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Funny Teaser for 'Spinal Tap Concert at Stonehenge - The Final Finale'
Hollywood

Funny Teaser for ‘Spinal Tap Concert at Stonehenge – The Final Finale’

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Funny Teaser for ‘Spinal Tap Concert at Stonehenge – The Final Finale’

by Alex Billington
October 23, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Where the children dance to the Pipes of Pan!” Bleecker Street has revealed the first look teaser for another new Spinal Tap movie releasing soon as a follow up to Spinal Tap II. They will also be releasing Vertigo Live & Rob Reiner’s Spinal Tap at Stonehenge: The Final Finale. One more concert before they kick the bucket! The concert-film reunites legendary fictional heavy metal band Spinal Tap (Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, Harry Shearer) for a once-in-a-lifetime performance — the first-ever rock show filmed at Stonehenge, the historic English heritage site tied to their iconic song of the same name. The film features show-stopping guest performances from Shania Twain, Eric Clapton, and Josh Groban and will be released by Bleecker Street in theaters and in IMAX in 2026. Bring on the grand finale Stonehenge performance of a lifetime! Back in September, Bleecker released the long-awaited sequel Spinal Tap II: The End Continues some 41 years after the original mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap rocked the world back in 1984. This looks like an actually crazy fun concert experience. And a radical way to wrap up this 40+ year Spinal Tap legacy.

Here’s the new teaser trailer for the live rock doc Spinal Tap Concert at Stonehenge, from YouTube:

Spinal Tap Concert at Stonehenge

You can rewatch the official trailer for Spinal Tap II: The End Continues right here for more film footage.

This Is Spinal Tap was released to critical acclaim in 1984 and went on to become a cult classic. In 2002, it was deemed “culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress, and was selected for preservation by the National Film Registry. Conceived by rockers Guest, McKean, Reiner, and Shearer, Spinal Tap II follows England’s loudest and most punctual band, as they reunite after a 15-year hiatus for one final concert. On the 40th anniversary of the original film, the sequel to the legendary rock mockumentary that put the film company on a run of success. Spinal Tap II: The End Continues is once again directed by iconic American filmmaker Rob Reiner, director of many classics like Stand By Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally, A Few Good Men, The Story of Us, plus docs the original This Is Spinal Tap, I Am Your Child, and Albert Brooks: Defending My Life most recently. The screenplay is by Christopher Guest & Michael McKean & Rob Reiner & Harry Shearer. Produced by Rob Reiner, Michele Reiner and Matthew George; along with Castle Rock Entertainment. Bleecker Street debuted Reiner’s Spinal Tap II sequel in theaters on September 12th, 2025. This concert doc lands in early 2026. Rock on? 🤘 🎸

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October 24, 2025 0 comments
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'The Rainmaker' Stars Answer Our Burning Questions About That Finale
TV & Streaming

‘The Rainmaker’ Stars Answer Our Burning Questions About That Finale

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for The Rainmaker finale.]

Case closed! There were some big surprises in store in The Rainmaker‘s finale, even for those who might’ve read John Grisham‘s novel of the same name or watched the cinematic adaptation to know how the trial might end. To break down the biggest moments and find out the answer to some of our most burning questions, TV Insider caught up with the cast and creatives to dish on all the spoilers.

First, a brief recap of events. Melvin Pritcher (Dan Fogler), after talking to Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan), agreed to testify in the civil trial against the hospital. After all, he wasn’t going to get out of facing prison time for his crimes, no matter what, but at least this would give him an opportunity to get even with the people responsible for his own mother’s death in the house fire. In his testimony, which was allowed as a rebuttal witness account to the doctor’s cause of death assessment, he admitted to murdering multiple patients, including the son of Rudy’s client. Things went off the rails, though, when he leaped across the room to attack Leo Drummond (John Slattery).

Sarah Plankmore (Madison Iseman) was deeply upset by what happened — not because her client had actively concealed serial murders but because of the attack on Leo. She didn’t waver from her commitment to her client, even under pressure from Rudy, who ultimately admitted he was wrong about her.

At the same time, Brad Noonan (Wade Briggs) faced the very real consequences of doing Leo’s dirty work. After being cornered by the FBI, he then confronted Leo, who quickly surmised he was wearing a wire and refused to say anything that could incriminate himself. He’ll leave Brad holding that bag. Upon learning of this, Sarah approved of Leo’s move, saying, “Somebody’s blood has to end up on the floor, right?”

She also encouraged Wilfred Keeley (Hugh Quarshie) to testify, and he asked her to handle his cross-examination. During the direct, Rudy got Keeley to admit that he was the only person with access to the Narpans machine code to delete the records and that they were erased the day after he learned of Jackie Lemaczyk’s complaint about Pritcher. On cross, though, Sarah found a way to throw Brad under the bus for it, pointing out that he would’ve had access to the master codes as his attorney, too.

Christopher Barr / USA Network

With Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) now encouraging Rudy to rest the case, he had a different idea; he decided to call Leo on the stand. Though Rudy got in some good shots — chiefly, airing out his mantra that “the truth is not your client” — the biggest effect was that Leo then had to sit out the case and let Sarah finish the defense. She, of course, rose to the occasion and delivered a poignant and thoughtful closing argument to discredit the witnesses. However, when the jury verdict came in, Dot Black (Karen Bryson) prevailed with a massive, multi-million dollar verdict. Dot then pledged to use the money to create treatment centers, Rudy bought the bar he used to work out, and Deck (P.J. Byrne) decided to try his hand at the bar exam, again, this time with Rudy’s lucky coin in hand. Meanwhile, Brad went to prison and saw a familiar face in the crowd: Melvin Pritcher.

Below, the cast and creator dissect our most burning questions.

Did Dot get her full settlement money?

Yes. Whereas in the book and prior film adaptation, Dot’s settlement was merely an academic exercise, as Great Benefit simply closed up shop and never paid her (or her attorneys, by extension), in this iteration, she gets the money.

Creator Michael Seitzman explained the decision to change that part of the ending, telling TV Insider, “It’s one place where I differ with the book…. I mean, I love the book and I love John’s writing, but I felt at the end that I wanted there to be a real reward. I just felt like they’ve earned it. And I think especially in television, you’ve gone through 10 episodes with these people. You’ve watched this entire thing take place. You’re rooting with all your heart — if we did it right, that is, you’re rooting with all your heart — that they’re going to win at the end. I don’t want to take that away from the character. Then, I don’t want to take it away from the audience.”

Is Sarah fully committed to Leo’s dark side now?

Sarah might have had personal reasons for knowingly letting Brad take the fall for what Keeley did, but still, her morality was unquestionably compromised throughout the case. So is she just going to do Leo’s bidding or carve out her own way of lawyering in the future?

Madison Iseman guessed, “I would like to think she’s paving her own path and giving into her own ways. I even think there’s a world where she never had to give up Rudy, but unfortunately, with the circumstances, she’s always going to pick herself. And our whole story is about the morally gray, and I think she ends up making a decision that people will find questionable, but over everything, I do think she’s trying to think of herself and her own future. And that closing argument has become one of my party tricks because I will never forget it as long as I live. If I have one glass of wine, I’ll recite the whole thing.”

THE RAINMAKER -- Episode 110 -- Pictured: Madison Iseman as Sarah Plankmore -- (Photo by: Christopher Barr/USA Network)

Christopher Barr / USA Network

Do Rudy and Sarah still have a future together?

