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Full Trailer for Father-Daughter Film 'Rebuilding' with Josh O'Connor
Hollywood

Full Trailer for Father-Daughter Film ‘Rebuilding’ with Josh O’Connor

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Full Trailer for Father-Daughter Film ‘Rebuilding’ with Josh O’Connor

by Alex Billington
October 14, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I keep remembering things that are gone… Makes me feel like there are things we’ve lost that I’ll never remember…” Bleecker Street has revealed the wonderful official trailer for a film titled Rebuilding, one of the best films from the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. It’s the second feature set in Colorado from filmmaker Max Walker-Silverman – who also made A Love Song in 2022 (trailer here). After wildfires take his ranch, a cowboy named Dusty winds up in a FEMA camp, finding community with others who lost homes, including his daughter and ex-wife. A gently humanist story of the American West. Filmed against the rapturous backdrop of southern Colorado, Rebuilding is a ruminative, moving portrait of resilience and human connection in the wake of loss. This wholesome film stars Josh O’Connor as Dusty, Meghann Fahy, Amy Madigan, Kali Reis, Lily LaTorre, Nancy Morlan, & Zeilyanna Martinez. This is such a gem – I hope audiences take the time to watch and enjoy and end up moved by this excellent little indie flick.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Max Walker-Silverman’s film Rebuilding, direct from YouTube:

Rebuilding Trailer

Rebuilding Poster

Rebuilding follows Dusty (Josh O’Connor), a reserved, divorced father whose ranch has burned down in a devastating wildfire. Now living in a trailer community on a government-run campsite, Dusty finds solace with his new neighbors who have also lost everything, quietly reassembles his life, and starts reconnecting with his ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy) and young daughter Callie-Rose (Lily LaTorre). A moving portrait of resilience and human connection in the wake of loss. Rebuilding is directed by American indie filmmaker Max Walker-Silverman, his second feature after the acclaimed Colorado movie A Love Song previously, plus a few shorts. Produced by Jesse Hope, Dan Janvey, Paul Mezey. This initially premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. Bleecker debuts Rebuilding in select US theaters on November 14th, 2025, expanding nationwide the next week on November 21st. Highly recommend this. Any good?

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Find more posts in: Indies, To Watch, Trailer

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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LA Film Production Declines, but New Incentives Show Positive Signs
TV & Streaming

LA Film Production Declines, but New Incentives Show Positive Signs

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

In June, California officially passed its new tax incentives to stop runaway production from the state and from Los Angeles specifically, and today, FilmLA released its first report of the quarter in LA since those incentives were passed.

The bad news is, shoot days in LA were still down in Q3 compared to where they were in 2024, a decline of 13.2 percent compared to July through September this same time last year. The good news is, FilmLA doesn’t seem phased at the dip over the summer just yet, and in fact the organization believes the effects of the passage of AB 1138 are already showing things heading in the right direction.

Seymour Hersh in Cover-Up

“We know that it will take a little while for new incentive-backed projects to get underway and be reflected in our data, so we were not surprised to see on-location production continue to slip this summer despite the state’s increased investment,” FilmLA Vice President Philip Sokoloski said in a statement. “Fortunately, we’ve already begun to see early signs of these incentives having their desired effect; we’re excited to be taking calls from productions looking to line up their locations and pull permits.”

In August, the California Film Commission announced that it had approved 22 TV projects to receive its first round of tax credits since Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law the expansion of the program up to $750 million of funds. The CFC said it had seen a 400 percent increase in shows applying for the credit, and that the 22 shows approved would bring in $1.1 billion in spending across California. Some of the shows approved include a new show from Larry David, another from “This Is Us” creator Dan Fogelman, and of course Season 2 of Seth Rogen’s “The Studio,” naturally.

In terms of why FilmLA’s numbers haven’t picked up to match that surge of interest in the program, shows have up to 180 days to begin production after qualifying for the tax credit, so a good chunk of these shows and films approved still haven’t gone into production, or at least not during the July-September quarter.

And the real culprit of decline for FilmLA was commercial production, which gets no tax incentives as part of the film and TV program. Shoot days for commercials were down 17.9 percent in the quarter compared to last year and even down slightly from last quarter. TV production was still down year-over-year, 20.7 percent to be exact. But that dip is after Q2 was way up from 2024 in shoot days, and of the total shoot days in Q3, only 8.8 percent of those were actually tax incentivized, so it stands to reason that there’s much more to come in the near future.

Some of the shows that shot in LA this past quarter, and some of which also qualified for the prior round of credits, include “Dancing with the Stars” (ABC), “The Price is Right,” “The Valley” (Bravo), “Dinner Time Live with David Chang” (Netflix), “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” (Hulu), “9-1-1” S9 (Fox), “Criminal Minds” S19 (CBS), “High Potential” S2 (ABC), “Bel-Air” S4 (Peacock), “Golf” S1 (Netflix), and “Shrinking” S3 (Apple TV).

