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Behind The Glamour: The Unseen Struggle Of Bollywood Producers Who Risk Everything For Cinema | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Behind The Glamour: The Unseen Struggle Of Bollywood Producers Who Risk Everything For Cinema | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

In the grand illusion called Bollywood, where lights dazzle and fame blinds, one figure stands quietly at the edge of every frame — the producer. He is the first to believe in a story and the last to be remembered for it. He risks everything — money, relationships, peace of mind — to make the impossible possible. Yet, paradoxically, he is also the most powerless person in the room.

The producer begins with faith — a faith so reckless it borders on madness. He hears a story, imagines it on screen, and starts assembling the pieces long before the puzzle even exists. Financing, permissions, casting, schedules — every step costs him something tangible, while what he gets in return is always intangible: a promise, a possibility, a maybe.

He invests not in certainty, but in hope. And hope is the cruelest currency of all.

Even when money flows in, it never really belongs to him. The moment he raises funds, he owes them — to investors, lenders, technicians, stars, and fate itself. He becomes the pivot around which every expectation spins. If something fails, it is always his fault. If something succeeds, it belongs to everyone else.

A producer’s courage lies not in his wealth, but in his endurance. He’s the man who walks into a storm knowing it will drench him, and still smiles because he has no other choice.

The journey from dream to screen is an obstacle course. Permissions, guild registrations, censorship clearances, location rights, municipal procedures — each one carries a cost and a compromise. He negotiates with departments that barely know what a film is about but know exactly how to delay it. Every approval requires persuasion; every delay eats into a shrinking budget.

And just when the paperwork clears, the machinery of the system takes over. Unions call strikes, suppliers raise rates, and actors’ calendars clash. The clock keeps ticking. A single day’s loss can burn lakhs, yet the producer must remain calm and diplomatic. For in Bollywood, the one who pays must also apologize.

Once the film is ready, the real fight begins — the release. Distributors and multiplexes function on an unspoken hierarchy. Big studios get the prime weekends and widest screens; smaller producers must make do with what’s left. Even streaming platforms — the supposed saviors of independent cinema — come with their own labyrinths of clauses and conditions.

The irony runs deep: the man who creates the film often has no control over how, when, or where it reaches its audience.

And then, the star system takes its toll. What begins as a partnership turns into silent servitude. The moment a big name signs on, the producer’s authority fades. Scripts are rewritten, teams reshuffled, schedules adjusted — all to suit the whims of celebrity calendars.

He funds everything — vanity vans, trainers, personal chefs, stylists, and entire entourages. The star’s world becomes his financial burden. The producer, who once dreamt of creating art, now manages logistics for egos larger than any set he’s built.

It’s not just financial exhaustion; it’s emotional attrition. He calls managers who don’t call back, rearranges schedules no one confirms, and smiles at temperaments he can’t afford to offend. The humiliation is quiet but constant.

When the film finally releases, it belongs to the stars. Their faces adorn billboards; their names trend online. The producer’s name flashes once before the opening credits and then disappears, buried under applause or blame. If the film fails, he becomes a footnote in the industry’s collective amnesia. If it succeeds, he becomes invisible in its glow.

And yet, despite all this, he returns. Every single time.

Because there is something unbreakable in him — an instinct that refuses to die. He convinces himself that the next story will work, that the next partnership will be fair, that the next Friday will redeem everything lost. In truth, it rarely does. But in this business of illusion, hope is the last surviving reality.

The world sees the glitz of Bollywood; the producer lives its grind. He carries the weight of everyone’s dream and the burden of everyone’s failure. He is both the creator and the casualty of cinema — a gambler who knows the house always wins, and still places his bet.

Behind every blockbuster, every disaster, every forgotten release, stands a man who mortgaged his peace, compromised his pride, and believed when no one else would. His courage is quiet, his pain private, his faith eternal.

In the grand narrative of Indian cinema, he remains the only artist who creates without a guarantee of survival.

In a world built on illusion, the producer lives the harshest reality. He creates dreams for others while silently watching his own slip away. Yet, every Friday, he returns to the altar — with another story, another loan, and the same unbroken faith.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Akshay Kumar
Bollywood

Shah Rukh Khan on Being Honoured With a Film Festival: “Cinema Has Always Been My Home…”

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Shah Rukh Khan will soon be ringing in his 60th birthday on November 2, 2025. And this time there is all the more reason to have a grand celebration in the Khan household, owing to his National Award win for Jawan. And now we hear that PVR INOX will be celebrating Shah Rukh Khan’s birthday with a special film festival that will showcase the actors’ blockbuster films till date starting from October 31, 2025. This will be a two-week-long film festival that will run across more than 30 cities and approximately 75 cinemas. It will offer a unique opportunity to his fans, to relive the best of Shah Rukh Khan’s cinematic journey on the big screen.