It’s still possible, but those involved with the show have very different takes on it. For Milo Callaghan, what Sarah has done in this case and beyond hasn’t changed the way Rudy feels about her deep down: “I think he’s really in love [with her still]. I think it’s a love story at heart… Michael used to say it’s a bit like a bird and a fish who fell in love, but where are they going to live? That’s the height of their housing troubles. They’re trying to figure out, ‘Can we do this?’ We talked about future seasons and future thoughts and reconciliations, and for me, when I read the scripts, I wanted them to find a way back. I thought it was really smart to deprive the audiences of that, but at the same time, I don’t know, I think Rudy still feels the love. I think right to the last moment, he’s got his hand out.”

Iseman, meanwhile, thinks it’s less likely they can rekindle the romantic elements of their relationship, saying, “I don’t know. There’s a lot that happens. I think they love each other. I think they will always love each other. But I think they are so similar in the way that they are so hard-headed, and I think that’s what made them work so well in the beginning. But they might be too hard-headed to ever put the other person first. So I don’t know if they would ever have a healthy relationship. But you never know.”

Seitzman added, “She would have to make a big turn right for him to take her back because he loves the Sarah from Episode 1. The Sarah that she became is impossible for him to love, because even when Rudy makes mistakes, he’s not morally compromised. He is trying always to do the right thing. She knows that she’s making decisions that are the wrong thing. She’s asked numerous times if you want to get your hands dirty, how dirty? And then she does it over and over and over again. She’s given the opportunity… to take an off-ramp, but she doesn’t. Rudy doesn’t behave like that. His is a real coming of age story. Hers is a Faustian bargain. She would have to undo her deal with the devil in order for him to take her back. But I think, like all exes, you know, we all have a soft spot for every ex. We can’t help it.”

THE RAINMAKER -- Episode 110 -- Pictured: John Slattery as Leo Drummond -- (Photo by: Christopher Barr/USA Network)

Christopher Barr / USA Network

Is Leo going to go to jail?

At the end of the finale, Leo revealed that, while Brad was already in cuffs, he was under his own FBI investigation. John Slattery, for one, has faith in his guy.

“I think Leo is going to do his damndest to stay out of jail, and he’s probably done it before,” he said. As for whether Leo has respect for Sarah in the end, after she proved to be a fellow cutthroat, he said, “Certainly. I think he’s respected her the whole way. I think he’s just trying to figure out whether she’s prepared to fight the good fight, as he sees it. But I think he respected her in the moment he met her, and that’s why he had her stick around.”

Is Bruiser happy her dad left?

After Bruiser found out the truth about her father, that he didn’t murder anyone, he still had to go on the lam from the FBI. So now, the firm is fully hers. Is Bruiser secretly happy about that, even if it means she can’t see her dad? According to Lara Parrilla, it’s “100%” yes. “She’s almost kind of relieved, but doesn’t ever say so, but then she’s secretly excited to do something different with the firm and give Rudy a chance because I don’t think her father would’ve ever done that,” she said.

Will Deck pass the bar exam?

P.J. Byrne isn’t so sure if his fast-talking associate counterpart will have what it takes to finally pass the bar, but he does have an idea of what might happen if he does. He told us, “I don’t know. Will Deck pass the bar after he’s failed it seven times in Season 2? I mean, is eight times a charm… I think he’ll do it, but I don’t think it’ll be easy. And I can only imagine him crossing the bar to his first case, he’s probably going to be a sweat pile. So he’s gotta eat some Lewis Barbecue to get his stomach full, and he might throw up.”

What is the significance of Rudy letting go of his coin?

Since we first met Rudy Baylor in Episode 1, his coin from a trip to Myrtle Beach with his brother has been his prized token, thought to give him luck and the memory of his lost brother. So it was a very meaningful moment indeed when he was finally willing to part with it and give it to Deck for luck with the bar.

“This has been both a driving force for him as well as an anchor that’s holding him down. It comes up periodically in these moments of stress. As he tells Kelly, at one point, ‘My brother said, if I rub my fingers over it’ll give me luck.’ She says, ‘Does it work?’ He says, ‘Sometimes.’ But it’s a security blanket, right? It’s somehow, ‘My brother’s wisdom is going to help me become the man that I want to become,’ the man that he felt his brother was. And by the end, we should believe, as he believes, that he’s become that man, and he doesn’t need it anymore. So he gets it to the person he’s closest with, which is Deck.”

Will there be a second season?

A second season has not yet been announced, but we’ve got some intel about what might happen if it does come along right here.

The Rainmaker, USA Network & Peacock

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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Daryl Dixon' Season 3 Finale Clip, Season 4 BTS
TV & Streaming

Daryl Dixon’ Season 3 Finale Clip, Season 4 BTS

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

As The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon prepares to wrap up its penultimate season, AMC teased fans at New York Comic Con with what’s to come.

During the show’s Season 3 panel, the audience was treated to a clip of Daryl (Norman Reedus) and Carol (Melissa McBride) sharing a heart-to-heart in the final episode, as well as a behind-the-scenes glimpse at Season 4.

A scene from the Season 3 finale episode ‘Solace of the Sea’ shows Daryl confiding in Carol on a beach about his need to constantly run, revealing that he’s scared he won’t be able to stay in one place when they get home.

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In the Season 4 clip, Reedus and McBride share a glimpse at some of the scenes they’re filming o-location in Spain. “We hope that you all will keep watching. It’s going to be even better than Season 3,” said McBride, as Reedus raved they’re “killing it on Season 4.”

Friday’s panel featured star/executive producer Reedus, as well as Walking Dead Universe chief content officer Scott M. Gimple, showrunner/EP David Zabel and EP/director Greg Nicotero.

The fifth spin-off of The Walking Dead (2010-’22), TWD: Daryl Dixon follows Daryl and Carol on their journey home to their loved ones after washing up in France, where the zombie virus originated.

In July, the show was renewed for its fourth and final season.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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David Henrie Teases Wizards Beyond Waverly Place Season 2 Finale
TV & Streaming

David Henrie Teases Wizards Beyond Waverly Place Season 2 Finale

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Wizards Beyond Waverly Place has spent the better part of its first two seasons mounting some very big questions, particularly about its main character Billie (Janice LeAnn Brown) and her involvement in the Wizard World.

Well, viewers will finally be getting some answers when Season 2 debuts on Disney+ tomorrow.

“I can’t wait to see people’s reaction to that ending. We really went for it,” star and executive producer David Henrie teases to Deadline.

The season, which has been rolling out weekly on Disney Channel since September 12, picks up with Roman (Alkaio Thiele), Milo (Max Matenko) and Billie (Janice LeAnn Brown) officially competing to retain their wizard powers into adulthood, after the Season 1 finale revealed the boys’ magical abilities. But, the Family Wizard Competition has been far from the only obstacle in their way this season as a mysterious new threat has begun to emerge over the course of the first six episodes.

While episodes have been airing on cable, Wednesday will mark their streaming premiere — and all 10 episodes will come available, meaning that fans won’t have to wait much longer to see how the rest of the season pans out.

But, make no mistake. The series is just getting started. So, while the Season 2 finale might answer one of the biggest questions Wizards Beyond has posed so far, it will also leave viewers with a ton more, according to Henrie.

“For me, the second season is really where the show begins,” he said.

In the interview below, Henrie discusses what to expect from the remaining episodes of Season 2 and where it’ll lead the story next.

DEADLINE: How is Season 2 expanding on the story you started telling last season and what can we expect, especially in those final episodes that no one has seen yet?

