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Young Bleed, Former No Limit Records Star, Dead At 51
Music

Young Bleed, Former No Limit Records Star, Dead At 51

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

It is with deep sorrow that the hip-hop community mourns the loss of Louisiana rapper Young Bleed (born Glenn Reid Clifton Jr.), who passed away on November 1, 2025, at the age of 51 after suffering a brain aneurysm in Las Vegas.

His death came just days after he appeared at the highly anticipated Verzuz battle between No Limit Records and Cash Money Records, a reunion that celebrated two of Louisiana’s most influential rap dynasties.

News of his passing was confirmed by his eldest son, Ty Gee Ramon Clifton, who took to social media on Monday evening (Nov. 4) with a heartfelt video message addressing both his father’s legacy and the misinformation spreading online regarding the circumstances of his death.

Young Bleed performs onstage during the Master P and the No Limit Soldiers Reunion at The Orion Amphitheater on June 27, 2025 in Huntsville, Alabama.

Julia Beverly/Getty Images

The emotional clip served as both confirmation and clarification, offering a rare and deeply personal glimpse into the grief and strength of a family coming to terms with sudden loss.

“Hello, my name is Ty Gee Ramon Clifton and today we’re going to be talking about my dad,” he began, his tone steady but heavy with emotion. Glenn Reid Clifton Jr., also known to the world as Young Bleed, had just days earlier been celebrating with friends and fans in Las Vegas after his triumphant appearance on stage. “As of Nov. 1, my dad gained his wings,” Ty Gee continued in the lengthy clip.

“This is a tough topic for me, I’m not sure how it’s gonna go, but I’m here to clear up a lot of false narratives. There’s a lot of things that were said and just a lot of mess, you can’t address everything on social media so that’s not the plan, but I know being a legend worldwide a lot of people were concerned for him, they wasn’t sure of what they heard, so I’m here to confirm, as his oldest child that he has gained his wings.”

Ty Gee clarified that his father was 51 years old, born June 6, 1974, noting that early reports had incorrectly listed his age.

“My dad was 51 years old when this happened to him. He’s born June 6, 1974 and that’s why we have the official date ’cause I saw his age was printed out wrong,” he said. “So the big question, what happened? So my dad didn’t really have no health issues. These are just chapters in life. And I hope after this video that people that have gone through the same thing or are going through grieving moments find peace in this video here.”

According to Ty Gee, the health emergency occurred shortly after the Verzuz afterparty. While Young Bleed had managed mild high blood pressure, he was not known to have major ongoing medical conditions. His son wanted to make it clear that the tragedy was a natural medical event, not the result of any darker or more speculative circumstances.

“My dad, like most as you get [up] in age, had high blood pressure. He’d take his medicines and do what he do as a celebrity so not much. After his huge celebration at the Verzuz, he went to an afterparty and that’s where everything kind of spiked. I did want to clear [things] up and let people know ’cause people was thinking it was deeper than that, but nah, it was more of a natural thing that caused this to happen to him. Once he collapsed, he did pass from the aneurysm, the bleed to the brain.

“We don’t know, at least right now, and when they called me and gave me all the news, I don’t know much about aneurysms. So I’m not sure if this is something that he’s been had or how that worked but after this, I will be doing some research just so I can get a better understanding on aneurysms, but all I know is after the collapse, that’s when we heard about it. Like I said, my dad was never in and out of the hospital and that’s the unfortunate thing about sickness. Especially men, we don’t go to the hospital much.”

In the days that followed, Ty Gee expressed his continuing grief and disbelief, explaining how unprepared he felt for such a devastating loss—even with the lessons his father had instilled in him over the years.

“I’m trying to stay direct with this video, but my mind is still racing. I do wanna thank God for having the strength to sit here and have this conversation ’cause I couldn’t barely even talk a couple of days ago and throughout this week, just kind of been in the bed thinking ’cause with all the preparations my day gave me, this is something that you can’t prepare for.

“I still don’t know how to take this, it’s still so unreal. Love that guy, everything that’s me is him. He taught me everything. Never treated me as a kid, even when I was a kid, he always poured so much life into me. So I’m gonna pick up the ball and continue from where he left off. I’m gonna make sure his legacy stays alive and that’s through all of us.”