Talking about the film festival curated by PVR INOX, Shah Rukh Khan said, “Cinema has always been my home, and seeing these films find their way back to the big screen feels like a beautiful reunion. These movies are not just my stories, they belong to the audience that have lovingly embraced them over the last 33 years. I am grateful to PVR INOX for celebrating this journey with such love, and to Red Chillies Entertainment, my creative home, for always believing in stories that connect us all. I hope everyone who comes to watch relives the joy, the music, the emotions, and the magic of cinema that we’ve shared together.”

The film festival will feature titles like Chennai Express, Devdas, Dil Se, Jawan and more. It will also feature Kabhi Haan Kabhi Na, Main Hoon Na, Om Shanti Om and more.

Shah Rukh Khan


On the professional front, Shah Rukh Khan will next be seen in the much anticipated film King which is expected to hit the screens in 2026. The film has an ensemble cast including Shah Rukh Khan in the lead along with Deepika Padukone, Abhishek Bachchan and Suhana Khan, among others.

Also Read: Khantastic! Shah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan and Aamir Khan Come Together for an Epic Photo

October 18, 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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Cinema United Elects Harkins Theatres' Mike Bowers as New Chair
TV & Streaming

Cinema United Elects Harkins Theatres’ Mike Bowers as New Chair

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Harkins Theatres president and CEO Mike Bowers has been elected chair of the executive board of Cinema United, the international organization of movie theater owners. Bowers will take over from B&B Theatres CEO Bob Bagby, who will remain on the executive board.

“Delivering an amazing cinematic experience has been my life’s work,” says Bowers. “It’s a true honor to serve the passionate people who bring the magic of moviegoing to communities across America and around the globe.”

Bowers has been president and CEO of Arizona-based Harkins Theatres since 2006. Also making up the executive board are Cinemark’s Executive VP and Chief Marketing and Content Officer, Wanda Gierhart Fearing, who will serve as Vice-Chair; Colleen Barstow of Nebraska-based Main Street Theatres who will become Treasurer, and Bo Chambliss of Georgia Theatre Company who will continue as Board Secretary.

“I am extremely excited to work with Mike and the leadership team to continue to support and promote this great industry. Mike brings years of experience building a successful circuit, and he will work tirelessly to support all of exhibition. The entire leadership team will bring energy and insight as we continue to drive toward the next great era in cinema,” says Cinema United president & CEO Michael O’Leary. “I also want to acknowledge and thank Bob for successfully leading Cinema United these past
two years. He will remain on the board and continue to be a leader for years to come.”

Cinema United represents more than 33,000 movie screens across the U.S. and Canada and an additional 30,000 more in 81 countries worldwide.

Thursday, October 9

Mischa Barton Bends Reality in ‘Glitched’ Paranormal Sci-Fi Comedy Film

Mischa Barton (“The O.C.”) will star in the paranormal sci-fi comedy, “Glitched,” which is set to make its world premiere at the La Femme Film Festival in Los Angeles on Oct. 17.

After turning their grandmother’s castle into a virtual reality playground, “Glitched” tells the story of a set of ambitious twins trying not to get stuck in the afterlife after accidentally opening a supernatural portal.

Rounding out the cast are Abigail O’Regan (“Spellbound”), Donal Brophy (“Sleep No More”), Jack McEvoy (“Vikings”) and Elijah Rowen (“Vikings”) and John Connors (“Crazy Love,” “Re-Creation with Jim Sheridan”). 

Directed by Alaskan filmmaker Zoe Quist, the genre-bending project is a women-led production that established mentorships across all key departments to create pathways for new voices and ensure economic diversity on set.

“Glitched” is written by Steve Grabowsky with Maria O’Neill p.g.a (“The Black Guelph”), Susan Wright p.g.a. and Quist as producers.


Five Participants Selected for the Annual Native American Unscripted Workshop

The Native American Media Alliance has selected five storytellers to participate in its 5th Annual Native American Unscripted Workshop: a five day talent development program that aims to help Native American filmmakers, journalists and media artists launch their careers in the unscripted film and television industry.

Guided by experienced unscripted producers, the program offers mentorship, creative seminars, meetings and networking opportunities for these emergent voices. At the end of the five days, participants pitch their projects to panels of creative executives and producers.

This years’ participants are Alana Tiikpuu, Evan L. Chouteau, Jenna Monroe, Joshua Emerson and Tammy “TS” Botkin. The program is sponsored by Comcast NBCUniversal, the Los Angeles County of Arts & Culture and the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.

Freestyle Digital Media Acquires “Stationed At Home”

Freestyle Digital Media, the digital film distribution arm of Allen Media Group, has acquired the VOD distribution rights for “Stationed At Home.” The film will be available to rent and own on digital platforms and DVD in North America starting Nov. 11.

