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The Doors 60th Anniversary Concert to Feature Robby Krieger, Perry Farrell, Billy Idol
Music

The Doors 60th Anniversary Concert to Feature Robby Krieger, Perry Farrell, Billy Idol

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

A concert celebrating the 60th anniversary of The Doors will feature the legendary band’s original guitarist Robby Krieger alongside Perry Farrell, Billy Idol and his longtime guitarist Steve Stevens, Sum 41’s Deryck Whibley, Stone Temple Pilots’ Robert DeLeo, and several more musicians. The show will take place at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles on October 30th.

Get Tickets to A 60th Anniversary Doors Celebration Here

The evening, dubbed “A 60th Anniversary Doors Celebration,” will include a full performance of the album Morrison Hotel, as well as a selection of other Doors classics. Tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster or StubHub.

In addition the aforementioned acts, the concert will feature Greg Gonzalez (Cigarettes After Sex), Fantastic Negrito, Chris Goss (Masters of Reality), Kevin Martin (Candlebox), John Doe (X), Carmine Appice (Vanilla Fudge), Stephen Adler (Guns N’ Roses), Adam Kury (Candlebox), and Orianthi.

Related Video

Opening the concert will be the band Tripform, featuring late Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek’s son Pablo Manzarek.

“Sixty years or so ago when The Doors were happening, I had no idea that in the next century, we would still be talking about and playing The Doors records,” stated Krieger in a press release. “I feel so blessed that just about every day someone stops me and recognizes me and wants to talk about The Doors and to thank me for making the music that they love still today. The people that recognize me seem to be getting nicer all the time… I like to say that it’s a good problem to have.”

Watch a teaser video featuring Robby Krieger and Perry Farrell below.

Editor’s note: This article was updated on October 21st with the addition of Billy Idol and Steve Stevens to the lineup, as well as a new Instagram video featuring Robby Krieger and Perry Farrell.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for Macau's 'Ballad of a Small Player' with Colin Farrell
Hollywood

Official Trailer for Macau’s ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ with Colin Farrell

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for Macau’s ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ with Colin Farrell

by Alex Billington
October 7, 2025
Source: YouTube

“What I see is a man way beyond any redemption.” This looks like one helluva sweaty thriller! Netflix has revealed the full official trailer for the vivid gambling movie titled Ballad of a Small Player, the latest creation from the acclaimed German filmmaker Edward Berger following All Quiet on the Western Front & Conclave most recently. This premiered at the 2025 Telluride & Toronto Film Festivals last month. And it hits theaters briefly later in October before it’s streaming on Netflix this month. When his past and his debts start to catch up with him, a high-stakes gambler / corrupt English lawyer laying low in Macau in the East encounters a kindred spirit who might just hold the key to salvation. The book it’s based on is also described as a “vivid and feverish portrait of a soul in self-inflicted purgatorio.” Exactly what this looks like. The film stars Colin Farrell as Lord Doyle, with Fala Chen, Deanie Ip, Alex Jennings, and Tilda Swinton as a private investigator chasing him. With cinematography by James Friend (All Quiet on the Western Front, “The Acolyte”), and music composed by Volker Bertelmann. Even though this has pretty bad reviews from the festivals, I’m still curious about it anyway. The visuals and intensity of Farrell’s performance look good.

Here’s main official trailer (+ poster) for Edward Berger’s film Ballad of a Small Player, from YouTube:

Ballad of a Small Player Teaser Trailer

Ballad of a Small Player Teaser Poster

You can watch the teaser trailer for Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player film right here for the first look again.

Lord Doyle (Colin Farrell) is laying low in Macau – spending days & nights on the casino floors, drinking heavily and gambling what little money he has left. Struggling to keep up with his fast-rising debts, he is offered a lifeline by the mysterious Dao Ming (Fala Chen), a casino employee with secrets of her own. In hot pursuit is Cynthia Blithe (Tilda Swinton) – a private investigator ready to confront Doyle with what he is running from. As Doyle tries to climb to salvation, the confines of reality start to close in. Ballad of a Small Player is directed by the Academy Award-nominated German filmmaker Edward Berger, director of the films Strait-Jacket, Sidewalk Hotel, Smelly Dinners, Wanderbread, Gomez: Heads or Tails, Jack, All My Loving, 2022’s All Quiet on the Western Front, and Conclave previously, and TV series “Deutschland 83” & “Patrick Melrose”. The screenplay is written by Rowan Joffe (of Last Resort, 28 Weeks Later, The American, Brighton Rock, Before I Go To Sleep, Locked In). Based on the novel of the same name from Lawrence Osborne. Produced by Mike Goodridge, Edward Berger, Matthew James Wilkinson. It premieres at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Netflix will then debut Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player film in select US theaters briefly on October 15th, 2025, and streaming on Netflix starting October 29th, 2025.