DAVID HENRIE: For me, the second season is really where the show begins, because the first season we really looked at like the prequel. The family didn’t know about magic. They didn’t know the kids had powers. There was no Wizard Competition. This season, the competition begins in our own way. We’re really excited about it because we answer a lot of questions unique to our series that were lingering from last season, like, is Alex Billy’s mom? So we answer that question this season, and we also bring in some big easter eggs that I think will leave a lot of lingering questions as to Alex’s character, her backstory in the lore.

DEADLINE: We found out that Milo and Roman have powers at the end of last season, so similarly to Wizards of Waverly Place, these kids are now competing to see who will get to retain their powers as an adult. How have you tried to keep things fresh while also incorporating these familiar elements from the original series?

HENRIE: What I love about this show is it takes the feeling and the heart and the themes of the old show and it represents them in a fresh way. I like that word, fresh, because the driving engine of this show is different than the other show. In the other show, we had a family who were all blood and always had each other’s backs. In this show, we have a found family. So we bring in this new girl who doesn’t understand what family is like the Russos do and also doesn’t trust family like the Russos do. So it’s a wonderfully fresh engine and a fresh way to tell family stories for 2025.

DEADLINE: How have you continued to reflect on the experience you want to create for these kids on set in Season 2?

HENRIE: I think a lot about my own experience as a kid on set, which is why I try to create the culture that I always wanted when I was a kid actor on various sets. Growing up, I always studied different sets and different cultures and learned. So now that I’m in a position of power here, I try to create the most fertile environment for mental health and for the kids to thrive. We’re all imperfect people. So everyone has their moments. But in general, I’m incredibly proud of the culture on our set. It is a professional, loving atmosphere that recognizes the reality that we have children on set, and they need to be treated like children. They’re not adults, and we need to respect that. It really is meaningful to me.

DEADLINE: You directed this season. Was that something you’d been thinking about since boarding the project?

HENRIE: I’ve directed films before. I’ve never directed TV. This is my first time directing TV. I was really excited to do it, because I’ve done hundreds of episodes of sitcoms from the original show, and others, and know the format so well. It really just works with my psychology or cognitive style, whatever you want to call it, it just is how I think. I loved every second of it. I got to do things that I haven’t gotten to do in single cam that I’ve always wanted to do, like I’ve always wanted to do the Spielberg push-pull shot, where you compress the background image. We got to do that here, because there’s a big comedic moment with Janice where she screams, ‘What?’ And I got to do this big Spielberg zoom in push-pull, which was such a fun shot and heightened the moment in a really great way. I got to have some heartfelt moments as well. The Christmas episode that I directed is the first time we’re introducing Christmas to the Wizards world, and it speaks to the kids that maybe feel lonely on Christmas. So we got to put a really nice message into this Christmas episode. I think the fans are gonna love it. I really do. I’m excited for them to see it.

DEADLINE: When you think beyond Season 2, how energized are you about the longevity of the story you’re telling here?

HENRIE: We end this season on the biggest cliffhanger the wizards universe has ever known. So what energizes me is to explore the questions that we provoke at the end of the season — very big ones, some questions that really speak to the overarching lore of the show, especially Selena’s character. So I’m really excited to explore those thoughts and ideas into this next season, because [in] Season 3, [we] are really going to lean into the questions of identity, belonging, legacy, universal questions that will really come to the forefront at the end of the season, which I can’t wait for people to see.

DEADLINE: The kids really come into their own this season. How has it been for you to watch them grow on this set and settle into their characters?

HENRIE: Selena said the same thing. She’s like, ‘Man, the kids are soaring.’ When we did the original show, the first season, you’re figuring out who you are and what your character is, and you’re finding yourself. Everyone’s finding themselves. The writers are finding their voice with each character, and it’s an exploratory process in any first season of any show. The second season, you start to find your thing. You start to really know what works for you and what doesn’t work for you, and you start to add in nuance that you didn’t have before. All the kids did that. They doubled down on their strengths. They did such a great job growing from one season to the next, and they’re soaring. They really are soaring. I’m so proud of them for growing and trusting their instincts.

DEADLINE: What are you most looking forward to about the release of those final episodes tomorrow?

HENRIE: I can’t wait to see people’s reaction to that ending. We really went for it. We really pushed the envelope. We swung for the fences. I mean, it turns into a drama and a heartfelt one, and Janice and Selena both give career-best performances. So I can’t wait for people to see all that they put into it, and I’m just so excited to see their reactions.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Grace Van Patten Dives Into Amanda Knox Finale, Teases 'Tell Me Lies'
TV & Streaming

Grace Van Patten Dives Into Amanda Knox Finale, Teases ‘Tell Me Lies’

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from the season finale of The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox, “Libertá.”]

The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox intentionally kept the camera pointed away from the person who is heard in the Hulu miniseries’ final scene. After eight episodes of a dramatic retelling of Amanda Knox’s harrowing legal journey to freedom, the final two episodes followed Knox, played by Grace Van Patten, as she tried to reclaim her life following her murder conviction being overturned on appeal and regaining her freedom after years spent in prison and in the courts. Part of that journey was Knox traveling back to Italy to confront her former prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini (which happened in real life), but the series stops short of confirming that it is Mignini who steps into the confessional booth to end the series; the show leaves the person’s identity a mystery, and ends before that person speaks.

“I’m so obsessed with that ending. I think it’s so smart,” Van Patten tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s so common that shows and movies are wrapped up in a bow for the audience, and the fact that this gives space for an interpretation, I think, is so smart. I am curious to hear what people think: Who that is, what are they about to confess?” She adds, “Everything’s out in the open now. Amanda’s side is out in the open.”

Below, Van Patten dives into her process to play Knox — her first role embodying a real person — to explain how her firm belief in her innocence brought a newfound depth to the series, and shares set stories of her relationship with Knox herself. She also teases her other Hulu series Tell Me Lies, which just wrapped production on its highly anticipated third season: “Buckle up,” she says. “Buckle. Up.”

***

Where were you in Tell Me Lies world when this show about Amanda Knox first came to you?

I was in between seasons two and three. I had first heard about it while we were filming, and I knew it was going to be a Hulu show, and I was like, “Does that mean maybe I could be considered?” But then I didn’t hear anything about it for months and months, and completely forgot about it until I saw that Amanda Knox had started following me on Instagram. That’s when my stomach dropped, and I reached out to my agents right away like, “What does this mean?!” That’s when the process began.

Did the timing line up with scheduling so you could film both series?

It worked out perfectly. It was a couple of months after we wrapped season two [of Tell Me Lies] when I found out about Amanda, so it was: go, go, go. I left for Italy two months later. Then, when I wrapped, I had about two and a half weeks and went right into Tell Me Lies, and we just finished filming a few days ago. So now I’m a free woman!

Tell me everything you just filmed.

You don’t want to know. It’s scary. For different reasons, both of these shows are terrifying!

What was that adjustment like, to go back into Tell Me Lies mode two weeks after absorbing yourself in the world of Amanda Knox?

I was really nervous at first. Since I’ve started Tell Me Lies, it’s only been Tell Me Lies. I haven’t had to go from another character to Lucy, so I didn’t know what to expect. But that’s the beauty of doing something for three seasons, which I didn’t know, but it’s just kind of in your body more and something you can switch on as opposed to having to find every time and every season. Lucy, unfortunately, is in my body! So it was more about igniting her, as opposed to figuring out who this person is again.

Jackson White as Stephen DeMarco here with Grace Van Patten as Lucy Albright in Tell Me Lies.

Josh Stringer/Hulu

When it came to figuring out Amanda, from what I’ve read, you had an awareness but were not the expert that I imagine you are now. Would you say you had an opinion about her innocence or guilt going in?