Directed by Daniel V. Masciari, the film is an indie drama following a lonely taxi driver in 1998, whose night takes bizarre turns as unexpected faces and figures float through his orbit. The film stars Erik Bjarnar, Darryle Johnson, Eliza VanCort, Jamie Donnelly, Peter Foster Morris, Jeff DuMont and Alek Osinski.

Wednesday, October 8

Art House New York Launches Regional Alliance to Support Indie Film Exhibition

Art House New York has officially launched with an inaugural week-long audience development campaign designed to bring audiences back to explore the vibrant and diverse independent cinema landscape in spring 2026. 

“Our goal is to strengthen ties between art house cinemas and with the film industry, creating new opportunities to connect audiences together,” Art House New York director Allason Leitz, said in a statement. “Alone, art house cinemas are hidden gems, but together, we are a cultural force.”

With the NYC Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment as a founding partner, Art House New York is a regional alliance strengthening independent film exhibitions in New York City through audience development, research and strategic initiatives. Paula Scher, who created the Art House New York logo and brand identity, will also develop the 2026 campaign.

Art House New York was founded by Lesli Klainberg (former president of Film at Lincoln Center) who tapped Allason Leitz of Third Industry Strategies to design its formative vision and serve as the initiative’s director.

Leaders from across the film industry on the advisory council include Kazembe Balagun, Executive Director, Maysles Documentary Center; Dori Begley, Co-CEO, Magnolia Pictures;  Matt Bolish, Deputy Director, Film at Lincoln Center; Mark Boxer, Head of Distribution, MUBI; Karen Cardarelli, Executive Director, Facets & Chicago Alliance of Film Festivals and Gary Faber, President, ERM Research. 

They are joined by New York Film Commissioner Pat Swinney Kaufman; Klainberg, AHNY Founder, former President, Film at Lincoln Center; Lela Meadow-Conner, Board President, Art House Convergence; Dara Messinger, Director of Programming, DCTV’s Firehouse Cinema; Rajendra Roy, Chief Curator of Film, MoMA; Shannon Treusch, Partner, Falco Ink.; Jesse Trussell, Director, Film Program and Strategy, BAM; Barbara Twist, Executive Director, Film Festival Alliance and John Vanco, Programming, Paris Theater (Netflix). 

Jackson Wild and Earth Alliance Awards $60,000 Grants to Documentary Filmmakers 

Jackson Wild and Earth Alliance have revealed the conservation and wildlife filmmakers selected for their inaugural Impact Pitch grant program, which aims to fund projects that shift the narrative toward solutions and actionable outcomes.  

The program awards up to $60,000 in funding to support filmmakers and impact campaigns associated with their films. 

Jigar Ganatra’s film “Chameleon Corridors” will receive $30,000 and strategic support to help implement its impact campaign. The “Chameleon Corridors” team will work with local partners in Tanzania to screen the film for farmers, students and Tanzanian authorities to dismantle ingrained superstitions around chameleons and educate communities about reforestation programs. 

Sally Snow’s “Iyo Ang Dagat (The Sea is Yours),” which explores the deep and complex relationship between people and sharks in the Philippines, will be awarded $15,000. The grant will help raise awareness about the value of sharks and rays and the ongoing efforts to protect them in Palawan and support working alongside key stakeholders to draft and pass legislation regulating marine and wildlife tourism in Palawan.

Michael Salama and Gastón Zilberman’s “Qotzuñi: People of the Lake” will also receive $15,000 and is set to use the funding with the Uru Indigenous Nation and local partners in Bolivia to improve food security for communities, support sustainable livelihoods, and create fellowships for Uru youth in communities surrounding Lake Poopó.

Other finalists include Danny Schmidt’s “Book of George” and the Environmental Justice Foundation documentary “Pantanal.”

Tuesday, October 7

Tribeca Festival and AT&T Launch Applications for Untold Stories With $1.2 Million in Prizes

The Tribeca Festival and AT&T have increased their AT&T Untold Stories program’s top production prize from $1 million to $1.2 million for the festival’s 25th anniversary in 2026. The program, which provides funding, empowerment and support for emerging filmmakers, is the largest unrestricted film production award of its kind in the world.

The program launched in 2017 and each year awards one new filmmaker full funding to produce a feature along with mentorship, support and a guaranteed premiere at the Tribeca Festival. Since its inception, the program has supported 40 projects and produced eight winning films, some of which have garnered distribution on major platforms such as Netflix and HBO Max.

“Independent filmmaking has never been tougher, and too many vital stories never make it to the screen. Untold Stories changes that,” said Jane Rosenthal, CEO and Co-Founder of Tribeca Enterprises. “It doesn’t just give filmmakers the means to create — it helps ensure their work is seen. With funding, mentorship, and distribution support, the program opens doors that might otherwise stay shut. This expanded prize will give bold storytellers the chance to dream bigger, go further, and reach the audiences their stories deserve.”

Applications for the 2026 Untold Stories award are now open and close on Feb. 6. The winner will receive the $1.2 million grant at next year’s festival.