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October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Colin Farrell Is Larger Than Life
TV & Streaming

Colin Farrell Is Larger Than Life

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

When does a gambling habit become a gambling problem? Is it when you’re down to your last wadded-up banknote, which you keep stuffed in your sock till all else has been spent? Or maybe it’s that extreme moment you’re forced to fake your own death, just to throw off your creditors. Surely things have gotten out of hand when the British government sends a private detective (who looks an awful lot like Tilda Swinton) all the way to Macau to collect the fortune you swindled from an unsuspecting old lady to subsidize your addiction.

In “Ballad of a Small Player,” Colin Farrell is a reckless high roller, all flop sweat and false bravado, who’s taken up residence in a decadent Chinese casino-hotel. He has three days to settle his HK$145,000 hotel bill, or else they turn him over to the authorities. (For now, they won’t send another bottle of bubbly to his suite or let him use the house limo service.) Gambling is all about stakes, and these don’t seem quite high enough — at least, not until a body goes hurtling past the window of the dining room where he’s eating, and then we realize what rock bottom looks like: a corpse crumpled on top of a car in the parking lot below, having hurtled itself off the roof only moments before.

Edward Berger’s polar-opposite follow-up to last year’s “Conclave” is also the polar opposite of movies that it would seem to resemble: films like “Leaving Las Vegas,” “Under the Volcano” and “Uncut Gems,” where desperate men (always men) burn the fuse right down to the quick. Farrell’s character calls himself Lord Freddy Doyle, though in fact, he’s little more than a fraud, spending other people’s money in pursuit of whatever thrill winning gives. But it’s not winning this man wants. It’s easy come, easy go where money’s concerned. Doyle is motivated by the fear of complete financial ruin and whatever consequences that might bring.

The locals call guys like this “gweilo,” or ghosts, which doesn’t feel quite right for Doyle, who’s anything but invisible, striding through town in his bespoke burgundy suit, neatly tied ascot and bright yellow gloves. This conspicuous foreigner looks like a cross between Quentin Crisp and a 1970s Harlem pimp. He doesn’t exactly blend in — although, to be fair, it takes a lot to compete with the garish neon casinos that rise up about him like the debauched skyline of Rouge City in Spielberg’s “A.I. Artificial Intelligence.”

“Lord” Doyle is what we might call a cad. He believes that a man can reinvent himself in Macau, but his past keeps catching up with him. That’s what the private detective with the cheap shoes and designer spectacles, who calls herself Betty but is really named Cynthia Blithe (that would be Swinton), serves to remind. She’s there to collect something like a million pounds, which Doyle owes her client. He has practically none to his name, but if she’ll just spot him 500 quid, he can turn it into enough to square his debts (well, some of them, at least).

“How ’bout dinner and a dance?” he says. “We can come to some kind of arrangement.” Blithe obliges, and sure enough, like some kind of magician, Doyle starts winning. But he’s still a long way from a million, and Blithe (who doesn’t look like any detective we’ve seen before) gives him 24 hours. For a so-called small player like this, deadlines don’t mean much. Everything’s negotiable. And so the movie becomes increasingly tiresome, watching Farrell oscillate from low to high, as DP James Friend shoves his high-def camera right up in his pores, or else shoots the actor from halfway across town, so he’s nothing but a tiny speck in a world of excess.

Adapted from the book by Lawrence Osborne, “Ballad of a Small Player” should feel like a film noir (Doyle could be lifted from one of Graham Greene’s novels), but Berger takes it in the other direction. Visually, it’s a stunning, vibrant film, as detailed and decadent as Paolo Sorrentino’s “The Great Beauty,” with the colors narrowed to a Wong Kar Wai palette. Hong Kong is just a stone’s throw away, after all, though Doyle is persona non grata there. He’s run out of options, having exhausted his credit at even the Rainbow Casino, where a filthy-mouthed grandma (Deanie Ip) wipes him clean at baccarat.

Enter the movie’s loose equivalent of a femme fatale, Fala Chen (Dao Ming), who lends money to losers at exorbitant rates, but sees something in Doyle that, frankly, the rest of us don’t. The two spend a night together by the shore, and Doyle awakens with numbers penned on his palm: a test of character that raises his already bombastic redemption/self-immolation several notches higher. It’s hard to follow how much of what’s happening from here on is real, as Berger never really establishes how gravity works in this world.

We watch Doyle win his way back on top, but the roller coaster has gone off the rails by this point. One minute, he’s having a heart attack, the next he’s shoveling fistfuls of lobster into his face. It’s no fault of Farrell’s. The actor is fully committed to this anxious caricature of a man who doesn’t know when to call it quits, but Doyle’s psychology is all over the map. Compared with great portraits of people dominated by their gambling compulsion — “Bay of Angels,” “Bob le Flambeur,” “Mississippi Grind,” “The Cooler” — “Ballad of a Small Player” looks great, but lacks the fundamental human insight to make it a winner.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Colin Farrell in Bad Netflix Thriller
TV & Streaming

Colin Farrell in Bad Netflix Thriller

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

A deep-pocketed neon-noir starring Colin Farrell as an inveterate gambling addict and see-thru fraud who has three days to fork up the $45,000 USD he owes to his Macau hotel and casino (lest he be deported back to England, or worse), Edward Berger’s “Ballad of a Small Player” sounds like a mighty decent bet on paper. And yet something is off from the moment it starts with Farrell’s Lord Doyle groaning “fuck” into the bathroom mirror, as if he’s just noticed it too. 