The family also extended gratitude to those who have offered prayers, donations, and words of support.

“I do wanna say thank you to a lot of people, I’m not necessarily gonna name specific [people] ’cause I don’t want nobody to feel left out, but to every single person that reached out with positivity that meant well, checked on me, provided their stories of losing their parents. Just the things that helped me get through these last few days, I appreciate that. The ones saying prayers for my dad, there’s so many people.”

Ty Gee concluded his message by acknowledging the doctors in Las Vegas who worked tirelessly to save his father and by confirming the legitimacy of the family’s GoFundMe page, which will now help with burial expenses.

“The doctors. They were working real hard out there in Vegas ’cause that’s where it happened. Thank you to all y’all. The GoFundMe, people that’s been sending money to that, we’re going to change the GoFundMe from medical expenses to medical and burial. It’s under his mother’s name, so that’s how you know it’s the real one, but we’ll leave a link in the description to let y’all know that’s the [correct] one to go to.”

Young Bleed’s passing marks the loss of one of the South’s most distinct and poetic voices. A Baton Rouge native, he rose to prominence in the late 1990s under Master P’s No Limit Records, achieving national success with his debut album All I Have In The World, Is… My Balls & My Word in 1998.

The project, anchored by the hit single “How Ya Do Dat,” went platinum and became one of the defining releases in the No Limit catalog—praised for its vivid storytelling and raw depiction of Louisiana street life.

In recent years, Bleed had continued recording and performing, maintaining a loyal fan base drawn to his signature mix of southern wisdom and lyrical realism. His appearance at the No Limit vs. Cash Money Verzuz was widely seen as a moment of renewed recognition, bridging generations of Louisiana hip-hop.

Though his time was tragically cut short, Young Bleed’s influence on Southern rap remains indelible. His son’s words reflect the enduring spirit of a man whose music and message resonated with authenticity and heart:

“I’m gonna pick up the ball and continue from where he left off. I’m gonna make sure his legacy stays alive and that’s through all of us.”

In mourning his loss, fans and peers alike remember a visionary artist whose art captured the soul of the South. From Baton Rouge to the world, Young Bleed’s legacy lives on—in every lyric, every lesson, and every life he touched.

See Ty Gee Ramon Clifton’s Instagram post below.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Grateful Dead Pay Tribute to Donna Jean Godchaux
Music

Grateful Dead Pay Tribute to Donna Jean Godchaux

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The Grateful Dead have paid tribute to longtime collaborator Donna Jean Godchaux, following news of her death at age 78.

“It is with heavy hearts that we mourn the loss of Donna Jean Godchaux,” the band shared in a statement posted to social media. “Her unmistakable voice and radiant spirit touched the lives of countless fans and immeasurably enriched the Grateful Dead family. Her contributions will forever remain part of the tapestry that continues to be woven.”

Godchaux passed away on Sunday (Nov. 2) at a hospice facility in Tennessee following a prolonged battle with cancer, according to her longtime publicist Dennis McNally. “She was a sweet and warmly beautiful spirit, and all those who knew her are united in loss,” McNally said. “In the words of Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, ‘May the four winds blow her safely home.’”

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Godchaux joined the Grateful Dead in 1971 alongside her husband, keyboardist Keith Godchaux, becoming a key part of the band’s 1970s sound during a transformative creative period. She sang on several of the group’s most enduring studio albums — including Europe ’72, Wake of the Flood, and Terrapin Station — and appeared on many now-iconic live recordings, including the legendary Cornell ’77 show and the Dead’s 1978 concerts at the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt.

In addition to her work with the Dead, Godchaux had an accomplished background as a session vocalist, performing on classic hits such as Elvis Presley’s “Suspicious Minds” and “In the Ghetto,” as well as Percy Sledge’s “When a Man Loves a Woman.” Her credits also included work with Cher, Neil Diamond, Boz Scaggs and Duane Allman.

After departing the Grateful Dead in 1979, the Godchauxs formed the Heart of Gold Band, which was cut short by Keith’s tragic death in a car accident the following year. Donna Jean Godchaux returned to music in the 1980s and continued recording and performing through the 2010s, including with the Donna Jean Godchaux Band and on her final album Back Around (2014).