Filmmakers can apply now at tribecafilm.com/untoldstories.

Tello Films Network Releases Trailer For Lesbian Holiday Romcom “The Christmas Writer”

The trailer for “The Christmas Writer” has been released online, courtesy of Tello Films Network..  The film will premiere on Nov. 18 on VOD.

The film follows a bestselling lesbian Christmas author loses her holiday muse and experiences writer’s block, setting her off on a journey to return to her quaint hometown in search of renewed inspiration, finding an unexpected love story.

“The Christmas Writer” stars Shelby Allison Brown as Noel, Callie Bussell as Callie, Jordan Myrick as Paulette, Kendahl Landreth as Erin, Stacey Lee Powell as Jillian, Karen M. Chan as Grandma Robbins, and June Tuss as Pepper. The film was directed by Tello Films founder & CEO Christin Baker, and co-written with Katie I. Williams. “The Christmas Writer” was produced by Andrew James Myers and Trenton Julius.

The film will also be available to rent or buy on Amazon, Apple, YouTube Movies and other VOD platforms.

Watch the trailer for “The Christmas Writer” below.

Monday, October 6

Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences Reveals 2025 Student Academy Awards Placements

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have unveiled the recipients of this year’s Gold, Silver and Bronze placements and universities around the world at the 52nd Student Academy Awards ceremony. The recipients were chosen from 3,127 entries from 988 colleges and universities worldwide.

The Student Academy Award placements for 2025 include:

Alternative/Experimental

Gold: Xindi Zhang, “The Song of Drifters,” University of Southern California

Silver: Vega Moltke-Leth, “Without Perfection,” University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Bronze: Mati Granica, “flower_gan,” London College of Communication, United Kingdom

Animation

Gold: Tobias Eckerlin, “A Sparrow’s Song,” Film Academy Baden-Württemberg, Germany

Silver: Lucas Ansel, “The 12 Inch Pianist,” Rhode Island School of Design 

Bronze: Sofiia Chuikovska, Loïck du Plessis D’Argentré & Maud Le Bras, “The Shyness of Trees,” Gobelins, France

Documentary

Gold: Tatiana McCabe, “Tides of Life,” University of the West of England Bristol, United Kingdom

Silver: Rebeka Bizubová, “Confession,” Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava, Slovakia

Bronze: Jane Deng, “I Remember,” New York University 

Narrative

Gold: Jan Saczek, “Dad’s Not Home,” Krzysztof Kieślowski Film School, Poland

Silver: Meyer Levinson-Blount, “Butcher’s Stain,” Tel Aviv University, Israel

Bronze: ZEFAN, “Kubrick, Like I Love You,” Columbia University

The Student Academy Award-winning films are now eligible to compete for the 98th Oscars in the Animated Short Film, Live Action Short Film or Documentary Short Film categories. 

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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‘Indian cinema has never seen anything like it before’: Madhur Bhandarkar hails Rishab Shetty's Kantara Chapter 1
Bollywood

‘Indian cinema has never seen anything like it before’: Madhur Bhandarkar hails Rishab Shetty’s Kantara Chapter 1

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Updated on: Oct 06, 2025 08:41 pm IST

Kantara Chapter 1, has been written and directed by Rishab Shetty, who also stars in it in the lead. The film released in theatres during Dussehra. 

Rishab Shetty’s Kantara Chapter 1 is the talk of the nation. The Kannada-language film that was released in theatres last Friday has become a box office sensation, earning rave reviews from filmmakers as well as fans. National Award-winning filmmaker Madhur Bhandarkar is the latest to join the bandwagon, and he has now penned a review of the film, praising Rishab’s ‘extraordinary’ performance and calling the film unlike anything Indian cinema has seen before. (Also read: ₹240 crore”>Kantara Chapter 1 box office day 5 (updated live): Rishab Shetty film remains steady on Monday, crosses ₹240 crore)

Madhur Bhandarkar has raved about Rishab Shetty’s Kantara Chapter 1.

What Madhur said about Kantara Chapter 1

In a new tweet on his X account, Madhur wrote, “Saw the film #KantaraChapter1 by @shetty_rishab, and I must say, Indian cinema has never seen anything like it before. It’s a raw, divine, and utterly captivating work of art. #RishabShetty delivers an extraordinary performance, expertly crafting & carrying the entire film.”

He added, “The performances, including @rukminitweets, are outstanding. The background score, sound design, cinematography, production design, and VFX are world class. Big congratulations to @hombalefilms for their unwavering support of this brilliant creative team. #KantaraChapter1”

Both Rishab and Rukmini reposted the review on their respective X accounts and thanked Madhur for the kind words of appreciation for Kantara Chapter 1.

Madhur is the director behind films like Chandni Bar, Fashion, Page 3, Traffic and Heroine.