The situation doesn’t need long to grow more ominous from there, as Volker Bertelmann’s thunderous string and horn score — squelching in your face like a wet fart throughout the course of a movie that’s meant to feel like a fever dream — accompanies the arch comedy of watching our protagonist try to slip out of his penthouse suite without getting caught. There’s a Coen brothers’-like smirk to Lord Doyle’s cartoon obviousness, but that doesn’t stop Berger from shooting the sequence like it’s straight out of “Conclave,” all straight lines and holy purpose. 

The Wizard of the Kremlin

Anyone with eyes can see that Lord Doyle is an impostor (his green velvet suit screams “I’m bluffing!” loud enough for people to understand it in every language, which is extra silly for someone who exclusively plays a pure luck game like baccarat), but that isn’t enough for locals to notice a gweilo like him. In a place built on empty promises, a peninsula whose Eiffel Tower is a copy of a copy of the real one in Paris, he’s just another lie that doesn’t even have the heart to believe in itself. 

The only problem there is that “Ballad of a Small Player” suffers from the same half-defeated identity crisis; much like our dear Doyle (or whatever his real name is), Berger’s film is so desperate for a win that it loses any real sense of what the stakes are. Despite promising a welcome throwback to the sort of down-and-out milieu that authors like Graham Greene once put on the map, this Lawrence Osborne adaptation winds up feeling like nothing so much as a quintessential Netflix movie: Easy to watch and impossible to care about. 

I’ll say this in its favor: Watching Doyle eat a meal is possibly one of the most uncomfortable things I’ve ever seen on the big screen, and I would have to imagine that its horror will translate to small ones as well. The man is rapacious — a hungry ghost with a big mouth and an empty stomach. He shoves food into his maw like a human No-Face, and his entire body trembles while he does it, as if Doyle is trying to survive his acute gambling withdrawal by distracting his other senses. Every bite feels like his last, and yet he’s also convinced that a single lucky streak is all he needs to clear his debts. Alas, there are some debts that can’t be repaid. There are some stains that don’t wash out. There are some problems that money can’t solve. 

One of them seems to be private investigator Cynthia Blithe (Tilda Swinton, splitting the difference between “Michael Clayton” and “Snowpiercer” with a pro forma performance memorable only for the glasses she gets to wear), who’s been hired to secure photographic evidence that Doyle is hiding out in Macau. More susceptible to money — or at least more understanding of why Doyle tries to buy his way out of everything — is an enigmatic Rainbow Casino employee named Dao Ming (Fala Chen), who watches the Englishman blow a fortune at her baccarat table only to be endeared by his lost soul sloppiness. Chen is the wraith-like heart of this story, but her character strains belief even in a shaky hand of a movie that operates with all the internal logic of a gambling addiction. 

Then again, so does everything else in “Ballad of a Small Player,” which reshuffles its cards so often that you start to wonder if it’s playing with a full deck. Switching gears between heightened comedy, self-destructive bender, ex-pat farce, and an empty meditation on the relationship between capitalism and shame, Berger’s film doesn’t juggle genres so much as it careens out of control between them, its crumbling hero too narcissistic for anything to matter beyond the tunnel vision of his next line of credit. 

Of course, Doyle is only looking for loans while he bides his time for a miracle, but it’s going to take something a bit more proactive than that in order to cleanse him of the sins that he’s been trying so hard to outrun, or at least out bet. “You can be anyone in Macau,” Doyle tells Cynthia as part of a sales pitch to leave him alone and “live a little,” but Doyle — who’s already faked his own death once — will have to become someone if he hopes to survive. 

This movie tries its best to nudge him in the right direction, but the path it offers him to rock bottom — and to the redemption that lies beyond it — proves exasperating. It’s some consolation that Doyle travels along the scenic route, as James Friend’s ultra-wide cinematography allows the purgatorial casinos of Macau to look as sterile as the fluorescent streets outside are aglow with sizzle and seduction. Still, the film’s rich sense of place never catalyzes into a legitimate atmosphere, which makes it that much harder to reconcile the “fun” of Berger’s tone and the flustered charisma of Farrell’s performance with the soul rot on display. 

“Ballad of a Small Player” mines so much of its queasy momentum from Lord Doyle’s relentless desperation and refusal to give up, but the movie doesn’t give us much of a reason not to throw in the towel. Doyle’s luck might turn before the end of this story — ours will not. 

Grade: C

“Ballad of a Small Player” premiered at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival. Netflix will release it in select theaters on Friday, October 17, and on Netflix on Wednesday, October 29.

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.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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