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

I Like Me’ Documentary INTERVIEW

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

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

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

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

'Kokuho'

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Oh, I see.

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

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

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

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

Why?

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

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

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

Yes.

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

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

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

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

Right.

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

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

With “The Great Outdoors”…

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

Right…

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

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

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

True.

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

Right…

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

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

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

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

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

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

It doesn’t.

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

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

[Laughs] No.

Now, five years later, that makes perfect sense.

Yeah. Exactly. Exactly.

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

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

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

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

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

I do.

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

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

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

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

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

Yeah.

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

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

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

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

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Martin Scorsese Documentary Is So, So Good
TV & Streaming

Martin Scorsese Documentary Is So, So Good

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

In the second episode of Rebecca Miller‘s enthralling five-part documentary on Martin Scorsese, the chronological review of his life and career reaches the 1976 classic “Taxi Driver.” Jodie Foster, sitting for a new interview on a film she’s been discussing for almost five decades, recounts how “gleeful” her director was to be making movies. “He was excited about how the blood got made,” Foster says, her eyes widening to mimic Scorsese’s delight. “And, when he was gonna blow the guy’s head off, how they put little pieces of Styrofoam in the blood so it would attach to the wall and stick there.”

“We had a great time,” Scorsese says. But then he pivots. He starts talking about how the studio “got very angry at us because of the violence,” because of the language, because of the “disturbing” depiction of New York City’s “seedy” underbelly. When the MPAA slapped “Taxi Driver” with an X-rating, Columbia Pictures told Scorsese to edit it down to an R-rating — or they would.

Monster: The Ed Gein Story stars Charlie Hunnam as the actor playing Ed Gein, shown here smiling in the dark with his hand above his face
ANEMONE, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, 2025. © Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collection

“That’s when I lost it,” Scorsese says. Miller pipes in to ask what he did, exactly, and Scorsese — visibly irked by the memory — repeats himself, stammers a bit, and then breaks into a wide grin. He knows the story from there, but the documentary allows Steven Spielberg (who Scorsese called for advice at the time) and Brian De Palma (who remembers Scorsese “going crazy”) to set up what happens next. All Scorsese has to explain is whether he had a gun (he says he didn’t) and why he was “going to get one.” “I would go in, find out where the rough cut is, break the windows, and take it away,” he says. “They were gonna destroy the film anyway, you know? So let me destroy it.”

Thankfully, it never came to that, but the director’s two extremes — the divine joy Scorsese finds through making movies set against the near-total ruination he’s endured for his art — rest at the center of what Miller aptly designates “a film portrait.” While touching upon all his feature films (almost), including new interviews from famous collaborators like Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio, as well as childhood friends and family members (including his three daughters), the series juxtaposes the angels and demons that have long defined one of cinema’s true “cornerstones” (as Spielberg calls him) in order to better appreciate how he’s interrogated them, year after year, right in front of our eyes.

Yet for as heavy as “Mr. Scorsese” can get — addressing modern America’s scourge of Travis Bickles, the rise of the religious right (timed to “The Last Temptation of Christ”), and Scorsese’s brush with death, four divorces, and bout with depression — it’s also enormously entertaining. Miller launches right into her invigorating assessment and keeps the pace up throughout.

The first hour is largely biographical, covering Scorsese’s early days in New York from childhood through film school. Archival interviews with his parents (many of which come from Scorsese’s own 1974 documentary, “Italianamerican”) help contextualize Scorsese’s own candid memories.

“I did see serious stuff,” he says, before a pointed pause. “Violence was imminent all the time.”

Miller also features a few of Scorsese’s childhood friends who, in addition to the standard one-on-one interviews, gather around a barroom table to reminisce with Scorsese and, later on, De Niro. They remember their Lower East Side neighborhood as the “hub of the five mafia families” and share one harrowing story about finding a dead body that implies such sightings weren’t all that unusual.

Martin Scorsese and Thelma Schoonmaker in 'Mr. Scorsese'
Martin Scorsese and Thelma Schoonmaker in ‘Mr. Scorsese’Courtesy of Apple TV+

Scorsese clearly experienced plenty first-hand, but his asthma also kept him in his room for extended periods, where he’d watch the neighborhood drama play out from window pane to window pane — perhaps, as screenwriter Mitch Pileggi suggests, priming him to see the world through film frames. (Scorsese credits the formative vantage point for why he loves high-angle shots, while Spike Lee pops in to say, on behalf of all cinephiles, “Thank God for asthma!”)

