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Festival Trailer for 'Silent Friend' Film with Tony Leung & Luna Wedler
Hollywood

Festival Trailer for ‘Silent Friend’ Film with Tony Leung & Luna Wedler

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Festival Trailer for ‘Silent Friend’ Film with Tony Leung & Luna Wedler

by Alex Billington
September 8, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I would like to find proof of what plants sense.” Film Boutique has debuted a festival promo trailer for the film titled Silent Friend, the latest mesmerizing creation by award-winning Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi. This is the best film from the 2025 Venice Film Festival and it seriously deserved to win Golden Lion – most critics agree, but the jury did not. Silent Friend is set at a university centered around a giant, old ginkgo tree. The film follows three intertwined stories at different time periods, exploring the idea of trees & plants being sentient and interacting with people. In the heart of a botanical garden in a medieval university town in Germany stands a majestic ginkgo tree. This silent witness has observed over a century the quiet rhythms of transformation across three human lives… This stars Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Luna Wedler (who won a Venice award), Enzo Brumm, Sylvester Groth, Martin Wuttke, Johannes Hegemann, Rainer Bock, Marlene Burow, & Léa Seydoux. I fell hard for the film – it’s an instant all-timer favorite, everything about it is magical. This trailer features some of the wonderful score, but it’s still an experience you must have in theaters – getting pulled into this beautifully alluring, entrancing story of trees & humans.

Here’s the first festival promo trailer for Ildikó Enyedi’s film Silent Friend, direct from YouTube:

Silent Friend Trailer

Silent Friend Trailer

Tales told from the perspective of a lonely old tree standing in the middle of a botanical garden. In 2020 – a neuroscientist from Hong Kong, exploring the mind of babies, begins an unexpected experiment with the old tree. In 1972 – a young student is profoundly changed by the simple act of observing and connecting with a geranium. In 1908 – the university’s first female student discovers, using the lens of photography, sacred patterns of the universe hidden within the humblest of plants. We follow their clumsy attempts to connect — each one of them deeply rooted in their own present – as they are transformed by the quiet, enduring, and mysterious power of nature. The ancient ginkgo tree brings us closer to what it means to be human — to our longing to belong. Silent Friend is written and directed by acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi, director of the films Büvös Vadász, Tamas and Juli, Simon the Magiciain, On Body and Soul, and The Story of My Wife previously. Produced by Reinhard Brundig, Monika Mécs, Nicolas Elghozi, Morgane Olivier, Meng Xie. This recently premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival (read our review); it next plays at TIFF, Vancouver, London. No US release is set yet – stay tuned for more. Who wants to watch?

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

September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi's Film 'Silent Friend' is Tree-Loving Bliss
Hollywood

Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi’s Film ‘Silent Friend’ is Tree-Loving Bliss

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi’s Film ‘Silent Friend’ is Tree-Loving Bliss

by Alex Billington
September 6, 2025

Do plants have feelings? Are trees interacting with humans? Is there a way to measure or montior this? Can we talk with them – can they talk with us? Is the natural plant world just as alive as animals are? These are the kind of questions that Hungarian filmmaker is attempting to address with her spectacular, breathtaking new film titled Silent Friend. And it’s an instant favorite – this rare creation is a Film We Have Never Seen Before. Nothing like it exists, and it deserves to be appreciated and loved as one of the best films of the year. After my deeply moving, soulful experience watching this film at its world premiere at the 2025 Venice Film Festival, I can say that it’s going right on my list of all-time favorites. Seriously. Silent Friend is a majestic film featuring 3 intertwined stories centered around a big, old, majestic ginkgo tree in a university garden. It’s an ambitious cinematic exploration of the idea that plants & trees are sentient, using emotional stories to make it plausible. I’m a believer. After this film, you’ll never look at plants & trees the same way again. 🌳

