me, because it was my first one. With “Nos Amis, the Eagles of Death Metal” doc, I didn’t want to make that documentary. The guys in the band didn’t want to make the documentary, because they didn’t want what was happening. But we knew each other, and we agreed, together, that we maybe don’t want to do this, but that it is important, not just for our healing, but then for everyone else that was involved in that [Paris] incident.

With this one, again, it was, well, I don’t know if I really want to do it. It’s really about Chris and Jen and Rose. Do they want to do this? And they were so adamant. And they were so like, “We really want to do this, and we really want to celebrate…” They really wanted to celebrate their father, and really remind people of that. When you have those agreements with your subject, so that you’re on the same page essentially, and there is no question as to what the motives are — that’s really, really important.

“John Candy: I Like Me” will premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival as the official Opening Night Gala. It will start streaming on Prime Video on Friday, October 10.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Gingerbread Land to Debut on Magnolia Network From Chip, Joanna Gaines
TV & Streaming

Gingerbread Land to Debut on Magnolia Network From Chip, Joanna Gaines

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Chip and Joanna Gaines‘ Magnolia Network has ordered up a sweet new treat for viewers this holiday season, which is sure to complement all their house-renovation content: “Gingerbread Land: The Biggest Little Holiday Competition.”

Hosted by Oliver Hudson and executive produced by the Gaineses, “Gingerbread Land” will feature top bakers facing off in “the biggest little gingerbread competition ever imagined.” The show will consist of four challenges testing teams to build edible worlds with lights, motion, and storybook-level detail in every miniature.

Per Magnolia Network’s description, “In the new series, contestants transform flour, sugar, and candy into intricate works of art, competing in playful rounds that test design, structure, and creativity. Each week, new challenges bring twists and surprises, while Oliver Hudson guides the fun with warmth and humor, inviting viewers into a magical holiday world, where imagination has no limits.”

“Gingerbread Land” judges include acclaimed pastry chef Gale Gand and architect and professor Michael Ford. Guest judges will also join weekly, including celebrity stylist Brad Goreski, chef Christina Tosi, actress D’arcy Carden and for the finale, Joanna Gaines herself.

“Gingerbread Land: The Biggest Little Holiday Competition” will debut Nov. 17 at 9 p.m. ET on Magnolia Network (a joint venture between the Gaineses and Warner Bros. Discovery) and sister cable channel Food Network. New episodes will stream the following day on HBO Max and discovery+.

“We wanted to create a show that makes you smile and puts you in the holiday spirit the moment you turn it on,” Joanna Gaines said. “’Gingerbread Land’ is all about joy, fun, and a sense of wonder. It’s a chance for families to gather, cheer on their favorite creations, and be inspired by the beauty and playfulness of the season.”

“From the very first pitch, we knew ‘Gingerbread Land’ would capture the magic of the holidays in a way that feels both whimsical and high-energy,” Magnolia Network president Allison Page said. “It’s festive, it’s joyful, and it’s the kind of show families will want to watch together year after year.”

“Gingerbread Land: The Biggest Little Holiday Competition” is produced by Lando Entertainment.

Judges Michael Ford and Gale Gand with Host Oliver Hudson, as seen on Gingerbread Land, Season 1.

Andrew Bui

Judges Michael Ford and Gale Gand blind judge each team’s pre-build, as seen on Gingerbread Land, Season 1.

Andrew Bui

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Rush Announces Reunion Tour To Celebrate Life Of Drummer Neil Peart
TV & Streaming

Rush Announces Reunion Tour To Celebrate Life Of Drummer Neil Peart

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, co-founders of the classic rock band Rush, have announced the band’s first tour in 11 years. The 2026 “Fifty Something” tour will, in the words of the band, celebrate Rush’s “music, legacy and the life of late drummer and lyricist Neil Peart.”

The tour, with German musician Anika Nilles taking drum duties, launches Sunday June 7 at Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, the first of two nights there.

See below for full tour itinerary.

In a lengthy statement (read it in full below), Lee said, “It’s been over 10 years since Alex and I have performed the music of RUSH alongside our fallen bandmate and friend Neil. A lifetime’s worth of songs that we had put our cumulative hearts and souls into writing, recording and playing together onstage. And so, after all that has gone down since that last show, Alex and I have done some serious soul searching and come to the decision that we fucking miss it, and that it’s time for a celebration of 50-something years of RUSH music. So in 2026, my BFF Lerxst (aka Alex Lifeson) and I are going to hit the road once again to pay tribute to our past and to Neil by performing a vast selection of RUSH songs in a handful of cities. No small task, because as we all know Neil was irreplaceable.”

Peart died in January 2020 of glioblastoma.

The 2026 tour is being undertaken with the full support of Peart’s widow Carrie Nuttall-Peart and daughter Olivia Peart, who said in a statement, “We are thrilled to support the Fifty Something tour, celebrating a band whose music has resonated and inspired fans for generations, and to honor Neil’s extraordinary legacy as both a drummer and lyricist.”

After the two dates in Los Angeles, the Fifty Something tour will then go to Mexico City for one show, followed by two-night stands in Fort Worth, Chicago, New York and Toronto. The tour ends on September 17 with a single concert in Cleveland.

The band also announced today a 50-track super deluxe anthology, RUSH 50, available in five distinct configurations, including the (1) Super Deluxe Edition, (2) RUSH Store Exclusive Super Deluxe Edition, (3) 7-LP Deluxe Edition, (4) 4-CD Deluxe Edition, and (5) Digital Edition. The career-spanning anthology includes the first-ever reissue of their 1973 debut single and concludes with a live recording the final song Lee, Lifeson, and Peart played together during the 2015 R40 Tour closer at The Forum.

Among the band’s many hits are “Tom Sawyer,” “Fly By Night” and “New World Man.”

Here is Lee’s full statement:

“It’s been over 10 years since Alex and I have performed the music of RUSH alongside our fallen bandmate and friend Neil. A lifetime’s worth of songs that we had put our cumulative hearts and souls into writing, recording and playing together onstage. And so, after all that has gone down since that last show, Alex and I have done some serious soul searching and come to the decision that we fucking miss it, and that it’s time for a celebration of 50-something years of RUSH music. So in 2026, my BFF Lerxst (aka Alex Lifeson) and I are going to hit the road once again to pay tribute to our past and to Neil by performing a vast selection of RUSH songs in a handful of cities. No small task, because as we all know Neil was irreplaceable.