Feature film production this past quarter was even up compared to last year, but just nominally at 9.7 percent. Roughly 22 percent of those shoot days were already incentivized, and many of them were indie projects. Some of the ones that FilmLA reported shot in Los Angeles this past quarter were Ben Affleck’s “Animals” and Chris Rock’s film “Misty Green” for A24.

“LA’s creative industry is too important to let go without a fight,” Sokoloski added. “As part of our ongoing focus on streamlining and enhancing the on-location filmmaking process, we are convening industry listening sessions and using what we learn to improve our service delivery and recommend actionable process and policy improvements to our valued government partners.”

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Bollywood

Kantara: Chapter 1 Collections: Rishab Shetty’s Film Scripts New Record

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Kantara: Chapter 1, the highly anticipated prequel to Rishab Shetty’s blockbuster Kantara, has surpassed all expectations. The film is scripting new records at the box office with each passing day. According to early estimates from trade sources, the film has grossed just over Rs 650 crore worldwide, further cementing its position as one of the biggest Indian hits of 2025.

Magical second Monday

Many thought Kantara: Chapter 1 would slow down on its second Monday, but it turns out the film continues its magnificent run at the box office. The film minted an impressive Rs 13.5 crore net in India, bringing its domestic total to Rs 451.90 crore. Breaking down the language-wise earnings, the Kannada and Hindi versions each brought in Rs 4.75 crore, while the Tamil version collected Rs 1.5 crore. The Telugu and Malayalam versions followed with Rs 1.35 crore and Rs 1.15 crore, respectively, on Monday. The lack of no other major film is working big time in Kantara: Chapter 1’s favour. Still, the staggering numbers have shocked the distributors and exhibitors.

Kantara Chapter 1 collections

Film continues to show box office supremacy

The film’s worldwide gross currently stands at Rs 652 crore, and with overseas markets performing steadily, trade experts believe the final number could surpass Rs 700 crore in the coming days. Rishab Shetty is leaving nothing to chance and is still aggressively promoting the film.

Directed and headlined by Rishab Shetty, Kantara: Chapter 1 delves deeper into the mystical folklore and spiritual themes that made the original film a phenomenon. The larger scale, intense performances, and immersive storytelling have resonated with audiences across languages. Even with the post-festival slowdown, the film continues to dominate multiplexes and single screens alike. With positive word of mouth and solid occupancy rates in key regions, the film is expected to maintain its strong hold at the box office till Diwali festival week.

Also Read: Kantara Chapter 1 Collections: Rishab Shetty’s Film Mints Rs 610 Crore

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Crazy Trailer for 'The Elixir' Indonesian Zombie Film Coming to Netflix
Hollywood

Crazy Trailer for ‘The Elixir’ Indonesian Zombie Film Coming to Netflix

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Crazy Trailer for ‘The Elixir’ Indonesian Zombie Film Coming to Netflix

by Alex Billington
October 13, 2025
Source: YouTube

“There are so many people eating people out there.” Netflix has revealed an official trailer for The Elixir, and Indonesian zombie horror thriller arriving to watch later this month streaming worldwide. This crazy fun zombie dark comedy is about a family which tries medicine that turns their dad into a hungry undead monster. A dysfunctional family running a renowned herbal medicine business creates even more trouble. The owner of the company attempts to innovate by creating a new potion, which ends up triggering a zombie outbreak. Made by Indonesian filmmaker Kimo Stamboel, The Elixir immerses audiences in a world of raw terror & unrelenting suspense. It weaves in Indonesian cultural elements, from the herbal medicine jamu to zombies with local characteristics, all set against the backdrop of familiar family dynamics. The film stars Mikha Tambayong, Eva Celia, Donny Damara, Dimas Anggara, Marthino Lio, Kiki Narendra, Ardit Erwandha, Claresta Taufan, and Varen Arianda Calief. This certainly looks crazy & gnarly! It’s extra gross and intense and filled with zombies galore as they overrun police and everyone else. Check it out.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Kimo Stamboel’s horror film The Elixir, direct from YouTube:

The Elixir Horror Film Trailer

The Elixir Horror Film Poster

Set in a remote village near Yogyakarta, the movie opens with a patriarch’s ambition to maintain power, leading to family disputes & catastrophe. Kenes (Mikha Tambayong) and her family visit her father, Sadimin (Donny Damara), the owner of a renowned herbal medicine business, to discuss the future of the family business. Tensions escalate when Kenes confronts her best friend, Karina (Eva Celia), about her intention to marry Sadimin. But the quarreling abruptly turns into fear when Sadimin, having just drunk his new potion of eternal youth, suddenly loses consciousness & transforms into a terrifying creature—a zombie. Panic erupts as the undead pounce on humans, while the uninfected try desperately to escape. All disputes, egos and emotions must be set aside for one goal: helping each other and fighting for survival. The Elixir is directed by Indonesian filmmaker Kimo Stamboel (half of “The Mo Brothers”), director of Macabre, Killers, Headshot, DreadOut, The Queen of Black Magic, Ivanna, Jailangkung: Sandekala, Sewu Dino, last year’s Dancing Village: The Curse Begins, and the “Blood Curse” series. The screenplay is written by Agasyah Karim, Khalid Kashogi, Kimo Stamboel. Produced by Edwin Nazir. Netflix will debut Stamboel’s The Elixir streaming on Netflix worldwide starting October 23rd, 2025 this fall. Anyone want to watch?