All about Kantara Chapter 1

Written and directed by Rishab Shetty, the original Kantara was a sleeper hit, earning over ₹400 crore worldwide on a ₹15 crore budget. The prequel – Kantara Chapter 1 – is set a thousand years before the events of the film. Apart from Rishab in the lead, the film also stars Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, and Gulshan Devaiah. The film has already broken box office records and is about to cross the ₹250 crore mark in India in 5 days.

News / Entertainment / Bollywood / ‘Indian cinema has never seen anything like it before’: Madhur Bhandarkar hails Rishab Shetty’s Kantara Chapter 1

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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ALL THAT JAZZ Podcast | Comedy, Cinema & Culture
Hollywood

ALL THAT JAZZ Podcast | Comedy, Cinema & Culture

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Podcasts are everywhere these days. They soundtrack commutes, workouts, and late-night scrolling. But every so often one stands out—not because it’s neatly packaged or algorithm-friendly, but because it feels alive. ALL THAT JAZZ, hosted by indie filmmaker Gregory Hatanaka, actress-director Nicole D’Angelo, cultural commentator Warren Hong, and cinephile guest host Jessica Brainard, is one of those rare shows.

It isn’t just about movies, though it dives into them with obsessive energy. It isn’t just about culture, though that’s always in play. And it isn’t just about comedy, though the laughs are constant. Instead, ALL THAT JAZZ thrives on intersections—the unpredictable moments where cult cinema, anthropology, politics, and absurd humor all crash into each other like a jam session gone gloriously off-script.

The Origin Story The seed of ALL THAT JAZZ was planted in off-the-record conversations. Gregory, Nicole, and Warren had spent years talking movies, distribution, and the culture that surrounds them. Jessica, a cinephile with a sharp cultural perspective, joined in naturally. Eventually, the idea hit: why not record it?

What makes the show different is its refusal to over-produce. Episodes unfold the way real conversations do—messy, funny, digressive, surprising. “We’re like one of those hidden mystery shops of wonders,” Gregory says. “You can discover things you never knew existed.”

That sense of stumbling onto something unexpected—like finding a forgotten record in the back of a dusty shop—is exactly what defines the show.

The Vibe Drop in on an episode and you never know where you’ll land. One moment the hosts are swapping stories about why Fast Times at Ridgemont High’s VHS release had the wrong soundtrack. The next, they’re debating the anthropology of endangered languages, unpacking Wade Davis’s TED talk, or explaining the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. Before you catch your breath, the conversation may have swerved into fragile states like Syria or Haiti, or back into the trenches of indie film contracts and production war stories.

The hosts keep the vibe electric. Gregory brings encyclopedic knowledge and war stories from the indie film frontlines. Nicole anchors the show with warmth, honesty, and philosophical reflections on art and life. Warren adds the sharp edges, mixing pop-culture humor with cultural critique. Jessica bridges cinema and culture, connecting forgotten movies to broader social and historical patterns.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries

Nicole sums it up best: “It means so much to have a place where we can tell the world about adventures—and even spiritual experiences—that shape the way we see life.”

Jessica adds: “I’ve always loved discovering new films and how they connect to the bigger picture of culture. On the podcast, I get to chase that curiosity every week.”

And Warren? He embraces the chaos. “The best part is the chaos—we don’t always know where we’re going, and that’s the thrill.”

The Unexpected The joy of ALL THAT JAZZ lies in its unpredictability. Listeners have tuned in to hear detailed breakdowns of why John Cassavetes’ A Woman Under the Influence plays differently across formats, only to find themselves swept into discussions of white-collar crime and the shocking statistics that show its cost in lives and dollars. What begins as a film conversation might twist into a sociology seminar, complete with reflections on deviance theories and corporate accountability.

And then, just as quickly, the conversation will shift gears again—into the spiritual, the personal, or the absurd. In one episode, the hosts bounced from discussing fragile states like Syria and Haiti to joking about food rituals. The phrase “fried chicken, yeah!” somehow became a mantra. It’s that unpredictability—never knowing if you’re about to learn something, laugh out loud, or both—that gives the show its charm.

Gregory thrives on that wide range. “To me, cinema has always been connected to everything else—politics, history, even spirituality. The podcast just makes those connections visible.”

Why the Range Matters The range of topics isn’t a gimmick; it reflects the way culture really works. Movies aren’t just entertainment—they’re tied to music rights, to the sociology of who gets represented, to the politics of which films get distributed. Anthropology doesn’t live in a classroom—it informs how we think about rituals in movies, why certain languages vanish, or how ancient civilizations like the Hittites understood the world. Even jokes, chants, or surreal tangents are part of culture.

In other words, ALL THAT JAZZ mirrors life: messy, interconnected, and unpredictable.

Meet the Hosts Gregory Hatanaka is best known as the filmmaker and distributor behind Cinema Epoch and Cineridge, labels that have brought everything from cult curiosities to ambitious indie projects to audiences worldwide. On the podcast, he draws on decades of experience in the trenches of indie cinema, mixing war stories with sharp insights.

