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Baahubali  The Epic
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Bugonia Movie Review: A Paranoid Fable for The Conspiracy Age

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia is a film that exists somewhere between satire, science fiction, and psychological thriller and true to the Greek auteur’s temperament, it refuses to pick a lane. The director, known for his surreal dissections of human behaviour in The Favourite and Poor Things, reimagines the 2003 South Korean cult classic Save the Green Planet! for a modern audience. The result is a film that is both audacious and uneven, equal parts allegory and absurdity.

The story follows two disillusioned men, Teddy Gatz (Jesse Plemons) and Don (Aidan Delbis), his neurodivergent cousin, convinced that a powerful pharmaceutical CEO, Michelle Fuller, played by Emma Stone, is, in fact, an alien orchestrating humanity’s demise. Acting on their paranoid conviction, they abduct her and hold her captive in a basement, hoping to extract a confession that could “save the planet.” What follows is a strange, often disturbing tug of war between delusion and truth, power and helplessness, rendered with Lanthimos’ signature blend of deadpan humour and unnerving precision.

The director has worked once again with long-time collaborator, cinematographer Robbie Ryan, who has used wide-angle lenses, one-point perspectives and exaggerated depth of field to create a world that feels both clinical and grotesque. The film is shot in VistaVision, giving its carefully composed frames a heightened sense of visual distortion. Every space seems too bright, every face too close, every pause too long. It’s a movie built on discomfort, using form as a mirror to its fractured themes.

At the heart of this disorienting narrative are two magnetic performances. Emma Stone, continuing her fruitful collaboration with Lanthimos, turns the cool composure of a corporate titan into something eerie and unreadable. Her role demands restraint and ambiguity and she excels on all fronts. Another Oscar nomination seems to be on her way. Whether she’s a manipulative CEO or an extraterrestrial predator is never entirely clear and that’s exactly the point.

Opposite her, Jesse Plemons delivers a career-best performance as the unhinged beekeeper-turned-conspiracy theorist. He embodies his character’s paranoia with terrifying sincerity, balancing absurd humour with deep tragedy. Plemons steals the show, grounding the film’s surreal energy in something painfully recognisable, the modern paranoia that fuels online misinformation and distrust. Aidan Delbis is himself autistic and hence his act rings with lived-in truth.

Thematically, Bugonia dives into various terrains: environmental collapse, corporate greed, and the seductive logic of conspiracy theories. It’s a film about power structures and the fragile human need to find meaning in chaos. In that sense, it feels eerily reflective of our own moment, where truth has become a matter of belief and belief a weapon of survival. Lanthimos doesn’t spoon-feed his audience answers but crafts a cinematic space where absurdity feels like the only rational response to the world.

Yet for all its ambition, Bugonia is not without flaws. The middle act, dominated by the hostage scenario, begins to drag under the weight of its own repetition. The tonal shifts from farce to horror to philosophical reflection can feel jarring, even indulgent. The film raises questions about faith, power and truth, but leaves them suspended, unresolved, perhaps intentionally so.

Ultimately, Bugonia is a film that dares you to either engage or walk away. It’s not meant for those seeking tidy endings, straight narratives or moral clarity. But for viewers willing to surrender to Lanthimos’ warped worldview, it offers a biting, funny, and often haunting reflection of contemporary anxieties. Like the best of his work, it finds beauty in the bizarre and discomfort in the familiar.

In the end, Bugonia may not convert anyone who isn’t already in Lanthimos’ corner. But for those attuned to his peculiar rhythm, it stands as another fascinating, if imperfect, entry in a filmography obsessed with human delusion and the strange, buzzing noise it makes when confronted with the truth. Just like the much-loved bees, so central to the film. The end will shock you for sure. But the absurdity of the human condition, even in its collapse, will bring a smile as well. Are we really needed in this world to keep? Wouldn’t it fare better without us? Such questions will haunt you for sure, much after the end credits roll away.