After acknowledging the impact Catholicism had on a young Scorsese (which never fully left him) and traveling out west for his initial days in L.A. (which never quite fit), the premiere ends by teeing up “Mean Streets” — with an irresistible kicker of a smirking De Niro — and the series shifts into a movie-by-movie narrative structure. While working through his oeuvre, identifying thematic overlap and stylistic progression (with notable assists from legendary editor Thelma Schoonmaker, operating her editing bay, as well as animated renderings of Scorsese’s first hand-drawn storyboards), Miller particularly excels at balancing her subjects.

She brings in the real-life inspiration for De Niro’s Johnny Boy to answer questions about the character. (He does not disappoint.) She prods her husband, Daniel Day-Lewis, to link “The Age of Innocence” to the rest of Scorsese’s movies by citing the “savagery of it.” And when Scorsese admits “there were some drugs going on” during production on “New York, New York,” Paul Schrader provides a blunter, more colorful description: “These were the cocaine years,” he says, “[and] ‘New York, New York’ was a very coke-y set.”

Isabella Rossellini serves a similar function when elucidating her ex-husband’s near-death experience in 1978 and his destructive temper in the years after. “He could demolish a room,” Rossellini says. She remembers mornings he would wake up angry, muttering “fuck it, fuck it,” over and over, without explanation, but she also recognized that he would channel that anger into his work. “[It] gave him the stamina” to get through shoots, she says, shortly before Scorsese credits therapy for saving his life. “If it wasn’t for the doctor — five days a week, phone calls on the weekend, strong steady work on straightening my head out — I’d be dead.”

The director’s devotees and film scholars at large may recognize material covered in Miller’s five-hour documentary. Fans of certain movies may also be disappointed with the time allotted for each of them (especially if you love “Hugo,” the only feature to get no dissection whatsoever), and it’s a little annoying that an episodic series (that’s nicely broken into episodic arcs) chooses to exclude all of Scorsese’s TV work. (No “Boardwalk Empire,” no “Pretend It’s a City,” and — least surprisingly — no “Vinyl.”)

But “Mr. Scorsese’s” entertainment value is without question. Where else can you hear about Scorsese throwing a desk out a window on the set of “Gangs of New York” during a fight with Harvey Weinstein? Or Schoonmaker remembering how Scorsese would direct his own mother in movies? (“He would literally just say, ‘OK, Mother, start now’” — giving her the first line and then asking her to improvise the rest.) Or a plainly uncomfortable DiCaprio saying the words “woman’s buttocks” while breaking down the opening shot of “The Wolf of Wall Street”?

Nor could anyone dismiss the value of Miller’s analysis. From the opening song (“Sympathy for the Devil,” of course) playing under a montage of existential questions invoked by his movies to the closing message that Scorsese literally lives for filmmaking (even if it kills him), “Mr. Scorsese” confronts her subject’s lifelong dichotomies while defining how each of his films helps unite and define them.

To close out her introductory thesis, a TV host says to Scorsese, “You once said, ‘I am a gangster, and I am a priest.’” Scorsese replies, “I said to Gore Vidal one day, ‘There’s only one of two things you can be in my neighborhood. You can either be a priest or a gangster.’ And [Vidal] said, ‘And you became both.’”

To paraphrase Spike Lee, thank God he did. Thank God he could. And thank God he found so many ways to share himself with the world.

Grade: A-

“Mr. Scorsese” premiered Saturday, October 4 at the New York Film Festival. Apple will release all five episodes on Friday, October 17.

October 5, 2025 0 comments
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Richard Jobson celebrates punk spirit in new Skids documentary by infamous Oasis artist
Celebrity News

Richard Jobson celebrates punk spirit in new Skids documentary by infamous Oasis artist

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

4 October 2025

The Skids frontman Richard Jobson has paid tribute to his hometown roots in The Story of The Skids — a new documentary directed by punk artist Mark Sloper which premiered last week to packed audiences across Scotland.

The Skids frontman Richard Jobson has paid tribute to his hometown roots in The Story of The Skids — a new documentary directed by punk artist Mark Sloper which premiered last week to packed audiences across Scotland

The film, directed by the celebrated punk artist and filmmaker Mark – known professionally as Mark Illuminati – charts the rise of Dunfermline’s punk pioneers from their beginnings in Fife’s former royal capital to their enduring influence today.