Silent Friend is both written and directed by the acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi, her latest film since The Story of My Wife in 2021 (which I did not like much). She also won the Golden Bear at Berlinale in 2017 for On Body and Soul. Now she’s back with her best film yet that I will be raving about for the rest of the year (and the next few years). I wrote in my 10 Films to Watch intro that I think Silent Friend will be this year’s Perfect Days. On one hand, that is true and it is, on the other hand it’s so different that I can’t really compare them. Silent Friend is just as soulful and touching and peaceful, and that is the kind of beautiful filmmaking I really connect with these days. Enyedi’s Silent Friend follows three stories – the first one is set in 1908 following a young woman (played by Luna Wedler) accepted at the university as their first ever female student; the next one in 1972 following a woman and man who connect over an experiment with a geranium; and one in 2020 about a neuroscientist from Hong Kong (played by Tony Leung Chiu-wai) who devises his own experiment with the big ginkgo tree at the university during Covid-19 lockdowns. It was filmed at and takes place at the very real Marbug University in Marbug, Germany – where this tree really exists (in their botanical garden). No one can’t recreate this magnificent 200+ year old tree. It’s real.

Among the many brilliant aspects of Silent Friend, the intertwining of the 3 stories is amazingly impressive. Many filmmakers usually just present them linearly with each segment playing one after another. Enyedi is much more complex than that – she interweaves the storylines together, cutting back & forth between them as each one plays out over time. They are connected, but mainly thematically (along with the same location and same tree), and each builds upon the last. One of the ideas within the first story set in 1908 is that this woman is the first ever to be accepted into the university and thus paves the way for women to study there – which connects into the 1972 segment where a young woman is now also studying there and has invented a way to measure her geranium plant’s expressions. This is one of the many interconnected ideas throughout this masterful film. From the vibrant score by Gábor Keresztes & Kristóf Kelemen, to the stunningly perfect cinematography from DP Gergely Pálos, to the tender & heartfelt performances by the entire cast, to the exquisite editing & pacing from editor Károly Szalai, to the themes & ideas within that are explored, to the very question of whether trees & plants can communicate with us, THIS is cinema at its finest. I am still in awe… I am still vibrating thinking about how truly gorgeous of an experience it was to sit and watch this film unfold together with a thousand other people. We all emerged floating, high on the glory of cinema.

What is truly profound about Silent Friend is how many layers upon layers of ideas it explores through these 3 different stories. There’s a deeply resonant concept it explores showing how human connection & human relationships are also important for scientific progress. Each one of them must come to work together with someone else in order to achieve their goals. In addition, this represents the idea of how communication is difficult yet connection is still possible. The relationships depicted in the 3 stories feature people who at first struggle to connect, for various reasons, and yet they begin to understand each other more with time. This ultimately connects back to the core of the film – that we can communicate with plants & trees, we’re just still working out how… And even though they may not understand our language, and trees can’t speak to us, we’re still able to communicate & make new discoveries anyway. Especially when it comes to caring for and appreciating nature. Another idea explored in the 1908 segment is of a woman who’s exploring photography & taking photos in a way no one has ever seen before. Enyedi is doing the same – she’s a woman showing us something we have never seen before either. Most importantly, Enyedi takes on the incredibly ambitious goal of allowing cinema to show us that plants & trees really are sentient and can communicate with us, and achieves this in the most astonishing & cinematically satisfying ways. She really went there, and pulls it off.

I could go on & on for hours about the various themes and layers and ideas hidden within this masterpiece. I could discuss the aspects of trees and plants that she hints at with these stories, and how we really do need to question our relationship with them. I will be watching this film over and over again for years. There’s so much humility, so much beauty, so much tenderness in every shot, in every glance, in every breath of this film. There are a handful of cuts that are absolutely phenomenal – cutting between stories & characters that are on par with the famous match cut from Lawrence of Arabia. The vigorous score builds & builds at the right moments, hitting deep in the chest with waves of emotion and vibration, reminding us that sound can be as magnificently affecting as the visuals. It’s a beautiful tree-hugger film, however it also carefully shows us human relationships are important, too. It’s not only about loving nature and understanding nature and admiring this tree and that’s all. There’s much more to it in every sense. It’s so invigorating, and so moving, to come across such a wonderfully resonant, deeply intellectual, cinematically powerful film that makes you want to talk about it for days on end. I live for this. And now I want to visit this ginkgo tree in Marburg, too.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.9 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 6, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter: Man’s Best Friend Album Review
Music