Also Read: Upcoming Hollywood Releases This October: Tron Ares, Bugonia & More

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Football Movie 'Signing Tony Raymond' Trailer Starring Michael Mosley
Hollywood

Football Movie ‘Signing Tony Raymond’ Trailer Starring Michael Mosley

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Football Movie ‘Signing Tony Raymond’ Trailer Starring Michael Mosley

by Alex Billington
October 31, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Some of the best plays happen off the field.” Iconic Events & Southern Isles Pictures have debuted the first official trailer for a film titled Signing Tony Raymond, a football movie but this time about the coach’s recruiting job. This story reminds me of Brad Pitt’s Moneyball, about how to build a winning team finding the right people. A young college football coach (armed with a lucrative NIL offer) is sent to rural Alabama to sign the nation’s top high school defensive end and soon finds himself trying to outflank a frenzy of rival recruiters, fight off grifting townsfolk galore, and somehow also win over the player’s wildly dysfunctional family. Inspired by a true story. “Owen’s perspective brings a rare mix of insight and humor to the realities of college football today.” Starring Michael Mosley as Coach Walt McFadden, with Mira Sorvino & Rob Morgan, featuring football legends Marshawn Lynch, Brian Bosworth and Champ Bailey. This looks like a kooky comedy about the eccentricities of small town American more than a mainstream sports movie.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Glen Owen’s film Signing Tony Raymond, direct from YouTube:

Signing Tony Raymond Poster

Set in the Deep South, the film follows Coach Walt McFadden (Michael Mosley), a talented but idealistic assistant coach at Louisiana University who’s out of second chances. After failing to land a top recruit the previous year, Coach Walt is given one last shot at redemption: signing the nation’s number one defensive end, Tony Raymond — or losing his job. His pursuit takes him deep into the backwoods of Alabama, where he discovers that money, not talent, often determines who wins. Signing Tony Raymond is directed by American filmmaker Glen Owen (a University of Georgia basketball alum), director of the film Stalked Within previously, plus the “Gillian in Georgia” series and sports doc “Comeback: A March Madness Story” on TV. Produced by John Thomas, Kristy Clabaugh, Don Mandrik, and Glen Owen. The film just premiered at the 2025 Austin Film Festival this month. Iconic will debut Glen Owen’s Signing Tony Raymond film in theaters starting sometime in early 2026. Stay tuned for the exact release date next year. Anyone into this?

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Find more posts in: Indies, To Watch, Trailer

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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UK Government Urged To Introduce Tax Relief On Indie Movie Advertising
TV & Streaming

UK Government Urged To Introduce Tax Relief On Indie Movie Advertising

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

UK chancellor Rachel Reeves, who will deliver a landmark budget in less than a month, has been urged by the influential Culture, Media & Sport Committee (CMSC) to introduc a tax relief for the print and advertising costs of indie movies.

In a letter published this morning, CMSC chair Caroline Dinenage said there are “countless films that end up not getting the audiences they deserve” due to these high costs.

The committee’s idea is that any movie that applies to the recently-introduced 40% indie tax relief would be eligible for a 25% tax relief to support the distribution and exhibition of British features.

“Even top-quality films cannot find an audience without distributors and their investment in promoting films,” wrote Dinenage. “Cinemas will not programme films without marketing spend attached, as the risk would be too great. The IFTC [indie film tax relief] will successfully offset the risk of making independent British films, but alone it will not offset the challenges of distribution and exhibition.”

Dinenage highlighted the success of British movies like Oscar-winner Conclave and StudioCanal’s recent I Swear but said while they play “to packed audiences nationwide, there are countless films that end up not getting the audiences they deserve.”

Dinenage’s letter came complete with some positive mathematics. She quoted the Film Distributors Association, which commissioned modelling of the potential impact of the proposal and found a return of more than £7 ($9.20) for every £1 spent on the relief, including a net positive return to Reeves’ Treasury department. The cost of the intervention would equate to just 2% of the total amount of film tax relief claimed on production costs, according to Dinenage.

The gamechanging 40% indie tax relief was introduced by the previous Conservative government and has had a huge impact on the indie movie sector. The current Labour government also rubberstamped additional VFX relief but has been relatively cold on introducing any more tax reliefs for the sector. TV industry bods have been calling for improvements to the high-end TV tax relief amid spiraling drama costs but ex-Culture Minister Chris Bryant recently told us this is unlikely.

Reeves’ budget will take place on November 26 and is being seen as a huge moment 18 months in to this Labour government, which has been slipping further and further in the polls.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix's Movie Theater Stunts Might Help Make It Cool
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s Movie Theater Stunts Might Help Make It Cool

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

For years, it’s been Netflix and Chill, but it’s increasingly becoming Netflix and Party.