“Yet life is full of surprises, and we have been introduced to another remarkable person; an incredible drummer and musician who is adding another chapter to our story while continuing her own fascinating musical journey. Her name is Anika Nilles, and we could not be more excited to introduce her to our loyal and dedicated RUSH fanbase, whom, we know, will give her every chance to live up to that near impossible role. Before we hit the stage, we also hope to add another musician or two to expand our sound a wee bit and free up Alex and I, in order to show off some of our new fancy dance steps.

Lerxst, Anika and myself, along with many of our longstanding crew members have been hard at work rehearsing and designing the kind of RUSH show you’ve grown accustomed to expect from us. We dearly hope you will come along and help us celebrate our history together.”

And here is the Carrie Nuttall-Peart and Olivia Peart statement:

“We are thrilled to support the Fifty Something tour, celebrating a band whose music has resonated and inspired fans for generations, and to honor Neil’s extraordinary legacy as both a drummer and lyricist.

“Neil’s musicianship was singular. Compositions of intricacy and power that expanded what rhythm itself could express. As both drummer and lyricist, he was irreplaceable. Inimitable in his artistry, and unmatched in the depth and imagination he brought to the lyrics that inspired and moved so many, he profoundly shaped how fans connected with him and the band, giving voice and meaning to their own lives.

“As the band enters this new chapter, it promises to be truly unforgettable. We are excited to see how their new vision unfolds, and to hear this legendary music played live once again.”

TOUR DATES

Sun Jun 07 Los Angeles, CA Kia Forum
Tue Jun 09 Los Angeles, CA Kia Forum
Thu Jun 18 Mexico City, MX. Palacio de los Deportes
Wed Jun 24 Fort Worth, TX Dickies Arena
Fri Jun 26 Fort Worth, TX Dickies Arena
Thu Jul 16 Chicago, IL United Center
Sat Jul 18 Chicago, IL United Center
Tue Jul 28 New York, NY Madison Square Garden
Thu Jul 30 New York, NY Madison Square Garden
Fri Aug 07 Toronto, ON Scotiabank Arena
Sun Aug 09 Toronto, ON Scotiabank Arena
Thu Sep 17 Cleveland, OH Rocket Arena
.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Bad Bunny on the 'Saturday Night Live' season 51 premiere
TV & Streaming

Bad Bunny Addresses Super Bowl Backlash During SNL Season 51 Premiere

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Bad Bunny is back on Saturday Night Live!

The three-time Grammy winner returned for his second time hosting on Saturday night, where he addressed some of the backlash surrounding him being named the 2026 Super Bowl Halftime Show headliner.

Bad Bunny poked fun at conservative criticism of him being tapped to perform at the big game, noting that everyone is excited about his performance, “even Fox News!”

“You might not know this, but I’m doing the Super Bowl Halftime Show. And I’m very happy, and I think everybody’s happy about it,” which led the crowd to erupt in applause, before he continued, “Even Fox News!”

SNL then cut to a montaged clip of pieced together segments that made out Fox News hosts saying, “Bad Bunny is my favorite musician and he should be the next president.”

“I’m really excited to be doing the Super Bowl, I know that people all around the world who love my music are also happy,” to which he then began speaking in Spanish.

“Especially all of the Latinos and Latinas in the world here in the United States who have worked to open doors,” he said in Spanish. “It’s more than a win for myself, it’s a win for all of us. Our footprints and our contribution in this country, no one will ever be able to take that away or erase it.”

He finished his monologue off by noting in English, “And, if you didn’t understand know what I just said, you have four months to learn!”

Earlier in the monologue, a clip of Jon Hamm (who Bad Bunny called Juan Jamón) dancing to his music at a show was shown. The SNL cameras then panned over to Hamm in attendance at the show.

During the cold open, Colin Jost took the stage where he portrayed U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, where he joked that the military would adhere to the highest standards set by President Donald Trump.

“Our military will now have the same rules as any good frat party,” he said. “No fat chicks. And if you’re a fat dude, god damnit, you better be funny as hell.” James Austin Johnson’s Trump then made his return, where he said he was “just here keeping my eye on SNL, making sure they don’t say anything too mean about me.”

“SNL 51, off to a rough start. 17 new cast members, and they got the ‘Update’ guy doing the cold open. Look at Colin, poor Colin. We knew they wouldn’t let him do the whole open by himself,” he joked.

Johnson’s Trump, too, very briefly touched on the controversy surrounding the Riyadh Comedy Festival, noting he was “surprised Colin’s here, I thought he’d be with his friends at the Riyadh Comedy Festival.”

Johnson’s Trump further poked fun at the brief suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! with a reference to his “attack dog” Brendan Carr, with Mikey Day making an appearance in the cold open as the FCC chair.

After the news of Bad Bunny being named the headlining act was revealed, Trump adviser Corey Lewandowski said ICE will be in attendance at next year’s Super Bowl. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem further corroborated Lewandowski’s claims, assuring ICE agents would be “all over” the big game.

Before he was named the next Super Bowl headliner, Bad Bunny notably did not have any U.S. dates featured on his Debí Tirar Más Fotos World Tour. He told i-D Magazine this was partly due to ICE concerns.

“There were many reasons why I didn’t show up in the U.S., and none of them were out of hate — I’ve performed there many times. All of [the shows] have been successful,” Bad Bunny said. “But there was the issue of — like, fucking ICE could be outside [my concert]. And it’s something that we were talking about and very concerned about.”

Elsewhere in the season 51 premiere, EJAE, Rei Ami and Audrey Nuna, who voice characters in Netflix and Sony Animation’s hit movie KPop Demon Hunters, made a surprise appearance during a brunch-themed sketch. Their short cameo saw Bad Bunny’s character raving over the film, to which they then surprised the audience and gave their first-ever live performance of “Golden.”