I remember it being controversial. I know people felt very strongly about if she was innocent or if she was guilty, and there were both existing opinions. But I didn’t have one. I just didn’t know. And then, as soon as I started doing research, I gathered a very factual opinion, which is: No, this girl did not do this. And that it’s a way deeper and more complicated story than what I realized, and I think what people realize. Doing that research made me even more motivated to help tell her side of the story.

At what point in that research process did you then get to meet Amanda and have the choice to collaborate closely or keep some distance? How did you approach that relationship?

I was figuring it out as I went along. I had no plan. I had never played a real person before, so everything was new to me. I didn’t know how involved she wanted to be. The first time I met her was really discovering all of these things; discovering that she does want to be involved and that she is willing to speak to me, and that was so reassuring. The fact that she was so open and vulnerable with me and I felt like I could ask her a million questions and she was willing to give me the answers. I felt so thankful that I could use her, as opposed to guess. I had two months before we went to go shoot, so that was filled with speaking to her and learning Italian as much as I could.

I was going to ask if you had spoken any Italian before the show.

No. None. That was the main skill I had to work on. Those two months were definitely crammed with talking to her, and learning Italian and doing as much research as I possibly could.

You read her book, so you had read her perspective before doing the show, but as you were going through the filming process and asking questions, was there anything that stood out to you as a misconception or something the public didn’t know?

What’s crazy is that the whole thing was a misconception. Learning the details were shocking, like the amount of the lack of evidence. It’s not like there was a little bit of evidence — there was no evidence, which is crazy that two people are being accused of murder with zero evidence. But I would say the most surprising thing and the most beautiful thing I learned was who Amanda was as a person who went through this thing, and how still, to this day, after going through something so horrible and tragic, she has maintained positivity and hope and compassion for people. I could imagine that after going through something like that it could be very easy to slip into a life filled with a lot of resentment and anger, and she did not let that defeat her. She really is such a strong woman. I’m really inspired by her mentality.

Showrunner K.J. Steinberg said the show could have ended at episode six, but that going beyond the verdict and following Amanda home was always part of the plan. Why did you think it was key to tell that after story, especially with these final two episodes?

It’s so important to see her readapt to normal life. She was still only 24, and so to watch the discomfort of that reentry and figure out how to navigate real life again… I know I’ve never seen that play out in a show. That was so fascinating to me to talk to her about and read in the scripts. The build of watching Amanda decide how to regain control of her life — whether that’s writing the book or writing that first letter to her prosecutor, and how this whole show up to this point is leading up to her regaining control of a life that has been completely out of her control. It gives it a hopeful end. It shows a continuation of an existing person who actually went through this, and that that’s not the story — the story is who she is now. That’s what I hope people take away from it.

With Amanda co-writing the last episode, “Libertá,” viewers get a lot of insight into her via her inner monologue in your finale scenes. What was that experience like, and was she on set for any of that final episode?

She was. She was there the last two or so weeks of filming, so she was there with the big Mignini scene at the end, which was super emotional and shot over two or three days. It was a scene we all really wanted to get right. It’s a very long, complex scene with so much going on between two people. So that one was tedious and emotional, and the fact that she was there for that made me feel very emotional doing it.

Were there any big questions you had for her when making the finale?

Any time she gave me validation that I was portraying her emotions authentically meant the world to me. She said that a few times throughout, and it made me feel so good that I was able to give her that. That was my main goal through all of this — to help her feel understood and for people to hopefully, by watching this, understand her more. To feel seen by her was really flattering and such an honor for me.

Grace Van Patten as Amanda Knox in The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox.

Disney/Andrea Miconi

The final words from Amanda in the show are that there will be some people who will believe her and think she’s innocent, and some who still won’t. Do you feel Amanda has an acceptance that even after you release this show and put it all out there that there might still be people who think she’s guilty?

I don’t want to speak for her, but I do know from getting to know Amanda that she’s very confident in who she is, and has never strayed away from who she is, which unfortunately, in the time of her being accused for murder, was used against her. But she is so true to who she is, and I am so inspired by that. Making this show, and having a platform to help somebody tell their story, was so meaningful to me. But I’m sure this helped her. Everything’s out in the open now. Her side is out in the open. So knowing her, she’s approaching it with positivity and acceptance.

Have you been following along with the viewer response and engaging on social media?

No. It’s probably partly a defense mechanism! But what’s helped is that I’ve been shooting Tell Me Lies as the show has been coming out, so it’s been a nice distraction of not reading things. It’s the first thing I’ve ever been a part of where I’m just so proud of what we did. Not even necessarily the outcome; it’s such a great show. But I’m so proud of the actual product and of everyone who came together to make this, and the reason we all made this. So I’m kind of with Amanda where people can hate it or love it, but I feel like we did something really important and good. There’s less weight to the response because of that.

In the final scene of the series, we don’t see who has arrived to confess. We only hear them breathe and see that it’s someone the priest recognizes. Do you all want people to make their own opinions about who’s in that confessional booth?

I’m so obsessed with that ending. I think it’s so smart. It’s so common that shows and movies are wrapped up in a bow for the audience. And the fact that this gives space for an interpretation, I think, is just so smart. I am curious to hear what people think: Who that is, what are they about to confess? I’m curious for that reaction.

What do you hope people take away from that final scene?

I hope that through watching this show, they really see who Amanda is, and can gather and form an opinion based on understanding her more and based on the facts. I really think it’s a story about this young girl regaining control of her life and never giving up, and being extremely resilient through it all and not letting a bad thing define and destroy her. That’s really inspiring to anybody, no matter what scale of tragedy you’ve gone through, or trauma. You can take that and use that mentality through any aspect of your life. I think that’s so beautiful.

This story also brings both Raffaele Sollecito and Meredith Kercher into the forefront. KJ has called them both the “oft-forgotten” victims in this story. What was it like to be a part of getting their stories out?

There is no doubt that this story involves so much pain and so much tragedy from multiple people and families, and that’s why we approached it with as much sensitivity as possible. I hope people see this was a tragic story on so many different levels, and that it is not one person’s story. It’s, unfortunately, the pain and tragedy of a lot of people involved.

What was it like working with Monica Lewinsky [who is a producer] on this project, and how did she help steer what you all hope to accomplish?

I look up to her so much. I think she’s so extremely smart and cool, and what she’s doing with her life, reclaiming her own story in her own way, is so inspiring. The team of Amanda and Monica is so badass. Honestly, just being able to talk to Monica about not only this show but her life and life in general, I learned so much from every conversation.

Looking ahead to what’s next for you, what is the most non-spoiler tease you can share about season three of Tell Me Lies?

Buckle up. (Laughs.) Buckle. Up. I mean, it’s absolute chaos in the purest form, with everybody. People can get excited about the drama for every character — everyone’s going through it.

***

The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox is now streaming all episodes on Hulu. Read THR’s recent cover story with Amanda Knox and Monica Lewinsky.

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Home Run: Blue Jays’ season finale a ratings hit
Celebrity News

Home Run: Blue Jays’ season finale a ratings hit

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

By Gregory Strong

The Canadian Press

Posted September 30, 2025 9:44 am

1 min read

TORONTO – The Toronto Blue Jays’ regular-season finale – a 13-4 rout that clinched the division title – was a ratings home run for domestic rights-holder Sportsnet.

The network says Toronto’s victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday averaged 2.36 million viewers on television and via streaming, making it Sportsnet’s most-watched Blue Jays regular-season broadcast ever.

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Alejandro Kirk homered twice as the Blue Jays secured the American League East crown for the first time since 2015.