Nicole D’Angelo has built her reputation as an actress, director, and writer who explores themes of intimacy and identity. On the show, she’s the grounding presence, often guiding the conversation into deeper waters about spirituality, memory, and personal journeys.

Warren Hong is the wildcard—funny, insightful, and unafraid to push the conversation into unexpected directions. His commentary ranges from sharp critiques of politics to surreal one-liners that leave the group in stitches.

Jessica Brainard brings her lifelong cinephilia to bear, connecting forgotten films to bigger cultural narratives. Whether she’s exploring why a VHS edit matters or tracing how a cult movie reflects generational shifts, she brings both passion and clarity.

The Bigger Picture So why does this podcast resonate? Part of it is the eclecticism. But more than that, it’s the sense of community the hosts create with listeners. By diving into subjects as varied as Dario Argento’s Tenebre, the anthropology of endangered languages, the rise and fall of ancient civilizations like the Hittites, or the controversies of corporate crime, ALL THAT JAZZ opens up cultural rabbit holes that most shows wouldn’t dare attempt.

It’s also a reminder that culture isn’t made of neat categories. A discussion of VHS soundtracks isn’t just nostalgia—it’s about economics, law, and how art circulates. A conversation about fragile states isn’t just political—it ties back to stories we tell in movies and the ways we understand identity. The absurdist riffs and surreal humor? That’s culture too, alive and evolving.

At its best, ALL THAT JAZZ feels like a cultural conversation that refuses to stay still. It’s a film school, a comedy club, and a philosophy seminar rolled into one—and then something stranger and funnier still. In an age where most podcasts chase niches, ALL THAT JAZZ dares to be messy, eclectic, and alive. That’s exactly why it works.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Hostile Political Climate Threatening Cinema, Say Industry Reps
TV & Streaming

Hostile Political Climate Threatening Cinema, Say Industry Reps

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Journalists and filmmakers and cinema itself are facing growing political threats and increasing difficulties, according to film industry reps at the Zurich Summit on Saturday.

Taking part in a discussion on the political turmoil engulfing the entertainment industry at the Zurich Film Festival industry event were Kathleen Fournier of Charlotte Street Films, producer of the Julian Assange doc “The Six Billion Dollar Man;” David Unger, CEO of Artist International Group; Nathanaël Karmitz, chairman of Paris-based MK2; and Stephen Follows, film data researcher and consultant for Guinness World Records.

Offering a stark example of the darkening climate for filmmakers was Fournier’s experience in producing Eugene Jarecki’s “The Six Billion Dollar Man,” which screens at the Zurich Film Festival.

“As a filmmaker, as a producer, there is substantial risk sometimes involved for me and my team personally,” Fournier said, explaining how she moved with her family to Berlin to work on the documentary, which tells “the definitive story of Wikileaks,” due to the potentially explosive footage they had obtained.

“We didn’t feel comfortable editing in the U.K. or in the U.S. because there are laws there and ways to seize footage, and journalists aren’t protected in the way they are in Germany. So we moved the entire production and editing team to Berlin, and that was really inspiring and very interesting … until Gaza happened and we started to see that even Germany, with all of its civic mindedness, is fallible to ideology and to erosion. So it was very interesting to see journalists challenged there in real time and to react to that.”

She added: “I think we really do need a mechanism in place to protect journalists. And that’s what our film is about.”

Fournier also noted how the changing political climate and growth of streaming platforms have impacted the prospects of certain types of documentaries.

“It used to be that if you won an Emmy, won the Sundance Grand Jury prize, won a Grierson Award, you would have no trouble getting your films made. And we won all of those with many of our films. I’m not complaining that doors have closed, but what I’m seeing is that as documentaries move to streaming platforms, many of the political and more nuanced and difficult or subjective documentaries did not make that leap.

“The sort of documentaries you now find on streaming platforms tend to be historical – there’s the past, so it flattens the stakes in a way because those people are gone, that time is finished – or it’s true crime or it’s often very sort of personal stories. So it is interesting trying to make a film at this particular juncture as the media landscape is changing fundamentally, dramatically.”

Yet life has always been difficult, Fournier added. “Every epoch has its challenges, and I think we as a generation, my generation, inherited a lot of the fruits of other people’s labor in the civil rights movement, in terms of civil liberties. Now it’s up to us to stand up for those and really investigate what it means as some of those rights and liberties get challenged or taken away.”

Despite winning this year’s Golden Eye Special Jury Prize at Cannes and a “phenomenal” screening in Zurich, “The Six Billion Dollar Man” has yet to land a U.S. distributor.

“We’ve been dancing with lots of partners and talking. People love the film, but it’s a difficult film. … It talks about Trump, it talks about the deep state. It uses all the facts that come from various court cases. It’s an incredibly, deeply researched film.”