On Halloween on Friday, Netflix is again releasing a Sing-a-Long version of its mega-hit “KPop Demon Hunters” into theaters, encouraging costumes and trying to get even more fans out of the house by expanding to more territories and theaters. It’s a repeat of an event Netflix staged in August that managed to bring in a box office-topping $19.2 million. And following a trailer on Thursday, Netflix will screen its finale of “Stranger Things” in theaters on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

It’s attracted a ton of speculation that maybe, just maybe, Netflix is finally softening its stance on putting movies into theaters. Even though Netflix keeps telling you, no and please, for the love of God, stop asking.

Diane Lane, Zoey Deutch, Jan Komasa, Madeline Brewer at the "Anniversary" New York premiere held at the Metrograph on October 21, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)

“There’s no change in the strategy. Our strategy is to give our members exclusive first-run movies on
Netflix,” Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said just last week during earnings. “We occasionally release certain films in theaters for our fans like we did with ‘KPop Demon Hunters,’ or as part of our launch strategy, publicity, marketing, qualification, all those things, and we’ll continue to do that.”

Sure, Ted, but what do you really think about theaters?

“Behaviors evolve. Consumer behavior changes. I do think there’s something very special about it, but thank God it’s not the only way I can see a movie,” Sarandos said on a podcast in February.

But really? Still not sure I believe you.

“I believe it’s an outmoded idea, for most people, not for everybody,” he said again in April.

Fine, but Netflix said it would never have ads until it did, that it would never have sports until it did, and that it would never have live stand-up specials or password sharing crackdowns or stop telling us how many subscribers it had or in-person theme parks that inherently get you away from watching Netflix… all until it did.

STRANGER THINGS: SEASON 5. (L to R) Joe Keery as Steve Harrington, Natalia Dyer as Nancy Wheeler, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan Byers, Maya Hawke as Robin Buckley, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers, Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson, and Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair in Stranger Things: Season 5. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025
‘Stranger Things: Season 5’COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

All that said, Netflix still isn’t doing “theatrical distribution.” It will never get to Amazon’s level of hoping to release 14-16 movies in theaters a year, report box office numbers, and play that volatile game of success and failure. But it has been ramping up its live events that drive fan engagement, sign-ups, and retention. And, oh by the way, just some of those events also take place inside movie theaters.

What Netflix is great at, more than any other legacy media company, is pivoting and reacting to a hit, capitalizing on what audiences are responding to on its platform. Netflix didn’t plan in advance to do live sing-a-long stunts for “KPop Demon Hunters,” but when the movie became quite literally its biggest of all time in a matter of weeks, it found a way to stage an event and maximize the film‘s pop culture impact.

So with the right thing, why wouldn’t Netflix do more of that? “Adolescence” or “Baby Reindeer” might never work in theaters, but it would not be a surprise to see an increase from one or two theatrical events a year to a handful more (Netflix had no comment for this story).

The question will be whether Netflix can bolster its events a bit more, giving the awards titles that get theatrical releases a bit more of a marketing bump to let audiences know they’re there? Guillermo del Toro recently touted that “Frankenstein” had expanded — “really” — to more theaters than you were probably aware. So can it do more to get butts in theater seats and not just make you aware that something is on Netflix?

Enter Greta Gerwig. For her “Narnia” movie, the only way Netflix could make sure it was working with a director on her caliber is to play ball with her desire for theaters. For that film, it’s splitting the difference between a wider theatrical release and utilizing IMAX in order to generate the feeling that this is a special, limited engagement event. We imagine the marketing dollars will come with it.

By doing more things out in the open, be it theatrical events, “Stranger Things” stage plays, Tudum fan events, or the Netflix House opening next month, Netflix is demonstrating that Netflix isn’t only a brand you can engage with in your home. If it can become an affinity brand and develop a similar loyalty, like the kind that people have for A24 or Criterion (in many ways, it already has and by a mile), all that is valuable toward getting more subscribers and keeping them around.

