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Toni Collette & Andy Garcia in Italy RomCom 'Under the Stars' Trailer
Hollywood

Toni Collette & Andy Garcia in Italy RomCom ‘Under the Stars’ Trailer

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Toni Collette & Andy Garcia in Italy RomCom ‘Under the Stars’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
November 2, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Allow yourself to fall in love again… This is your big moment.” Aura Ent. has debuted their official trailer for an indie romantic comedy film titled Under the Stars, the latest from filmmaker Michelle Danner after her other film The Italians last year. Out on VOD this month if anyone wants to visit Italy. “Sometimes the greatest love story will be your very own.” Under the Stars follows a novelist in a passionless relationship who decides to head to Italy. The twist is that Alex Pettyfer plays the lead character, and Andy Garcia is his Italian host, Giacomo. Once he arrives in Italy, he unexpectedly falls for a spirited local girl who challenges everything he knows about love. It looks like there’s also two love stores in here! Starring Toni Collette, Andy Garcia, Alex Pettyfer, Rob Estes, Jessica Serfaty, and Eva De Dominici. A very rustic charm.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Michelle Danner’s film Under the Stars, direct from YouTube:

Under the Stars Poster

Under the Stars follows a struggling romance novelist trapped in a lifeless relationship and plagued by writer’s block. Hoping to reignite his passion, he travels to Italy for inspiration – only to unexpectedly fall for a spirited local who challenges everything he thought he knew about love and himself. Under the Stars is directed by American acting coach / author / director Michelle Danner, director of the films How to Go Out on a Date in Queens, Hello Herman, The Bandit Hound, Bad Impulse, The Runner, Miranda’s Victim, and The Italians previously. The screenplay is written by Victoria Vinuesa. Produced by Pia Patatian. This hasn’t premiered at any film festivals or elsewhere, as far as we know. Aura Ent. will debut Danner’s Under the Stars romcom film direct-to-VOD starting November 11th, 2025 this fall. Anyone want to watch this?

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November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Toni Collette, Mae Martin and Sarah Gadon
TV & Streaming

Is Evelyn Dead? Ending and Shocking ‘Leap’ Scene Explained by Toni Collette (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Mae Martin‘s new Netflix series Wayward is a twisty psychological thriller about an academy for “troubled teens,” run by Evelyn Wade (Toni Collette), and the surrounding town that holds a whole lot of secrets.

Evelyn uses questionable methods to get the students to remember traumatic events from their past to prepare them for a ritual called “the Leap,” but the process is eventually turned on her in the end when Alex (Martin) injects her with a too-large portion of the drugs used, resulting in a haunting scene that shows Evelyn reacting to the psychedelic overload.

But did the injection actually kill her? “We actually did a lot of takes which were far more intense and it felt like Evelyn was gone forever,” Collette tells TV Insider. “But it’s kind of left a little open-ended.”

Martin, who created the show, confirms, “I think [Evelyn’s] still in there.”

Alex is a cop who’s new to the town of Tall Pines. He moved there with his pregnant wife, Laura (Sarah Gadon), who used to be a student at Tall Pines Academy and has a troubled history with Evelyn, memories of which she unlocks throughout the series. It doesn’t take long for Alex to notice that things are a little off at the Academy and within the town in general (for example, Tall Pines has no children.)

As he investigates, with help from two of the school’s teens, Abbie (Sydney Topliffe) and Leila (Alyvia Alyn Lind), he makes an enemy out of Evelyn, who wants to “Leap” him before he can find out the full truth of what she’s up to. When Alex escapes, he’s shocked to find that Laura has given birth to their child and is essentially sharing the baby with the rest of the people in the town. “It’s everyone’s. It’s the only way to break the pattern,” Laura insists.

While Alex seems horrified to see that his wife is essentially taking on Evelyn’s leadership role in a new form, he ultimately makes the decision to stay with her and their baby in Tall Pines. He helps Abbie escape by leaving her his car so she can leave town, but he doesn’t join her for the getaway.

“I knew that I wanted the show to escalate to something pretty surreal and almost sort of a parabole by the end, or a weird myth,” Martin explains. “Alex is a deeply flawed character who desperately wants acceptance, and I really understand his choice, in a way. He compromises a lot of his integrity and his morals, but he ultimately wants to stay with his wife and baby. I’m curious for what would happen for them in the future. I think their kid is going to be pretty messed up.”