Sabrina Carpenter: Man’s Best Friend Album Review

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Historians will say it was “Espresso” that did it, but Sabrina Carpenter’s ascent to pop’s A-list truly began with “Nonsense.” At each stop on her tour behind 2022’s Emails I Can’t Send, Carpenter performed the song with a bespoke bonus verse incorporating a local shoutout and a sexual innuendo. “Water ain’t the only thing I swallow,” she sang to a Chicago crowd that October. By January, “Nonsense” graduated from also-ran to the album’s only charting single, and Sabrina Carpenter as we now know her had arrived: witty, itty-bitty, a little smutty, dolled up like a powder-blue Peggy Lee. Now Carpenter is beloved by the classic pop constituencies (teen girls and gay men), while classic rock’s powers that be hold her in an esteem second only to Olivia Rodrigo. After nearly a decade in the para-Disney machinery, she’s understandably eager to keep a good thing going.

BRAT may have dominated the conversation in 2024, but it was Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet that truly achieved ubiquity: At one point, its singles “Taste,” “Please Please Please,” and “Espresso” occupied Nos. 2, 3, and 4 on the Hot 100. Man’s Best Friend arrives a year later, almost to the day, with comparatively little pomp. Its only single, “Manchild,” is sneakily endearing, like an explicit needlepoint you’ve passed in the hallway a few dozen times before bothering to stop and read. “Fuck my life,” Carpenter coos oh-so-sweetly, “Won’t you let an innocent woman be?” On Short n’ Sweet, she raided the costume closet—a Riviera disco diva’s sunnies, a sheer Y2K minidress, a dubiously authentic Pennsylvania twang—to find the one that best suited her. Delivering formally classic, facepalm-clever pop songs on a timetable unseen since Rihanna’s heyday, Man’s Best Friend takes the Sabrina persona to its apex, and maybe as far as it can go.

When Carpenter sings about sex with men, misandry begets horniness, which begets misandry. “Stranger danger” refers to when he’s not that into you anymore; fantasies of pregnancy remain blissfully immaterial. As she goes slackjawed over a man’s basic competence—“Assemble a chair from IKEA, I’m like, ‘Uhhh’”—“Tears” boogies to a fidgety strain of nu-disco pulled from the two-year window between Diana Ross’ Diana and Evelyn “Champagne” King’s Get Loose. Late-album highlight “House Tour” namedrops Chips Ahoy! in the midst of Carpenter’s lavishly long-winded and none-too-subtle metaphor: “Yeah, I spent a little fortune on the waxed floors/We can be a little reckless ’cause it’s insured.” It’s Madonna drag reverse-engineered through Madonna’s imitators—the exact sort of kitsch, reference-to-a-reference move that ought to signal just how serious Carpenter isn’t.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter 'Short n' Sweet' Anniversary Celebrated on Instagram
Music

Sabrina Carpenter ‘Man’s Best Friend’ Sets Spotify Record: Reaction

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter‘s new album Man’s Best Friend was one of the year’s most highly anticipated pop releases for months before it dropped — and now, it has the numbers on Spotify to prove it.

As announced by the streaming service Tuesday (Sept. 2), the 12-track LP has set a new 2025 record for most streams in a single day for an album by a female artist. On Instagram Stories, Carpenter reacted to the news by writing, “This blows my mind.”

“Can’t thank you enough for listening,” she added.

On X, Carpenter also reshared the announcement and wrote, “I can’t believe this … thank you so much for listening.”

The confirmation of the streaming feat comes just a few days after the Grammy winner released Man’s Best Friend, her seventh studio album, on Aug. 29. She first announced the project in June, shortly after dropping lead single “Manchild,” which debuted atop the Billboard Hot 100 — Carpenter’s second-ever No. 1 on the chart.