Season 51 of SNL comes on the heels of a cast exodus this summer. Five cast members separated the show following its landmark 50th season, including Ego Nwodim, Heidi Gardner, Devon Walker, Michael Longfellow and Emil Wakim. 

Other than Johnson’s Trump joking about season 51 featuring “17 new cast members” in the cold open, the cast shakeup was not further addressed.

Please Don’t Destroy sketches were also thrown out ahead of season 51, which formerly starred Ben Marshall, John Higgins and Martin Herlihy. With the end of the bit, Higgins left SNL, while Marshall now joins as a featured player and Herlihy remains on the show’s staff as a writer. Tommy Brennan, Jeremy Culhane, Kam Patterson and Veronika Slowikowska were also added to the cast.

Bad Bunny hosted the season 51 premiere of SNL, while Doja Cat served as the night’s musical guest, in her first appearance on the sketch comedy series. 

The full slate of host and musical guests for the rest of the season has not yet been revealed, though Amy Poehler is set to host on Oct. 11 with Role Model as musical guest. Sabrina Carpenter will pull double duty in both roles on Oct. 18.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Blue Lock Rivals codes: Full list for October 2025 and how to redeem
TV & Streaming

Blue Lock Rivals codes: Full list for October 2025 and how to redeem

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Whether you’re a fan of Blue Lock or just enjoy a bit of footie, our Blue Lock Rivals codes will help you dominate the pitch in this hit Roblox game.

Roblox is no stranger to big sports games – Basketball Zero is evidence of that – and Blue Lock Rivals is one of the biggest around.

If it’s codes you’re after, then you may want to take a look at our pages for Grow a Garden, Mugen, 99 Nights in the Forest and even Fortnite Steal the Brainrot!

You’re not here for that, though! You’re here for Blue Lock Rivals codes, and you can read on for a full list of active codes for October 2025!

Full list of Blue Lock Rivals codes for October 2025

Below are all the codes that currently work in Blue Lock Rivals for October 2025. Be sure to only copy the bold section, as this is the code itself.

  • ZOMBIETIME – 10x Lucky Spins and 10x Lucky Flow Spins (NEW)
  • YoMichael – 8x Lucky Spins (NEW)
  • THEDON – 4x Lucky Spins (NEW)
  • LASTWEEKSORRY – 5x Lucky Spins

Expired Blue Lock Rivals codes

Below are expired codes that no longer work. If you have a code that isn’t working when you try to redeem it, cross reference it with this list.

  • WIROWIROWIRO
  • ISAGIWINS
  • RINLOSES
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How to redeem Blue Lock Rivals codes

Before you can redeem a code in Blue Lock Rivals, you need to follow these steps:

  • First, you need to join the Blue Lock Rivals Roblox group and give it a “Thumbs Up” on the Roblox page
  • Reach Level 10 in Blue Locks Rivals by playing the game
  • Once at Level 10, select “CODES” from the bottom of the main menu
  • Enter a code
  • Press Redeem

Once you have done this, the code should be active and working. But if it isn’t, there may be a few things that have gone wrong

Why isn’t my Blue Lock Rivals code working?

This can be due to a number of things, but the most likely culprits are:

  • The Blue Locks Rivals code doesn’t work anymore because it has expired
  • You haven’t reached Level 10 yet
  • There is a typo in the code

The last one may seem obvious, but some of the codes have characters such as exclamation points in them, or there may be a space that has accidentally been introduced when you copy-and-pasted the code from somewhere.

But before you write the code off, make sure that you’re at Level 10 or above, as this is required before you can use codes.

Check out more of our Gaming coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Tom Pelphrey and Mark Ruffalo in
TV & Streaming

Tom Pelphrey Breaks Down Robbie’s Tense Car Ride With Mark Ruffalo’s Tom (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Task, Season 1 Episode 5, “Vagrants.”]

Task‘s latest episode put Robbie Prendergast (Tom Pelphrey) on a collision course, careening with the FBI’s Tom Brandis (Mark Ruffalo) and the Dark Hearts, as a path of escape for his criminal pursuits closed in, “Vagrants.”

The installment found Robbie frantic as he tried locating Cliff (Raúl Castillo) following his run-in with the Dark Hearts, and after a meet-up with Erin (Margarita Levieva), it was clear to him that Jayson (Sam Keeley) was the culprit responsible for Cliff’s absence and apparent demise. Robbie also sought out a way to sell the drugs he’d stolen from the gang, opting to team with Shelley (Mickey Sumner) to offload the goods in exchange for cash.

Putting himself in danger, Robbie met with dealer Freddie Frias (Elvis Nolasco) to come to a deal. Eventually, Robbie went home to find Maeve (Emilia Jones) had taken Sam (Ben Doherty), and we learn she’s turned him into the FBI, cooperating with the feds. But that wasn’t before Dark Hearts boss Perry (Jamie McShane) showed up to look around the property, claiming he needed to grab some items that belonged to her dad.

Peter Kramer / HBO

With the walls essentially closing in, Robbie prepared to leave the house, but was met by Tom Brandis in the driveway, who claimed he was there to seek out Maeve in regards to her father Billy’s cold case. He talks his way into the house and is communicating with task force member, Anthony Grasso (Fabien Frankel), unaware he’s a crooked agent, but their texts are interrupted when Tom is sent a sketch resembling Robbie as the suspect who kidnapped Sam.

Robbie holds a gun to Tom’s head and forces him into his car, taking him hostage, as they drive down the highway. Robbie and Tom’s discussion revolves around life after death and their views of the world. All the while, Robbie tells Tom about everything he knows, ranging from Jayson being responsible for Billy and Cliff’s deaths to him hitting houses in retaliation for his brother’s loss.

The candid conversation occurs while Robbie has a gun to Tom’s back, but as he directs the FBI agent down a dirt road, he instructs him towards a lake and asks that Tom make sure Maeve isn’t held responsible for his actions, freeing the agent and continuing on his own path. When Tom gets in touch with his team, they pick him up, and they track the car Robbie took through the satellite radio. Little do most of the agents know, apart from Grasso, that the Dark Hearts are also in pursuit of Robbie, and everything is about to converge.

