celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Martin
Tag:

Martin

Tomb Raider Series Adds Martin Bobb-Semple
TV & Streaming

Tomb Raider Series Adds Martin Bobb-Semple

by jummy84 December 1, 2025
written by jummy84

With Sophie Turner already confirmed to play Lara Croft, the other castmembers of Amazon Prime Video‘s upcoming “Tomb Raider” live-action series are slowly being assembled as production gears up to start in January.

Variety has learned that Martin Bobb-Semple, the rising British star most recently seen in a recurring role on The CW’s “All American: Homecoming,” has joined the series, based on the iconic video game series. While details are under wraps, it’s understood to be as a series regular and a major role for the Londoner.

As previously reported, Phoebe Waller–Bridge will serve as creator, writer, and executive producer on the series, which has been in development at Prime Video since early 2023 and was officially greenlit in May 2024. Chad Hodge has also boarded the show as executive producer and co-showrunner alongside Waller-Bridge. Jonathan van Tulleken will serve as director and executive producer. Shooting is due to begin Jan. 19.

Bobb-Semple was most recently seen as the series regular, Orlando “Lando” Johnson, in “All American: Homecoming.” Starting as a recurring character, he was upped to a series lead in season 3. Before that, he starred in two seasons of Peacock’s “One of Us is Lying,” and was a series lead in “Free Reign” for Netflix. Starting from a young age, his first role was in London’s West End, before he trained at the famed Identity School of Acting. From there, he shortly booked his first TV role for the BBC.

The “Tomb Raider” series is executive produced by Crystal Dynamics; Waller-Bridge and Jenny Robins via Wells Street Productions; Dmitri M. Johnson, Mike Goldberg and Timothy I. Stevenson of Story Kitchen; Michael Scheel; Hodge; van Tulleken; and Legendary Television. The series is produced by Story Kitchen, Crystal Dynamics and Amazon MGM Studios. Waller-Bridge is currently under an overall deal at Amazon MGM Studios.

The show was developed under a pact between Crystal Dynamics and Amazon MGM Studios which comes via Story Kitchen’s first-look deal with the studio to develop additional “Tomb Raider” stories into series and films.

Bobb-Semple is repped by Identity Agency Group.

December 1, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Revisiting Martin Scorsese's 'Casino' With Variety's Owen Gleiberman
TV & Streaming

Revisiting Martin Scorsese’s ‘Casino’ With Variety’s Owen Gleiberman

by jummy84 November 20, 2025
written by jummy84

On today’s episode of the “Daily Variety” podcast, we’ll hear from Variety‘s Owen Gleiberman about his rediscovery of an under-appreciated Martin Scorsese classic, 1995’s “Casino.” And Joe Otterson unpacks his reporting on the turmoil behind the scenes on Sylvester Stallone’s “Tulsa King” series as the Taylor Sheridan drama shoots Season 4 in Atlanta.

More to come

Popular on Variety

(Pictured: Sharon Stone in “Casino”)

Listen to Daily Variety on iHeartPodcasts, Apple Podcasts, Variety’s YouTube Podcast channel, Amazon Music, Spotify and other podcast platforms.

November 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Shah Rukh Khan
Bollywood

Martin Scorsese Hosts Homebound Screening in New York for Neeraj Ghaywan

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Filmmaker and Hollywood legend Martin Scorsese recently hosted a grand screening of Neeraj Ghaywan’s latest film Homebound in New York. The event was followed by an engaging discussion between Scorsese and Ghaywan, drawing applause from the audience for the film’s emotional storytelling and cinematic depth.
Homebound, which earlier premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, has now earned the honour of being selected as India’s official entry to the Oscars 2025 in the Best International Feature Film category. The story follows two close friends, Shoaib and Chandan, navigating the struggles of lockdown life and friendship during the pandemic.
Ahead of the screening, Scorsese was seen sharing light-hearted moments with the film’s cast, Ishaan Khatter and Vishal Jethwa, who portray the two leads. Photos from the event, shared by Dharma Productions, show the team celebrating their global success alongside Scorsese. The studio called it “a night to remember”


Director Neeraj Ghaywan expressed his gratitude in a heartfelt post on social media. He wrote, “I was obviously nervous and sweating about doing a QnA with the master. Mr. Scorsese saw that in the green room. He narrated a funny anecdote about how he was mistaken by the cops to be the hillside strangler. He did that because he wanted to calm me down without even me being aware of it. That’s the generous selfless master that he is. I don’t know what future holds for this film but this right here is the biggest award for me.”