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Find more posts in: Foreign Films, Horror, To Watch, Trailer

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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European Film Awards Nominations Shortlist 
TV & Streaming

European Film Awards Nominations Shortlist 

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The European Film Academy has shortlisted 67 films, which will be available to receive nominations for the 38th European Film Awards, taking place on January 17, 2026. 

The shortlist includes 44 feature films, 15 documentary films, and 8 animated feature films, with 27 shortlisted films directed or co-directed by women. 34 European – both EU and non-EU – countries are represented. The list was voted for by the members of the European Film Academy.

Titles that made the list include Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest Bugonia, Mascha Schilinski’s Cannes favorite Sound Of Falling, and On Falling, the debut feature from filmmaker Laura Carreira and produced by Jack Thomas-O’Brien of Sixteen Films. Scroll down for the full shortlist. 

European Film Awards 2026: Shortlist
FEATURE FILMS (44):
BEARCAVE (ARKOUDOTRYPA) directed by Krysianna B. Papadakis & Stergios Dinopoulos (Greece,
United Kingdom)
BUGONIA directed by Yorgos Lanthimos (United Kingdom, United States, South Korea)
CASE 137 (DOSSIER 137) directed by Dominik Moll (France)
CHRISTY directed by Brendan Canty (Ireland, United Kingdom)
DEAF (SORDA) directed by Eva Libertad (Spain)
DIE MY LOVE directed by Lynne Ramsay (United Kingdom, United States, Canada)
DREAMS (DRØMMER) directed by Dag Johan Haugerud (Norway)
DUSE directed by Pietro Marcello (Italy, France)
FATHER (OTEC) directed by Tereza Nvotová (Slovakia, Czech Republic, Poland)
FRANZ directed by Agnieszka Holland (Czech Republic, Germany, Poland)
FUORI directed by Mario Martone (Italy, France)
I ONLY REST IN THE STORM (O RISO E A FACA) directed by Pedro Pinho (Portugal, France, Brazil,
Romania)
IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT (UN SIMPLE ACCIDENT) directed by Jafar Panahi (France, Iran,
Luxembourg)
LA GRAZIA directed by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy)
LATE SHIFT (HELDIN) directed by Petra Volpe (Switzerland, Germany)
LITTLE TROUBLE GIRLS (KAJ TI JE DEKLICA) directed by Urška Djukić (Slovenia, Italy, Croatia,
Serbia)
LOVE ME TENDER directed by Anna Cazenave Cambet (France)
LOVEABLE (ELSKLING) directed by Lilja Ingolfsdottir (Norway)
MASPALOMAS directed by Jose Mari Goenaga & Aitor Arregi (Spain)
MILK TEETH (DINTI DE LAPTE) directed by Mihai Mincan (Romania, France, Denmark, Greece,
Bulgaria)
MIRRORS NO. 3 (MIROIRS NO. 3) directed by Christian Petzold (Germany)
MOTHER directed by Teona Strugar Mitevska (North Macedonia, Belgium)
ON FALLING directed by Laura Carreira (United Kingdom, Portugal)
ONCE UPON A TIME IN GAZA directed by Tarzan Nasser & Arab Nasser (France, Palestine,
Germany, Portugal, Qatar, Jordan)
ONE OF THOSE DAYS WHEN HEMME DIES (HEMME’NİN ÖLDÜĞÜ GÜNLERDEN BİRİ) directed by
Murat Fıratoğlu (Turkey, Germany)
PALESTINE 36 directed by Annemarie Jacir (Palestine, United Kingdom, France, Denmark, Norway)
PILLION directed by Harry Lighton (United Kingdom)
ROMERIA (ROMERÍA) directed by Carla Simón (Spain, Germany)
SENTIMENTAL VALUE (AFFEKSJONSVERDI) directed by Joachim Trier (Norway, France, Denmark,
Germany, Sweden)
SILENT FRIEND directed by Ildikó Enyedi (Germany, France, Hungary)
SIRAT (SIRÂT) directed by Oliver Laxe (Spain, France)
SLEEPLESS CITY (CIUDAD SIN SUEÑO) directed by Guillermo Galoe (Spain, France)
SOUND OF FALLING (IN DIE SONNE SCHAUEN) directed by Mascha Schilinski (Germany)
SUNDAYS (LOS DOMINGOS) directed by Alauda Ruiz de Azúa (Spain)
THE LAST VIKING (DEN SIDSTE VIKING) directed by Anders Thomas Jensen (Denmark, Sweden)
THE LITTLE SISTER (LA PETITE DERNIÈRE) directed by Hafsia Herzi (France, Germany)
THE LOVE THAT REMAINS (ÁSTIN SEM EFTIR ER) directed by Hlynur Pálmason (Iceland, Denmark,
Sweden, France)
THE NORTH directed by Bart Schrijver (Netherlands)
THE STRANGER (L’ÉTRANGER) directed by François Ozon (France)

THE VOICE OF HIND RAJAB directed by Kaouther Ben Hania (France, Tunisia)
TWO PROSECUTORS directed by Sergei Loznitsa (France, Germany, Netherlands, Latvia, Romania,
Lithuania)
WHAT MARIELLE KNOWS (WAS MARIELLE WEISS) directed by Frédéric Hambalek (Germany)
YES (KEN) directed by Nadav Lapid (France, Israel, Cyprus, Germany)
YOUNG MOTHERS (JEUNES MÈRES) directed by Jean-Pierre Dardenne & Luc Dardenne (Belgium,
France)

DOCUMENTARY FILMS (15):
AFTERNOONS OF SOLITUDE (TARDES DE SOLEDAD) directed by Albert Serra (Spain, France)
AN AMERICAN PASTORAL (UNE PASTORALE AMERICAINE) directed by Auberi Edler (France)
ANCESTRAL VISIONS OF THE FUTURE directed by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese (France, Lesotho,
Germany, Qatar, Saudi Arabia)
FIUME O MORTE! directed by Igor Bezinović (Croatia, Slovenia, Italy)
FLOPHOUSE AMERICA directed by Monica Strømdahl (Norway, Netherlands, United States)
GOOD VALLEY STORIES (HISTORIAS DEL BUEN VALLE) directed by José Luis Guerin (Spain,
France)
HAIR, PAPER, WATER… (TÓC, GIẤY VÀ NƯỚC…) directed by Nicolas Graux & Minh Quý Trương
(Belgium, France, Vietnam)
LISTEN TO THE VOICES (KOUTÉ VWA) directed by Maxime Jean-Baptiste (Belgium, France)
MEMORY directed by Vladlena Sandu (France, Netherlands)
MILITANTROPOS directed by Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova & Simon Mozgovyi (Ukraine, Austria,
France)
RIEFENSTAHL directed by Andres Veiel (Germany)
SONGS OF SLOW BURNING EARTH (PISNI ZEMLI SHSCHO POVOLNO HORYT) directed by Olha
Zhurba (Ukraine, France, Denmark, Sweden)
THE SHARDS (OSKOLKY) directed by Masha Chernaya (Georgia, Germany)
TWST / THINGS WE SAID TODAY directed by Andrei Ujică (France, Romania)
WITH HASAN IN GAZA directed by Kamal Aljafari (Germany)

ANIMATED FEATURE FILMS (8):
ARCO directed by Ugo Bienvenu (France)
BALENTES directed by Giovanni Columbu (Italy, Germany)
CHECKERED NINJA 3 (TERNET NINJA 3) directed by Anders Matthesen & Thorbjørn Christoffersen
(Denmark)
DANDELION’S ODYSSEY (PLANETES) directed by Momoko Seto (France)
DOG OF GOD (DIEVA SUNS) directed by Raitis Abele & Lauris Abele (Latvia, United States)
LITTLE AMELIE (AMÉLIE ET LA MÉTAPHYSIQUE DES TUBES) directed by Maïlys Vallade & LianeCho Han (France)
OLIVIA AND THE INVISIBLE EARTHQUAKE (L’OLÍVIA I EL TERRATRÈMOL INVISIBLE) directed by
Irene Iborra Rizo (Spain, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Chile)
TALES FROM THE MAGIC GARDEN (POHADKY PO BABICCE) directed by David Súkup, Patrik
Pašš, Leon Vidmar & Jean-Claude Rozec (Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, France)

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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The Film Industry Needs This Cinderella Story
TV & Streaming

The Film Industry Needs This Cinderella Story

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

When the industry is a hot mess, fairy-tale moments are just that: outliers. However, as traditional paths into the film industry erode, this is the Cinderella story we all need. 

Dave Kalema is a first-generation Ugandan-American who worked his ass off as he aspired to something he didn’t fully understand and wasn’t sure he could do, but kept plugging forward until it started to make a kind of sense. It’s also the story of the fairy godmother Industry Standard, an annual competition that snapped his ambitions into focus and gave him a career-launching, nine-month residency in documentary post production.

I love stories like Kalema’s, but he doesn’t really need me to tell it; he’s also a touring performer with The Moth who has won multiple grand slams. You can read his extraordinary storytelling in “Dreamscape,” which IndieWire is proud to publish for the first time.

Dave Kalema

Still, the turning point is striking: When he got the nod from Industry Standard, he was 31 years old and 24 hours from losing his apartment. Yet Kalema insists that he would have carved his way into the industry even if he’d never heard of the program at all.

“If not for Industry Standard, I would’ve found a way to AE (assistant editor), whatever that scale of the project would’ve been,” Kalema said. “But it would’ve taken me much longer to get to a place like Library Films or to be in the rooms that I’ve been in the last year had it not been for Industry Standard.”  

A Program That Lowers the Ladder

Industry Standard isn’t a training program or an internship. It’s for people who already have post-production skills but need someone, as founder Jennifer Sofio Hall puts it, to “lower the ladder.”

Its roots go back to when Hall was managing director at MakeMake Entertainment. Facing pressure from client surveys about the company’s diversity profile, she posed a simple question to founder Angus Wall: “Can we just cut to the top of this problem and start creating some jobs for people?”

Netflix, which had a post-production deal with MakeMake, supported the idea and covered costs that allowed a resident to rotate across the company’s verticals. Hall later moved to the UK in 2022 and left MakeMake, but Netflix asked her to continue the program. 

 Industry Standard co-founders Bedonna Smith and Jennifer Sofio Hall

Residents also receive mentorship around their roles as well as the soft skills essential for industry success. Hall prioritizes candidates who are already active in the documentary community, whether by volunteering at festivals or supporting nonprofit film groups.

By 2024, Industry Standard opened its first formal application process: 350 applicants competed for five slots (three assistant editors, a post producer, and an archival producer). For the 2025 cycle, more than 450 people applied; Hall is currently reviewing 52 finalists for seven slots across editorial, post, motion design, archival research and producing, color, timing, and sound. She is also in talks with Avid and Getty to expand opportunities.

“This is not being trained on the job,” she said. “It’s not something you can dip in and out of over the course of a week. You’re in this constant state of learning and absorbing. You have to kind of have your faculties on all the time and that takes a tremendous amount of mental and emotional energy.”

Persistence Behind the Break

That’s Kalema. He’s been shooting and editing since 2018, when he founded Coin Flyp Media to direct and edit digital shorts about the personal challenges of pro athletes, but he’s invisible on IMDb. He was also an NCAA athlete at Amherst College, captain of a Division III National Championship team, and graduated cum laude.

What I really love isn’t Kalema’s backstory, or Industry Standard’s magic-wand moment of earning an assistant editor residency at Chris Smith’s Library Films that led to a full-time job. I’m also not going to argue that he’s an everyman because if you take even a moment to scan “Dreamscape,” it’s clear he’s not.

What really impresses me is all the other stuff that led to achieving his dream: a path that’s persistent, random, and doesn’t make a lot of sense. That’s what anyone can relate to, and certainly what the industry now has to offer. 

Nimble by Nature

He’s nimble. That’s hard to define, because it isn’t a singular activity. Nimbleness means adapting to whatever comes at you, being willing to work within uncertainty, and turning that into forward motion. It also means you can live with a whole squirming bucket of uncertainty; In entertainment, it might be the most valuable talent of all. 

“I think a lot of being nimble is putting yourself out there and meeting people, not when you need them, but to kind of follow through on your passions,” he said. “If you really like a film and you’re going to a film festival, tell people you really like their work or tell people that you’re really interested in the path that they took. I’ve always put myself in a position where I have to learn, where I’m forced to learn. I’ve never been scared of the experience that I don’t have.”

That’s the throughline that will let Kalema continue his journey, not the fairy godmother.

Weekly recommendations for your career mindset, curated by IndieWire Senior Editor Christian Zilko

New filmmakers who see a festival run as the ultimate goal often misunderstand some key parts of how the ecosystem works. This article attempts to clarify some key truths about film festivals — not in a negative way, but from a place of appreciating what works about them and creating realistic expectations

I won’t leave you in suspense over the cryptic headline: The biggest mistake indie filmmakers make is waiting too long to release their movies. If you go into a long festival run without any semblance of a distribution plan, your film might end up coming out two years after it premieres, when audiences and media have already moved on to fresher titles.

October is upon us, which means it’s a great time to talk about scary movies — AKA one of the last genres that gives filmmakers an opportunity to punch above their budget and turn a profit. Film industry researcher Stephen Follows uses his findings from a recent collaboration with Blumhouse to explain how the horror genre is evolving and what might be coming next.

Young professionals looking to break into Hollywood often think of “assistant” as the simple default choice for a first job in the industry. But assistants to different departments have wildly different job descriptions, and knowing what is expected of each one can help you specialize earlier and advance your career faster. This great article breaks down the role of a showrunner’s assistant. It’s a must-read for any students looking to pursue careers in TV writing.

Whether you’re looking to climb the ranks of the film and TV industry as an executive or are a creative who just wants a better understanding of how decisions are made, this list of business terms used in entertainment companies is a fantastic resource. Study it for half an hour and you’ll be able to hold your own in a conversation to the point that executives will assume you have an MBA.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Ra.One director Anubhav Sinha opens up on working with Shah Rukh Khan, says the film flopping broke him emotionally
Bollywood

Ra.One director Anubhav Sinha opens up on working with Shah Rukh Khan, says the film flopping broke him emotionally

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Oct 14, 2025 06:27 am IST

Shah Rukh Khan, Kareena Kapoor and Arjun Rampal starred in the 2011 release Ra.One. The film underperformed at the box office.

Ra.One, the sci-fi film produced by Shah Rukh Khan and starring him in the lead role, arrived with high expectations when it was released during Diwali in 2011. However, the film opened to mixed reviews and underperformed at the box office. In an interview with the YouTube channel Ulta Chasma UC, director Anubhav Sinha has now opened up about the film’s reception and the impact on him at that time.

Shah Rukh Khan and Kareena Kapoor Khan on the Ra.One poster.

What Anubhav said

During the conversation, Anubhav said, “I meet a lot of people who now tell me they like Ra.One, but at that time, the film was declared a flop. There was a lot of pain after it flopped. I made a film with Shah Rukh Khan and it was a flop and people didn’t like it at that time. That film broke me emotionally. It took time for me to recover from that.”

‘He is a very passionate, compassionate person’

Anubhav went on to talk about collaborating with Shah Rukh Khan in the film, and added, “I was very fortunate that I was able to meet Shah Rukh Khan. I value him more than a star and an actor. Even if I don’t work with him ever, but I know him as a person and that is enough for me, you learn a lot from him. He is a very passionate, compassionate person. Despite all the stardom, he has a middle-class mind. You can learn all of these things from him. Of course, I would love to work with him, but I don’t have a story for him now and he also will not have time for me now.”

Anubhav went on to make films like Mulk, Article 15, Thappad and Bheed in the years succeeding the release of Ra.One.

Meanwhile, Shah Rukh recently won the National Award for Best Actor for his performance in Jawan. The actor was last seen in 2023’s Dunki, and will be seen next in King, which will also star Deepika Padukone and daughter Suhana Khan.

News / Entertainment / Bollywood / Ra.One director Anubhav Sinha opens up on working with Shah Rukh Khan, says the film flopping broke him emotionally

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | “Elle Fanning wore Simone Rocha at the London Film Festival” links
Celebrity News

bitchy | “Elle Fanning wore Simone Rocha at the London Film Festival” links

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Elle Fanning wore Simone Rocha to the BFI London Film Festival screening of Sentimental Value. I love this, including her makeup. [RCFA]
Tina Fey & Seth Meyers came out for SNL’s real 50th anniversary episode, which was hosted by Amy Poehler. Tina played Kristi Noem. [Pajiba]
Review of Kiss of the Spider Woman. [LaineyGossip]
Zuhair Murad’s latest collection. [Go Fug Yourself]
Rachel Sennott’s I Love LA reminds people of Girls. [OMG Blog]
Sydney Sweeney is still out and about. [Just Jared]
David Beckham looks tiny here. [Seriously OMG]
I do not trust Marjorie Taylor Greene’s rebrand. [Jezebel]
Diane Keaton’s life in photos. [Hollywood Life]
People talk about their encounters with rude celebrities. [Buzzfeed]

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Andrew Jarecki's 'The Alabama Solution' Rocks Sundance Film Festival
TV & Streaming

Andrew Jarecki’s ‘The Alabama Solution’ Rocks Sundance Film Festival

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84


[Editor’s note: This interview was originally published on January 29, 2025 and has been lightly updated for the film‘s HBO debut Friday, October 10. It will also be streaming on HBO Max and is currently in limited theaters for Oscar qualification.]

Andrew Jarecki was never more anxious about sharing a new project at Sundance.

At the festival, the veteran documentarian debuted his Oscar-nominated “Capturing the Friedmans” (2003), “Just a Clown” (2004), “Catfish” (2010), and Emmy-winning series “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” (2015), which he followed up with a popular sequel.

Earlier this year in Park City, Jarecki and his producer-turned-co-director Charlotte Kaufman premiered HBO’s “The Alabama Solution,” a hard-hitting exposé of the brutal Alabama state prison system, a six-year investigative project that deploys video footage taken on the contraband phones of the inmates themselves, as well as interviews by the filmmakers. The movie inspired a long, standing ovation at The Library, and the film’s activist subjects, Melvin Ray and Robert Earl Council, sent a pre-recorded video and participated in a live Q&A by phone from prison. It had an Oscar qualifying run in limited theaters starting October 3 and is a strong contender for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar, with a 90 on Metacritic.

Diane Keaton at the Ralph Lauren Spring 2024 Ready To Wear Fashion Show at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on September 8, 2023 in Brooklyn, New York. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/WWD via Getty Images)

This movie left my jaw open a few times. I gasped at the shocking conditions at the Alabama prisons: water sloshing on floors, strewn garbage, the rats accompanying solitary confinement. The filmmakers themselves became inured to the horrifying video footage the inmates sent them via their cell phones. They saw men’s faces bashed by prison guards, the bloody streaks left behind by men dragged after a beating. They learned of murders.

“First, you have to wrap your head around that this is a reality that’s happening in our country’s prisons,” Kaufman told IndieWire over Zoom. “Most people understand that America’s prisons are tough, but I don’t think people quite understand to what level is the cruelty, the trauma, the abuse, the negligence. The first couple of years of making this film was like having a bucket of ice water dropped on us every day.”

Six years ago in 2019, Jarecki’s daughter was reading a book about Anthony Ray Hinton, who had been wrongfully convicted in Alabama. Jarecki was reading articles about Montgomery and a memorial to people who had been victims of lynching. “It was Presidents’ weekend, and we said, ‘We got to go to Montgomery, maybe we’ll learn something,’” said Jarecki. “Pretty much by chance, I met a man who was the first Black prison chaplain in the state of Alabama, and we started talking. And because I’ve been interested in the justice system, and made a bunch of films in and around it, I started asking him about the prisons. He said, ‘Well, why don’t you come in and volunteer?’ And I said, ‘Would they let me in there?’ And he said, ‘Yeah, if you come and volunteer, you can do it.’”

PARK CITY, UTAH - JANUARY 28: Director Charlotte Kaufman and Andrew Jarecki attend the
Charlotte Kaufman and Andrew Jarecki attend the ‘The Alabama Solution’ premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film FestivalGetty Images

That’s why Jarecki and Kaufman decided to check out the Alabama prisons. They eventually obtained permission to film the opening scene, an outdoor picnic for the inmates at Easterling Prison. “It was then that we started to be taken aside by these men,” said Jarecki. “And we discovered that there were things happening in the prison that nobody on the outside was allowed to see. So that was the initial way in.”

Once they got that first glimpse and whisperings of what was going on, the filmmakers felt “compelled to continue to look and to investigate,” said Kaufman. “The main response to all of this horror is a feeling of wanting to understand how it’s possible this is happening. As much as there’s sadness and outrage, feeling compelled to keep looking and to keep understanding.”

Another wrinkle: The two ringleaders of the activist movement inside the prisons, Council and Ray, who launched the Free Alabama Movement and were posting on social media like Facebook and YouTube, were in increasing danger. The film shows them hit and then slammed in the isolation tank. “We knew, as we started to learn about just how dark things were in the prison,” said Jarecki, “that people were regularly retaliated against. When we were told about these incredible leaders inside, Robert Earl Council and Melvin Ray, it was clear that they were going to be able to tell us things that we otherwise wouldn’t know, and give us a perspective from the view of somebody who’s in the midst of that horrible system. They had been working for many years fearlessly to get the word out. But trying to get through the walls of the prison is difficult.”

Anxiety about the potential reaction to the movie drove the filmmakers to keep a tight lid on the film before they showed it at Sundance. “It’s driven by our deep concern for their safety,” said Kaufman, “and wanting to be intentional of how we release it to the world, so that their attorneys, their defense committee, and they themselves, can be prepared, and that it’s not in a disorganized fashion.”

Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival
Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman at the 2025 Sundance Film FestivalAlanna Taylor

The mission and practice of the incarcerated subjects documenting their lives within prison walls even predated the film’s production. “When events were happening around them that they felt was important for the world to see, they were documenting it,” said Kaufman. “But obviously, one-off videos sometimes don’t portray the whole truth of what’s happening. They’ve shared with us, and then they gave us a lot of their time to have these in-depth conversations throughout six years. The fact that we were able to have those conversations not on the wall phone, which is monitored by the prison, but we were able to have them through this other means was extremely meaningful.”

Often the prisoners stand in the window holding their phones, so their faces are illuminated. They bought the phones from the prison guards. With no wifi, they nabbed cellular service signals in the sky, and figured out ways to charge the phones. “There would be conversations about, ‘Oh, you’re backlit.’ ‘When’s the next time we’re going to be able to talk?’” said Kaufman. “How precious do you want to be about those things? Because the most important thing is the dialogue, and the medium is the message. That’s part of the point of this film: Should it be that difficult to be able to have honest conversations and document what’s happening in our facilities?”

It’s not new to have cell phones in prisons across the country. “Cell phones have been present in Alabama’s prisons and in many prisons since 2013-14,” said Kaufman. “Not everybody is using the technology in such a brave way and ingenious way, as the men who are in our film, but they are present.”

For the moment, neither Ray nor Council are in solitary confinement. “The retaliation against them has been pretty varied over the years, and obviously for long periods of time,” said Jarecki. “The two of them together have spent a combined 14 years in solitary confinement. At the moment, they are, from a relative standpoint, stable. They’re keen to see people react to the film and see people absorb this material that’s been secret for so long. So they’re concerned, and we’re concerned, obviously, about any further retaliation by the administration.”

Kaufman sees the film as not all about the evils of the prison system. “As much as this film is about all of the darkness and the corruption and the cover-up,” she said. “It’s also a portrait of human resilience. And they are still very resilient.”

The movie introduces us to people who we would not otherwise get a chance to meet. And we can see their humanity. But we see the Alabama prison system denigrating convicted criminals, no matter their race, as somehow not deserving of being treated as human beings. “There’s this binary quality to the thinking about criminal justice,” said Jarecki. “There is a mindset that there are people who are criminals and people who are not criminals, and our job here is to just root out the bad ones and then lock them up forever, because society will be safe with no recognition of which crimes we prosecute. You could have a person that’s stolen a billion dollars in taxes. Maybe that person is going to get pardoned. You have another person that’s stolen $30 in baby formula. Maybe that person’s going to get locked up for a long time. So the system is seemingly illogical.”

It’s hard to witness in the film just how intractable and resolute the Alabama prison establishment and state government have been in refusing to do anything about what’s going on. “In the early days,” said Jarecki, “we thought, ‘surely they will recognize that when the Department of Justice is writing findings letters that say that horrible things are happening, the state is going to respond to that in some way, right?’ We’ve talked to people in the DOJ who’ve said, ‘Most of the time, when we bring up massive problems in a state’s prison system, constitutional violations, horrible conditions, the state is embarrassed, and the state wants to do something about that.’ Not so with Alabama.”

Of all the terrible prison systems in America, Alabama is the worst. “It’s the deadliest prison system,” said Jarecki. “That includes the highest level of drug overdoses, of murder, of rape and suicide. However, as you could see from the film, similar things are happening in many states, because these states are not allowing anybody to see inside, and so journalists don’t get access to these prisons. You say democracy dies in darkness. People die in darkness. We think of that as something that happens in some far off country or in the middle of war. There’s a great line from Melvin Ray: “How is it possible that a journalist can go into a war zone, but can’t go into a prison in the United States?”

While scholars have shown that mass incarceration is rooted in racism and historical slavery, Kaufman said, “This is a system that hurts everybody. It’s harmful to the guards, it’s harmful to those incarcerated. The cruelty doesn’t discriminate. The system is an equal opportunity disaster.”

Next Up: The film is generating an impact campaign. “The film is the beginning of what we hope is going to be an impact both in Alabama and outside Alabama,” said Jarecki. “Charlotte and I are both working a lot on that. It’s going to be a way of life for the next year.”

“The Alabama Solution” is currently in limited theaters and will make its debut on HBO and HBO Max Friday October 10.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for Jim Jarmusch's 'Father Mother Sister Brother' Film
Hollywood

Official Trailer for Jim Jarmusch’s ‘Father Mother Sister Brother’ Film

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for Jim Jarmusch’s ‘Father Mother Sister Brother’ Film

by Alex Billington
October 9, 2025
Source: YouTube

“It’s like they say: you can choose your friends, your lovers, but you can’t choose your family.” Mubi has debuted their official trailer for the film titled Father Mother Sister Brother, the new Jim Jarmusch film that has been in the works for years. It premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival, where it strangely won the Golden Lion award, and also played at NYFF. It will play in limited theaters starting in December later this year. A new ensemble comedy feature a huge cast of characters – this is a triptych with segments set in the US, France, Ireland. Estranged siblings reunite after years apart, forced to confront unresolved tensions and reevaluate their strained relationships with their emotionally distant parents – a mom, dad, & brother / sister. A series of character studies: quiet, observational and non-judgemental — a comedy, but interwoven with threads of melancholy. Starring Tom Waits, Adam Driver, Mayim Bialik, Charlotte Rampling, Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Sarah Greene, Indya Moore, Luka Sabbat, Françoise Lebrun. Despite this solid cast, this is one of my least favorite films of the year. Excruciatingly boring and entirely pointless – don’t think it deserves any awards or anyone’s attention. But that’s just my own opinion.

Here’s the main trailer (+ poster) for Jim Jarmusch’s film Father Mother Sister Brother, via YouTube:

Father Mother Sister Brother Teaser

Father Mother Sister Brother Teaser

You can watch the teaser trailer for Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother right here for the first look.

Father Mother Sister Brother is a feature film, though carefully constructed in the form of a triptych. The 3 stories all concern the relationships between adult children, their somewhat distant parent (or parents), and each other. Each of the three chapters takes place in the present, and each in a different country. Father is set in the Northeast US, Mother in Dublin, Ireland, and Sister Bother in Paris, France. The film is a series of character studies, quiet, observational and non-judgmental – a comedy, but interwoven with threads of melancholy. Father Mother Sister Brother is written and directed by acclaimed American indie filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, director of many great films including Stranger Than Paradise, Down by Law, Mystery Train, Night on Earth, Dead Man, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Coffee and Cigarettes, Broken Flowers, The Limits of Control, Only Lovers Left Alive, Paterson, Gimme Danger, and The Dead Don’t Die previously. Produced by Charles Gillibert, Joshua Astrachan, Carter Logan, and Atilla Salih Yücer. This is premiering at the 2025 Venice Film Festival underway now. Mubi opens Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother in select US theaters starting on December 24th, 2025 late this year. How does that look?

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