As Tom calls out to Robbie from the edge of a river, the Dark Hearts have also closed in, but what’s next? Only time will tell. As for Robbie finally colliding with Tom, Pelphrey tells TV Insider, “it’s such a beautiful juxtaposition. One of the things I was struck by between Robbie and Tom is that here you have this ex-priest who’s, in a very real way, grappling with loss of faith, what faith means, and his own understanding of god. On the other hand, you have Robbie who, in a strange way, lives in faith.”

Viewers get a taste of this in the opening and closing moments, in which Robbie takes water and rubs it on his chest, a practice he and his brother took up before jumping into the cool waters of the quarry to swim in the winter months. While he claimed he did it to keep from having his heart explode, the action is more loaded in the final minutes as he seems to get ready for whatever action is ahead.

“Now, he says he doesn’t believe in God, so he’s not living in a sort of religious faith, but he’s constantly saying things happen for a reason, and he’s acting like things happen for a reason,” Pelphrey explains of Robbie’s approach. “I found that to be more of a subtle way that they’re kind of an interesting opposite side of the same coin, Tom and Robbie.”

For episode director and executive producer Jeremiah Zagar, things were a little trickier behind the scenes than they appear onscreen. “A hard scene was the scene in the car with Robbie and Tom just because it was like 99 degrees and they didn’t have any air conditioning and they were sweating bullets and the equipment was bumping around,” he reveals. “Sometimes the things that seem easy are often incredibly difficult.”

Despite external challenges with heat and cameras in small spaces, Zagar credits Pelphrey and Ruffalo with delivering emotionally during that key moment. “That scene is the core of the show. I think that’s what you’re waiting for the entire season, in some ways, and that scene has to pay off in its utter simplicity,” Zagar points out. “It’s a testament to Mark and to Tom. They’re such incredible actors, and they lived in those characters’ skin for so long.”

See what’s next for Tom and Robbie as Task continues on HBO, and let us know what you thought of the heart-pounding episode’s ending in the comments section.

Task, Sundays, 9/8c, HBO and HBO Max

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Elisabeth Moss, Kate Hudson Sci-Fi Satire
TV & Streaming

Elisabeth Moss, Kate Hudson Sci-Fi Satire

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases “Shell” in select theaters Friday, October 3.

Some movies suffer because of bad timing. “Shell” wouldn’t be a very good movie under any circumstances, but it fares especially poorly against Coralie Fargeat’s “The Substance,” a better and more outrageous film that deals in very similar subject matter. “Outrageous” is what director Max Minghella is going for here. And when it accepts its destiny as a ‘50s-style rubber-suit sci-fi monster movie, “Shell” does have camp value to it. Even then, it still doesn’t commit to the bit hard enough to make it successful. 

Monster: The Ed Gein Story stars Charlie Hunnam as the actor playing Ed Gein, shown here smiling in the dark with his hand above his face

There are some funny moments in “Shell” — both intentional and unintentional — and some eye-catching images. The first living creature to appear on screen is a fluffy lap dog smeared with blood, which combines the two; it trots down a dark hallway in an ‘80s-style mansion, its little legs moving as fast as they can. The camera follows the dog into a retro tiled bathroom, where Elizabeth Berkley is sitting in a shell-pink bathtub wearing a matching silk robe cutting grotesque black bumps off of her leg. She’s freaking out. The tub is slippery with blood. She passes out and drops the knife, and the dog starts licking it clean.

It’s a promising cold open, one that leads into an uneasy blend of attempted pathos and tired entertainment-industry satire as Samantha (Elisabeth Moss) goes out for what she thinks is a meeting with the director of one of the downbeat indie movies Moss sometimes stars in in real life. It turns out to be an open audition, and Samantha loses the role — a divorced single mother of two — to “it” girl Chloe Benson (Kaia Gerber). Chloe is barely old enough to drink, let alone have two kids, but she’s hot and popular on social media so there you go. The experience leads Samantha’s reps (one of whom is played by Ziwe, perfectly cast) to suggest, their voices thick with smarmy faux-concern, that she go rest at the Shell clinic for a while. 

CEO Zoe Shannon (Kate Hudson) is the face of Shell, a company whose services blend elements of “Death Becomes Her” and “The Lobster.” In a spa-like atmosphere, people like Samantha can stave off their fear of irrelevance by undergoing an outpatient procedure where their DNA is fused with the DNA of a lobster, or something, resulting in a younger, stronger, taller version of themselves with clear skin and bright eyes. A lot is explained, but none of it sticks. The only things that land are the cutting jokes, which, again, are nothing new — did you know Los Angeles is a shallow and insincere place? — but get some chuckles in the moment. 

The satire here is clumsy, gesturing at similar points already made in better movies. There’s a rule in comedy that if you have to explain a joke, it’s not a very good joke, and a similar sort of ambiguity is at play here. It’s not always clear if, say, a montage set to “Walkin’ on Sunshine” after her Shell treatment improves Samantha’s life is a tongue-in-cheek parody of cheesy ‘80s movies, or if it’s just plain cheesy itself. This all ties into the camp factor, which could also be used to explain away hacky details like Samantha’s cat as a stand-in for her spinsterhood. Hypothetically. 

“Shell” also fancies itself body horror, but again it doesn’t commit hard enough to truly excel in that area. Samantha barfs up some black bile, and Zoe’s sycophants eat her skin at a dinner party in a bit that briefly frames her as a Christ figure but doesn’t go anywhere. Then there are the bumps that pop up when the procedure “goes wrong,” which are referred to in the film as “scales” but are more like the kind of lumpy mole that would prompt a visit to the dermatologist. A whole rash of them is pretty gross, but not as gross as it needs to be. Where’s the goop?

Mysterious pink liquids are injected into willing subjects from unlabeled vials at the Shell clinic, again shades of “The Substance.” Even the surface aesthetics of the films are similar: Both have an eye for ‘80s-inspired fashions and architecture, which manifests here in the form of silver lamé and curved lines. The heightened reality of this film is not as well constructed, however, and with much less intentionality: The self-driving cars that appear in the background throughout the film,for example, serve no particular purpose except to shore up its sci-fi credentials. 