Sitting across from him is the highest point in my career in cinema. Mr. Martin Scorsese, the EP on #Homebound hosted a screening and did a QnA with me in NYC!

I was obviously nervous and sweating about doing a QnA with the master. Mr. Scorsese saw that in the green room. He… pic.twitter.com/QwWbzGT0Wt


— Neeraj Ghaywan (@ghaywan) November 8, 2025


The event also saw the presence of Mira Nair and Siddharth, who attended to show their support for the film’s Oscar journey. With global appreciation growing, Homebound continues to make India proud by telling a deeply personal yet universal story of connection, loss, and hope.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sam Riley & Stacy Martin in Fuerteventura Mystery 'Islands' US Trailer
Hollywood

Sam Riley & Stacy Martin in Fuerteventura Mystery ‘Islands’ US Trailer

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Sam Riley & Stacy Martin in Fuerteventura Mystery ‘Islands’ US Trailer

by Alex Billington
November 6, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Even in a place like this, people want to pretend they’re somewhere else…” Greenwhich Ent. has unveiled their own official US trailer for the film titled Islands, an intriguing English-language mystery thriller set on the island of Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands off the coast of Europe. It’s the latest film made by German filmmaker Jan-Ole Gerster, director of A Coffee in Berlin (aka Oh Boy) and Lara. I’m a big fan of Gerster and a big fan of this film already (my full review). It first premiered at the 2025 Berlin Film Festival and opens in US theaters starting January 2026 next year. Sam Riley stars as Tom – a tennis pro washed up on a holiday island not doing much with his life. Now he’s the coach at a hotel resort, hitting countless balls over the net to tourists. When he crosses paths with a particular tourist family, it seems he’s found an escape of his own. Co-starring Stacy Martin, Jack Farthing, Fatima Adoum, Dylan Torrell, Ramiro Blas. I also really enjoy the mysterious score in this by Dascha Dauenhauer. I highly, highly recommend catching this film – still one of my favorites of 2025. So glad it’s finally being released soon in the US. Enjoy.

Here’s the official US trailer (+ poster) for Jan-Ole Gerster’s film Islands, direct from YouTube:

Islands Trailer

Islands Poster

In this twisty thriller, a tennis coach at a tropical resort finds himself at the center of a missing persons mystery. Tom (Sam Riley) teaches tennis during the day and parties at night. When an enigmatic tourist (Stacy Martin) arrives, Tom is unable to shake the feeling he has met her before. Tension and attraction grow, until her husband (Jack Farthing) disappears, and the police suspect Tom. Islands is directed by the acclaimed German filmmaker Jan-Ole Gerster, director of the films A Coffee in Berlin (aka Oh Boy) and Lara previously. The screenplay is written by Jan-Ole Gerster, Blaž Kutin, Lawrie Doran. Produced by Jonas Katzenstein, Maximilian Leo, Associate Producer, and Katrin Kreppel. This initially premiered at the 2025 Berlin Film Festival earlier this year (read our review) and it played at the Edinburgh Film Fest. Greenwich Ent will debut Gerster’s Islands movie in select US theaters starting January 30th, 2026 early next year.

Share

Find more posts in: Indies, To Watch, Trailer

November 8, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform 'Let's Get Out of Here' on 'Fallon'
Music

Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform ‘Let’s Get Out of Here’ on ‘Fallon’

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The duo recently released a collaborative bluegrass album, Safe, Sensible and Sane

Steve Martin and Alison Brown appeared on The Tonight Show to showcase their instrumental bluegrass track “Let’s Get Out of Here.” Martin and Brown performed the rousing song on banjo with the help of several other live musicians, including two strings players.