Much of the documentary focuses on Richard’s reflections on growing up in the area, his creative inspirations, and his pride in the city’s musical heritage.

Richard narrates the film, sharing memories of penning punk anthems such as Into the Valley and The Saints are Coming at Dunfermline Library.

He told the Dunfermline Press: “There’s a lot of special things about the (then) town. It’s our job to highlight them and be very humble about it.

“That library is a special place, because it gave me time to think. It’s in one of the most spectacular areas that I think I’ve ever seen, it’s just breath-taking.

“My feeling is that they should pedestrianise the whole Maygate. They could turn it into this beautiful place where you can have markets and do different things, making it a creative hub in the heart of an important city.”

Much of the filming took place inside the Old Town Barber Club on Maygate, run by Richard’s brother Brian Jobson.

Early scenes revisit long-closed venues such as the Bellvue Hotel and the Kinema Ballroom – the latter once hosting David Bowie and The Clash – where Richard recalls headlining as a defining moment for The Skids.

One story in the film recounts their ill-fated second gig, planned during a Communist Party event in Pittencrieff Park to support Chilean refugees.

Richard said: “That was until Stuart Adamson opened by telling the crowd how ‘if this was a Communist country, you wouldn’t be allowed to see a band like this’, at which point the plug was pulled.”

He added: “I took a much more internationalist approach with the band, but the magnet was always coming back to Dunfermline, and I think the key to that was Stuart, because he lived in the centre.”

Skids Guitarist Stuart Adamson went on to form Big Country in 1981, achieving worldwide fame before his death in 2001.

Richard later launched The Armoury Show and moved into writing and television before reforming The Skids in 2017.

Reflecting on the band’s longevity, he told the Press: “I think through various things that we’ve been doing, we’ve kept The Skids relevant. When you play a song like Working for the Yankee Dollar, it probably means more today than it did when we wrote it way back then, because of the politics of today that are almost indescribably horrific.

“Suddenly these songs have another meaning, as does Into the Valley, even Masquerade and Charade. They all feel very contemporary because they were commentaries on the world as I saw it when I was 15, 16, 17. I always thought the world would get better, and it didn’t.”

Director Mark Sloper is famous in Britain’s punk art scene and recently gained attention as Oasis’ official artist for their 2025 comeback tour.

The band commissioned him to produce two neon artworks celebrating their first two albums, Definitely Maybe and (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?, priced at £4,000 each in official Oasis pop-up stores.

Mark famously caused a stir in 2020 when he unveiled a portrait of the late Queen Elizabeth II with blue hair, a nose ring and a heart tattoo bearing the word ‘Philip’.

The artist said: “The message was she said it was really good but didn’t like the Philip tattoo and would prefer the lion and unicorn crest. I never got the print back so assume it may be hanging in her toilet. When I was told she had been shown the portrait, I was happy to make the change.”

Speaking about his latest collaboration with Oasis, Mark added: “Noel and Liam Gallagher clearly love the punk aesthetic, and I’m overjoyed to be part of the reunion tour as Oasis still have that punk spirit.”




October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Raoul Peck Documentary Premieres at Cannes
TV & Streaming

Raoul Peck Documentary Premieres at Cannes

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: “Orwell 2+2 = 5” originally debuted at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. It opens at the IFC Center in New York City on Thursday, October 2 and the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles on October 9.

On January 8, 2021, Donald Trump Jr. took to X (then Twitter) to declare that his father’s suspension from the platform was a sign that “We are living in Orwell’s ‘1984.’ Free speech no longer exists in America.” The irony that the elder Trump’s actions leading to the ban — spreading false information that the 2020 election was rigged on the platform and directly causing an attempted insurrection of the U.S. Capitol building — fit far more into George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel and its vision of a future ruled by misinformation and propaganda is one that Jr. was seemingly entirely unaware of.

Mark Kerr, Dwayne Johnson at arrivals for THE SMASHING MACHINE Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) 2025, VISA Screening Room at the Princess of Wales Theatre, Toronto, ON, September 08, 2025. Photo By: JA/Everett Collection

It was a sign of how, in spite of the cultural ubiquity the short, pioneering 1949 science fiction novel has obtained — introducing terms like “Big Brother,” “doublethink,” and “thoughtcrime” into the cultural lexicon and remaining a staple of high school curriculums in its native Britain and across the pond in the United States — a frighteningly large amount of people seem incapable of processing what Orwell’s vision of a future ruled by fear, surveillance, and a controlling superstate actually means, and how close to home it hits in our current political landscape.

So if Raoul Peck‘s new documentary “Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5” might sometimes feel like it’s preaching to the choir, drawing comparisons between modern politics and the terrors of Oceania that plenty of academics have already made, perhaps it’s best to keep in mind that for many viewers, its conclusions will be far less obvious.

Peck, a Haitian filmmaker whose work has always had a strong political bent, is best known for his 2016 essay film “I Am Not Your Negro,” which uses the unfinished James Baldwin manuscript “Remember This House” as the skeleton for an examination of the deaths of Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Jr. “Orwell” plays like a spiritual successor to his Oscar-nominated breakthrough, mixing Orwell’s writings and letters — narrated by “Homeland” star Damian Lewis — with archival photographs, footage from various adaptations of “1984” (including the 1956 version starring Edmund O’Brien as bureaucrat Winston and the version starring John Hurt released on the actual year), footage from other movies ranging from “Oliver Twist” to “Notting Hill,” and modern day news reports to argue how Orwell’s fears of a totalitarian state have already come true.

The result isn’t as riveting as “I Am Not Your Negro” — it feels less personal and more generic, like a term paper someone could have written in undergrad. Still, Peck makes his points well, and accomplishes what he sets out to do by getting your blood pressure rising.

The film starts with text explaining how, in 1946, Orwell decamped to Jura, an island off the coast of Scotland, where he would spend the remaining four years of his life working on a manuscript that would become “1984.” Rather than taking the traditional path of focusing on Orwell’s life during this time, however, Peck is more interested in how the ideas the author developed in Jura still feel so relevant today. Loosely, the film structures itself around the famous doublethink party motto of Oceania: “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength,” using each component as another avenue into exploring modern fascism.

Peck casts a wide net in who he applies to his gaze to, looking broadly at the rise of alt-right movements across the globe, from the USA to Europe to Asia. “War is Peace” incorporates footage of George Bush declaring war on Iraq, as well as disturbing footage of both Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s genocide of Palestine. Via “Freedom is Slavery,” Peck takes a look at how modern fascist and right-wing movements build complicity within their bases, as well as the growing income inequality crisis occurring globally. With “Ignorance is Strength,” the film peers into the rampant misinformation caused by conservative news outlets and growing anti-intellectualism and book banning.

Unsurprisingly though, a very large portion of the film centers around Donald Trump, and how his cult of personality, his disregard for the truth and obvious lies, and his willingness to subvert democracy all prove eerily similar to the omnipresent, unseen Big Brother of “1984.” In many respects, the film already feels out of date, mostly covering Trump’s crimes during his first term as well as the January 6 Capitol insurrection rather than dipping into the more flagrant fascism of his past few months back in office. And, in relitigating controversies that have been been pecked and prodded at for years at this point, “Orwell” sometimes winds up making points you’ve probably read in a hundred online essays already.

Still, as pat as a point of reference as “1984” and the phrase “Orwellian” has become on the internet, that doesn’t mean Peck doesn’t make the comparisons well. His research is thorough and persuasive, and occasionally finds a new, refreshing angle to apply the analysis, such as one segment that explores how AI-generated “art” ties back to the themes of the novel. On a technical level, “Orwell” is sharply made, cross-cutting between “1984” footage and modern day interviews to allow the audience to bridge the gap on their own terms, with only occasional graphics used to illustrate particularly disturbing or stark statistics when needed. It helps that Lewis is an excellent narrator, giving his version of Orwell a perfect touch of wry humor in his voice that makes some of the more upsetting moments easier to stomach.

With the film’s sociological critiques so pointed, “2 + 2 = 5” loses its edge whenever it sporadically attempts to include material fleshing out Orwell’s life outside of his most famous creation. His other well-known allegory for Stalinist Russia, “Animal Farm,” gets a brief acknowledgement, but the other work goes largely ignored. Sparse content about his personal life — including the death of his first wife Eileen O’Shaughnessy and how his second Sonia Brownell inspired the character of Julia in “1984” — feels vestigial rather than illuminating.

Most frustrating, Orwell’s limitations both politically and personally — especially the sexism, homophobia, and classism that occasionally seeped into his novels and essays — don’t receive much implicit or explicit acknowledgement within the film. A revealing bit of narration from Orwell notes how, as a young man, “he was both a snob and a revolutionary,” an Eton-educated member of the middle class whose socialism was based more on theory than struggle. But Peck doesn’t take the time to look into how that background affected his portrayal of the proles in “1984” as unwashed, undignified masses. You could read something radical into Peck’s choice to take the words of a white British man who never had much, if anything, to say about race in his writings and apply his concepts to modern-day systemic racism: one segment compiles several quotes from Trump about the Black community juxtaposed with fake AI images he used for his campaign in 2024, while footage from the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests is prominently featured.

“1984” famously ends on a pitch black note of despair: Winston has been broken by the Party’s torture and released back into the world as a complacent puppet, one who passively writes 2 + 2 = 5 on a coffee table while declaring his love for Big Brother. Peck’s film climaxes with a montage of this sequence as depicted in the novel’s various film adaptations, but it ends by looping around to an earlier section of the book, where Winston muses to himself that “If there was hope, it must lie in the proles, because only there, in those swarming disregarded masses, eighty-five percent of the population of Oceania, could the force to destroy the Party ever be generated.”

In some respects, this appeal to the common man conclusion feels a bit false, given how uncompromising Orwell was at denying his audience catharsis. Still, one has to take account of the different functions Orwell and Peck’s works serve: while Orwell wrote “1984” as a warning of where the world could be headed, Peck made a film about the world we already live in. How do you find the strength needed, living in totalitarianism, to believe that things can change for the better?

“My chief hope for the future,” Lewis narrates as Orwell as the film draws to its close, “is that the common people have never parted company with their moral code.”

Grade: B-

“Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5” had its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. It opens at the IFC Center in New York City on October 2 and at the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles on October 9.

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

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Martin Scorsese Gets Real In Documentary Series
TV & Streaming

Martin Scorsese Gets Real In Documentary Series

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Apple TV+ on Wednesday released the trailer for Mr. Scorsese, its five-part documentary series from Rebecca Miller about 11-time Oscar-nominated director-writer-producer Martin Scorsese.

The docuseries is gearing up for its world premiere Saturday in the Spotlight section of Scorsese’s hometown New York Film Festival. That comes ahead of an October 17 release date on the streamer.

Mr. Scorsese features never-before-seen footage and in-depth interviews with those closest to Scorsese, with a talking-heads list that includes his frequent leading actors Robert De Niro, Daniel Day-Lewis and Leonardo DiCaprio along with Mick Jagger, Robbie Robertson, Thelma Schoonmaker, Steven Spielberg, Sharon Stone, Jodie Foster, Paul Schrader, Margot Robbie, Cate Blanchett, Jay Cocks and Rodrigo Prieto; his children; wife Helen Morris; and childhood friends.

Along with interviews with Scorsese, the interviewees and his own artistic output will help paint a picture of the man whose singular filmography grapples with the question of whether humans are intrinsically good or evil (“I struggle with that all the time,” he says in the trailer), beginning with 1967’s Who’s That Knocking at My Door starring Harvey Keitel and includes such wide-ranging titles as Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, The Last Temptation of Christ, Goodfellas, Gangs of New York, The Aviator, The Departed (his only Oscar Best Director win so far), The Wolf of Wall Street and his last pic, 2023 Best Picture Oscar nominee Killers of the Flower Moon.

(Upcoming addition to the list: As Deadline broke earlier this month, Scorsese just locked in his next film, with DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence set to star in the ghost story thriller What Happens at Night.)

“I knew I could express myself with pictures,” Scorsese says. “But I had to find my own way.”

Executive producers of Mr. Scorsese include Miller and Damon Cardasis, Cindy Tolan, Rick Yorn, Christopher Donnelly and Julie Yorn. Ron Burkle is producer of the docuseries, which is presented by Expanded Media and Round Films in association with LBI Entertainment and Moxie Pictures.

Check out the trailer above.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Butthole Surfers, August 1996: (L-R) Guitarist Paul Leary, drummer King Coffey, and lead vocalist/keyboards Gibby Haynes of the American rock band the Butthole Surfers in New York, New York. (Credit: Bob Berg/Getty Images)
Music

New Butthole Surfers Documentary Cements the Psych-Punk Heroes’ Experimental Legacy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Butthole Surfers: The Hole Truth and Nothing Butt, Tom Stern’s bio-doc chronicling the chaotic yet culturally significant career of San Antonio, Texas’ Butthole Surfers, was much-lauded at South By Southwest earlier this year for its revelatory examination of the band—which lives up to its title with a humorous, heartfelt, and unflinchingly honest approach. It’s also a rollicking look at one of the most brilliant, experimental, and misunderstood collectives in music history. 