Everyone in “Shell” lives in this reality except for schlumpy everywoman Moss, who feels like she’s about a half-step off from everyone else. That’s not a failure on the part of the actor, who has proven herself more than capable many times over. It is indicative of the overall clumsiness of the project, whose lack of consistency is present even in little details like that fact that some of the magazines in the film are real (Samantha is profiled in “Vanity Fair”) and others are not (ditto for Zoe in “Persons”). 

Hudson, meanwhile, does understand the tone Minghella is aiming for here, or is perhaps setting it herself. Her motivations for striking up a friendship with Samantha are inscrutable and predatory, and she plays the chilly villainess with relish as she struts around in fabulous gowns and purrs out pseudo-scientific bullshit. (There’s also the potential for a lesbian subtext to her relationship with Moss, but this is sadly underdeveloped.) Her perfection is supposed to make her hateable, and Moss’ imperfection is similarly meant to frame her as relatable. But pulling off that dynamic in a movie that also has human-sized crustaceans in it is a project for a more skilled filmmaker than this one. 

Grade: C

“Shell” premiered at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Republic Pictures releases the film Friday, October 3, 2025.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best reviews, streaming picks, and offers some new musings, all only available to subscribers.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Eran Riklis on His Thriller Series Co-Penned by "Fauda'"s Moshe Zonder
TV & Streaming

Eran Riklis on His Thriller Series Co-Penned by “Fauda'”s Moshe Zonder

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Prominent Israeli filmmaker Eran Riklis, known for his Middle-East set humanistic films “Lemon Tree,” “The Syrian Bride” and most recently “Reading Lolita in Tehran” feels angry and frustrated over the political leadership in Israel that has led nearly 4,000 entertainment industry names to boycott Israeli film institutions, viewed as “complicit in war crimes” in Gaza.

Riklis has been selected for the Tallinn’s TV Beats, Co-Financing Market (Nov. 7-8) with his upcoming TV drama “The Abduction of Yossele Schumacher,” commissioned by Israel commercial channel Keshet 12.

The filmmaker is eager to find European partners in Tallinn for his six-part drama thriller. But he alsohopes that anti-Israel sentiments from some parts of the global industry won’t impact his dream to bring to the screen yet another work building bridges between people. 

“Israel is not in the best [political] position and I hope that nothing political will stand between me and making the series,” he tells Variety in a video call from his home in Tel-Aviv. Similarly, Riklis feels sorry for the controversy over Israel’s Oscar entry “The Sea” featuring a young Palestinian boy, risking his life to go to the beach in Tel Aviv, and subsequent threat from Israel’s culture minister Miki Zohar to axe funding to the Israeli Film Academy. 

“I mentored ‘The Sea’s’ director Shai Carmeli Pollak when he attended the Sam Spiegel International Script Lab with the project. I loved the story and gave Shai confidence to direct it. I then saw the film at the Jerusalem Film Festival and cried for an hour and a half. It’s a simple yet complex story and absolutely beautiful.

The fact that the Israeli Film Academy voted for it [as Oscar entry] was a surprise, but it’s the best film that represents Israel right now. It’s good to join the [Oscar] race with this kind of story,” notes the filmmaker, a firm believer that art transcends political boundaries and that storytelling can open people’s hearts and minds.

“As a filmmaker, I want to remain optimistic,” says Riklis who was a 19-year old Israeli soldier during the Yom Kippur War in 1973 and lost many close friends. “I faced the Egyptian army for months. It was a horrible war. But then, who would have imagined that a few years later, in 1979, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat would sign a peace agreement [the Camp David Accords] with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who had very right-wing views. So I always try to remember these events,” insists Riklis. “There are always people trying to make changes and succeeding; we need to have hope.”

Eran Riklis

Credit: Marie Gioanni

Thriller series based on true events

After “Reading Lolita in Tehran” which tackled women resisting the oppressive clerical regime in Iran, Ricklis’ next project, the TV show “The Abduction of Yossele Schumacher,” looks at a different religious extremism, closer to home for the filmmaker. 

The story is based on the true case of the abduction in Israel of a seven-year-old Jewish boy, Yossele Schumacher, by his ultra-Orthodox grandfather in the early 1960s, to prevent him from being raised as a secular Jew by his parents. Following an intensive international search led by Israel’s secret services Mossad for nearly two years, the boy was eventually found in the U.S. and returned to his parents. According to the logline, the abduction “leads three women to clash over his fate and faith and to a fierce conflict between the Israeli Mossad and the impenetrable web of the orthodox community.”

Riklis, who was only six-to-seven years-old at the time of the events, has a vivid memory of the case that became a cause célèbre, dividing the Israeli society. “Overnight, from a small family dispute, the story became huge, opposing the secular and ultra-Orthodox population in Israel. Our Prime Minister at the time Ben Gurion was afraid the case would lead to a civil war, so he asked Mossad to intervene,” Riklis explains, before adding: “With no documentary made about the case, the Yossele Schumacher story felt like an old memory being lost, until three years and a half ago, when I spoke to someone who mentioned it. I contacted Yossele, found him and told him about my idea to bring his story to television. He said “yes and yes again. I’ve just been waiting for this to happen!”

Riklis then contacted seasoned screenwriter Moshe Zonder, known for “Fauda,” Apple TV+ spy thriller “Tehran” and the recent Series Mania winning show “The German.” The two had collaborated earlier on Riklis’ local hit “Zohat” (1993) and “Vulcan Junction” (1999). “I felt Moshe would be the perfect co-creator and co-writer of the series. He has a great skill in balancing drama and thriller, so I was thrilled when he agreed to board the project,” Riklis says. 

Digging deeper into the plot and storyline, the filmmaker says “the main dramatic thread will be the search for the kid, but the series will contain three dramatic layers. Firstly, the core of the story will be about three equally flawed women. Madeleine Feraille, Yossele’s abductor, a former French resistance fighter who converted to Judaism after WWII. Then the boy’s mother, Ida Schumacher, and the Mossad agent Judith Avrahami. For various reasons, the three women are grieving a child. “That’s the emotional core of the series,” says Riklis.