Offering a sharp critique of the industry, Follows argued that the onus was on companies to exhibit greater courage, as was the case in the 1970s, which saw much braver, more diverse and interesting storytelling than what was produced in subsequent decades.

“The film industry is fundamentally, as a business and as an ecosystem, risk averse and scared and cowardly. … It’s absolutely cowardly that they’re not releasing these films. You think about how ‘Bowling for Columbine’ got media releases and things like that. So this needs agitators. If we leave it and don’t actively do things, the industry acts in horrible ways. The reason Me Too had to happen is because when left to our own devices as an industry, we didn’t police, we didn’t sort out.”

While stressing that politics and cinema have always been very linked, Karmitz said: “What is new is that we ask this question, and we ask this type of question because culture is under attack and cinema is under attack.”

Karmitz said that while the press was talking less and less about films, far-right accounts on the social media platform X were systematically attacking “everything about movies and French movies.”

The far-right has become the major voice discussing cinema on X, he added. “Is this a problem? Yes, it is, because the question is, how do we organize to fight back?”

Karmitz noted that many of MK2’s cinema events and discussions attract contentious reactions from far-right critics.

Looking at the broader situation in France, he also stressed the recent legal challenge faced by the CNC national film center in Parliament and the ongoing right-wing assault on national television.

Unger, for his part, expressed optimism that the climate would eventually improve. He recalled how earlier films by the likes of Charlie Chaplin and Stanley Kramer “were unbelievably controversial” in their day. Kramer’s 1967 classic “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” for example, no longer causes the great ruckus it once did.

He also underscored the importance of such a discussion at the Zurich Summit. “I see that this register’s here. And I think for us to have this dialogue here is important, because it’s forcing all of us in this room to kind of examine where the business is and how we can help shape it.”

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Claudia Cardinale, Tunisian-born star of Italian cinema dies at age 87
Bollywood

Claudia Cardinale, Tunisian-born star of Italian cinema dies at age 87

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

ROME, Sept 23 – Claudia Cardinale, a glamorous symbol of post-war Italian cinema who enjoyed a long and varied acting career on film and in the theatre, has died at age 87, according to AFP and other French media.

Claudia Cardinale, Tunisian-born star of Italian cinema dies at age 87

Raised in Tunisia to a family of Sicilian origin, Cardinale’s introduction to the movie world came in 1957 after she won a beauty contest in Tunis and was rewarded with a trip to the Venice film festival.

Her voice had to be dubbed for her first Italian screen roles because she had grown up in a family where Sicilian dialect was spoken and had been educated at a French-speaking school.

Her early career was also complicated by a secret pregnancy which she said was the result of an abusive relationship. She gave birth to a son, Patrick, in London in 1958 and passed him off as a younger brother for several years while he was brought up by her parents.

After a series of smaller roles, she shot to international fame in 1963 when she featured in Federico Fellini’s “8-1/2” while she also starred alongside Burt Lancaster in “The Leopard” in the same year.

Shooting two films at the same time brought complications, with Cardinale recalling that she had to have different hair colours for the two roles.

In an interview with Britain’s Guardian newspaper in 2013, Cardinale contrasted the approaches of directors Fellini and Luchino Visconti, who directed “The Leopard”.

“He couldn’t shoot without noise. With Visconti, the opposite, like doing theatre. We couldn’t say a word. Very serious,” she said.

Her growing profile opened the door to Hollywood productions and she appeared in the comedy caper “The Pink Panther”, directed by Blake Edwards, and Sergio Leone’s “Once Upon A Time In the West” in 1968.

OSTRACISED

Cardinale’s career took a hit in the 1970s, after she separated from film producer Franco Cristaldi to start a life-long relationship with filmmaker Pasquale Squitieri, with whom she had a daughter, also called Claudia.

Angry at being dumped for another man, Cristaldi asked friends and associates in the Italian cinema industry to ostracise Cardinale, resulting for example in Visconti turning her down for his last film, “The Innocent” .

“It was a very delicate moment. I discovered I had no money in my bank account,” Cardinale said about the period.

Franco Zeffirelli eventually came to her rescue, casting her in the 1977 television mini-series “Jesus of Nazareth”. She then continued working with other European directors, including Werner Herzog and Marco Bellocchio.

The husky-voiced, chain-smoking Cardinale had a reputation as a fiercely independent, free-spirited woman, who once defied Vatican protocol by showing up for a meeting with Pope Paul VI in a miniskirt.

A 2022 book celebrating her life was called “Claudia Cardinale. The Indomitable”.

Based for much of the time in France, and friends with presidents Francois Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac, Cardinale turned to the theatre around the turn of this century, winning plaudits for her appearances on the stage.

She carried on making films in a variety of European languages until late in her life, appearing in Swiss TV series Bulle in 2020.

Awarded a lifetime achievement at the Berlin Film Festival back in 2002, she said acting had been a great career.