The documentary made its West Coast debut September 23, kicking off Beyond Fest—the popular alternative genre movie series hosted by Neon and the American Cinemateque inside Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre. 

Friends, famous fans, and a multitude of bassists and drummers throughout Butthole Surfers’ trajectory are interviewed, but the spotlight is mostly on its founders, vocalist Gibby Haynes and guitarist Paul Leary. Their relationship started off as a creatively charged stoner bromance and ended up distanced, if not estranged, with both men recalling certain parts of their journey differently. 

Lol Tolhurst and Robert Smith of the Cure in 1983. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

Gibby Haynes poses at Sneekwave in Sneek, the Netherlands on August 9, 1987. (Credit: Frans Schellekens/Redferns)

Of course, that’s mostly due to drug use. The band members were known not just for drinking and toking themselves silly while touring across the country in their early years, but for dropping LSD and mushrooms right before live performances, which made their sets unpredictable and often volatile. 

These noisy freakouts became the stuff of underground legend, but their ground-breaking album releases on labels like Alternative Tentacles, Touch and Go, and Rough Trade in the ’80s, and later Capitol Records (where they scored a mainstream hit, “Pepper,” off of Electriclarryland in ’96) influenced the musical landscape for years to come.  

The band has been due a proper cinematic biography and this one delivers in a fittingly frenetic way, highlighting both the madness of the past and reflective regrets of today. 

After the Hollywood screening, Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison conducted a Q&A, but it was clear that the band didn’t want to talk too much about the film, with Haynes going off on tangents about Tex Mex food and jokingly calling music docs in general “bullshit.” About three questions were asked and answered (sort of) when Haynes gestured toward a set-up behind them. Then Butthole Surfers played a surprise mini-set of three songs including “Cherub,” “1401,” and “The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey’s Grave.” 

(L-R) Gibby Haynes, Teresa Nervosa, and King Coffey perform at the 7th St. Entry in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 24, 1985. (Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

SPIN messaged the filmmaker afterward to ask about the challenges of documenting such a tempestuous crew. “A big advantage I had is that I knew from the outset I would just keep shooting until I thought I had enough no matter how many years that took,” Stern says. “Production line-style documentaries like the ones you see on Netflix have a limited timeframe to shoot in, so they either get the goods or they don’t on the first couple tries, but I interviewed Gibby at least 20 times over five years and ultimately got the emotional vulnerability I was hoping for. He’s such a complicated guy and I felt the audience would want to understand him on a deeper level than what you see in the typical rock doc.” 

With hilarious puppet reenactments, wacky animation, awkward but illuminating edits, and outrageous archival footage, including the band’s infamous 1986 NYC Danceteria club show (which featured simulated sex on stage), The Hole Truth may not be a typical rock doc, but it is a highly entertaining one. 

Everyone from Dave Grohl to Keith Morris share fond memories, recalling the rhythmic rituals of dueling drummers King Coffey and Teresa Taylor, Leary’s astounding psychedelic riffage, and Haynes arresting presence as he trampled the stage in a bloody dress or completely naked, with fire, strobe lights, and graphic medical films adding to the spectacle.

The doc has a massive roster of famous commentators, too. And while some of them question the band’s choices—both live and on record—all of them tout B.S.’s transcendence and talent. Eric Andre, Flea, Ian MacKaye, Steve Albini, Donita Sparks, Henry Rollins, Thurston Moore, Wayne Coyne, Ice-T, Al Jourgensen, Richard Linklater, John Paul Jones, and many more share their thoughts and recollections, but two appearances in particular stand out. 

Gibby Haynes and Paul Leary, September 23, 2025. (Credit: Hadley Gustafson)

Johnny Depp (who befriended Haynes during the “Hollywood years” as it’s referred to in the doc) marks a low point, when the pair dabbled with heroin. He speaks somberly of the era, when he and Haynes formed a supergroup with the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Flea and John Frusciante called P., which headlined Depp’s Sunset Strip club The Viper Room the night River Phoenix died there. 

He’s followed up with Thelonious Monster’s Bob Forrest, now an addiction recovery advocate, reflecting on Haynes’ guilt over Phoenix’s passing and bad advice he gave Kurt Cobain before his death. Forrest also helps the frontman revisit suppressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, which may have led to his self-destructive tendencies. 