“Let’s Get Out of Here” is the closing track on Martin and Brown’s recent LP, Safe, Sensible and Sane, which dropped earlier this month. The album marks the musicians’ first collaborative release, and includes appearances from Jackson Browne, Vince Gill, the Indigo Girls, Tim O’Brien, Jason Mraz, and Della Mae. It was tracked live at Compass Sound Studio in Nashville.

“With the banjo, there are so many styles you can work with, but Alison and I both have an ear for its more melodic, melancholy aspect,” Martin explained in a statement about the album. “We got together and played music for days, and ended up making a record where our entire banjo histories coalesce.”

Trending Stories

“We didn’t start off by saying, ‘Let’s make an album,’” Brown added. “We were just having a good time writing songs, and at some point we realized we’d written enough to gather them all together and put a bow on it. There was a joy and ease and sense of fun to the whole process, and now hopefully everyone who listens will share that joy.”

Martin recorded the album in the midst of filming his hit TV series, Only Murders in the Building. The fifth season of the show premiered on Sept. 9. Hulu recently announced that the series will head overseas to London to film its sixth season. Martin’s co-star Selena Gomez celebrated the news with a post on Instagram featuring a photo of her with Martin and Martin Short. “We are eternally grateful we can bring any of you any sort of joy,” she wrote. “My deepest gratitude from Steve, Marty and myself.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Apple Martin Made Her Singing Debut at a Nashville Bar
Fashion

Apple Martin Made Her Singing Debut at a Nashville Bar

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Apple Martin has opened up before about her love of singing, telling Interview that she’s involved in an on-campus cabaret group and adding, “I have a very low voice so whenever we’re doing harmonies it’ll be like, Alright, it’s the boys and Apple.” In the same conversation, she reflected on her choice to pursue a career in the public eye…or not. “It’s interesting because I grew up with that uneven balance of getting out of the airport with my mom and being bombarded with cameras, and then just being a normal kid,” she recalled, adding, “I don’t think we need another celebrity child in the world.”

These days, though, she says, “I just try to do what feels right and block out anything regarding me in the news to the best of my ability. And I’m getting a lot better at being like, Fuck it. I’m not going to be scared. I just want to do what seems fun and figure my life out.” A song with friends seems like just the right start.


October 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Apple Martin says famous parents didn't let her 'feel entitled to anything'
Celebrity News

Apple Martin says famous parents didn’t let her ‘feel entitled to anything’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

15 October 2025

Chris Martin and Gwyneth Paltrow made sure daughter Apple doesn’t feel “entitled to anything”.

Apple Martin has played down nepo baby claims

The Coldplay singer and his Goop founder ex-wife – who have Apple, 21, and son Moses, 19, together – made sure to raise their children with a strong work ethic, which has made them “grateful” for opportunities in life.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Apple said: “I constantly remind myself how grateful I am to have these opportunities.

“I know this is not a normal way to grow up by any means.

“But my parents did a really good job of instilling in me that I shouldn’t be entitled to anything. I have to work.”

Apple – who is studying law, history and society at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee – has joined Self Portrait for a new fashion campaign, having appeared for Chanel at Paris Fashion Week and posed with her Hollywood star mother for GapStudio.

However, by the time she turned 16 she had already started working in a clothes shop.

Back in 2020, her dad Chris told Ellen DeGeneres: “It’s her first job, and she’s about to be 16 and she’s making her way in the world and I’m so proud of her.”

Now, Apple has admitted she is doing what she can to have “a normal college experience”.

She told the newspaper: “Hanging out with my friends and trying to have a normal college experience makes me feel more normal.

“That’s how I like to unwind. We’ll sit down and do little guitar playing sessions, one person will play and the others will sing.

“I also love watching reality TV with my friends. There was one day we spent five hours on the couch and just watched old episodes of America’s Next Top Model.”




October 15, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Martin Scorsese Calls on Streamers to Champion Iranian Cinema
TV & Streaming

Martin Scorsese Calls on Streamers to Champion Iranian Cinema

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

After initially being canceled due to visa issues, New York Film Festival audiences on Friday were treated to a warm and wide-ranging conversation between Jafar Panahi and Martin Scorsese. The two titans of cinema took to the stage of the Walter Reade Theater (plus Panahi’s translator) to discuss the Iranian filmmaker’s career, including the many incidents that have forced him to work in secret, plus his latest film, Palme d’Or winner “It Was Just an Accident.”