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The Blue Jays earned a bye to the AL Division Series with the victory. They will play the winner of the wild-card series between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees.

Game 1 in the best-of-five series is scheduled for Saturday at Rogers Centre.

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Sportsnet says the average audience for the full season was 906,800 viewers per game, a jump of 51 per cent from the 2024 campaign.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 30, 2025.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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stranger things season 5
Bollywood

Stranger Things Season 5 Makers Tease More Action With Special Effects Ahead Of Finale Release- Watch

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

For nearly a decade, Stranger Things has electrified audiences with heart-pounding thrills, 80s nostalgia, and unforgettable characters. From Hawkins to the Upside Down, it has become a global legacy that shaped culture and inspired millions. Stranger Things Season 5 will release in three parts.

Stranger Things Season 5 Makers Tease More Action With Special Effects

Starting September 29, fans worldwide are invited to relive the phenomenon with a full rewatch of Seasons 1–4 on Stranger Things social channels and Tudum.com, before the curtain rises on the endgame. Stranger Things 5 arrives on Netflix in three unmissable drops: Volume 1 on November 26 (four episodes), Volume 2 on Christmas (three episodes), and The Finale on New Year’s Eve. At 5 PM PT sharp, the world will unite for one final adventure into the Upside Down.

About Stranger Things 5

The fall of 1987. Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna. But he has vanished — his whereabouts and plans unknown. Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding. As the anniversary of Will’s disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread. The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they’ve faced before. To end this nightmare, they’ll need everyone — the full party — standing together, one last time.

Created by The Duffer Brothers, STRANGER THINGS is produced by Upside Down Pictures & 21 Laps Entertainment with The Duffer Brothers serving as executive producers, alongside Shawn Levy of 21 Laps Entertainment and Dan Cohen.

Cast Of The Stranger Things

The cast includes Winona Ryder (Joyce Byers), David Harbour (Jim Hopper), Millie Bobby Brown (Eleven), Finn Wolfhard (Mike Wheeler), Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin Henderson), Caleb McLaughlin (Lucas Sinclair), Noah Schnapp (Will Byers), Sadie Sink (Max Mayfield), Natalia Dyer (Nancy Wheeler), Charlie Heaton (Jonathan Byers), Joe Keery (Steve Harrington), Maya Hawke (Robin Buckley), Priah Ferguson (Erica Sinclair), Brett Gelman (Murray), Jamie Campbell Bower (Vecna), Cara Buono (Karen Wheeler), Amybeth McNulty (Vickie), Nell Fisher (Holly Wheeler), Jake Connelly (Derek Turnbow), Alex Breaux (Lt. Akers), and Linda Hamilton (Dr. Kay).

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Stranger Things star Noah Schnapp KICKED OUT of NYC club for being ‘aggressively wasted’- Reports

Akankshya Mukherjee

Akankshya Mukherjee is a dynamic and ambitious individual poised to make waves in the realm of Media and Communication. With a passion for creativity and a drive to contribute to forward-thinking organizations, Akankshya embodies adaptability and a hunger for learning. Having already garnered experience through involvement in various organizations, she has honed the skill of quickly adapting to new environments and challenges. She sees each opportunity as a chance for personal and professional growth, eagerly embracing roles in communications and content writing.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Howie Mandel, Mel B, Solange Kardinaly, Sofia Vergara, and Simon Cowell,
TV & Streaming

Top 10 Hit the Stage in Part 1 of Finale

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

America’s Got Talent is wrapping up its milestone 20th season with a two-night finale event.

The final 10 contestants took to the stage to prove they have what it takes to win during the first half of the Season 20 finale on Tuesday, September 23. While judges Simon Cowell, Sofía Vergara, Howie Mandel and Mel B. will share their thoughts on the Top 10 during the episode, it will be up to America to decide which act will take home the $1 million prize.

Viewers can vote up to 10 times for their favorite performers online or via the AGT or NBC mobile apps. Results will be announced during on the show’s Wednesday, September 24, episode, which will see the final 10 acts perform alongside some of Hollywood’s biggest stars.

Scroll below to see everything that went down during Part 1 of AGT‘s two-part Season 20 finale!

Jessica Sanchez

Sanchez said she was “ready to be a star” after appearing on Season 1 of AGT. After some ups and downs in the music industry, she came back to the show better than ever and made it to the Season 20 finale, all while pregnant. Hoping to win the season with her unborn daughter, Sanchez belted out an impressive rendition of Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga‘s “Die With a Smile.”

Sanchez scored a standing ovation from all four judges, with Vergara calling her performance “perfection.” Mel B. praised Sanchez’s vocals as “flawless,” while Mandel dubbed the first act of the night as the “best” act of the night. Cowell, meanwhile, highlighted how Sanchez’s AGT journey highlighted the power of believing in yourself.

LightWire

The group headed into the finale with extra motivation — and pressure — after experiencing a technical malfunction during their Semifinals performance. After earning a Golden Buzzer earlier in the season, the troupe sought to prove that they are a million dollar act with another captivating performance, using special effects and dance to tell a moving story.

Cowell said he “got quite emotional” watching the act, praising the group for their talent on and off the AGT stage. He even went so far as saying the group deserved to win the competition. Mel B. enjoyed the act despite feeling it was “similar” to last week.

Mama Duke

Mama Duke noted that a Golden Buzzer from Mel B. felt like a “full circle moment,” as she looked up to the singer growing up. The rapper wanted to deliver a million dollar finale performance, and did just that with a motivational and uplifting original song.

Mel B. said she would be “first one” to buy front row tickets to a Mama Duke concert and praised her “realness.” Mandel also appreciated her authenticity, while Vergara loved her uniqueness and creativity. Cowell, for his part, said he enjoyed getting to know Mama Duke throughout the AGT season. “Whatever happens, this is an incredible launch pad for whatever you really want,” he added.

Sirca Marea

The trapeze duo have put a lot of hard work into their AGT journey, and have even lived out of their van throughout the competition. The pair lived up to their title as one of the series’ best acrobatic acts with a jaw-dropping, high-flying finale performance full of risky moves and flips. Like their Semifinals routine, Sirca Marea also incorporated several impressive blindfolded tricks.

Mandel’s criticism of the routine feeling “repetitive” was overshadowed by thunderous applause from the audience. Mel B. called the performance “seamless,” while Vergara called it “breathtaking.” Cowell, who gave the pair a standing ovation, said, “That was the best, genuinely, I have ever seen. … That was like an 11 out of 10.”

Micah Palace

Palace went from being frustrated about his musical future to living out his dreams on the NBC competition series. Motivated by a letter from his mom, the aspiring rapper lit up the AGT stage with an energetic song featuring both English and Spanish lyrics.

Vergara called Palace’s performance a “party,” while Cowell said he was “so happy” for the young musician. Handing out some more criticism, Mandel said he preferred Palace’s previous performances to his finale act. Cowell called Mel B.’s comments reminding Palace to act kind to the show’s crew “out of order,” stating he’s only been “really polite and sweet to everyone.”

Leo High School Choir

After securing the last spot in the Finals, the Chicago choir felt inspired heading into the season’s second-to-last episode. Led by choir director, LaDonna Hill, the students (some of whom have since begun college), got the crowd clapping along to their performance of The Script’s “Hall of Fame.”

Mel B. gushed over the group, stating that they’ve “delivered time and time again.” Cowell praised the choir’s ability to “make people feel great,” while Mandel said the act was a “winning, wonderful vibe.” Vergara declared, “You’re the coolest choir that has ever been here on AGT.”