Even more than that, it can make Netflix cool.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review Nuremberg | Courtroom Of Conscience More Than Justice | Glamsham.com
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Movie Review Nuremberg | Courtroom Of Conscience More Than Justice | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Nuremberg is one of the cities in the German state of Bavaria. Russell Crowe and Rami Malek Face Off in a Courtroom Drama of Conscience and Power. There’s something inherently cinematic about the Nuremberg Trials — the gravest men of the 20th century facing the moral weight of their crimes under the flicker of courtroom lights. James Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg revives that atmosphere with an unmistakable sense of seriousness, even though its emotional temperature often remains carefully contained.

At its heart, Nuremberg is not a war film but a moral confrontation — a drama about intellect, guilt, and control. Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek), an American psychiatrist is assigned to assess the mental state of Nazi war criminals awaiting trial. His interactions with Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe), form the psychological core of the story — an ongoing duel between analysis and arrogance, between human understanding and moral depravity.

Crowe’s performance is easily among his finest in years — a chilling portrayal of Göring as both monstrous and magnetic, fully aware of his charisma and how to weaponize it. His exchanges with Malek simmer with manipulation. In one of the film’s sharpest moments, Göring taunts Kelley by suggesting that he is the young psychiatrist’s “ticket to success.” The line lands like a slap — a reminder that even in defeat, power finds ways to dominate. It exposes Kelley’s own ambition, hinting that his fascination with his subject isn’t entirely noble. Vanderbilt captures this dynamic with a deft, unsettling precision – a man who committed unspeakable crimes still managing to control the moral narrative, if only for a moment.

Malek, in contrast, underplays beautifully. His restraint gives the film its quiet heartbeat. Kelley’s professionalism conceals an inner tremor — a man torn between scientific detachment and human empathy, struggling to remain composed as he stares into the abyss of human evil. His silences, far more than his dialogue, convey the real conflict.

Visually, Nuremberg impresses with its craftsmanship. Certain single long shots are awe-inspiring — not for their grandeur, but for their compositional intelligence. The early train sequence, between Douglas Kelley (Malek) and Lila (Lydia Peckham) built around a card trick, elegantly establishes tone and character without exposition.

The art direction, however, fluctuates in conviction. At times, the film recreates post-war Germany with haunting authenticity — the cold symmetry of the courtroom, the claustrophobic interrogation chambers — while in others, the environment feels curiously sterile, as if production design had briefly lost its emotional anchor. Yet Vanderbilt’s directorial control reasserts itself through several standout decisions. His use of real concentration camp footage within the courtroom scenes, is both bold and deeply affecting. It anchors the film’s intellectual dialogue in lived horror, redirecting the viewer’s empathy from the accused to their victims. It’s a creative stroke that gives the film its emotional backbone as also it takes the attention away from the proceeding depth that was expected.

Where Nuremberg falters slightly is in translating the psychological duel into the broader trial narrative. The courtroom scenes, while competently executed, seldom carry the same pulse as the one-on-one encounters between Kelley and Göring. The intellectual tension that crackles in private conversations dissipates in the public proceedings, which often feel more reenacted than reimagined. One wishes the film had allowed that cerebral chess match to bleed more visibly into the formal trial — to make justice and psychology collide in the same breath.

Still, Vanderbilt’s strength lies in restraint. The execution-by-hanging sequence near the end is a perfect example of understated direction — communicating the gravity of judgment without resorting to literal visuals. It’s a masterstroke of suggestion over spectacle, proof that sometimes representation carries the weight of truth better. In that moment, Nuremberg achieves what it often reaches for — an emotional resonance born from moral reflection, not dramatization.

In the final reckoning, Nuremberg stands as a dignified, intellectually charged historical drama — commanding in its performances, occasionally uneven in tone, yet unwavering in its intent. It’s not a film that overwhelms; it’s one that lingers, asking questions long after the lights fade. Less a courtroom of justice than a courtroom of conscience, it leaves you with a quiet ache — not from what it shows, but from what it implies.

A thoughtful, visually assured film that wins on intellect and restraint, even when it sidesteps the deeper emotional undercurrents it evokes.

Movie: Nuremberg
Directed by: James Vanderbilt
Based on: The Nazi and the Psychiatrist by Jack El-Hai
Starring: Russell Crowe, Rami Malek, Leo Woodall, John Slattery, Mark O’Brien, Colin Hanks, Wrenn Schmidt, Lydia Peckham, Richard E. Grant, Michael Shannon
Running time: ~2hrs 31mins
Theatrical Release Date: November 7, 2025

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Paige Bueckers Will Reportedly Star in a Movie About a Women's Basketball Rivalry
Fashion

Paige Bueckers Will Reportedly Star in a Movie About a Women’s Basketball Rivalry

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Paige Bueckers’ off-season is heating up—and we’re not just talking about the WNBA superstar’s upcoming debut in Unrivaled, the player-owned three-on-three league based in Miami.

On October 29, Deadline reported that the 2025 WNBA Rookie of the Year is set to star in Jess & Pearl, a sports movie developed by Apple Original Films. Though Apple did not comment on the report, Deadline’s sources claim the project is “set in the world of women’s basketball” and based off an original idea by Scandal writer and producer Zahir McGhee. Bueckers will reportedly serve as an executive producer as well.

Here’s everything we know about Paige Bueckers’ upcoming Hollywood debut.

Read more

The WNBA Needs Every One of These Faces

As the internet argued over the “face of the league,” the women of the WNBA were coming together to fight for fair pay and a say in their future. These five athletes—and 2025 Glamour Women of the Year—represent the real draw of the WNBA: its players.

What is Jess & Pearl?

So far, all we have is this brief description provided by Deadline: “Set in the world of women’s basketball, the film follows two phenoms who forge an extraordinary bond as teammates until fame, competition, and the ruthless business of college athletics threaten to turn their friendship into an epic rivalry.”

When is Jess & Pearl coming out?

So far, no release date has been set or announced.

Who is involved behind-the-scenes?

UConn alum and Dallas Wings guard Paige Bueckers will reportedly serve as an executive producer, while David Bernad (The White Lotus) has reportedly signed on to produce the project through his company, Middle Child Pictures. Lindsay Kagawa Colas, who recently served as executive producer on a documentary about WNBA legend Sue Bird, is allegedly on board to produce alongside producer Tommy Alter.

Who else is in the cast?

So far, no other names have been released, but I’m personally pulling for Bueckers’ fellow WNBA superstar Angel Reese, who recently made her own feature film debut in A House of Dynamite on Netflix. You know, right before she made her Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show runway debut as the first pro-athlete Victoria’s Secret Angel.

Though she only had a small role in the film, Reese told People she plans to continue acting and even hire an acting coach. “I was talking to Common—he’s overseas right now shooting season 2 of Silo—and he was telling me, ‘You got to hire an acting coach,” she said at A House of Dynamite’s New York Film Festival premiere on September 28. “I model already, so it’s like adding to the résumé. I’m young right now, so I’m going to do it while I’m young.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Final US Trailer for 'Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy' Korean Movie
Hollywood

Final US Trailer for ‘Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy’ Korean Movie

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Final US Trailer for ‘Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy’ Korean Movie

by Alex Billington
October 29, 2025
Source: YouTube

“What’s the meaning of an ending with one survivor?” Blue Fox Entertainment has unveiled their official US trailers for an epic Korean action adventure movie called Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy. It’s made by the same Korean filmmaker who also made The Great Flood movie out in December later this year. Omniscient Reader is adapted from a famous web novel, written by a Korean author duo writing under the pen name “singNsong”. It was originally a big hit in Korea back in 2019. Combining epic high-stakes action with mind-bending fantasy, the movie promises to be a cinematic spectacle that will captivate both long-time fans of the webtoon & newcomers alike. When the apocalyptic world depicted in a serial novel suddenly becomes reality, ordinary Kim Dok-ja – the only person who knows how the novel ends – must set out on a treacherous journey with his companions and the novel’s omnipotent hero, Yu Jung-hyeok, to survive and save the day. Starring Ahn Hyo-seop & Lee Min-ho, along with Chae Soo-bin, Shin Seung-ho, Nana, Jisoo, and Kwon Eun-seong. This looks like a big, cheesy Hollywood movie with some sketchy VFX – as they battle creatures of all sizes, malevolent forces, and more mayhem all trying to write their down destiny.

Official trailers (+ poster) for Kim Byung-woo’s film Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy, via YouTube:

Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy Trailer

Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy Poster

Kim Dok-ja (Ahn Hyo-seop), an ordinary man in his 20s, is the only reader of an obscure web novel titled “Ways to Survive the Apocalypse”. Having started reading in school, after 10 years of serialization the novel’s conclusion is finally published, and Kim, not liking the ending, writes an angry letter to the author, calling it “the worst novel ever”. After sending the letter, the apocalyptic world of the novel suddenly becomes reality, and the novel’s omnipotent hero Yu Jung-hyeok (Lee Min-ho) appears before Kim. As the only person who knows how to survive in this world, Kim and his companions rescue Yu Jung-hyeok and strive to save the world by writing his own, new ending. Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy, also known as 전지적 독자 시점 in Korean, is directed by Korean filmmaker Kim Byung-woo, director of the films Written, The Terror Live, Take Point, and the “Reborn” series previously, as well as the upcoming The Great Flood movie. The screenplay is written by Kim Byung-woo & Lee Jung-min; based on the web novel by singNsong (aka Sing Shong). Produced by Realties Pictures & Won Dong-yeon. Capelight & Blue Fox debut Omniscient Reader: The Prophecy direct-to-VOD in the US starting November 4th, 2025 this fall. Who’s interested?

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

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Paramount Layoffs Hit Movie Execs In Production, Marketing, More
TV & Streaming

Paramount Layoffs Hit Movie Execs In Production, Marketing, More

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Paramount‘s motion picture divisions, including production, literary, marketing and music, were impacted today with many Melrose Ave lot vets exiting. The new David Ellison run conglom is handing out approximately 1,000 pink-slips as it looks to achieve $2 billion in overall savings. We understand that some of those savings aren’t in job cuts alone.

Among those departing, we hear, are President of Worldwide Music, Randy Spendlove who has been at the studio since 2006. Spendlove arrived to Paramount as a Grammy Winner for Best Soundtrack Album for the Miramax Best Picture Oscar winner, Chicago. He started at A&M Records as VP of Promotions where he worked with Janet Jackson, Sheryl Crow, Soundgarden and Bryan Adams. In 1998, he became President of Motion Picture Music at Miramax Films where he worked on Chicago, Shakespeare in Love, Cold Mountain and Finding Neverland. While at Paramount, he co-supervised the music and co-produced the soundtrack album for Dreamgirls, which was nominated for three Best Song Oscars.

Other executive departures include Bryan Oh, SVP of Production, who most recently was shepherding a K-pop music drama starring Ji-young Yoo and singer-songwriter Eric Nam; Geoff Stier, EVP of Production who was formerly with Showtime Original Programming and a previous Paramount vet overseeing such titles as World War Z and True Grit before coming back in July 2024; Andres Alvarez, EVP of Home Entertainment; Rachel Cadden, EVP of International Theatrical Marketing; Christine Benitez, SVP Multicultural Marketing; and Phil Cohen, SVP of Literary Affairs who arrived to the studio in 2022.

In a note to staff today, Paramount Co-Chairs Dana Golberg and Josh Greenstein took a knee, expressing how “difficult” today is and how “we want to take a moment to acknowledge the departure of valued colleagues and express our deep gratitude for their contributions, dedication, and the impact they’ve made on our studio.” The duo also emphasized the new Skydance-owned Paramount’s plan of “right-sizing our organization” which aims to “refocus our energy, and align our efforts with the endless opportunities ahead.”

There are 1,000 more expected to be cut from the roughly 20,000-employee count of the combined Paramount and Skydance. The next wave is hitting offshore offices. As Deadline previously reported, Paramount television and marketing/distribution were effected today.

Below is the internal email from Paramount Co-Chairs Dana Golberg and Josh Greenstein.

Team,

We recognize that today has been a difficult one as our workforce changes take effect. We want to take a moment to acknowledge the departure of valued colleagues and express our deep gratitude for their contributions, dedication, and the impact they’ve made on our studio.

This restructuring marks a pivotal step in shaping the path forward. We’re right-sizing our organization to ensure Paramount Pictures remains not only the iconic studio built on more than a century of storytelling, but also the leading destination for creators and innovators who will define the future of entertainment. Please know that we’re making these changes as comprehensively as possible to ensure we can move forward decisively, refocus our energy, and align our efforts with the endless opportunities ahead.

As we set our sights on the future, our goal is to create clarity and momentum as we begin this next chapter. Your managers and HR business partners are here to support you—please don’t hesitate to reach out with questions or concerns. What makes this place exceptional is the spirit of collaboration and kindness you show one another every day. We know that same generosity will carry us through this transition.

We will be sharing more around our strategy and structure in the coming weeks and appreciate your continued commitment and focus. 

Thank you for everything you bring to this team. We’re confident that, together, we’ll build an even stronger future.

Dana and Josh

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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The SpongeBob Movie: Search For SquarePants Set To Make A Splash In December 2025 | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

The SpongeBob Movie: Search For SquarePants Set To Make A Splash In December 2025 | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

SpongeBob is returning to the big screen with a brand-new adventure, and this time he’s going deeper than ever before. The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants from Paramount Pictures is set to release on December 19, 2025, promising an all-new, ocean-spanning story for fans of every age.

According to official details, the movie follows SpongeBob as he tries to prove his bravery to Mr. Krabs. Determined to show he’s more than just a fry cook, he joins The Flying Dutchman, a ghost pirate known for his mischievous and mysterious ways, on a wild seafaring mission. Along the way, SpongeBob and his Bikini Bottom friends face hilarious new challenges in the deepest parts of the ocean.

The film stars Tom Kenny as SpongeBob, alongside Clancy Brown, Rodger Bumpass, Bill Fagerbakke, Carolyn Lawrence, and Mr. Lawrence reprising their iconic roles. The cast also features George Lopez, Ice Spice, Arturo Castro, Sherry Cola, Regina Hall, and Mark Hamill, bringing a mix of comedy and star power to the underwater adventure.

Directed by Derek Drymon and produced by Lisa Stewart, Pam Brady, and Aaron Dem, the movie is rated PG for rude humor, some thematic elements, and mild language.

As of now, this information is based on what’s been officially released by the studio. We haven’t seen the movie yet and don’t claim to have. But from what’s known so far, The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants looks like it’s going to be a fun, heartfelt return to the kind of humor and creativity that made the franchise a global favorite.

Mark your calendars, SpongeBob and the Bikini Bottom gang are set to sail back into theaters this December, ready to make another splash.

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Hollywood’s Next Breakout? Alyssa Matthews Lands New Movie Role and Eyes Leading Part in Upcoming Horror Series
Hollywood

Hollywood’s Next Breakout? Alyssa Matthews Lands New Movie Role and Eyes Leading Part in Upcoming Horror Series

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

The rising Hollywood heartthrob continues her ascent with back-to-back projects in film and television.

Hollywood newcomer Alyssa Matthews is quickly establishing herself as one of the industry’s most promising rising stars. Best known for her standout performance in the cult-favorite comedy Bottoms, Matthews is now poised for a major breakout with two exciting projects on the horizon.

Sources tell us the actor is in the final stages of joining the core cast of a highly anticipated slasher-horror television series, set to begin production in the next few months. Matthews’ role is expected to be one of the series’ core cast members, marking a pivotal step in her rapidly growing career. The series has already generated buzz within the industry for its cinematic approach to horror and its ensemble of emerging talent, with insiders noting that Matthews’ character will play a key part in the suspense-driven storyline.

Sources also confirm that Matthews has joined the cast of the upcoming feature film The Children, which is slated to begin filming soon. The addition further underscores her momentum, showcasing a range that spans both chilling horror and dynamic drama.

Trained under acclaimed acting coach Howard Fine, Matthews brings a grounded yet magnetic presence to every role. Her performances are marked by an emotional precision that feels both instinctive and cinematic, allowing her to fully disappear into character. Industry insiders note her ability to command the screen with quiet intensity, a quality that’s already distinguishing her as one of Hollywood’s most intriguing new talents.

Off-screen, Matthews’ influence is expanding into fashion. She is in the final stages of signing with a leading New York City modeling agency, signaling a crossover into high-fashion campaigns. She also recently wrapped a major campaign with a globally recognized fashion brand, further establishing her as a multifaceted force in entertainment.

Described by those who’ve worked with her as a Hollywood heartthrob in the making, Matthews exudes both poise and depth, the hallmarks of a true modern star. With a major television series and a feature film on the horizon, Alyssa Matthews is carving out a powerful space for herself in Hollywood, and her rise is only just beginning.

 

 

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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