But as impressive as Carpenter’s new milestone is, it’s not difficult to ascertain why so many people would tune in once she dropped MBF. The Girl Meets World alum had set expectations quite high after breaking through to pop-superstar status in 2024 with the success of album Short n’ Sweet, which spawned hits such as “Espresso” — which, speaking of Spotify, was the platform’s most-streamed song last year — and Hot 100 No. 1 “Please Please Please.”

Even so, the performer didn’t let any pressure to top Short n’ Sweet get to her while making Man’s Best Friend with collaborators Jack Antonoff and Amy Allen. In a recent interview with Interview, Carpenter explained, “I was just like, ‘This is no different than when I was making the last album.’”

“Nobody told me I needed to put it out at any date,” she continued. “If I felt inspired, I would just write. You can write and it doesn’t have to be for anything.”

If her new Spotify metric is any indication, that mentality definitely paid off. See Carpenter’s post on X below.

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Tony Leung on His First European Film 'Silent Friend'
TV & Streaming

Tony Leung on His First European Film ‘Silent Friend’

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Tony Leung Chiu-wai’s first European film ever, “Silent Friend,” is about to premiere in Venice. But he already wants to reunite with director Ildikó Enyedi.

“I would like to work with Ildikó again, if we get a chance,” he tells Variety. Two years ago, he picked up the Golden Lion Lifetime Achievement Award at the Italian fest. 

“When I was still in Hong Kong before the shoot, I asked her: ‘What do I need to do to prepare for this character?’ She said: ‘You just need to be there.’ This was my first time doing anything like this. So I went there, and went with the flow,” he laughs. 

In 2021, Tony Leung Chiu-wai made his long-awaited English-language debut in Marvel Studio’s “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” alongside Simu Liu, with fans calling out for his return as Wenwu. But following delays, its sequel is still in development. 

“I don’t know what my next step will be and I never plan anything in my career — again, I go with the flow,” he says. While “Silent Friend” marks another big step for the star, he’s not actively seeking out international projects. 

“It’s not like I suddenly want to work with all these different teams in every other country. It’s all about instinct. The first time I talked to Ildikó, online, I just knew I wanted to work with her and that’s why I said yes. Instinct.”

He adds: “After ‘Silent Friend,’ I haven’t done anything else and it has almost been a year. I never plan, because when you do, the outcome is always different from what you expect. So why bother?” 

In the century-spanning film, he plays a neuroscientist stuck in a university town in Germany during the pandemic. All alone, save for an imposing ginkgo tree and a suspicious security guard he can’t even communicate with, he starts a new experiment encouraged by a fellow enthusiast (Léa Seydoux). 

“When I got the script, Ildikó left me a note that said: ‘It’s a sci-fi with a sense of humor.’ She told me she watched some videos of me being interviewed and just saw something inside me. That’s why she created this character for me.” 

“I think he’s a very lonely guy. But the film proves that even if we don’t speak the same language, as long as you feel others with your heart, you’ll understand them. I love playing this kind of role without much dialogue. It’s much more challenging.”

But it wasn’t the story itself that made him want to work with Enyedi, also behind Oscar-nominated “On Body and Soul.”

“I was only interested in Ildikó. When she approached me, she showed me her films and I just went: ‘Wow, this is wonderful.’ I really love this person – not just her work. I felt I could trust her,” he recalls.

“We didn’t just talk about the script. It wasn’t the usual actor-director exchange. She’s a friend, a very good friend and a teacher. She sent me some books and one of them was by Alan Watts [known for popularizing Eastern philosophy and religion]. I told Ildikó I was a Buddhist, that I study philosophy. I said: ‘We clearly have something in common’.” 

Leung Chiu-wai is known for Oscar-nominated “Hero,” Ang Lee’s “Lust, Caution,” “Internal Affairs,” later remade by Martin Scorsese, and his collabs with Wong Kar-wai – “In the Mood for Love” brought him Best Actor award in Cannes. But “Silent Friend” is still his “only experimental movie.”  

“I haven’t seen it yet. I usually try to avoid [watching my films] because every time, I only see missing parts.” Was there ever one he considered to be perfect? “Never.”

Making it changed his own relationship to nature.

“I would read about early cognitive development of babies, about plant intelligence and it really changed my perspective towards the world. I pay more respect to it,” he admits.  

“Why do we assume that plants don’t have intelligence when other living beings do? It just exists in a different form; one we don’t quite understand. I really didn’t think this way before. It really makes sense. They are living beings, right next to us, but we are not aware of it. You know, humans always think we are at the top of the food chain, but we need to stop doing that. We should be more humble.”

Now, he hopes the viewers will feel the same. 

“I really hope it will change their point of view, too. And make this planet a better place.”

Tony Leung Chiu-wai in ‘Silent Friend’
Courtesy of Films Boutique

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter's 'Man's Best Friend': Five Takeaways
Music

Sabrina Carpenter ‘Man’s Best Friend’ Album Review

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s not easy to be a convincing humorist in pop music. By design, lyrics are always meant to be a little quirky but few pop stars have mastered the art of hamming it up quite like Sabrina Carpenter. On Man’s Best Friend, Carpenter is in break-up mode the only way she could be: sad but still horny and altogether self-aware.

Just a year out from her blockbuster breakthrough Short n’ Sweet, the singer’s seventh album was created with a tight crew who had been integral to her previous release: Jack Antonoff, Amy Allen and John Ryan. Together with Carpenter’s innuendo-laden wit at the helm, the album zeroes in on the updated Seventies pastiche that worked so well on her biggest hits. She’s a little bit ABBA and a lotta bit Dolly: the Pennsylvania-native hits a charming Southern twang over swathes of synths, airy guitar riffs, and funky nü-disco beats. Her new songs are united in their grooviness as Carpenter’s heartbreak and disappointment in her male options takes her on a thoroughly modern tour of what dating, embracing, and then flipping the script on the humiliation ritual that is being a woman who dates men. 

From the opening “Oh, boy” on “Manchild,” Carpenter spends the entire album dishing out tough love for her lovers, unrelenting in listing out her grievances. On “Tears,” she only “gets wet at the thought” of him “being a responsible guy.” On both “My Man on Willpower” and “Nobody’s Son,” she’s exhausted by her lover’s selective control. On the former, they’re together but he’s not as touchy and clingy and feral for her as he used to be. On the latter, they’ve broken up and he hasn’t caved on calling her yet.

Carpenter has few peers these days when it comes to turning some of the most uncomfortable or even painful feelings when you’re crying over an ex into giggle-worthy treats. “Never Getting Laid” stands out. The slow burning, sexy song has her wishing the best for her ex — so long as he stays in his house and never looks or touches another woman again. She drinks the pain away on “Go Go Juice,” running through the numbers on her phone over a two-steppin’ beat that belongs in your local honky tonk.

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Editor’s picks

The two standouts on the album are when Carpenter is at her flirtiest and her wit is at its quickest. The funky “When Did You Get Hot?” has her encountering a long time acquaintance who she didn’t remember looking so cute. “You were an ugly kid, but you’re a sexy man,” she comments, in a line that can only work with her winking delivery. “House Tour,” a coulda-been Song of the Summer contender if only it had come out a month earlier, is bold enough to have made 1983 Madonna seethe with jealousy. She’s beckoning a new lover to come see her house because she’s “just so proud of [her] design.” On the chorus she assures “I just want you to come inside/But never enter through the back door.

It may have taken Carpenter six albums to finally find the right formula that works for her as a budding pop diva, but now it’s clear there’s no looking back. If Short n’ Sweet solidified her stardom, Man’s Best Friend plates her status in gold.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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5 Takeaways From Sabrina Carpenter’s New Album Man’s Best Friend
Music

5 Takeaways From Sabrina Carpenter’s New Album Man’s Best Friend

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

After years toiling in the post-Disney-star pop ecosystem, Sabrina Carpenter finally broke through last year with Short n’ Sweet, her sixth album, which rode to pop ubiquity (and strong Grammys recognition) off the back of “Espresso,” “Please Please Please” and “Taste” its three catchy, sharply written megahit singles. Since then, she’s staged a gigantic global arena tour and, somehow, found time to record a follow-up: Man’s Best Friend, which once again finds her working with Jack Antonoff, John Ryan, and the songwriter Amy Allen.

Like its predecessor, Man’s Best Friend positions Carpenter as a kind of TikTok-era Mae West: a sex symbol who’s in on the joke, and who can flick between sweet and savage in milliseconds. This time around, there’s a little more sadness and frustration in the mix—Short n’ Sweet might have made frequent reference to the irresistible nature of Carpenter, but this record pokes some holes in that self-confidence as she sings about men who are disinterested, rude, or just plain annoying. Here are five key takeaways.

Provocation with Purpose

Man’s Best Friend was already a media sensation before it even came out, thanks to its vaguely provocative cover—Carpenter, on all fours, with a man in a suit grabbing her hair—and its title, which some fans assumed was being presented literally and uncritically. In truth, the presentation of the album makes a lot of sense when you listen to it: Many of these songs, like “My Man on Willpower” and “We Almost Broke Up Again,” center on Carpenter’s inability to cut herself off from men who trifle with her emotions or make her feel undervalued. (On her being treated, in other words, like a dog.)

Euro Swag

One of the songs on Sabrina Carpenter’s pre-show playlist is ABBA’s “If It Wasn’t For The Nights,” an underrated and relatively obscure from 1979’s Voulez-Vous, written by Björn Ulvaeus about how his own sense of workaholism was the only thing getting him through his divorce from Agnetha Faltskog. Carpenter’s ABBA standom comes into full bloom on Man’s Best Friend, which draws distinct influence from the lush white European pop of the ’70s and ’80s. There are shades of “I’ve Been Waiting For You” on “We Almost Broke Up Again Last Night,” while “Nobody’s Son” plays like a love letter to the Swedish pop industry, somehow nodding to “One of Us,” Ace of Base’s “The Sign” and Jens Lekman’s “The Opposite of Hallelujah” in equal measure.

Then there’s “Goodbye,” the album’s triumphantly acerbic closer, which channels “Voulez-Vous” and the hearty chug of “Take a Chance on Me.” If Carpenter wants to stay in this lane for a while, there’s still plenty of weird ABBA music from which to mine inspiration: personally, I’d love to hear her take on “Visitors”-esque paranoid coldwave.

August 30, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter's 'Man's Best Friend': Five Takeaways
Music

Sabrina Carpenter’s ‘Man’s Best Friend’: Five Takeaways

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter tried to warn you. “The album is not for any pearl clutchers,” the “Espresso” pop goddess told Gayle King, before dropping her new album, the hotly awaited Man’s Best Friend. And she wasn’t kidding about that. Sabrina has returned with her most libidinally charged, riotously funny album — not to mention her best. All over Man’s Best Friend, Sabrina delivers nonstop one-liners about love, sex, and breaking up. Right from the start, she set out to punch people’s buttons, starting with the title and the hugely controversial album cover. The photo depicts Sabrina on her hands and knees in a little black dress, reaching up to a power-suited figure who’s grabbing a fistful of her blonde hair. The songs live up to that spirit — it’s the great smutty sex-comedy concept album that Abba never made. 

It’s also full of delightfully catty break-up salt, after her high-profile split from Saltburn actor Barry Keoghan. But the whole album is a major statement from a true original — nobody in the game combines sex and laughter the way Sabrina does. Here are five takeaways from Man’s Best Friend.

She’s Not One to Waste Time
Sabrina moves fast — Man’s Best Friend comes almost exactly a year after her breakthrough Short n’ Sweet, the August 2024 blockbuster that made her a household name. But instead of taking her time with the follow-up, she introduced her new era back in June, with “Manchild,” her second Number One hit after “Please Please Please.” Man’s Best Friend gets right to the point — twelve songs in 38 minutes, all written by Carpenter with just three collaborators: Jack Antonoff, Amy Allen, and John Ryan. All three are on top of their game — not a skip in the bunch. Antonoff really puts out as her producer, helping her cram the music full of nonstop twists and turns, with loads of Abba and Eurodisco. His most famous collaborator has been Sabrina’s pal/tourmate/mentor Taylor Swift, but she made her upcoming album with Max Martin and Shellback. (Carpenter is featured on the title song, “The Life of a Showgirl.”) So no wonder Antonoff sounds extra-determined to remind everyone why he’s the producer-king wingman to all the main pop girls.

Editor’s picks

Sabrina’s Got Sex on the Brain
No surprise here — Sabrina spends virtually of these songs on the prowl for carnal satisfaction, milking every kind of sexual scenario. She never runs out of risqué imagery. The synth-pop banger “House Tour” is one of her most hilariously filthy songs. After dinner with a dim bulb who drives a cool car (“the pineapple air freshener is my favorite kind”), she invites her date back to her home on “Pretty Girl Avenue,” offering, “I’m pleasured to be your hot tour guide.” But it soon becomes clear she’s not talking real estate. “Do you want the house tour?” she purrs. “I could take you to the first, second, third floors/And I promise none of this is a metaphor/I just want you to come inside.” She constructs the song with all her lyrical carpentry, from “I spent a little fortune on the waxed floors” to “We can be a little reckless because it’s insured” to “Never enter through the back door.” Location, location, location.

She Needs Emotional R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Sabrina is not exactly coy when it comes to shredding lovers who fail to deliver. In her excellent new single “Tears,” she explains that what she really needs is an emotional connection. The chorus has one of her most clever hooks: “I get wet at the thought of you/Being a responsible guy/Treating me like you’re supposed to do/Tears run down my thighs.” She goes into detail about her ideal of seductive male behavior — “Considering I have feelings? I’m like, ‘Why are my clothes still on?’” — and how much it turns her on when you do the dishes and assemble her IKEA furniture. (She debuted the “Tears” video on Friday, a Rocky Horror homage starring Colman Domingo.)

She faces a different version of the same dilemma in “My Man on Willpower,” where she laments, “My man won’t touch me with a twenty-foot pole/My slutty pajamas not temping him in the least.” Whatever he’s going through, it leaves her frustrated, asking, “What in the fucked-up romantic dark comedy is this nightmare?”

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Even Sabrina Gets the Break-Up Blues
Hell hath no fury like a Sabrina scorned, and this album is full of songs where she rips her exes apart. After the headlines about her split from Keoghan, she did a not-so-subtle remake of the “Please, Please, Please” video with Dolly Parton, where his character is bound and gagged in the back of her truck. So fans were ready for Saltbrina to fire away, and she doesn’t hold back, with kiss-offs like “I just wish you didn’t have a mind that could flip like a switch/That could wander and drift to a neighboring bitch.” She hits the town for a rebound bender in “Go Go Juice.” “A girl who knows her liquor is a girl who’s been dumped,” she sings, until she decides to drunk-dial her troubles away. “Could be John or Larry, gosh, who’s to say? Or the one that rhymes with ‘villain’ if I’m feeling that way.” (“Villain” might not exactly rhyme with “Keoghan” — though Bob Dylan is a longtime friend of the Beatle Keoghan plays in an upcoming movie — but “Larry” sure rhymes with “Barry.”)

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When it comes to saying farewell, she doesn’t necessarily take the high road. “Goodbye” concludes, “I’ll say arrivederci, au revoir/Forgive my French but fuck you, ta ta.” Her nastiest barb here is “Never Getting Laid,” her sarcastic revision of “I Will Always Love You,” as she lets her ex know, “I wish you a lifetime full of happiness/And a forever of never getting laid.”

She’s Sick of Her Phone
Sabrina meets her share of romantic buzzkills on Man’s Best Friend, but she’s got especially harsh words for phone junkies. In the highlight “Sugar Talking,” she goes ballistic on a lover who spends more time texting than showing up in person. “Put your loving where your mouth is,” she commands, after getting one too many late-night texts. “Your paragraphs mean shit to me / Get your sorry ass to mine.” She commands him to put down the phone and focus on giving her some IRL face-to-face action. He sends her flowers to apologize, but that doesn’t do it for her either. It’s a bold stand from a romantic who wants less thumb-typing and more face time. “You having these epiphanies,” she sneers. “Big word for a real small mind/Aren’t you tired of saying a whole lot of nothing?” Like the rest of Man’s Best Friend, it’s Sabrina at her nastiest, funniest, and most irresistible.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter Warns 'Man's Best Friend' Not for 'Pearl Clutchers'
Music

Sabrina Carpenter Warns ‘Man’s Best Friend’ Not for ‘Pearl Clutchers’

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

“Sometimes people hear the lyrics that are really bold, and they go, ‘I don’t want to sing this in front of other people.’ It’s like it’s almost too TMI,” the singer tells CBS Mornings

Sabrina Carpenter warned that the provocative lyrics on her upcoming album Man’s Best Friend might not be for prude-minded people in a preview from the singer’s interview with CBS Mornings.

“The album is not for any pearl clutchers,” Carpenter told Gayle King in a clip shared Thursday, one day before Man’s Best Friend’s arrival. “But I also think that even pearl clutchers can listen to an album like that in their own solitude and find something that makes them smirk and chuckle to themselves.”

While previous hits like “Espresso” and “Please Please Please” were more subtle with the innuendo, Man’s Best Friend’s previous singles and controversial album art suggest a bolder, more sexual LP, one that might make casual fans uncomfortable.

“Sometimes people hear the lyrics that are really bold, and they go, ‘I don’t want to sing this in front of other people.’ It’s like it’s almost too TMI,” Carpenter added. 

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“But I think about being at a concert with, you know, however many young women I see in the front row that are screaming at the top of their lungs with their best friends, and you can go like, ‘Oh, we can all sigh of relief, like, ‘This is just fun.’ And that’s all it has to be.”

In her recent Rolling Stone cover story, Carpenter said of the people bemoaning her sultry stage shows, in particular her “Juno” positions, “It’s always so funny to me when people complain. They’re like, ‘All she does is sing about this.’ But those are the songs that you’ve made popular. Clearly you love sex. You’re obsessed with it. It’s in my show. There’s so many more moments than the ‘Juno’ positions, but those are the ones you post every night and comment on. I can’t control that. If you come to the show, you’ll [also] hear the ballads, you’ll hear the more introspective numbers. I find irony and humor in all of that, because it seems to be a recurring theme. I’m not upset about it, other than I feel mad pressure to be funny sometimes.” 

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Young Thug's Friend PeeWee Roscoe Addresses Rumors Rapper Snitched On Him: 'Jeff Clean As Listerine'
Celebrity News

Young Thug’s Friend PeeWee Roscoe Addresses Rumors Rapper Snitched On Him: ‘Jeff Clean As Listerine’

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Young Thug’s Friend PeeWee Roscoe Addresses Rumors Rapper Snitched On Him: ‘Jeff Clean As Listerine’

Whew, boy drama!

Young Thug is facing backlash online after fans resurfaced an alleged leaked interrogation tape that appears to feature him mentioning Peewee Roscoe. The two-hour clip has gone viral.

Roscoe was previously accused of sh**ting at Lil Wayne’s tour bus in 2015, but he is now stepping forward to defend his longtime friend.

In an Instagram video, Roscoe dismissed the online accusations and stood firmly by Thug. “Jeff clean as listerine,” he said, making it clear he does not believe Thug cooperated against him. Roscoe also added that Thug had always tried to “pull me out the hole,” and he insisted the rapper never snitched on him.

The tape originally surfaced nearly two years ago, but fans have reignited the drama on Twitter. Some tied the controversy to Thug’s feud with Gunna, though Roscoe’s defense may shift the conversation.

What are your thoughts on this messy situation?

VIA: Peewee Roscoe


August 28, 2025 0 comments
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