Chris Turner

Turner recalled how he took a “massive risk” pursuing his dream of performing. Once again creating an on-the-spot rap featuring lyric suggestions from the judges and the audience, Turner performed an impressive — and hilarious — song mentioning everything from tampons to baby elephants to Jamaica to Mandel himself. As an added twist, the tempo increased every time Turner completed a rap about a given topic.

For Cowell, Turner could be the act to win the season. Mel B. found herself “lost for words” at Turner’s “raw talent,” and Vergara said she would be “very happy” if he won. Mandel, meanwhile, declared, “You just solidified yourself $1 million.”

Jourdan Blue

Blue said he felt like a “different person” from his AGT audition heading into the finale. Taking Cowell’s Semifinals criticism to “do something unexpected” for his next performance, Blue performed a powerful rendition of “Golden” from the film KPop Demon Hunters. The cherry on top? His parents were there supporting him in the audience.

“It’s over!” Mandel yelled, adding, “I believe you won!” Cowell also loved Blue’s “very smart” song choice, agreeing that he could win the season. Mel B. and Vergara also had nothing but praise for Blue’s latest cover.

Team Recycled

Being on AGT felt like being in the Olympics for the dance troupe. With their Finals performance, the 40-plus-member group wowed the audience and the judges with their grand routing set across both the stage and the auditorium.

For Mandel, the group lived up to the Golden Buzzer he gave them, while Cowell dubbed the performance “spectacular.” Mel B. thought the act was “genius” despite including some “recycled” dance moves, and Vergara thought they were the best they have ever been.

NBC

Steve Ray Ladson

Ladson has come a long way from a small town to the AGT. Chasing his dreams — and a Golden Buzzer from Vergara — led him to the show’s finale. Performing in front of his family, Ladson got his audience doing the “rodeo” with his energetic country rock song. He even showed off banjo skills and vocal chops on a mini stage directly in front of the judges.

“You are already a superstar,” Vergara exclaimed, while Mel B. added, “I’ve never seen an artist like this on AGT that has so much individuality, that sticks in his lane, and knows who he is as a true artist.” Cowell said now is Ladson’s “moment,” and Mandel called his performance a “winning song.”

Steve Ray Ladson,' America's Got Talent' Season 20 Finals Part 1, NBC, September 23, 2025.

NBC

America’s Got Talent, Finale, Part 2, Wednesday, September 24, 9/8c, NBC

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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'Chief of War' Finale Battle Scene Explained by Cinematographer
TV & Streaming

‘Chief of War’ Finale Battle Scene Explained by Cinematographer

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Chief of War” finale, Episode 9 on the Apple TV+ series, is called “The Black Desert.” And director Jason Momoa does not hold back when it comes to just how “black” and “desert”-like that setting is for the show’s climactic, 30-plus-minute battle between the forces of Hawaii and Maui.

The clash sees Cliff Curtis’ spurned chieftain Keōua, now high on his own supply as the chosen of the volcano Gods, on the one side; then, Kaina Makua’s reluctant, good-hearted king Kamehameha, and Jason Momoa’s vengeful chief of war Ka’iana on the other. The massive armies square up on a desolate lava field, which is not exactly the kind of place you’d want to fight with very sharp spears and minimal padding. 

Protestors outside 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' following ABC's indefinite suspension of the program at Hollywood Blvd on September 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

It’s also not necessarily the kind of place you’d want to drag a film crew for eight days of shooting intense crowd and stunt sequences. But series cinematographer Matthew Chuang told IndieWire the location the “Chief of War” team found was simply undeniable as the place for the battle where the Kingdom of Hawaii truly came into being. 

“We were scouting possible locations for this, and we came across this lava field — this huge lava field on a cliff by the side of the water. I don’t know if you’ve ever been on a lava field before, but it’s like walking on the moon,” Chuang said. “It’s so jagged, and the ground has these peaks and cracks, and it’s really sharp. If you put your hand on the lava, you could cut yourself.” 

It took the location scouting team about 30 minutes to walk into the spot around Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park where they would eventually film, in fact, because the ground was so sharp. But Momoa especially pushed for them to find solutions to work and get power to the location safely, so that the show could visually underscore the importance of the battle in Hawaiian history. “He wanted to shoot that on Hawaiian land, you know?” Chuang said. “So they got geologists to come in and looked [at the location], with production, at how we could get our gear in there, and they kind of made it possible.”  

Te Ao o Hinepehinga getting ready to throw a stone with the ocean behind her in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

With geological information about the safest places to film and how to get gear in and out, though, Chuang and Momoa still had to test a lot of camera and, especially, lighting equipment to ensure that they could withstand the marathon, all-day, and into-night battle sequence. Chuang made the correct story decision for the show to embrace a naturalistic style overall, building frames that continually envelop the characters within the landscape or set them starkly against it. But it meant that during the battle shoot, the production had to really divide and conquer in order to get the coverage they needed. 

“We had five units going at the same time. Jason brought in [the other ‘Chief of War’ directors] Brian Mendoza and Justin Chon to help him direct certain sequences. We sectioned off the lava field for different areas to have the forces stand off, then colliding, then a section for certain characters to use, and we split it off that way,” Chuang said. “It was a huge undertaking.” 

Momoa, who leads Kamehameha’s forces from the front, had to balance spearing and pummelling his way through Keōua’s army on camera with coordinating other units following other characters through the bloody scrum. You’d expect this to require a huge amount of planning and communication between the camera and stunt teams, and it did. But, reflecting on the experience, Chuang was struck by how getting the scale of the battle right took a full-court press from the entire “Chief of War” crew. 

Jason Momoa throwing a spear in a line of spear and musketmen in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

“It was all planned out, but at the same time, incredibly crazy. Everyone on the crew, from costumes to makeup to stunts, were all happening all along the same time. All the PAs and transport — everyone needed to come together to make this possible.  Sometimes, we would start at 3 in the morning and prep at night. Then, as the sun was coming up, we’d start shooting all those sequences.” 

The brutality of the black desert is a big part of what makes the sequence feel so visually distinct; it sharpens as the light changes, then grows dark and fiery and almost infernal as night falls, and as the combatants have to wail at each other by the glow of lava coming forth from the Earth. Chuang said that when it comes to the lava-work, visual texture allows the camera and the action to breathe a bit — to not need the kind of shaky-cam or quick movement that forces a sense of intensity. Instead, it comes from the environment and the actors onscreen. 

It’s a visual approach Momoa responded to even before Chuang got the job. “The key [to shooting the lava] is to have fog and smoke and atmosphere to light. One of my biggest influences in general is this photographer, Todd Hido. His stuff is this quiet, moody, memory-based work. When I was talking to Jason about coming to shoot the show, we’d just met for the first time over Zoom, and I mentioned Todd. He was like, ‘Oh, I love Todd! He’s a friend.’” Chuang said. 

Cliff Curtis standing, arms outstretched, on the edge of an active volcano, like one does, in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

Todd Hido was not the only friend of the show on “Chief of War.” Just as the Apple TV+ series was gearing up to shoot the Episode 9 battle sequences, Mokuʻāweoweo, the summit caldera of Mauna Loa, erupted for the first time since 1984. The production needed to halt for a day to make sure the air quality was safe and it would be safe to film. 

“We went out there and started scouting anyway, and it was actually a really great prep day because everyone could get there and settle. But yeah, that volcano hadn’t exploded in like 40 or 50 years, and then the day that we finished [shooting], it stopped erupting,” Chuang said. “Jason and the Hawaiians thought it was a sign from the Gods, like a blessing, you know? So that was really amazing.” 

“Chief of War” is available to stream on Apple TV+

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jason Momoa Goes Inside ‘Chief of War’ Finale, Epic Ending
TV & Streaming

Jason Momoa Goes Inside ‘Chief of War’ Finale, Epic Ending

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from the season one finale of Chief of War, “The Black Desert.”]

Come hell or high water, Jason Momoa was going to do everything in his power to execute his ambitious creative vision for the season finale of Chief of War, which he considers to be the apex of his three-decade action career.

“At first, no one really thought it was going to be possible. And when we were at the very end of it, people that I really, really respect were like, ‘I’ve never seen anything like that in my life,’” Momoa, who co-wrote and directed the finale, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “But I knew we only had a certain amount of time, and the only way to pull off something of this magnitude was to shoot it a certain way.”

The synopsis of the final episode — which co-creators Momoa and Thomas Pa’a Sibbett confirm to THR is meant to function as a season, rather than a series, finale — may sound relatively simple. After Kamehameha finally comes around to the idea of using Ka’iana’s “red-mouthed weapons” — the firearms that Ka’iana had acquired during his travels abroad — in battle, the two chiefs and their small but mighty army go head-to-head with the forces behind power-hungry kings Keōua (Cliff Curtis) and Kahekili (Temuera Morrison) on the volcanic terrain known as Hawaii’s “Black Desert.” The brutal battle is a decisive victory for Ka’iana and his allies, thanks in large part to their formidable fighting skills and their use of those devastating weapons.

But anyone who has watched the finale knows that summary just barely scratches the surface of the this cinematic ending. “When people are talking about episode nine, that conversation really needs to include Jason as a director,” Sibbett says. Shooting in Hawai’i — much less over the real-life lava fields of Kalapana in the middle of the night — was actively “discouraged,” but Apple TV+ executives eventually signed on to the idea at the insistence of Momoa, who pulls quintuple duty on the series as star, co-creator, co-writer, executive producer and now director.

“Keeping it in Hawaii allows the inhabitants of that area, other people from across the island, to participate,” Sibbett adds. “They get to be the wearers of the feather capes. They get to be the warriors that hold the spears. The impact that has on a people, the impact that has on a culture that has never been shown at this level — I think that sets [Momoa] apart in this conversation.”

Early on in the writing process, Momoa had a clear idea of how he wanted to helm the finale. “I’ve directed quite a few times before this, and I’ve always wanted to shoot in really good light,” says Momoa, whose prior directorial experience included the 2014 indie film Road to Paloma and his recent HBO Max docuseries On the Roam. “Not being able to have money or have the crew that could pull off maybe what some larger [productions] could, I’d always have to really scout it, dial it in, and shoot in the right light.”

Momoa knew he wanted the battle to end with Ka’iana holding Keōua at gunpoint, just before Keōua was killed in a rush of lava. “I wanted to have that moment where I’m staring [Keōua] down be right at the last bit of that blue light with the lava going off and the ash coming down,” he says. Since he wanted the battle to start in the early afternoon and spill into the late evening, the production had to work backwards and shoot the entire sequence in reverse.

With the help of the same stunt team that he has worked with for decades, Momoa meticulously planned out every scene of the battle long before cameras started rolling. “I would shoot four to five units at the same time,” the director reveals. “I had to pick the storylines that I wanted to shoot within each of the other three to four units, so that I was getting what was going on with me, what was going on with Kamehameha, what was going on with my brothers and my wife. I had to make sure I blocked out correctly all those moments.”

“Don’t be fooled by his abs and physique. He’s got a great frontal cortex going on,” jokes Curtis. “I’ve worked with brilliant people, so I know what it looks like and smells like. James Cameron’s got a similar facility — perhaps on a different scale — to understanding the complexity of how to manage multiple units, and Jason’s definitely got that facility. It’s very, very impressive to see him map it all out in his mind before it happened.”

A lot of people, however, were not convinced that Momoa would be able to pull off what would typically be a weeks-long shoot on another production in just eight days.

“The producers were very scared, but I was like, ‘We’re going to shoot early, and we’re going to end not too far after noon and get some of the daylight.’ We got up at 3 a.m., started at 4 a.m., and we’d probably end at 2 or 3 p.m., and then I’d stay and prep for the next [night],” Momoa says. “You could have shot this in a Walmart parking lot, and you could probably put green screens up, like we normally do on other things, and just put down black and use it as lava fields. But you’re going to feel that we were there when the volcano went on.”

Momoa enlisted the rest of his producing and filmmaking team to oversee each of the units, and he would always be running between scenes, if not acting in them. “I had just done this LeBron James Nike commercial, so I had these lavender trainers on with my Malo, and my ass was just running from one side to the other,” Momoa recalls with a laugh, evoking quite a striking visual. “And it’s a lava field, so you fall. I think I’m the one that got messed up the most, but thank God we had no accidents. But I was just running, because I had it all in my head. This is how I like to direct. Most people don’t know that, but I’ve been doing it for a long time.”

As Momoa puts it, the Hawaiian gods seemed to be on his side during the grueling shoot. A few hours before they were set to begin their first late-night shoot of the finale, Mauna Loa, the nearby volcano, erupted for the first time in 38 years. After pausing production for a day to review the air quality, the cast and crew resumed production. The next day, another mountain, Kīlauea, became active, but the smoke blew away from the set. “Obviously, many volcanoes did create the Hawaiian Islands, but in our written history, it has never been documented that they both went off at the same time. That happened as we started,” Momoa says.

After a little bit of rain on the first day, the weather was clear for eight days in a row. But the day they wrapped, it started pouring rain and Mauna Loa stopped erupting, recalls Momoa. “It was the biggest, most beautiful omen. We stirred up so much [energy], and it just felt like we were doing the right thing. It’s powerful, man. There’s footage of us there dancing in the rain with all the extras [after] fighting on lava. Nothing will ever come close to that, ever.”

Momoa was also not afraid to take some creative liberties with the historical facts. Before they officially started attacking each other, the two sides would first engage in a kind of spiritual battle. Their respective kahunas would do their chants, the volcanoes would go off, and then the two sides would engage in a kind of rap battle in Ōlelo Hawaii, where they would taunt each other. In this case, ‘Ōpūnui spoke for Keōua, while Ka’iana spoke for Kamehameha.

“When we came up with this [scene], I was like, ‘What’s the most disrespectful thing [Ka’iana] could do? He’s on his enemy’s side, he’s on their land — and he’s going to speak English,’” Momoa says. “I said, ‘Listen, if I look to Kamehameha and I ask for permission, and he gives me the nod, I’m going to say this shit [in Engish], and our audience will be able to understand me, my team will understand me, and Keōua won’t. That will infuriate him. Being able to have that moment in English, the audience understands that it raises the bar.’”

Momoa knows that he may catch a little flack for deviating from the historical record in that scene. But what he ultimately wanted to accomplish from a storytelling perspective was to piss Keōua off so much that his troops would try to attack the other side with spears — only for them to be wiped out one-by-one by the red-mouthed weapons that Ka’iana and his allies had hidden in their capes. “It wasn’t necessarily what happened, but that idea came out of a place of me just as an actor going, ‘What would I do? How do I get him to charge me?’”

That wasn’t the only choice that Momoa made from his character’s perspective. As an inside joke, Keōua’s kahuna, whose tongue Ka’iana rips out of his mouth in front of Keōua during the hectic battle, is played by Kahoʻokahi Kanuha, Momoa’s ʻŌlelo Hawai’i coach.