Then we learn that Taylor, one of the most charismatic characters in the movie (she also starred in and became the poster girl for Linklater’s Gen-X classic Slackers after she left the band) was dying of lung disease and perished before it was completed, as did Coffey’s husband, who battled brain disease. Both figures are important reminders that the Surfers’ brought queer representation to the punk community (in Texas no less) before it was actually accepted. Their personal struggles are heart-wrenching and make for a pretty heavy last act. 

But ultimately, The Hole Truth takes fans on a wild ride filled with lots of laughs, vivid visuals, and thoughtful perspectives. It’s an amalgamation that captures the irreverent spirit and visionary madness of the group itself. 

“My goal was to cement a place in music history for this amazing band because they deserve it,” Stern shares. “They were singular artists, each one an amazing character, and they evoked such strong, emotional responses from audiences, including, obviously, me.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Family Documentary 'Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost' Official Trailer
Hollywood

Family Documentary ‘Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost’ Official Trailer

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Family Documentary ‘Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost’ Official Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 25, 2025
Source: YouTube

“They’re not superstars – they’re just performers who are married with kids and trying to do the best with both worlds.” Apple TV has revealed the first official trailer for a documentary film titled Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost, directed by actor / filmmaker Ben Stiller telling the story of his own family. This is an extension of his previous doc series also titled “Stiller & Meara”, taking a closer look at his parents – comedy icons Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara. One of the most personal films about Ben Stiller and his family. The doc is premiering at the 2025 New York Film Festival and will then hit theaters and streaming on Apple TV+ in October this fall. NYFF explains: “After Anne & Jerry passed away in 2015 and 2020, respectively, Stiller dug into the vast treasure trove of recordings, footage, letters, and ephemera with which they documented their personal & professional lives. These extraordinary archives are a foundation of this immensely moving – and, of course, very funny – documentary. Stiller & Meara is above all a true multigenerational family project, made with the collaboration of Stiller’s sister, Amy Stiller; his wife, Christine Taylor Stiller; and children Ella and Quinlin Stiller.” This looks great! A must see for Stiller fans and doc lovers out there.

Here’s the trailer (+ poster) for Ben Stiller’s doc film Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost, from YouTube:

Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost Doc Trailer NYFF

Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost Doc Poster

Actor / comedian / filmmaker Ben Stiller tells the story of his parents, comedy icons Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, exploring their impact both on pop culture and at home, where the lines between creativity, family, life and art often blurred. In the process, Ben Stiller turns the camera on himself and his family to examine Jerry and Anne’s enormous influence on their lives, and the generational lessons we all can learn from those we love. Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost is directed by acclaimed actor / comedian / filmmaker Ben Stiller, director of the films Reality Bites, The Cable Guy, Zoolander 1 & 2, Tropic Thunder, and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty previously, plus series “Escape at Dannemora” and “Stiller & Meara”. Produced by John Lesher, Geoffrey Richman, Lizz Morhaim, Ben Stiller. Executive produced by Bryn Mooser, Justin Lacob, Kathryn Everett, Tony Hsieh, Andy Hsieh. This is premiering at the 2025 New York Film Festival. Apple TV will then release Ben Stiller’s Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost doc film in select US theaters on October 17th, 2025, then streaming on Apple TV+ starting October 24th this fall. Who wants to watch?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Kanye West Documentary 'In Whose Name?' Brings In Big Revenue
Music

Kanye West Documentary ‘In Whose Name?’ Brings In Big Revenue

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Ye may be at his peak controversially, but people are still invested in his life and story. In Whose Name?, the documentary about some of his most chaotic years, recently brought in big revenue despite not having a traditional marketing rollout.

The film, directed by Nico Ballesteros, made $776,000 in its opening weekend, a huge feat as it was not heavily promoted and was only available in 1,000 theaters across the country. Nonetheless, its inclusion of raw footage and an in-depth look at the Chicago producer’s trying times was more than enough to convince people to go see it.

The documentary covers moments such as his “White Lives Matter” shirt era, his periods of antisemitism, the collapse of his relationship with Kim Kardashian, the Sunday Service era, and more. One clip in particular, where he lashed out at Kris Jenner, circulated on the internet and drew people to see the film even more.

“I’d rather be dead than to be on medication,” the artist formerly known as Kanye West exclaimed in the clip. Later, he yells, “No one in the family has taken responsibility for my hospital visit, but if you want to go online, that’s 50% of what people say at least!”