As for whether or not we’ll get to explore the family’s future in another season of Wayward, that’s still up in the air. “I was told it was a miniseries, but there’s definitely more story to tell, I think,” Martin admits. “We left all those characters in crisis, basically.”

Collette adds that the cast “talks about” returning for a Season 2. “It’s endlessly intriguing,” she says. “Endlessly. So many places it could go, for sure.” As Gadon also points out, “Nothing’s tied up in a neat little bow.”

Wayward, All Episodes, Streaming now, Netflix

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Mae Martin's Netflix Tease Starring Toni Collette
TV & Streaming

Mae Martin’s Netflix Tease Starring Toni Collette

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

First, Netflix received rave reviews and an impressive haul of Emmys for Adolescence, an eerie and unsettling four-part limited series that posited that kids today, young men in particular, are not alright. It offered no particular solution to this crisis, which made it even more unsettling.

Get ready for the discomfort to continue with Netflix’s Wayward, an eerie and unsettling eight-part limited series that posits that the industrial complex built around “fixing” troubled kids, of all genders, might be even more broken than the kids themselves. It veers off into genre-bending oddness so immediately and, ultimately, so completely that it offers no particular solution to this crisis, which I suppose makes it even more unsettling.

Wayward

The Bottom Line

Unsettling and unsettled, for better and worse.

Airdate: Thursday, September 25 (Netflix)
Cast: Mae Martin, Toni Collette, Sarah Gadon, Sydney Topliffe, Alyvia Alyn Lind, Brandon Jay McLaren, Tattiawna Jones, Isolde Ardies
Creator: Mae Martin

Wayward marks an unexpected storytelling swerve for series creator and star Mae Martin, who previously co-created and starred in Netflix’s bittersweet two-season rom-com Feel Good, as well as a 2023 stand-up special.

While there are small traces of overlap with their previous semi-autobiographical semi-comedies and Martin’s dryly comic tone is employed periodically, Wayward is not, exactly, a comedy. You can laugh at things in it, but that laughter will rarely make you, pun intended, feel good.

It is, by design, odd and off-putting, a portrait of unfulfilled alienation more than a straightforward thriller or social-issue drama. It’s easy to watch Wayward while working your way through a checklist of slightly similar shows, but what it ends up being isn’t entirely like any of them. It’s hard to exactly say, in fact, what Wayward ends up becoming, which is probably both my favorite and least favorite thing about it. Wayward is a pupal show, a show about transition and in transition, and if you demand a butterfly or even a moth to fully emerge, you’ll be disappointed.

Wayward begins with a pair of parallel narratives that, thankfully, don’t wait long to intersect.

Abbie (Sydney Topliffe) and Leila (Alyvia Alyn Lind) are a pair of troublemaking teens in 2003 Toronto. Leila, emotionally wounded by her older sister’s death, enjoys recreational drugs and skipping class with Abbie, who is chafing against her controlling parents. When the girls’ latest low-key misadventure lands them in trouble, Mr. Turner (Patrick J. Adams, fine but barely in the show so don’t watch for him), a school authority figure of some sort, warns Leila that she’s failing high school and recommends his own alma mater, Tall Pines Academy, which uses “groundbreaking therapeutic techniques, rigorous academics and a transcendent connection with nature to solve the problem of adolescence.”

Ah, the problem of adolescence.

Anyway, at the same time we meet Alex (Martin) and Laura (Sarah Gadon), moving to the Vermont town of Tall Pines after Alex loses his job as a Detroit cop, but before Laura can give birth to their first child. Laura attended Tall Pines Academy and credits the school and Evelyn Wade (Toni Collette), its odd founder, with turning her life around.

Everything in Tall Pines seems perfect, from its quintessential New England-y Main Street to the expansive farmhouse that Evelyn is giving them rent-free to the police department’s total chill about Alex’s excessive force scandal or the fact that he’s a trans man receiving hormone therapy.

It is, of course, too good to be true.

(It’s also kinda confusing if you’re a TV obsessive and you remember a little Fox series called Wayward Pines in which a former law enforcement figure finds himself in what seems like a quintessential rural town, only to discover that it’s very much too good to be true.)

Soon, all of our characters begin to learn that something strange is happening in Tall Pines and that the methodology at Tall Pines Academy is far from orthodox.

The question — which is planted in the pre-credits opening scene with a terrified teen (Gage Munroe’s Riley) fleeing the school and running into freaky things in the dead of night — is what, exactly, the strange things happening at Tall Pines Academy and in Tall Pines itself actually are. (I’ll only spoil that the source of the strangeness in Wayward is not the same as the source of the strangeness in Wayward Pines.)

What’s so enticing (or infuriating, I suppose) about Wayward is how it always feels on the brink of shifting into a different genre. It’s a mystery, but if you told me after two or three episodes that what it was evolving into was a horror series or science fiction, I wouldn’t have been shocked. Or, actually, maybe it isn’t really a “mystery” per se, just a show in which things are mysterious. Though I guess Alex is investigating and trying to get to the bottom of something, so that sounds like a mystery, but without a singular answer/resolution. Is it a cult show? Is it a demonic possession show? Is it whatever the hell The OA was?

With a small narrative pivot, the show gives indications that it could become a dark satire of the Troubled Teen Industrial Complex or an exposé of the sort of “Scared Straight” programs Dr. Phil used to get off on sending juvenile guests to.

Primarily directed by Euros Lyn, Wayward has an almost languid pace meant to simultaneously lull you into a false sense of wooded, bucolic serenity and put you very slightly on edge, only branching into genuine discomfort at certain moments. The heightened sound design, making natural noises seem intrusive and alien, builds a mood of uncertainty and a sensation that almost every scene could be a hallucination or a dream.

Maybe an easier way to express all of that is that Wayward is very, very Canadian.

Anyway, it’s all the tantalizing set-up for a half-dozen genres, without the satisfying payoffs associated with any of those genres.

The series hovers in a similarly liminal space when it comes to depicting and critiquing the curriculum and goals at Tall Pines Academy, which I keep initially typing as “Twin Pines Academy,” which is a bit like “Twin Peaks Academy”; there’s little question that David Lynch is another of the show’s myriad influences.

If I had to boil the series’ agenda down to one line, it would be something like, “There are no bad kids, only kids, and kids shouldn’t get locked up in weird academies.” Evelyn’s agenda, articulated in a book that is unconvincingly treated as a bestseller, has something to do with epigenetic trauma and kids being the victims of psychoses patterned through their parents.

Or as Evelyn puts it, “You must understand that the darkness in you is not your fault. You’re just a ripple of all that came before. You never stood a chance. Birth is nonconsensual.”

There’s a lot of blather in both the diagnosed problems and detailed stages of the treatment, and yet it’s never clear whether the critique is directed at the specifics of the Tall Pines program — many of which are mighty reminiscent of Stephen King’s The Institute — or its overall absurdity.

Martin’s naturally dry affect makes them an interesting still point at the center of the odd Wayward universe, like so many things in the series reaching a simmering point, but never a full boil, even when the character is exhibiting what is suggested to be anger issues. Alex is, at once, a proactive gumshoe and a reactive Mia-Farrow-in-Rosemary’s-Baby-type figure. The sweetness of Alex and Laura’s relationship is, like everything else here, meant to set you so totally at ease that you wonder what’s going to be wrong, with Gadon radiating an almost overlit luminosity.

Collette plays Evelyn as an uber-guru, with shades of Charles Manson, a dash of Nicole Kidman in Nine Perfect Strangers, perhaps just a bit of Ruth Gordon from Rosemary’s Baby. For a limited series, having a character whose primary attribute is “cheery suspiciousness” works well enough, but I still never felt for a second like Collette was playing a real human.

The two best and most natural performances in the series come from Topliffe and Alyn Lind (sister to prolific, visually similar young actresses Emily and Natalie), both likable and believably uncomfortable with everything around them. Their lack of artifice allows some of the cast’s other teen/20-something performers to go broad and big, especially Isolde Ardies, whose terrifying intensity as a sad-eyed rule-follower named Stacey is a real highlight.

As befits a show that’s enticingly a lot of things, but conclusively none, Wayward reaches more of an “end” than an end. I was never bored and, despite the evasiveness, never exactly frustrated. I think Martin is incredibly talented and this series shows the expansive potential of their voice, albeit not the fully realized potential. Viewers craving something more concrete are less likely to remain tolerant for the full journey.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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‘Wayward’ Review: Toni Collette Leads a Quirky Cult for Kids in Mae Martin’s Curious Netflix Thriller
TV & Streaming

‘Wayward’ Review: Toni Collette Leads a Quirky Cult for Kids in Mae Martin’s Curious Netflix Thriller

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Feel Good” creator and stand-up comedian toys with a new genre in “Wayward,” a mystery-thriller about a therapeutic boarding school whose eerie local influence and harsh psychological “treatments” prompt the small town’s newest deputy to ask questions no one wants to answer.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Full Trailer for Eerie Small Town Thriller 'Wayward' with Toni Collette
Hollywood

Full Trailer for Eerie Small Town Thriller ‘Wayward’ with Toni Collette

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Full Trailer for Eerie Small Town Thriller ‘Wayward’ with Toni Collette

by Alex Billington
August 28, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Behind this door, nothing is what it seems.” 🐸 Netflix has revealed the full official trailer for an eerie new original series titled Wayward, created by actress / writer / comedian Mae Martin. Something strange is going on in this town – is this a cult or a sci-fi experiment or secret X-Men mutant school what? Ready for streaming starting in September coming up soon. Nothing is what it seems in the town of Tall Pines. After an escape attempt from an academy for “troubled teens”, two students join forces with a newly local police officer, unearthing the town’s dark and deeply rooted secrets. “The eternal struggle of the next generation…” The small-town cop suspects that the local school for teens — and its dangerously charismatic founder — may not be all it seems. The new series stars Mae Martin, Sarah Gadon, Sydney Topliffe, Alyvia Alyn Lind, Brandon Jay McLaren, and Toni Collette as Evelyn, the very mysterious founder of the academy. Along with Tattiawna Jones, Isolde Ardies, and Joshua Close. I’m curious to learn more about Tall Pines’ mysteries. “The only way out of here is through that door…” So what’s behind that door? This is such a spooky concept with so many weird things shown in this trailer. What is really going on there? Any ideas?

Here’s the full official trailer (+ poster) for Mae Martin’s series Wayward, direct from Netflix’s YouTube:

Wayward Trailer

Wayward Poster

“We think you’ll be very happy here.” 🚪 In the picture-perfect town of Tall Pines, sinister secrets lurk behind every closed door. Not long after police officer Alex Dempsey (Mae Martin) and his pregnant wife Laura (Sarah Gadon) move into their new home, he connects with two students Abbie (Sydney Topliffe) and Leila (Alyvia Alyn Lind) from the local school for “troubled teens” who are desperate to escape and could be the key to unearthing everything rotten within the town. As Alex begins investigating a series of unusual incidents, he suspects that Evelyn (Toni Collette), the school’s mysterious leader, might be at the center of all the problems. Created by Mae Martin, Wayward is a thrilling and genre-bending limited series about the eternal struggle between one generation and the next, what happens when friendship and loyalty are put to the ultimate test, and how buried truths always find a way of coming up to the surface.

Wayward is a new original series created by Canadian comedian / writer Mae Martin, creator of the “Feel Good” series, and a writer on the “Baroness Von Sketch Show” and “Benefits with Friends” podcast. It’s co-showrun by Mae Martin & Ryan Scott. Writing by Mae Martin, Ryan Scott, Evangeline Ordaz, Mohamad El Masri, Kim Steele, Kayla Lorette, Alex Elbridge, Misha Osherovich. Featuring episodes directed by Euros Lyn, Renuka Jeyapalan, John Fawcett. Made by Objective Fiction & Sphere Media. Executive produced by Mae Martin, Ryan Scott, Jennifer Kawaja with Sphere Media, Bruno Dubé with Sphere Media, Ben Farrell with Objective Fiction, Hannah Mackay with Objective Fiction, Euros Lyn. Netflix will debut the Wayward series streaming on Netflix worldwide starting September 25th, 2025 this fall. So who’s interested in it?

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August 28, 2025 0 comments
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