“That’s the guy who lived with me and taught me the Hawaiian language. So he obviously can do these amazing chants, and he can speak the language, but he knows my frustration with it,” says Momoa, who learned the critically endangered language specifically for the role. “I’m like, ‘I’m going to rip your tongue out, and I’m going to eat it, dude.’ So [that scene’s] just two buddies just being silly. But it was something that would’ve happened; it’s something I would’ve done.”

Momoa was also keen to give each of the other core group of characters their own moment in the spotlight. For most of the first season, Ka’iana and his wife, Kupuohi (Te Ao o Hinepehinga), have largely been unable to see eye-to-eye. He has been permanently changed by all of the pain and suffering he has seen abroad, and she believes he is no longer the man she fell in love with. “Kupuohi’s put in positions where she should blow her top, snap, and just lose her mind so many times, and she doesn’t. Every time she goes, ‘No, I’ll stay strong. I’ll stand beside my man. I will not break. I will not cry,’” O’Hinepehinga explains.

But Momoa always wanted to give Kupuohi a moment of catharsis. One day while shooting the finale, he came running up to O’Hinepehinga with a giddy look on his face. “He’s like, ‘We’re going to stab you right here,’ and he grabs my waist,” she recalls of shooting the moment that Kupuohi gets stabbed during the battle. “And I’m like, ‘I’m sorry. What? You didn’t say I died?’ And he’s like, ‘No, no, no. He’s just going to stab you really lightly.’ And he comes in, and I’m shish-kabobed! He’s like, ‘We talked about it, remember? There would be a moment. This is the moment — [this] scream is a release of every single moment you have wanted to scream ever.’

“I don’t know if you’ve ever experienced this, but when I’m overwhelmed with situations or emotions or just work in general, I don’t have a chance to express it. So it all just bubbles to the surface until eventually it blows — and it’s in the aftermath of the blow where I find clarity in all the things that I’m confused [about],” O’Hinepehinga continues. “I wanted that for Kupuohi. Yes, she’s emotionally intelligent and strong, but a person can only take so much.”

Kupuohi ultimately survives being stabbed. But immediately following the conclusion of the battle, Kupuohi watches from afar as Ka’ahumanu (Luciane Buchanan) — the wife of Kamehameha who has clearly been harboring feelings for Ka’iana — rushes to Ka’iana’s side to make sure that he survived being knocked unconscious. O’Hinepehinga sees Kupuohi’s final look at Ka’iana and Ka’ahumanu as not one of “pain” or “jealousy,” but of “clarity.”

When Kupuohi sees her husband embracing another woman after the battle, “she’s able to see clarity not only in her future, but her relationships with the people around her. It’s terrifying, but I think there’s liberation in having a complete understanding of where you are in this world and who you are in this world,” O’Hinepehinga says. “I don’t know what that looks like in the future, but a woman liberated is a terrifying thing, I’ll say that much.”

That love triangle could very well play into future seasons of the show. Momoa notes that, historically, Ka’iana was accused of having an affair with Ka’ahumanu, with whom he shared a similar pessimistic worldview. To complicate matters further, by the end of the first season, Ka’ahumanu has officially joined her husband’s council. “But when she can’t have his kid, there’s a lot of stuff that happens coming up in the future, and I think things shift,” he says.

“You have to understand our system is completely different from what the modern system is right now. So if a woman wanted to upgrade and make her bloodline stronger, she could leave and go and be with the chief with more stature,” he adds. “Kamehameha had many aikāne [or same-sex relationships]. Kahekili had endless aikāne. They had men and women, so it’s something that we can’t wrap our heads around. We kept it smaller the first season. But it’s a very complex and beautiful system that happened in Hawaii, so I’m sure that did happen.”

The other character who has a real moment of catharsis during the battle is Kupuohi’s sister, Heke (Mainei Kinimaka), who lost the love of her life, Ka’iana’s brother, Nahi (Siua Ikale’o), in the penultimate episode. In the finale, Heke brutally slashes, gouges, poisons and then stomps ‘Ōpūnui — the man who presumably sexually assaulted her after Nahi’s killing — to death.

At the end of the finale, after learning that Ka’iana and Kamehameha obliterated Keōua’s troops, the more sinister Kahekili declares war on Hawai’i. “I’m building something that’s even more crazy. So not to give away a spoiler, but I’m going to have a super monster soon,” Momoa teases of what that ending means going forward. “I’m setting up things, which I like to do. Whether we get greenlit or not, my intentions are there. So there’s a lot of foreshadowing; there’s a lot of things that I want to happen in the future.”

For those who are familiar with English literature, Sibbett likens the story of Ka’iana and Kamehameha to that of King Arthur and Lancelot. “They needed to come together by the end of episode eight. It needed to be understood that they are not the same person,” he says. “They have a completely different way of thinking and how they view the world, but bringing them together creates the strongest force possible, and we were able to accomplish at least the friendship in episode eight, and by episode nine, it’s showing why it works, how it works, and that they are better off together.”

So much of the first season was about trying to unite the two men “so that we can now really dive into the building of Camelot,” Sibbett explains. Looking ahead, “if you’re thinking of it in terms of King Arthur and Lancelot, I want to expose the world to Camelot. I want to expose them to the world now as we’ve built it, as we’ve seen it, and to really get an idea that Camelot’s not the only kingdom.”

Whereas the first season largely centered around Ka’iana and consisted of “seeing the world through his eyes,” the second season would “be about really looking at Hawai’i a little bit more from that bird’s eye view, and really starting to see how these kingdoms interact with each other,” Sibbett teases. “I want us to expand the world, if we get a season two, so we can really get an idea of the functionality and how everything works.”

While the co-creators are feeling positive about a renewal — especially after the overwhelmingly positive responses they have received from critics and the people of Hawai’i and Aotearoa — Momoa and Sibbett insist that “it’s still too early” for them to pitch a second season. But that does not mean that they have not been tracking the response to the show on social media.

“People are really being drawn into not just our big storylines, but even some of these smaller ones. These are actually areas that we would like to build and go deeper into. It’s just a matter of [considering], what’s the public’s taste, and what are they eager for?” says Sibbett, who has noticed that some viewers have gravitated toward the prophetess Taula (Roimata Fox) and Prince Kupule (Brandon Finn), the son of Kahekili, in particular. “Of course, we can tell Ka’iana, Kamehameha and Ka’ahumanu all day. But to see that people are enjoying all these little sub-stories as well is really enjoyable, because we can definitely build more and more.”

Regardless of what happens, the cast and crew — most of whom identify as Polynesian — have been forever changed by the experience of retelling a key part of Hawai’i’s history. “Chief of War is such an emotionally liberating story for a lot of us here in Polynesia for so many different reasons, whether it be [speaking] Olelo Hawai’i, or just representation, or the fact that we get to be at the forefront of telling our own stories,” O’Hinepehinga says.

During her final day (or night) of shooting the chaotic finale, O’Hinepehinga turned a corner and saw and heard “this sea of brown people chanting” Kamehameha’s name. “We had 500 to 800 Polynesians standing there chanting that statement for the scene, and most of our crew, they were all Kanaka or they had been living on Hawai’i, so they were very committed to living the authentic Hawaiian experience,” she recalls. “I turned and I saw one of our cameramen with tears rolling down his face. He was like, ‘This is the moment.’ And in that moment, we went, ‘I don’t care if it succeeds or fails or wins every award out there — this is what it’s about, this is what it’s for.’ You could just feel it, this sense of pride and achievement.”

***

The full first season of Chief of War is now streaming on Apple TV+.

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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