Panahi’s latest is his first feature since he was incarcerated for several months in 2023 for criticizing the Iranian government. As he has often been forced to do in recent years, Panahi shot the film in secret. The film was inspired by his own experiences in prison.

Anne Thompson, Daniel Battsek, Ryan Lattanzio

At the conclusion of the hour-long-plus discussion, Scorsese asked Panahi what he thinks the future of Iranian cinema is these days, particularly in light of the departure (and exile) of many of Panahi’s contemporaries, such as Bahman Ghobadi and Mohammad Rasoulof.

“After the revolution, these waves of migration, forced migration almost, started as unwanted exile,” Panahi said through his translator. “Many of the actors and directors who were at the height of their careers were forced to leave Iran. … This became more and more and it was really difficult to bear, especially in the first decade after the revolution. … All the backbones of Iranian filmmaking are out. I really miss all those films that they could have made in Iran and that they didn’t. Some of them were able to adapt and stay [there] and work [there], but then there are others like myself who cannot leave Iran.”

As our own Anne Thompson told it best in her recent profile of “It Was Just an Accident” filmmaker and auteur Panahi: “Over the past 15 years, [he] has been imprisoned, blindfolded, interrogated, and put under house arrest with a 20-year ban on making films” by his native country. But on Friday, Panahi was firm: He’s not leaving Iran, and he’s excited about the filmmaking community that endures.

It Was Just an Accident
‘It Was Just an Accident’Neon

“I don’t have the courage and I don’t have the ability to leave Iran and stay out of Iran,” Panahi said. “I have stayed there and I am going to work there. But there is something else I want to add, there are a lot of young filmmakers who are coming and who are making the best films of Iranian cinema in the same style that we are making films. And they are not going to accept censorship whatsoever. And it has become so common that even within the film circles in Iran, everyone is talking about taking these people seriously, people making films clandestinely, whereas there was a time that no one really paid attention.”

He added, “Although we are not concerned about the future of Iranian cinema, we very much would love for all of our friends who left to return one day,” noting that Rasoulof in particular is looking for ways to return to his home country to work.

Scorsese, who is clearly a huge admirer and fan of Panahi and his work, was quick to offer his ideas for how the work of these rising filmmakers can and should be seen: in short, widely.

“This has to be supported by the international distribution [world], I would think, streaming platforms, film festivals, et. cetera, these films have to be supported that way, for us to see them,” Scorsese said. “Streamers have a lot of room, and they throw things that are just not up to the same level [on to their platforms]. There’s no reason why a Criterion, a Mubi, an Amazon, all of that couldn’t show these films.”

The filmmaker and champion of film also noted that the impact could be profound, not just on cinema, but Iran itself.

“I mean, neorealism from Italy in 1945, it gave the heart back to the Italian people that was destroyed during the war and with everything that happened,” he added. “The film themselves, it gave their soul back, through cinema, and that was neorealism. So cinema can be very powerful, everybody can see that. So it’s really getting to see these films. It’s not just putting them on something, and putting them up on, what are they called? Tiles? You have to kind of curate them, so you know where you’re going, you know what you’re looking at.”

Scorsese and his light disdain for streamers’ homepage tiles was greeted with applause, and both Scorsese and Panahi, who ended their chat with a long hug on stage, were met with a standing ovation. This one was worth the wait.

Neon will release “It Was Just An Accident” in theaters in New York and Los Angeles on Wednesday, October 15, with a national rollout to follow.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Martin Scorsese almost became a priest but was kicked out for bad behaviour
Music

Martin Scorsese almost became a priest but was kicked out for bad behaviour

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Martin Scorsese has revealed that he trained for the priesthood in his younger years, until being kicked out for bad behaviour.

Mr. Scorsese, a new documentary series, delves into the filmmaker’s life and achievements, and charts his rise to becoming the Oscar-winning director behind cinematic classics such as Raging Bull, Taxi Driver, and Goodfellas. An article by Variety quotes a moment in the series where he discusses a moment early in his life where he could have taken another path.