The second layer will be the thriller, with the Mossad search for the boy between Israel, Italy, Germany, France, England and the U.S.. “You will be on the edge of your seat, like with a Liam Neeson thriller,” promises the filmmaker. Then the third element will be the complex socio-political context, “with themes about oppression, liberalism, fate versus religion, the Rule of Law vs the Rule of God, issues that are as topical today as 60 years ago.”

“Ultimately, it’s about pain, love, parenthood, loss, faith, fanaticism and about secrets and lies on so many levels,” adds the filmmaker who feels the project has “all the right ingredients to turn into exciting and profound must-see television for everyone.”

The project, with an estimated budget of around €1.5 million ($1.7 million) per episode, is being produced by Riklis’ own shingle Eran Riklis Production and Moshe Edery of United King Films, one of Israel’s most-established production and distribution outfits and a long-time partner to Riklis. Israel’s commercial channel Keshet 12, is on board.

“At Keshet, we are passionate about telling Israeli stories that reflect our unique culture while resonating with audiences everywhere,” says Keshet 12 head of drama and comedy Karni Ziv. “With Eran Riklis at the helm, this project promises to be a moving family drama with a strong, suspenseful edge, and we are excited about its potential to connect with viewers both in Israel and beyond.” 

As one of eight projects selected for Tallinn’s TV Beats Co-Financing Market, part of the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival’s Industry@Tallinn & Baltic Event, the series will vie for the coveted Council of Europe Series Co-Production Development Award worth €50,000 ($58,700).

“At Tallinn, I hope to find co-producers who love the project. I’m particularly looking for partners from traditional sources of financing – public funders, broadcasters, and also streamers,” says Riklis who hopes to go into production in November 2026.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Sony Pictures Television Award Introduced At MIA Market In Rome
TV & Streaming

Sony Pictures Television Award Introduced At MIA Market In Rome

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Sony Pictures Television (SPT) will introduce a drama award at this week’s MIA Market in Rome.

The Sony Pictures Television Award will be presented for the first time at the Italian industry confab. This will go to the winner of the annual MIA Drama Coproduction Market & Pitching Forum, with a jury from Sony Pictures Television making the choice from the 15 in contention.

Projects in contention include 1980s Parisian skinheads drama Rage, which will be directed by Xavier Dolan, and Dutch art theft drama Hitler’s Horses: An Arthur Brand Story, produced by Femke Wolting from Submarine and written by Ed McCardie. There are also projects from Palestine, the UK, Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, Switzerland, Ireland, Norway and, of course, Italy.

SPT has been a big supporter of MIA over the years, with the President of Sony Pictures Television Studios, Katherine Pope, speaking on stage last year. She’ll be in town again this week to present the award, as SPT becomes the official sponsor of the Drama Coproduction Market for the first time.

The launch of the Sony Pictures Television Award “underscores a shared commitment to fostering innovative new voices, promoting international coproductions, and telling stories with the potential to transcend borders,” SPT and MIA jointly said.

“We’re thrilled to partner with MIA and Gaia Tridente’s incredible team and establish the Sony Pictures Television Award for Best Drama Project 2025,” said Pope. “The Drama Coproduction Market at MIA brings together creators from around the world who are pushing boundaries and thinking globally. We’re excited to support these kinds of bold projects that can travel across cultures while maintaining their unique voice. It is important to champion these stories and the talented teams behind them.”

MIA boss Tridente has repeatedly positioned her market as one where stand-out projects truly begin their journeys to screen.

“This recognition, through the new Sony Pictures Television Award, seals an important partnership with a global major and highlights the value of the MIA Co-Production Market,” she said today. “I am especially grateful to Kathrine Pope and Sony Pictures Television for their trust and vision, which confirms the strategic role of MIA as a platform for international co-production.

“This award celebrates the drama projects and talents that emerge from our market, reinforcing our mission to connect creativity and business on a global scale. Together, we aim to foster stories with worldwide resonance and provide producers with concrete opportunities to grow and succeed.” 

MIA begins today (October 6) and runs through the week, gently warming up participants for next week’s MIPCOM. Now in its eleventh year, and fourth with Tridente at the helm, the event is heavily focused on its pitching competitions for drama, documentaries and animation.

This year, there will also be a Book Adaptation Forum and training initiative Apollo Series, which has been developed in partnership with Series Mania Institute and Goteborg Film TV’s Drama Vision track. There will also be a short-film showcase, ‘Vertical’ AI workshops curated by Largo.ai, and an Industry Insider Bootcamp, which is presented by UTA.

As usual, there will also be panel sessions, content showcases, the MIA Buyers’ Club, the C EU Soon work-in-progress program, market screenings, networking sessions, workshops, roundtables and conferences. The 2024 edition attracted 2,800 participants, up 10% year-on-year.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Alyvia Alyn Lind
TV & Streaming

Alyvia Alyn Lind Unpacks Lingering Questions

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from Wayward.]

Wayward star Alyvia Alyn Lind knows you have unlimited questions about her new limited series that’s currently ranking atop the Netflix TV charts.

Created by Mae Martin, Wayward shines a light on the troubled teen industry through Vermont’s fictional Tall Pines Academy. The “therapeutic” school is run by Toni Collette’s cult-like leader, Evelyn Wade, who later takes a special interest in Lind’s Leila. The latter is a Canadian teenager who made the journey across the border in an effort to rescue her best friend, Abbie (Sydney Topliffe), from the clutches of this institution that her parents forced her to attend. However, Leila’s plan backfires, turning her into the latest enrollee.

Leila and Abbie were always mischievous partners in crime, but Leila’s drug use was far more serious than Abbie ever realized. The reason is due to the fact that Leila has yet to reconcile the traumatic drowning death of her older sister, Jess (Devin Cecchetto), which Evelyn picks up on in order to play her patented mind games. Leila is eventually subjected to a psychological experiment where she has to confront her potential involvement in Jess’ death, and the series ultimately depicts two different versions of the harrowing incident. 

In Lind’s mind, the version in which Jess accidentally drowns on her own is the more accurate portrayal, not the Evelyn-provoked account where Leila pushes an equally inebriated Jess in a swimming pool and opts not to save her. But Leila soon buys into the mindset that she’s a murderer, something Abbie disputes based on a phone call they shared in the direct aftermath.

“At the end of the day, I personally believe she did not intentionally push her sister [into the pool],” Lind tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s very common for people who have gone through traumatic experiences to have lapses in their memory and not remember exactly what happened. So it’s a perfect opening for Evelyn to go in there and pull at the strings until it’s all unraveled.”

After Jess’ death, Leila’s mother became completely withdrawn from her maternal duties, and now that Leila is in the hands of Tall Pines Academy, she appears to have no interest in her daughter returning home anytime soon. This turn of events ends up contributing to Leila’s unexpected decision to let Abbie complete their well-planned escape alone so she can stay at Tall Pines Academy.

“I think the reasons she gave Abbie for why she’s staying are true. She wants the community, she wants the family, and I think she genuinely does believe that. But I think that was all placed into her mind by Evelyn,” Lind says. “Evelyn saw her and saw her trauma and how tough her exterior was, and behind every tough exterior is an extremely soft center. So she wanted to rip that out, and I think she manipulated her.”

Wayward popped up on Lind’s radar shortly after the heartbreaking cancellation of her three-season series, Chucky, and the original audition email described the mystery-thriller as an “eight-episode limited series.” But with so many dangling threads, there’s already a clamor amongst the viewers and the cast/crew for another season.

“We were all aware [that it was a limited series] from the start, and we were all sad about it from the start. As the cast got closer and everybody had so much fun together, we got sadder and sadder as the season progressed,” Lind shares. “But you never know. Limited series get picked up [for more seasons] all the time now, so we’re just hoping that Netflix wants to push it further. We all want more for our characters, especially me. I want to see where Leila goes. I love her so much.”

Below, during a recent spoiler conversation with THR, Lind also discusses her unique upbringing in a showbiz family that includes her sisters, Natalie and Emily Alyn Lind, as well as matriarch Barbara Alyn Woods.

***

You started acting at such a young age. Do you have any memories that predate you being a working actor? 

Not really. Those memories would have to be before I started acting at 3 years old. But as I got older, my mom told me stories. My older sisters were in the industry from a very young age, and my mom has been doing it her entire life. My sisters would run their lines when I was only 2 or 3, and I would overhear and listen in the background. When they were done, I would come in and say, “My turn!” I’d then do their lines perfectly from top to bottom, and this was right after I’d learned how to speak. So it’s always been in my blood, and it’s always been inevitable that I’d end up wanting to pursue a career in it. I really don’t remember a time where I wasn’t working on a set. That could sound like a nightmare to some people, but it has been such a dream come true for me. 

Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila in Wayward.

Courtesy of Netflix

When we’re kids, our parents sign us up for things just to see what sticks. And then, as we get older, we start to figure out what we actually like and don’t like. But it sounds like you knew you loved acting from the moment you started running lines for fun.

Definitely. The reason I love acting so much and have such a great relationship with it after all these years is because I always had a choice. It was never a situation where my mom was being a stage mom. She always gave all three of us the opportunity to stop whenever we wanted and go back to [more traditional] school. Growing up, we had conversations all the time about it. “You got another audition. Do you want to do it? Do you still like this? Are you happy?” All three of us just never wanted to stop. We all found such a strong love for it at such a young age, and we’re all so grateful for our mom’s guidance within this industry that we love so much. I was extremely lucky. It’s very unheard of to find the profession you want to pursue for the rest of your life at just 3 years old. 

When you watch your mom and sisters act, do you notice any mannerisms that all of you share?

It’s funny you ask that. I was literally watching Wayward with my family the other day, and I noticed for the first time that when I cry on screen, I look really, really similar to my oldest sister, Natalie [Alyn Lind]. I also make certain expressions or smirks or faces that remind me exactly of Emily [Alyn Lind]. I think I’m a perfect mix of both of their faces and expressions. So it’s both weird and interesting to watch myself on screen and be like, “Wait, there’s Emily. Wait, there’s Natalie.” But from growing up together and running lines with each other and just being there for one another during every project, I think that we’ve all adapted a few of each other’s little tricks. So we do have similarities, but we also have such different acting styles. We are all so distinct, even though we all had the same acting coach in my mother.

Did Wayward emerge right as Chucky ended? 

Chucky ended, and then Wayward came up. It was such an interesting time because we were obviously all so sad about Chucky being canceled. So I got the audition, and I was so grateful when I booked it. I then got to dive into the history of the [troubled teen industry], and it was a really exciting transition. Chucky was very campy and crazy and unrealistic in a lot of ways because it was a killer doll show. So getting to dive into something that’s real and terrifying in a more grounded way was really awesome.

Do you think the door is fully closed on Chucky? I know there was loose talk of trying to revive it in some form.

Oh my gosh, I have no clue. [Creator] Don Mancini holds the power. But whenever there is a revival, if there is one, I am so there. I’m down. Sign me up. I love that crew and that cast so much, and we had the most incredible time filming. I definitely would love to be involved and avenge the Terror Trio. I want them to have a better ending and not be stuck in dolls for the rest of their lives.

Chucky, Spiderwick Chronicles and Wayward all shot in and/or around Toronto?

Yeah, it’s not crazy to think that I’m a Toronto-based actor at this point because I film everything in Toronto. I’m half-Canadian, which is awesome. My dad’s side of the family is Canadian, and I have dual citizenship. So I love filming in Toronto so much.

Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila in Wayward.

Courtesy of Netflix

Wayward is being billed as a limited series, but the ending leaves so many plates spinning that it seems ripe for a second season. Did you always know you were shooting a limited series?

Yeah, it was known from the start. When I got the audition in my inbox, it said, “eight-episode limited series.” So we were all aware from the start, and we were all sad. As the cast got closer and everybody had so much fun together, we got sadder and sadder as the season progressed. But you never know. Limited series get picked up [for more seasons] all the time now, so we’re just hoping that Netflix wants to push it further. Obviously, everybody involved in the show loves it so much, and we’re so proud of the outcome. We all want more for our characters, especially me. I want to see where Leila goes. I love her so much.

There’s a recent saying that the limited series is the new pilot, so anything is possible.

It would be a dream to do another season and explore these characters even further. If it ends up happening, I would be so excited and so on board. But if it doesn’t happen, then the place the characters ended up in is where they’re going to stay. Leila’s ending is so sad to me. I’m so protective over her, and I want her to get as far away as possible from that school. But she has to figure that out for herself. Unfortunately, I can’t protect my characters that much.

Her sister Jess’ death is a mystery throughout the season, and we’re given two different versions of the story. One was accidental, and the other was more intentional. Leila eventually thinks she killed her sister on purpose, but Abbie argues that’s not true because of a phone call they shared the day after it happened. Who do you think is right? 

Oh my gosh, I love this question so much. While filming the episode, everybody had their different speculations. I had a conversation with Brian Davids Mae [Martin] about it. I then had a conversation with that episode’s director [John Fawcett] just to figure out what is true in Leila’s head. At the end of the day, I personally believe that she did not intentionally push her sister [into the pool]. It’s very common for people who have gone through traumatic experiences to have lapses in their memory and not remember exactly what happened. So it’s a perfect opening for Evelyn to go in there and pull at the strings until it’s all unraveled.

So, truly, deep down, I believe that she did not kill her, but I also love that the episode has so many different versions of what happened. It creates a conversation. I’ve already been on socials to look through people’s posts about whether or not they think she killed her, and it’s so fun to see that everybody else has a different opinion. I’ve watched the show with many of my friends and family, and all of them have different opinions. So it’s really fun to see what people think because it really is up for interpretation. Whatever you want to think is what it can be.

Devin Cecchetto as Jess and Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila in Wayward.

Courtesy of Netflix

We established earlier that being a sister is a major part of your life, so did you have a tough time filming that tragic backstory involving Leila’s sister?

That entire episode is so heavy. It was the episode I was the most excited to film while also being the most terrified to film. I really wanted to get it right, and show why Leila is the way she is. That episode is such a huge transitional moment for her. We filmed the pool sequence all night from 7 p.m. to 8 a.m. It was emotionally and physically exhausting, and terrifying. But those days are the most rewarding. So I’m really happy with the outcome, and I hope everybody else loves it, too.

Leila’s flashbacks took place while in the Mirror Room. Once she’s free, the camera lingers on her as she eats pizza and listens to Duck play Pink Floyd’s “Time.” She was listening to that song in the first episode too. What’s really on her mind there? Is it genuine enjoyment to set up her big choice to stay at Tall Pines in the finale? Or was she just trying to gain Duck’s trust like her and Abbie planned? It seemed genuine to me. 

That scene is another one of the big turning points that we see for Leila. It’s the first time that she truly sees humanity in this place. To that point, it’s been so rough and mean and aggressive and scary. Suddenly, she’s sitting there eating pizza, and this guy that she’s been terrified of the whole time is now playing her favorite song on the guitar. And for the first time, she thinks, “Maybe this place isn’t as bad as I thought it was. Maybe they were really just trying to fix me, and now that I’m getting better, it’s not as scary anymore.” It’s such a terrifying cycle of manipulation. But you can really see it in her face: “This could be my life. I could do this every day. I could sit here and eat pizza and listen to Pink Floyd every day.” So It’s a big transitional period for her to see that maybe this place isn’t as bad as she thought that it was.

Then she has a phone call with her mom, and she couldn’t have been less interested in Leila potentially coming home. So do you believe the explanation she gave Abbie as to why she’s staying? Or did Evelyn manipulate this outcome?

I think both can be true. I think that the reasons she gave Abbie for why she’s staying are true. She wants the community, she wants the family, and I think she genuinely does believe that. But I think that was all placed into her mind by Evelyn. Evelyn saw her and saw her trauma and how tough her exterior was, and behind every tough exterior is an extremely soft center. So she wanted to rip that out, and I think she manipulated her. 

She knew about how absent Leila’s mom has been since Jess’ death. So it was a perfect opportunity for her to take over that role. “I will be this mother figure for you. I will be this figure that will love you unconditionally, which is something that you’ve never had in your life. I will show you the ropes, and I will find you a family.” 

She does it in the same way that she does it to Laura [Sarah Gadon]. It’s really interesting how many similarities there are between Laura and Evelyn’s relationship and Leila and Evelyn’s relationship. So I think that everything that she’s saying to Abbie at the end of the show is true, but all of those things have been placed in her head by Evelyn.

Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila and Toni Collette as Evelyn Wade in Wayward.

Courtesy of Netflix

What did you pay attention to most with Toni Collette? Was it her acting style, or was it more about the way she carries herself on set?

I learned so much from her and her energy on set. Just watching her is a masterclass. I watched her switch back and forth between her Australian accent and American accent, and it was so insane that it should be studied. She’s just such a powerhouse. I want to be her. I was such a superfan before we started filming, so I was terrified. But then getting to know her and being on set with her as much as I was, it was an honor to study her. She plays her character so insanely well, and getting to see her bring Evelyn to life up close was incredible.

Lastly, I have to follow up on something your sister Emily and I talked about during Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire. You’re friends with Mckenna Grace, and Emily played her friend of sorts in that movie. Was it pretty bizarre for you to watch given your connection to both?

It was so much fun! When I heard that Emily got the role in the new Ghostbusters, I was so excited because I knew Mckenna, but I didn’t know how close their storyline would be to each other. And when I learned that it was basically just going to be the two of them together the entire movie, I was so excited. I think it was also exciting for Emily because Mckenna is a familiar face. I’ve known Mckenna since I was four or five. We’ve both been in the industry that long together. So getting to see Mckenna at the premieres and watching them work together was so much fun, and it was never weird at all. I’m so glad that they had that experience together.

Emily did say that you wondered why you didn’t get to go out for it.

I remember being like, “I should have gotten this audition. I want to work with Mckenna. I love her so much. That would’ve been so much fun.” I was more just jealous that I didn’t get to work with Mckenna because we would’ve had such a blast on set. But Emily has such a ghostly energy. So the casting decision after seeing the movie makes so much sense. They were right on point.

***
Wayward is currently streaming on Netflix.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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