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Trailer for Wacky Animated Film 'Endless Cookie' About Half-Brothers
Hollywood

Trailer for Wacky Animated Film ‘Endless Cookie’ About Half-Brothers

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Trailer for Wacky Animated Film ‘Endless Cookie’ About Half-Brothers

by Alex Billington
November 13, 2025
Source: YouTube

“The goal is to make something funny, beautiful, spiritual, political…” Obscured Releasing has unveiled an official trailer for an animated film called Endless Cookie, a wacky, funky, clever documentary tale of two-half brothers in Canada. This originally premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, and also played at the AFI, Hot Docs, MoMA, and London Film Festival. Endless Cookie is a new film from Seth & Pete Scriver – they’ve been painstakingly assembling it over 8 years. Two half-brothers, one Indigenous and one white, embark on a journey through time and place. They time travel from their remote home in Shamattawa to the vibrant urban landscape of the 1980s in Toronto. Pete & Seth are half-brothers. Pete is a First Nations carver, poet, mechanic and storyteller living in Shamattawa. He was recently nominated for a Hero award for saving his neighbors life by rescuing her from a house on fire. Seth is an artist, animator and carpenter living in Toronto. He won the Best Canadian First Feature at TIFF in 2013 for his animated feature Asphalt Watches. This is their first creation together. It’s a very odd, wacky film – reviews describe it as “the strangest, most seemingly nonsensical documentary in some time.” Looks super kooky and amusing.

Here’s the official trailer (+ posters) for Peter & Seth Scrivers’ animation Endless Cookie, from YouTube:

Endless Cookie Poster

Endless Cookie Poster

The film plays out like a particularly tangential fever dream–a colorful depiction of the many overlapping episodes of the brothers’ lives–from their upbringing in Downtown Toronto’s Kensington Market to Pete’s current residence in an isolated Northern Manitoba First Nation community. As they reminisce, their yarns are often punctuated, interrupted or else hijacked by the charismatic members of their family who indulge in their own reveries. Endless Cookie is at heart an impressionistic and often surreal depiction of family but it is also a documentary of the creative process. Endless Cookie is written and directed by half-brothers / filmmakers Peter Scriver & Seth Scriver (also a co-director on Asphalt Watches) making their first feature film. Produced by Seth Scriver, Dan Bekerman, Jason Ryle, Chris Yurkovich, Alex Ordanis. This initially premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. Obscured Releasing debuts Peter & Seth Scrivers’ Endless Cookie film in select US theaters starting on December 5th, 2025 coming up soon.

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

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Bad Bunny onstage during the first show of his 30-date concert residency at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on July 11, 2025. (Credit: Ricardo ARDUENGO / AFP)
Music

Endless Summer: A Dispatch From Bad Bunny’s San Juan Residency

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Home is a feeling. Home can be a mountain, an island, a stranger’s home where you’re welcomed like family.

Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, better known as Bad Bunny, decided he’s homebound for the summer. During prime festival and touring season, the megastar—whose latest album Debí Tirar Más Fotos (I Should Have Taken More Photos) hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts, his fourth album to do so—leveraged his celebrity to manifest one of the underlying purposes of his art. After spending years bringing Puerto Rico to the world, his homegrown show at San Juan’s famous Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot (El Choli, if you’re local) was designed to bring the world to the island. 

Aptly named No me quiero ir de aqui (I Don’t Want To Leave), Bad Bunny’s completely sold-out summer residency is an unabashed love letter to Puerto Rico. Entering the arena, the floor is flanked by two stages: a mountain that feels uprooted straight out of El Yunque National Forest, vaguely shaped like a cemí (a Taíno nature spirit), and a pink casita whose interior doubles as a VIP area. Anyone who sees the small house up-close can attest to the fact that the little house is authentic Caribbean architecture, the kind of space that could belong to any tía out in Fajardo or Ponce or Bayamón.

The spectacle opens theatrically: At center stage, a woman searches for a camera. At the same time, a man finds a blanket covering drums used for plena, a traditional Puerto Rican genre. Slowly, out of the mountain, dancers emerge donning traditional jíbaro garb worn in Boricua folk tradition, some complete with pava straw hats (an unofficial symbol of this era that doubles as a show of Puerto Rican pride). The man of the hour subtly appears stage-left, kicking off the night with new song “ALAMBRE PúA”.

A man wears a straw hat with the Puerto Rican flag in the background before the start of the first show of Puerto Rican singer Bad Bunny’s 30-date concert residency at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan, on July 11, 2025. (Credit: Ricardo ARDUENGO / AFP)

Liam and Noel Gallagher perform onstage at the Oasis Live '25 Toronto concert at Rogers Stadium on August 24 in Toronto, Ontario. (Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images)Liam and Noel Gallagher perform onstage at the Oasis Live '25 Toronto concert at Rogers Stadium on August 24 in Toronto, Ontario. (Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images)

No me quiero ir de aquí is split into three of the island’s key genres: plena, perreo, and salsa. Bad Bunny adapted his songs to each, plena drums replacing the dembow rattle on beloved hits like “La Santa” (originally recorded with Daddy Yankee) and “Vete.” When he appeared at la casita for the reggaeton-heavy section of the night—which included YHLQMDLG-era opus “Safaera” (recorded in 2020 with Jowell & Randy, and Ñengo Flow) and Un Verano Sin Tí’s “Titi Me Preguntó”—he comfortably waltzed between the roof and the front porch. His transition back to the mountain was soundtracked by local plena collective Pleneros de la Cresta, who thanked the audience after a lively jam out to “CAFé CON RON”: “Thank you for getting the world to hear plena puertorriqueña!”

One of the residency’s biggest draws is the rotating cast of guests. For its 19th iteration,  Lorén Aldarondo Torres of Puerto Rican indie band Chuwi sang her “Weltita” verse from the mountaintop. Later, when the casita was transformed into a party de marquesina like the ones where reggaeton was born, the soundtrack was none other than Ivy Queen herself. The undisputed Queen of Reggaeton held court over the stadium from the casita’s entrance with a medley of her hits, snarling signature song “Quiero Bailar” like it was the last time she’d sing it. Before going back to the mountains, Bad Bunny tried bending the audience to his will again, encouraging everyone to turn off their phones and be in the moment. Most of the arena followed suit, and the audience presence was palpable. 

Before switching to salsa, a video about the genre’s African roots was played, and Benito emerged in a suit. Backed by Los Sobrinos, he reinterpreted “Callaíta” with timbaleros and bongos. If he wasn’t already, Bad Bunny was fully in control of the audience for “Baile Inolvidable”, the salsa standout from this era. Arguably the show’s biggest moment after his sobering rendition of “Lo Que Le Pasó a Hawaii” right before, it was a tremendous show of artistic growth, one where Bad Bunny channeled salsa legends like Héctor Lavoe and Willie Colón while remaining more himself than we’ve ever seen him.

It wasn’t until the end that I realized three hours had flown by. I was ready for more, almost disappointed that there wasn’t. That feeling was a shock: A big-budget arena show can often drag. Bad Bunny’s generosity as a performer is on full display from the moment you approach El Choli to the second you leave, an eternal moment frozen in the endless summer of the Caribbean heat. It’s something that can only exist here, something Bad Bunny did well to remind us when he first popped out of la casita, right as the initial electric guitar chords of house-influenced banger “Neverita” reverberated through the arena: “Summer ended in most of the world, but we’re in PR.”

All quotes have been translated from Spanish.

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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