“I’ve lived more than 150 lives, prostitute, saint, romantic, every kind of woman, and that is marvellous to have this opportunity to change yourself,” she said.

“I’ve worked with the most important directors. They gave me everything.”

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Nag Ashwin deepika
Bollywood

Mohanlal to Receive Dadasaheb Phalke Award for His Contribution to Indian Cinema

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Malayalam cinema’s biggest star, Mohanlal, has been chosen for the Dadasaheb Phalke Award for the year 2023, Indian cinema’s highest recognition. The award will be presented at the 71st National Film Awards ceremony in New Delhi on September 23, 2025.

The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, through an official X post announced, “On the recommendation of the Dadasaheb Phalke Award Selection Committee, the Government of India is pleased to announce that Shri. Mohanlal will be conferred the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke Award 2023… Mohanlal’s remarkable cinematic journey inspires generations! The legendary actor, director, and producer is being honoured for his iconic contribution to Indian Cinema. His unmatched talent, versatility, and relentless hard work have set a golden standard in Indian film history. The award will be presented at the 71st National Film Awards ceremony on Sept 23, 2025.”

On the recommendation of the Dadasaheb Phalke Award Selection Committee, the Government of India is pleased to announce that Shri. Mohanlal will be conferred the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke Award 2023.

Mohanlal’s remarkable cinematic journey inspires generations! 🌟

The… pic.twitter.com/n1L9t5WQuP


— Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (@MIB_India) September 20, 2025

A Storied Career Comes Full Circle

With a career spanning over four decades, Mohanlal has acted in more than 400 films across Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Hindi. Known for his effortless screen presence and versatility, he has delivered memorable performances in films ranging from intense dramas to action blockbusters. Whether it was the understated brilliance of Vanaprastham, the cultural phenomenon of Drishyam, or the mass appeal of Pulimurugan, his body of work reflects an actor who has constantly reinvented himself to match the times.

Over the years, Mohanlal has won numerous honours including two National Film Awards for Best Actor and multiple state awards. He has also been decorated with the Padma Shri in 2001 and the Padma Bhushan in 2019, making this latest recognition a crowning moment in his long and decorated career.


A Landmark for Malayalam Cinema

Mohanlal now joins an elite list of legends who have been conferred the Phalke Award, becoming only the second person from Malayalam cinema to do so after filmmaker Adoor Gopalakrishnan. His selection marks a proud moment for the industry, underscoring its influence beyond regional boundaries and affirming its place in the larger history of Indian cinema.

This recognition also comes at a time when Malayalam cinema has been earning acclaim nationally and internationally for its content-driven films. Mohanlal’s award is not just about his personal achievement but also about shining a spotlight on Kerala’s cinematic legacy and its growing resonance across the world.

As Indian cinema continues to evolve, the Dadasaheb Phalke Award for Mohanlal stands as a testament to how an actor from Kerala became one of the country’s most beloved and enduring stars. His journey from local icon to national treasure reflects the power of storytelling and performance to transcend borders.

Also Read: Mohanlal’s Vrusshabha Teaser Unveiled, Diwali Release Locked

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Daisy Ridley & Jameela Jamil Set For Cinema For Gaza Fundraiser
TV & Streaming

Daisy Ridley & Jameela Jamil Set For Cinema For Gaza Fundraiser

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The industry advocacy group Cinema For Gaza is hosting a fundraising table read of Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice, adapted for the stage, with a participating cast that includes names such as Daisy Ridley, Jameela Jamil, and Ambika Mod (One Day). 

The table read will serve as a one-off fundraising event for the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians. The event will take place on October 12 at the Troxy in East London. 

The wider cast includes Jenna Coleman, Morfydd Clark, Nish Kumar, Susan Wokoma, Mawaan Rizwan, Priya Kansara, Amar Chadha-Patel, Jeff Mirza, Shazia Mirza, and Asim Chaudhry. It will be helmed by director Nida Manzoor.

Cinema for Gaza has said 100% of the money raised will go directly to Medical Aid for Palestinians, which runs a polyclinic in Gaza. The clinic has been supporting hundreds of patients a day, providing vital healthcare such as psychosocial support, physiotherapy, and medication for chronic conditions.

Cinema for Gaza was created by UK film professionals Hanna Flint, Julia Jackman, Leila Latif, Sophie Monks Kaufman, and Helen Simmons, with support from Rebecca Osias and Guy Lodge. The group has so far raised £269,206. 

Last year, the group organized a fundraising auction where high-profile names from the film and TV world donated unique gifts to be auctioned off. Contributors included Tilda Swinton, Ramy Youssef, Peter Capaldi, Imelda Staunton, Brian Cox, Joseph Quinn, Mike Leigh, Misan Harriman, Joanna Hogg, Aimee Lou Wood, and Josh O’Connor.

September 15, 2025 0 comments
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