Raised Catholic, Scorsese attended mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City from a young age, and his faith inspired him to start studying for the priesthood. “There was a preparatory seminary, and that was on 85th Street somewhere. I did okay for the first few months, but something happened,” he said.

While Scorsese didn’t specify the incident, he explained: “I began to realize the world is changing. It was early rock and roll and the old world was dying out. I became aware of life around me. Falling in love or being attracted to girls, not that you’re acting out on it, but there were these feelings, and I suddenly realized it’s much more complicated than this. You can’t shut yourself off.”

He concluded: “The idea of priesthood, to devote yourself to others, really, that’s what it’s about. I realized I don’t belong there. And I tried to stay, but they got my father in there, and they told him, ‘Get him out of here.’ Because I behaved badly.”

While best known for his films based in the world of organised crime, Martin Scorsese has directed some religious stories as well. In 1988, he made The Last Temptation Of Christ, a depiction of Jesus’ (Willem Dafoe) imagined personal struggles that drew criticism from Christian groups at the time.

He would also make 1997’s Kundun, based on the life of the 14th Dalai Lama, and 2016’s Silence, about the quest to find a missing Jesuit priest.

Mr. Scorsese airs on Apple TV+ on October 17.

Last month, it was revealed Scorsese would be reteaming with regular collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio on ghost story What Happens At Night.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'Mr. Scorsese'
TV & Streaming

Rebecca Miller’s Apple TV+ Martin Scorsese Doc

by jummy84 October 5, 2025
written by jummy84

An early montage in Rebecca Miller‘s montage-heavy five-part documentary on Martin Scorsese focuses on the ways that friends, loved ones and collaborators address the Oscar-winning director. 

There are several “Martys” among the ultra-familiar, a lot of “Martins” among the respectfully familiar, and a few “Mr. Scorseses” among the familiar but deferential. (“Martin Scorsese” would be reserved for the respectfully distant and, of course, “Scorsese – Monster: The Martin Scorsese Story” for Ryan Murphy.)

Mr. Scorsese

The Bottom Line

Conventional but utterly engaging.

Venue: New York Film Festival (Spotlight)
Airdate: Friday, October 17 (Apple TV+)
Director: Rebecca Miller

Miller’s docuseries is titled Mr. Scorsese and that encapsulates her approach as well: This overview of Scorsese’s career is thorough, peppered with warmth and affection, but perhaps just a shade more conventional and, yes, deferential, than the subject matter might ideally require. Especially in its second half, Mr. Scorsese becomes a little bit of a laundry list, and its attempts to tie together aspects of Scorsese’s career feel a little rushed. But the series has enough wonky inside-baseball film conversation for serious fans — in its best moments, it could nearly be called Ms. Schoonmaker — and enough clips and colorful stories to inspire casual observers to seek out a couple more semi-obscure Scorsese titles.

Scorsese’s life and work, still ongoing thank heavens, have been given a rather simple five-act structure for purposes of the documentary. Miller starts with Scorsese’s early biography and his evolution from aspiring priest to student filmmaker to first-time feature director on the Roger Corman-produced Boxcar Bertha. Then it’s over to Mean Streets, Scorsese’s early Robert De Niro collaborations, cocaine and over-exertion. Then more cocaine, plus Raging Bull and the director’s mid-80s wandering in the cinematic desert. Then the series concludes with Last Temptation of Christ and Goodfellas, followed by the Leonardo DiCaprio years, resolving with pre-production on Killers of the Flower Moon.

For the most part, Miller has access to all of the people you need to tell Scorsese’s story — starting with Scorsese, who clearly sat for a lot of in-depth interviews in a variety of locations, including what appears to be a waterside vacation house; a cluttered urban office; and, best of all, several darkly lit restaurants, where he gets to gab with friends from childhood as they remember their rough-and-tumble upbringing with a mixture of candor and nostalgic romanticization. Miller sits down with all three of Scorsese’s daughters, ex-wife Isabella Rossellini, peers like Brian De Palma and Steven Spielberg, stars such as De Niro and DiCaprio (along with the likes of Miller’s husband Daniel Day-Lewis, Margot Robbie and Sharon Stone), and an assortment of regular collaborators, with longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker and writing partners like Paul Schrader and Jay Cocks among key behind-the-scenes figures. 