Godchaux’s passing comes just over a year after the death of founding Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh in October 2024. The remaining members of the extended Dead universe — including Bob Weir and Mickey Hart — have continued to perform with Dead & Company, who celebrated the band’s 60th anniversary with a three-night run at San Francisco’s Oracle Park earlier this year.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Donna Jean Godchaux, former singer with the Grateful Dead, dies aged 78
Music

Donna Jean Godchaux, former singer with the Grateful Dead, dies aged 78

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Donna Jean Godchaux, who sang with the Grateful Dead throughout the 1970s, has died at the age of 78.

The news was confirmed in a statement shared with Rolling Stone by her representative Dennis McNally, who said that she passed away on Sunday (November 2) at a hospice facility in Nashville after a “lengthy struggle with cancer”.

“She was a sweet and warmly beautiful spirit, and all those who knew her are united in loss,” McNally added. “The family requests privacy at this time of grieving. In the words of Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, ‘May the four winds blow her safely home.’”

Godchaux joined the Dead in 1971 at the same time as her husband Keith, who played keyboards in the band. She sang on a string of seminal records by the psychedelic giants, including ‘Europe ‘72’, ‘Wake Of The Flood’ and ‘Terrapin Station’, as well as many of the band’s famous bootleg live recordings.

Before that, she had a successful career as a session singer at the legendary Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama and elsewhere, singing backing vocals on huge hits such as ‘Suspicious Minds’ and ‘In The Ghetto’ by Elvis Presley and ‘When A Man Loves A Woman’ by Percy Sledge. She also worked with Cher, Neil Diamond, Duane Allman and Boz Scaggs during that late-’60s period.

In addition to their work with the Grateful Dead, Donna and Keith Godchaux released the album ‘Keith & Donna’ in 1975, which featured contributions from Dead frontman Jerry Garcia.

They left the band in 1979 and formed the Heart Of Gold Band, but that project came to an end with the sudden death of Keith the following year.

Godchaux continued to create new music, forming the Donna Jean Godchaux Band and Donna Jean And The Tricksters in the ‘80s, before starting a solo career in 1998 with a self-titled record. Her final album ‘Back Around’ was recorded with the Donna Jean Godchaux Band alongside Jeff Mattson and was released in 2014.

Her death follows the passing of founding Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh last October at the age of 84. In August, Dead And Company – made up of band alumni Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, alongside others – played three sold-out nights in San Francisco to mark the Dead’s 60th anniversary.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Grateful Dead singer Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay dead at 78
Celebrity News

Grateful Dead singer Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay dead at 78

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

3 November 2025

Grateful Dead singer Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay has died aged 78.

Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay has passed away at the age of 78

The singer – who spent seven years in the legendary rock band as well as performing on chart-topping hits for both Elvis Presley and Percy Sledge – passed away on Sunday (02.11.25) at a hospice in Nashville “after a lengthy struggle with cancer”.

A statement from Godchaux-MacKay’s representative read: “She was a sweet and warmly beautiful spirit, and all those who knew her are united in loss.

“The family requests privacy at this time of grieving. In the words of Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, ‘May the four winds blow her safely home.'”

Born in Alabama, Donna began her career as a session singer and performed backing vocals on the No.1 hits When a Man Loves a Woman by Percy Sledge and Elvis Presley’s Suspicious Minds – as well as on records by Cher, Neil Diamond and Dionne Warwick.

She recalled to AL.com in 2016: “I was singing from pretty much as soon as I could talk. I remember very distinctly when I was six years old, I knew I was going to be a singer and I would sit out on my back porch and sing to the top of my lungs every day.”

She then moved to California and married keyboard player Keith Godchaux, with the pair going on the join the Grateful Dead together.

Donna remained in the band – fronted by the late Jerry Garcia – for seven years and contributed to six albums, including Wake of the Flood and From the Mars Hotel.

She said of playing with the Grateful Dead: “It was great fun. I loved singing with those guys and we had an absolute blast.”

Donna and Keith decided to leave the group in 1979 and formed the Heart of Gold Band the following year, although it was tragically short-lived as Keith passed away at the age of 32 following a car accident in California.

The singer then married bassist David MacKay – a member of the band Fiddleworms – in 1981 and the pair played together in her own Donna Jean Godchaux Band.

Godchaux-MacKay was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994 as a member of the Grateful Dead.

Donna is survived by her husband David and their son Kinsman, as well as her son Zion ‘Rock’ Godchaux from her first marriage.




November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’
Bollywood

Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Updated on: Nov 03, 2025 03:38 pm IST

The teams of NC24 and NBK111 announced on Monday that they are postponing updates of Naga Chaitanya and Balakrishna’s films. 

A massive road accident near Chevella in Rangareddy district of Telangana on Monday left 19 people dead and 22 others injured. As numerous people took to social media to mourn these deaths, the teams behind Naga Chaitanya’s NC24, directed by Karthik Dandu, and Balakrishna’s NBK111, directed by Gopichand Malineni, announced that they’re deferring film announcements in light of the tragedy.

Announcements for Balakrishna and Naga Chaitanya’s films have been deferred due to the accident in Rangareddy district.

Naga Chaitanya, Balakrishna film defer announcements

“Team #NC24 stands in solidarity with the families affected by the unfortunate incident in Chevella. Wishing strength, recovery, and peace to all,” announced the team of Chaitanya’s next, releasing a note on social media. The note read: “We are deeply saddened by the tragic incident that occurred in Chevella, Rangareddy district. Our heartfelt condolences to the families who lost their loved ones and prayers for a speedy recovery to the injured.”

The note further read: “In light of this unfortunate event, Team #NC24 has decided to postpone the reveal of Meenakshi Chaudhary’s character poster to tomorrow. May strength and peace be with everyone affected by this tragedy.” Balakrishna’s film’s team also deferred the announcement about the female lead of his film, writing, “In view of the heartbreaking incident near Chevella, the announcement planned for today at 12:01 PM is being held back. Team #NBK111 extends its deepest sympathies and prayers to the families affected.”

Director Anil Ravipudi also posted condolences for the victims of the Chevella accident on social media.

What happened in Chevella?

A tipper lorry carrying gravel collided head-on with a public transport bus on Monday. Officials told PTI that the tipper collided with the RTC bus near Chevella, about 50 km from Hyderabad. 19 people, including 13 women and a girl child, died, and 22 suffered injuries. The drivers of both vehicles died in the accident.

Cyberabad Police Commissioner Avinash Mohanty noted that a head-on collision occurs when one of the vehicles is on the wrong side of the road. The cause of the accident will be determined following an investigation. With the gravel from the tipper falling onto the bus, several passengers were trapped inside, and officials had to implement relief measures to bring them out.

News / Entertainment / Telugu Cinema / Balakrishna, Naga Chaitanya films defer updates in light of Chevella tragedy, which left 19 dead: ‘Deeply saddened’

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Tchéky Karyo
TV & Streaming

Tchéky Karyo Dead at 72 as Tributes Pour in for ‘The Missing’ Actor

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • French actor Tchéky Karyo, best known for his role as detective Julien Baptiste in BBC’s The Missing and Baptiste, has died at age 72.
  • Karyo had a prolific career, appearing in notable films such as La Femme Nikita, Bad Boys, The Patriot, and 1492: Conquest of Paradise.
  • Tributes from colleagues, fans, and the BBC highlighted his talent, charisma, and the lasting impact of his performances on audiences worldwide.

Tchéky Karyo, the French actor known for portraying detective Julien Baptiste in the BBC series The Missing and its spinoff, Baptiste, is dead at 72.

On Friday, October 31, Karyo died following a battle with cancer, his family told the AFP news service, per the BBC.

In addition to The Missing, Karyo was best known for his roles in films like La Femme Nikita (1990), Addicted to Love (1997), Bad Boys (1995), and The Core (2003). He also notably appeared in Ridley Scott‘s 1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992) and played French Major Jean Villeneuve opposite Mel Gibson in The Patriot (2000).

“We are so sad to learn of the passing of Tchéky Karyo,” Director of BBC Drama Lindsay Salt said in a statement. “He was a truly brilliant and much loved actor and he will be fondly remembered by BBC viewers for his roles in The Missing, Baptiste and most recently Boat Story. Our thoughts are with his family and loved ones at this time.”

Meanwhile, fans took to social media to react to Karyo’s death and share tributes honoring his acting career.

On X, one user wrote, “So sad to hear of the passing of Tcheky Karyo. Lovely actor and sweet man. Rest in peace Tcheky.”

Bye bye Tcheky Karyo 😔
J’aimais beaucoup sa façon de jouer avec une puissance inouïe les salauds, les dingues, tout en faisant des petits pas de côté de temps en temps vers des choses plus douces ou drôles.
Quelle gueule et quel charisme. Je l’aimais beaucoup 🖤🖤 pic.twitter.com/95jxeF6Jg9

— Virginie Debuisson (@VirgoWhallala) October 31, 2025

Another X user shared, “Bye bye Tchéky Karyo 😔 I really loved the way he played those bastards and lunatics with incredible intensity, while occasionally taking little side steps toward things that were softer or funnier. What a face and what charisma. I loved him a lot 🖤🖤

Someone else wrote on X, “One of my favorite actors, his role in Kiss of the Dragon is phenomenal.”

A different fan shared via X, “He often played villain roles, but @tchekykaryo had become, over the years, an endearing personality and a major actor for #cinema français. Condolences to all his loved ones.”

Meanwhile, yet another X user commented, “Oh no. If anyone hasn’t seen him as Baptiste, I suggest they reserve some time over the next few days and watch The Missing. What a show and what an actor. RIP.”

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Pierre Robert, Voice of Philadelphia Rock Radio, Dead at 70
Music

Pierre Robert, Voice of Philadelphia Rock Radio, Dead at 70

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Pierre Robert, the voice of Philadelphia rock radio for 44 years as a DJ on 93.3 WMMR, died Wednesday. His agent confirmed his death to Rolling Stone. Robert was 70.

On the air from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. every Monday through Friday, Robert — pronounced Ro-bear — was part of the fabric of Philadelphia. He was a colorful, ubiquitous figure, known for his long hair and gray beard and the welcoming way he saluted callers: “Great day in the morning!” His daily time on the air was punctuated by hearty laughs, self-deprecating jokes about his disregard for time (he was perpetually late, on “Pierre Standard Time”) and wafer-thin sports knowledge (to Robert, every Philly team was “the boys in blue”), and a playlist that, even in the era of corporate radio, took musical risks.

Born William Pierre Robert in California in 1955, he cut his teeth on a San Francisco progressive rock station before ultimately heading east. In 1981, he joined WMMR in Philadelphia, where he worked until his death. Robert, true to his roots, was a passionate fan of the Grateful Dead, but he was an especially unwavering champion of hometown bands in Philadelphia, New Jersey, and the surrounding area, regardless of their level of fame. His playlists included locally grown artists like Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen, Hall & Oates, the Hooters, and his beloved Beru Revue.

“He didn’t care if you were the fad or the fashion of the moment. He just cared,” Jon Bon Jovi wrote in tribute to Robert on Instagram.

“What made him so great is that he truly cared about the music,” the band the Offspring wrote about Robert on social media. “He was first and foremost a music fan, and his listeners knew it, because they saw him in the pit with them. Just as we were honored to see him in the pit at our shows.”

Along with his noon “workforce blocks” — a cluster of songs by the same artist — Robert also schooled listeners on rock & roll history, especially of the local kind, in his “On This Day” segment. Deep diving into the concert calendar, he’d list off who was playing where in Philly on that particular date. It was a way of preserving the past and honoring those who came before, a hallmark of Robert’s broadcasting style.

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The centerpiece of Robert’s on-air year came every December, with his annual Christmas Eve show. It was an hours-long marathon of holiday songs, both traditional and rock-based, peppered with copious amounts of Christmas-themed audio snippets. Jackie Gleason’s monologue in the yuletide episode of The Honeymooners was played regularly, along with Cheech & Chong’s “Santa Clause and His Old Lady,” and a corny bit known to loyal listeners as “The Jaguar.”

The throughline for Robert, however, was yet again the local. He played Beru Revue’s live Christmas medley; Philly songwriter Alan Mann’s “Christmas on the Block,” about blind children who decorate their home; and a montage of heartwarming lyrics welcoming former Delaware Valley residents back home.

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For Philly listeners, Robert’s voice was just that: home.

“His voice helped the hungry and the homeless, and he did it because he cared. About you, about me, about making the world a little kinder wonder filled place to live,” Bon Jovi wrote. “His memory will live with us as it will with all of the people he touched. That man is Pierre Robert. The legendary DJ.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Buzz Aldrin's Wife, Anca Faur Aldrin, Dead at 66
Celebrity News

Buzz Aldrin’s Wife, Anca Faur Aldrin, Dead at 66

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Buzz Aldrin is mourning a tragic loss. 

The astronaut’s wife Dr. Anca Faur Aldrin died on Oct. 28, two years after the couple tied the knot, Buzz and her family shared in a joint message on social media. She was 66.  

“Dr. Anca Aldrin, wife of astronaut Buzz Aldrin, peacefully passed away last night with her husband and her son, Vlad Ghenciu by her side,” read the statement posted to Facebook Oct. 29. “Mrs. Aldrin, an accomplished chemical engineer with a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh, served as the treasurer for the California Hydrogen Business Council and as Executive Vice President of Buzz Aldrin Ventures LLC.”

And Buzz, 95, paid tribute to his wife in a separate message as well, saying, “I am so fortunate to have found and married the love of my life.”

“She brought joy to everything we did together,” he continued. “I will miss her dearly.”

The statement added, “Her family requests privacy in their time of mourning.”

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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First Look Teaser for 'Dead Man's Wire' Thriller Starring Bill Skarsgard
Hollywood

First Look Teaser for ‘Dead Man’s Wire’ Thriller Starring Bill Skarsgard

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

First Look Teaser for ‘Dead Man’s Wire’ Thriller Starring Bill Skarsgard

by Alex Billington
October 28, 2025
Source: YouTube

“These people lure in common folk, give ’em a taste of the American Dream, and then spit ’em right out!” Row K Entertainment has revealed a teaser trailer for the hit film Dead Man’s Wire, which received huge applause and tons of great reviews playing across many film festivals this fall. Dead Man’s Wire is the latest film directed by American filmmaker maestro Gus Van Sant, an entirely true story from the 1970s about a hostage situation. “His revolution was televised.” Based on a true story, the 1977 kidnapping of a prominent banker grips the nation and turns the everyman abductor (starring Bill Skarsgård) into an outlaw folk hero. As the media frenzy peaks, the standoff becomes a spectacle of desperation, defiance and blurred justice, which resonates even today. Starring Bill Skarsgård as Tony Kiritsis, Dacre Montgomery as Dick Hall, Cary Elwes, Myha’la, Colman Domingo, and Al Pacino. I saw this at the Venice Film Festival (read my review) and the audience went nuts – they were full-on cheering & applauding throughout the entire credits. Opening in theaters in January in just a few months from now – this film deserves to end up a big smash hit.

Here’s the first look teaser trailer for Gus Van Sant’s film Dead Man’s Wire, direct from YouTube:

Dead Man's Wire Trailer

Dead Man's Wire Poster

The morning of February 8, 1977, Anthony G. “Tony” Kiritsis (starring Bill Skarsgård), 44, entered the office of Richard O. Hall, president of the Meridian Mortgage Company, and took him hostage with a sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun wired with a “dead man’s wire” from the trigger to the Hall’s head. This is the true story of the stand-off that took the world by storm as Tony demanded $5 million, no charges & no prosecution, and a personal apology from the Halls for cheating him out of what he was “owed.” Dead Man’s Wire is directed by award-winning American filmmaker Gus Van Sant, director of many great films including My Own Private Idaho, Good Will Hunting, Psycho, Elephant, Finding Forrester, Paranoid Park, Milk, Restless, Promised Land, The Sea of Trees, and Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot previously. The screenplay is written by Austin Kolodney. And it’s produced by Noor Alfallah & Remi Alfallah, Mark Amin, Andrea Bucko, Gordon Clark, Tom Culliver, Cassian Elwes, Joel David Moore, Matt Murphie, Siena Oberman, Paula Paizes, Sam Pressman, Veronica Radaelli. This initially premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival earlier this year (our review). Row K will release Van Sant’s Dead Man’s Wire film in select US theaters on January 9th, 2026 early next year, expanding wide on January 16th. Who’s ready to watch?

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October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Gus Van Sant Talks 'Dead Man's Wire' and River Phoenix Memories
TV & Streaming

Gus Van Sant Talks ‘Dead Man’s Wire’ and River Phoenix Memories

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Gus Van Sant is still moving.

“I think a lot of the films I’ve made, even unintentionally, have been based on real things,” Van Sant says with his familiar mix of understatement and curiosity. “That’s a genre, I guess. I’ve always been drawn to what makes people do what they do.”

In “Dead Man’s Wire,” Van Sant’s latest film, which premiered at AFI Film Festival on Saturday, that fascination becomes electrified — literally. The historical true-crime drama, based on the real-life 1977 Tony Kiritsis hostage case, unfolds like a pressure cooker between desperation and spectacle.

“When I read the script,” he recalls, “there were links embedded in it — you could click them and hear the real 911 calls. Tony talked so fast, like Scorsese on a cocaine bender, cracking jokes and losing his temper. I thought, ‘This is an amazing character.’”

Van Sant’s words carry a quiet thrill, the sound of an auteur who has spent a career balancing empathy and danger. From “Drugstore Cowboy” and “My Own Private Idaho” to the Oscar-nominated “Good Will Hunting” and “Milk,” he’s never chased a single genre; only human behavior.

“The story had this weird barnstormer energy,” he shares. “We were meeting in the Soho House, and the producer said, ‘We have to start shooting in Louisville in two months.’ That was the most appealing thing — just hitting the road like Huckleberry Finn.”

Now 73, Van Sant is nostalgic when talking about creative chaos. “The best thing about film is still the accident,” he says. “River Phoenix used to love when something unexpected happened on set. He’d come alive inside those moments — he could feel his character reacting in real time.”

That memory lingers, as does the one of the fog machines at the 1998 Oscars that made him physically ill while “Good Will Hunting” (1997) lost most of its awards to “Titanic.”

“I’m allergic to stage fog now,” he says with a chuckle. “So I never use it on set.”

It’s been seven years since his last theatrical film (“Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot”), but Van Sant is back with a story that echoes his fascination with real American tragedy and absurdity — a director drawn, as ever, to the ragged edge between empathy and obsession.

With “Dead Man’s Wire,” Van Sant delivers his most arresting and charged work since “Milk.” The film hums with the restless energy that defined his early 1970s-like masterpieces while showcasing a sharpened maturity in tone and control. Skarsgård gives a career-best performance, grounding Tony Kiritsis’ volatility with flashes of humor and heartbreak, while Dacre Montgomery and Colman Domingo deliver richly textured performances. Dark horses for the Oscars? Of course. But that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be considered. In particular, Van Sant’s direction is at once intimate and explosive, framing the chaos with empathy, allowing the audience to feel the pulse of desperation behind every decision. The film’s screenplay, adapted from real events by first-time screenwriter Austin Kolodney, is infused with humanism and dark wit, standing as one of the year’s finest.

In a wide-ranging interview with Variety, Van Sant talks about his past, present and future in the industry he’s spent over four decades mastering.

‘Dead Man’s Wire”

Stefania Rosini SMPSP

Looking at your filmography, this fits with your interest in real-life characters and crimes.

Yeah, I think so. A lot of my films, even the fictional ones, are based on something from the real world — a news story or an article. “Drugstore Cowboy,” “Elephant,” and “Last Days” all came from that impulse. It’s not “true crime” like television, but it’s about what makes someone act a certain way — that question inside the crime.

How did you settle on Bill Skarsgård for Tony and Dacre Montgomery for Richard?

Casting was probably as important as the script. I was at a spa one weekend, listening to ambient music, trying to decide if I should jump into this project immediately — we had to start shooting in November. I’d always wanted to work with Bill. I’d offered him roles before that didn’t happen. He has this fascinating career — horror films, yes, but he’s like Lon Chaney, the man of a thousand faces. He’s also 10 years younger than the real Tony, which made it interesting.

Dacre I knew because of his audition tape for “Stranger Things.” It’s one of those legendary tapes actors pass around — perfect lighting, perfect eyelines. I didn’t even watch the show at first, just his scenes. He felt new, unpredictable, and that was what the movie needed.

And Colman Domingo as the radio DJ — it’s such an inspired choice.

We actually modeled that character after the DJ in “The Warriors.” That was in the script. We had a few actors pass before Colman came aboard. He was working with our producer, Cassian Elwes, on another project and said, “I’d love to work with Gus.” He was perfect — his presence grounds the film.

Fans always ask if you’d ever revisit “Drugstore Cowboy.”

Actually, there are screenplays that the same writer wrote — James Fogle. There were four different ones, and one of them is called “Satan’s Sandbox,” that I think James Franco wanted to do, but that was the one I kind of preferred. It’s set in San Quentin prison. And actually, when we met him and made the movie, he was in Walla Walla State Penitentiary in Washington State, and so he had some stories when they were out of prison, like “Drugstore Cowboy,” when they were running around, selling drugs and stealing drugs. So there are other ones, yeah, there are other ones that exist.

River Phoenix was so prolific in your cinema journey. He definitely is one of the core reasons I, myself, fell in love with movies. How often does he cross your mind?

I mean, I think about him all the time — there’s a picture on the wall of him. He was sort of like, you know, a very great collaborator. And we only did that one piece, and we were planning on — he was planning on being in what turned out to be “Milk.” But that didn’t happen till later, before he died, so there was a project that we were talking about. But, yeah, he was very spontaneous. He loved to improvise. That was his favorite thing. And I don’t think he got to, necessarily, depending on who he was working with, go off the page and improvise. It probably wasn’t the type of films that he was doing — he was doing traditional pieces that were pretty much, like, securely in Hollywood. You know, he was doing traditional pieces, that’s what he was offered.

And in that environment, you’re not making a film like — you know, like you’re mentioning Scorsese — where they improvise whole scenes. And when we did, he found out that I liked it, you know, that I was okay if he just did something for like five minutes that wasn’t even in the screenplay, because then he could actually research stuff, and he could feel very open about what he was playing. So that was kind of magical, that he liked it, and he had not been able to do it. So he was very excited about it, because he wasn’t normally doing it.

I don’t know, there’s lots of things. His upbringing was such that he didn’t really have a lot of film history connected to his memory banks. He was homeschooled, so he didn’t have a lot of teaching that he knew about concerning war. His homeschooling consisted of, like, no war. So characters like General MacArthur weren’t in his world — he didn’t know who they were. And then conversely, he didn’t know what humor was. He didn’t know what, like, a quote-unquote joke was, until he was nine, he said.

He found that out because he went to a traditional school — a public school — and kids were telling jokes. It was an era when kids were all about jokes. He didn’t know what they were; they were just like a foreign thing to him. He also didn’t have a smile, which people don’t necessarily know. He told me that — he said, ‘Well, I don’t have a smile.’ And I said, ‘You’re kidding.’ And then he smiled and showed me his smile, and I said, ‘Oh yeah, I don’t see that smile in your films.’

So he had this interesting thing — for a movie star, an interesting absence of that kind of giant smile. But meanwhile, he was very funny, and his most favorite thing was just to laugh and tell stories.

You’ve been nominated twice for an Oscar. What do you remember about those mornings?

Mostly that I didn’t realize when the announcements were happening. I woke up to a bunch of phone calls. It’s the big Hollywood prize — it feels great. At the ceremony for “Good Will Hunting,” they unveiled this huge Titanic ship set, and fog rolled out everywhere. I got so sick sitting there, I swore I’d never use fog on my sets again.

There’s a lot of talk about the “death” of cinema. Do you believe that?

Not at all. Movies always follow technology — from nickelodeons to iPhones. What matters is the gathering, that communal experience. The art form isn’t dying; it’s just shifting. The best films of the 1920s were miracles because nobody knew what cinema was yet. We’re in another one of those periods of discovery.

Can we expect another film soon? Or do we have to wait another seven years?

I hope so. I did the Gucci project and six hours of “Feud,” so I haven’t been idle. There are hundreds of ideas — digital files full of them. Some might take decades, like “Milk” did. But they’re there, waiting.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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