Jenner tried to tell him that doesn’t matter, and he exploded on her. “It does matter!” he repeated at the top of his lungs before grabbing his belongings and storming out. “It doesn’t matter what the internet says, it matters what we think, Ye,” Jenner said while he exited. He eventually came back and she expressed her love for him, her sympathy for impacting his mental health, and how she wanted his relationship with Kim K to be.

AllHipHop reported that Ballesteros and his team plan to widen the scope of the film’s cinematic reach and eventually get it onto streaming platforms. For now, watch the trailer below.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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‘The Perfect Neighbor’: What We Know About Netflix’s New True Crime Documentary
Fashion

‘The Perfect Neighbor’: What We Know About Netflix’s New True Crime Documentary

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The Perfect Neighbor is one true crime documentary you’re going to want to see, even if you’re not usually a true crime fan. The film, directed by Geeta Gandbhir, premiered at Sundance Film Festival 2025, where it won the Directing Award: U.S. Documentary. Unusually for a true crime documentary, The Perfect Neighbor is already generating Oscar buzz, so you’re probably going to want to know why.

Here is everything we know about The Perfect Neighbor so far.

What is the real story behind The Perfect Neighbor?

The film tells the story of Ajike Owens, a Black woman who was killed by her white neighbor, Susan Lorincz, in Ocala, Florida. As shown in the documentary, Lorincz had routinely called the police on the Black neighborhood children, seemingly for no reason. According to CNN, Lorincz later admitted to hurling racial slurs at the children. Eventually, Owens tried to confront Lorincz, per CNN. Lorincz became frightened and fatally shot Owens through her own locked door.

Per NPR, Lorincz argued she had killed Owens in self-defense, citing at her trial Florida’s “stand your ground” laws.

“The Perfect Neighbor is a deeply personal project, created to transform grief into purpose and honor the lasting legacy of Ajike Owens and her family,” said Gandbhir in a statement.

Where is Susan Lorincz now?

In August 2024, per The New York Times, a jury convicted Lorincz of manslaughter after deliberating for only two hours. In November, according to ABC, she was sentenced to 25 years in prison. A local news station interviewed Lorincz from prison in September, and Lorincz seemed unapologetic, denying that she’s capable of manslaughter.

Who will be featured in the documentary?

Rather than relying on witness and expert interviews, The Perfect Neighbor is told through police body-cam footage and recorded audio from 911 calls, which allow the circumstances to speak for themselves.

Is there a Perfect Neighbor trailer?

The trailer for The Perfect Neighbor dropped on September 23.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Kanye West ’In Whose Name?' Documentary Opens to Solid Box Office
Music

Kanye West ’In Whose Name?’ Documentary Opens to Solid Box Office

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The box office numbers have arrived for the documentary In Whose Name? from filmmaker Nico Ballesteros, who was granted unvarnished access to Kanye West — now known as just Ye — in the six tumultuous years following his public embrace of conservative politics. The film opened to a limited release, screening at around 494 theaters nationwide. In its opening weekend, the film grossed $776,000, a strong domestic box office performance for a documentary without significant marketing behind it.

For comparison, the Oscar-winning doc No Other Land logged a cumulative $420,000 a month after opening in January, on its way to earning $2.4 million to date. It’s Never Over, the doc about Jeff Buckley, also saw opening numbers in the $420,000 range. Becoming Led Zeppelin, released in February, is 2025’s top-earning doc opening to over $2 million, though it screened internationally.

Clips from In Whose Name?, including one in which Ye explosively lashes out at Kris Jenner, have been circulating around social media for several days, as the film’s unfettered level of access presents a view of Ye that many fans have never seen. The film offers a behind-the-scenes view of some of his most controversial moments in recent years, most notably the aftermath of his White Lives Matter T-shirt and subsequent antisemitic Twitter tirade.

While In Whose Name? comes short of offering any explanations as to how Ye went from a beloved musical icon to effectively a social pariah, it does provide a clear view into the world of celebrity in our highly digitized and politicized age. The team behind the film hopes to screen it in more theaters in the coming months, as well as make the movie available on streaming platforms. Its strong first-week performance suggests there is, in fact, an audience hoping to decipher the mind of Ye all these years later.

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The doc was executive produced by Patrick Hughes, Nick Jarjour, Amy Ann Singh, and Justin Staple. Attorney Simran Singh, who executive produced Selena: The Series, is also credited as a producer.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this article misstated the number of screens that carried the film.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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