Rounding out the documentary are younger directors following to varying degrees in Scorsese’s footsteps, like Spike Lee, Ari Aster and both Safdie brothers. Journalist/film scholar Mark Harris pops up late in the series to smooth some intellectual transitions. These relative outsiders offer some insight, but rarely feel as seamlessly integrated into Miller’s story as the people who were there.

The first two episodes, which lay the foundation for all of Scorsese’s fixations and themes, were my favorites, with Scorsese and his assortment of matured tough-guy pals steering anecdotes interspersed with storyboards drawn by a young Scorsese and footage from his acclaimed student films. Miller is never formally adventurous, though some of the art/artist parallels are illustrated in thoughtful split-screens. From the violence he witnessed in the streets to the escape offered by secure and air-conditioned movie theaters to the moral inquiry prompted by his immersion in Catholicism, this is Scorsese in a nutshell, delivered with the director’s trademark volubility that remains delightful even if most of the background was conveyed in documentaries like Italianamerican and A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies. 

Martin Scorsese has always been an open book, a storyteller who has offered his autobiography freely and an auteur whose deepest philosophical themes have been recurring and explored in bold type. That he’s never been an “Oh, I’d prefer to let the work speak for itself” recluse is to Miller’s advantage. But she has to push to get different or deeper engagement, leaving many of her questions and conversational detours audible. 

Given that it could easily have become oversaturated with testosterone, it’s obvious that Mr. Scorsese benefits from being made by a director who isn’t simply a giddy fanboy. It’s in moments like Miller’s inquiry about the use of hands as a motif in The Age of Innocence that you can see Scorsese relax and embrace a topic that isn’t the usual gabbing about violence and Catholic guilt and whether or not he can be classified as a gangster filmmaker — not that those topics are excluded. 

Nothing is exactly off-limits, but one can sense Scorsese trying to de-sensationalize his drug use or the work-related obsessiveness that led to his many divorces so thoroughly that there’s nothing for Miller to dwell on. This makes the version of Scorsese’s life presented here follow a very familiar “Rise, slight fall, rise again” arc, along with a “Sexagenarian or septuagenarian gets another chance at fatherhood and corrects the mistakes he made the first time, much to his older children’s resignation/chagrin” formula that has become so common for documentaries about men of a certain age.

Scorsese’s big movies get the most extensive focus, and the truth is I could happily watch five hours of Scorsese and Schoonmaker breaking down tape on Raging Bull, Goodfellas and Mean Streets. But it’s often just as interesting when Scorsese goes somewhat deep on a less expected film, like the long-term dream project Gangs of New York, or a less universally adored project like Casino. 

Miller is so eager to at least touch on everything on Scorsese’s resumé that the few gaps stick out. I’m pretty sure, for example, that Scorsese’s only scripted feature not to get even a token mention is Hugo. Do I need a deep exploration of Hugo? Nah, but Scorsese’s ability to adapt to and evolve with cinematic technology is a big part of his venerability. Do I need deep dives into Boardwalk Empire or Vinyl? Probably not, but those HBO dramas, one a reasonably large success and the other a large failure, represent a not-insignificant portion of Scorsese’s output from the past 15 years. 

I’m also a bigger fan of Scorsese’s documentary work than Miller seems to be. While The Last Waltz gets ample attention, it’s odd that Mick Jagger is in the documentary for basically one quote about the way music is used in Casino, without mentioning the Rolling Stones concert film Shine a Light.

Again, though, what’s missing in Mr. Scorsese stands out because so much is present, and present in such solidly rendered ways. Scorsese is an always entertaining raconteur; the footage and outtakes from his films fuel an instant desire for a career retrospective binge; and his daughters (especially Francesca, whose social media posts with her dad have often gone viral) round out the character portrait beyond his normally fast-talking, excitedly curmudgeonly persona. I never wanted anything different, just slightly more, from the docuseries.

October 5, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming