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Production House Vyjayanthi Movies Confirmed Deepika Padukone Being Replaced In The Sequel of 'Kalki 2898 AD' 
Bollywood

Production House Vyjayanthi Movies Confirmed Deepika Padukone Being Replaced In The Sequel of ‘Kalki 2898 AD’ 

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

A shocking update has been revealed about the highly anticipated sequel to “Kalki 2898 AD”, as the leading lady of the film, Deepika Padukone, will not be a part of the film. The makers of the blockbuster epic confirmed her exit through an official announcement, leaving fans surprised and disappointed. Social media is now buzzing with questions about what led to her departure and who will step into the lead role opposite Prabhas in the sequel.

Deepika Padukone

Deepika Padukone Replaced From Kalki 2898 AD

The production house Vyjayanthi Movies, which backed director Nag Ashwin’s futuristic drama, revealed the news in a statement on X. The post read, “We officially announce that Deepika Padukone will not be part of the sequel to ‘Kalki 2898 AD.’ After much deliberation, we have decided to part ways. Despite the long journey of making the first film, we could not continue our partnership. A project like ‘Kalki’ demands unwavering commitment, and we wish Deepika the very best for her future endeavors.”

Deepika Padukone

Also Read: Disha Patani’s Father Jagdish Singh Patani Expressed Gratitude To CM Yogi Adityanath For Encountering The Shooters

Let us tell you that Deepika’s chemistry with Prabhas in the first installment was widely appreciated, and fans were eagerly waiting to see the duo reunite on screen. Her sudden exit has now raised curiosity about the film’s new female lead and the future direction of the franchise. Interestingly, this is not the first major project Deepika has walked away from in 2024. Earlier this year, she also exited Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s “Spirit” after reporting creative differences.

Deepika Padukone

Rumors suggested that Deepika requested an eight-hour work shift and other scheduling accommodations, which the director allegedly found unprofessional. Similar reports had circulated about “Kalki 2898 AD 2,” claiming that Deepika had asked for reduced working hours, a demand said to be a key reason behind her decision to quit the sequel. With Deepika officially stepping away, the spotlight is now on Vyjayanthi Movies to reveal who will replace her and how the film will maintain the momentum of its record-breaking first part.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas 2025 Movies, TV Shows: Dates, Casts, More Details
TV & Streaming

Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas 2025 Movies, TV Shows: Dates, Casts, More Details

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s fall, so you know what that means: It’s time for Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas to officially begin. The holiday movies and TV shows kick off the festive season on Friday, October 17.

For 16 years, Hallmark Channel has been the place to go for 24/7 holiday viewing, and that will continue this year, with nearly 80 hours of all-new programming across 10 weeks. Original movies will premiere every Saturday and Sunday, series will air on Fridays and Mondays, and everything will be available to stream the next day on Hallmark+.

It all begins with the Hallmark Channel debut of the first season of Mistletoe Murders, the cozy mystery series starring Sarah Drew and Peter Mooney, on October 17. It will lead right into the Season 2 premiere, beginning November 7. Also among the series coming as part of Countdown to Christmas is Twelve Days ‘Til Christmas starring Mae Whitman and based on the popular book by Jenni Bayliss.

Hallmark has also teamed up with iconic brands, the NFL and Grand Ole Opry, for two films, Holiday Touchdown: A Bills Love Story, with cameos from Buffalo Bills players and legends, and A Grand Ole Opry Christmas, for which Brad Paisley wrote and performs original music and with appearances from other Opry members and country music artists.

Paul Campbell, Tyler Hynes, and Andrew Walker are back in their third movie as the Brenner boys in Three Wisest Men. Hallmark is reuniting Lacey Chabert and Andrew Walker for the first time in seven years (My Secret Valentine) with She’s Making a List, while Erin Krakow and Tyler Hynes will star in Christmas Above the Clouds (their first movie together since It Was Always You in 2021 and first Christmas film together).

As usual, Thanksgiving weekend will bring two movies on Friday, November 28, Saturday, November 29, and Sunday, November 30, at 6/5 and 8/7c. And every Sunday, beginning on October 19, Hallmark Mystery will feature movie merry-thons in festive, themed collections, including A Cozy Country Christmas, Thank You for Your Service, The Magic of Christmas, and A Little Christmas Faith. And every Tuesday night, starting on October 21, you can binge holiday movies with your favorite stars with back-to-back films starring Paul Campbell, Jessy Schram, Victor Webster, and more.

“It’s an honor that millions of viewers welcome Hallmark into their homes each year and make us part of their annual holiday traditions,” said Darren Abbott, Chief Brand Officer, Hallmark, in a statement. “Audiences turn to Hallmark Channel and Hallmark+ for programming that they can watch with their families that they know will fill them with hope and joy. This year promises an unforgettable slate of movies and series featuring fan-favorite actors that will deliver everything fans love about Christmas on Hallmark Channel.”

Watch the promo for Countdown to Christmas:

Scroll down to get all the details about Hallmark Channel’s Countdown to Christmas movies — and three series — from the casts and premiere dates to official synopses as well as photos. Then, head to the comments section below to tell us which movies you’ll be watching.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Amy Poehler Slams Oscars for Rejecting Comedy Movies
TV & Streaming

Amy Poehler Slams Oscars for Rejecting Comedy Movies

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Amy Poehler called out the Oscars on her “Good Hang” podcast for always ignoring comedy movies when it comes time to giving out awards. Poehler’s latest episode featured Olivia Colman as a guest as part of the latter’s press tour for the Searchlight Pictures comedy “The Roses.” Colman stars opposite Benedict Cumberbatch, who called in to the “Good Hang” episode to chat briefly with Poehler.

“If you can do comedy, you can do anything. I really do believe that,” Cumberbatch proclaimed.

“Of course. You don’t have to tell me, babe!” replied Poehler, who is a bonafide comedy icon thanks to “SNL,” “Parks and Recreation,” her stints hosting the Golden Globes with Tina Fey and more.

“Every single year at the Oscars, everybody [in comedy] gets blanked and all the serious people get up and accept and accept,” Poehler said. “It’s some hot bullshit! Because comedy is not easy. And I got to tell you, both you and Olivia can do both.”

While the Oscars have certainly been embracing more movies with comedic elements over the years, including best picture winners such as “Anora” and “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” it usually snubs traditional comedies that don’t have a dramatic bent to them. Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” was a recent rare exception with eight nominations, but it did not win best picture and both Gerwig and star Margot Robbie were shockingly shut out of the best director and best actress races. Rian Johnson’s comedic “Knives Out” movies only got screenplay nominations, as did “Bridesmaids” all the way back at the 2012 Oscars.

As far as comedies in the upcoming 2025 Oscar race, the more dramatic-leaning ones such as Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Bugonia” and Noah Baumbach’s “Jay Kelly” are once again dominating the early Oscar buzz conversations. Traditional comedies such as “Friendship,” “Good Fortune” and “The Naked Gun” all earned strong reviews but are most likely long shots. Johnson is back with his third “Knives Out” movie, “Wake Up Dead Man,” but whether this franchise can break out into major categories like best picture or acting races remains to be seen.

Watch Colman’s full appearance on the “Good Hang” podcast in the video below.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Charlie Sheen opens up about sexual encounters with men
Celebrity News

Charlie Sheen made awful homemade movies with the Penn brothers

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

14 September 2025

Charlie Sheen made awful homemade movies with the Penn brothers.

Charlie Sheen made awful homemade movies with the Penn brothers

The Platoon actor, 60, grew close to actors Sean Penn and his sibling Chris Penn as they lived near each other in Malibu, and has now opened up about how they made terrible attempts at making films together as they grew up.

Charlie said in conversation with David Duchovny, 65, at the 92nd Street Y in New York on 8 September to promote his memoir The Book of Sheen, the Penn brothers had a huge influence on his early years, adding: “We just found it as a way to just kind of emulate, mimic, copy what our parents were doing. The two houses that it kind of bounced between – Casa Penn and our place – is really where that all happened.”

The son of actors Martin Sheen and Janet Sheen, Charlie remembered how his and the Penn families contributed to their makeshift productions.

He said: “We never really had the resources to do substantial productions. We were reliant on whatever dad would kick in or what the Penn parents, (actress) Eileen and (director) Leo, what they would kick in… basically our prop department was blank guns, blanks and blood.”

While the work was rough around the edges, Charlie said it cemented a bond with Sean, now 65, that has endured throughout their lives.

He explained part of his motivation in writing his new autobiography was to show how much Sean and Chris, who died in 2006 and 40 from heart disease, had meant to him – and that he wanted Sean to see that in print.

Charlie added: “A lot of that (book) was written out of love for Sean. I wanted Sean to really read how much his brother meant to me.

“And I was tempted to go to Sean and read him stuff as I was creating it.

“And I was like, ‘No, man, that’s probably not how Chris would’ve handled it. He would’ve walked in and just (said), ‘Here it is’.”

The Book of Sheen also recounts Charlie’s later Hollywood career, including his roles in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Two and a Half Men and Spin City, as well as his struggles with addiction.

But at its heart, he said it acknowledges the friendships and family ties that shaped him.

Charlie added: “Writing the book was the most challenging job I’ve ever had, and hands down the most rewarding one.”




September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Mescal & Jessie Buckley Rip Your Heart Out
TV & Streaming

Movies Are Meeting the Moment but Distributors Are Scared of Palestine

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The following article is an excerpt from the new edition of “In Review by David Ehrlich,” a biweekly newsletter in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the site’s latest reviews and muses about current events in the movie world. Subscribe here to receive the newsletter in your inbox every other Friday.

Ahoy, mateys! And welcome to another thrilling installment of “In Review.” Over the last two weeks I have journeyed far and wide across this land to bring you the hottest takes on the fall’s most exciting new movies, even if the best of them — by some distance — was the one I saw at the exotic AMC 34th Street (more like One Escalator After Another am I right?). 

US actor Michael Shannon attends the premiere for "Nuremberg" at Roy Thomson Hall during the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) in Toronto, Ontario, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Cole BURSTON / AFP) (Photo by COLE BURSTON/AFP via Getty Images)

Here are five things I learned on my travels:

Mona Fastvold and Brady Corbet Are Re-Writing the Rules

‘The Testament of Ann Lee’

When “The Brutalist” stormed the festival circuit around this time last year, it seemed like something of a unicorn — as well as an almost impossible sell. Twelve months, 10 Oscar nominations, and one rapturous quasi-musical later, it feels like a new kind of recipe for success. How do you follow an epic historical drama about a traumatized European who sails to America and builds their own church? You make another one, of course.

The parallels between Mona Fastvold and Brady Corbet’s future projects may not rhyme quite as clearly as those between “The Brutalist” and “The Testament of Ann Lee,” but the most exciting thing about this one-two punch isn’t their thematic overlap so much as it is their shared sense of scale and self-possession. At a time when Hollywood is both deathly allergic to risk and physically incapable of making anything that costs less than $100 million, the fact that Fastvold and Corbet have now both directed gorgeous, sweeping, and creatively unbound movies for a fraction of that cost in Hungary feels like a new way forward. Sure, that model requires the kind of zeal and asceticism more associated with a religious movement than a film set, but “The Testament of Ann Lee” is nothing if not an ideal example of how it’s done. 

Passion Projects Are a Double-Edged Sword

‘Frankenstein’

Most good movies take a hot minute to get made, but this fall saw the premieres of several films — surely more than I’ve made room to mention here — that were marinating for decades. I mean, Guillermo del Toro was probably pitching his “Frankenstein” to the other kids in the middle of class during first grade, where his teacher forced him to write “I will not be sympathetic toward monsters” on the blackboard 100 times as punishment. 

But timing is everything, and it often only appears as if all of the pieces are falling into place. On the one hand, Park Chan-wook was duly rewarded for waiting 20 years to direct “No Other Choice,” as his Donald Westlake adaptation — about a man so desperate for another job in his field that he murders the other candidates — is perfectly suited for the worldwide pivot to AI. Ditto Laura Poitras, who’d been trying to make a Seymour Hersh documentary since at least 2005, but didn’t manage to wear him down until world events — specifically the genocide in Gaza — had provided her the material she needed to paint her subject’s career as an investigative journalist into a broader and more damning portrait of American malfeasance.

On the other hand, del Toro has not been done any favors by dreaming of “Frankenstein” for so long; his love for the material is sacred and unimpeachable, but it comes through more palpably in how he talks about Mary Shelley’s novel than it does in any part of the movie he’s made from it. Soapy, broad, and so chintzy-looking despite its budget that it was difficult for me to appreciate the tragic beauty of Frankenstein’s monster (I weep for how tactile this film might have been had del Toro made it before teaming up with cinematographer Dan Laustsen for “Crimson Peak” and committing himself to a series of increasingly garish digital veneers), this most passionate of passion projects would be so easy to mistake for any of the other gothic CGIsores from the last 25 years that it might as well be stitched together from the leftover parts of “Van Helsing.” I think there was a time when del Toro would have recognized as much, but the money and technology at this disposal has caused him to lose sight of the human element that drew him to this story in the first place.  

Most Distributors Are Still Scared of Palestine

‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’

Earlier this summer, I wrote about the fate of Nadav Lapid’s “Yes,” and how its post-Cannes disappearance appeared to suggest that festivals and distributors were afraid of films that dared to confront the most transparent moral atrocity of our times: the genocide in Gaza (Kino Lorber has since acquired U.S. rights for “Yes,” and will release it here in early 2026). Did Telluride, Venice, or TIFF do anything to improve the situation? Well, yes and no. 

Telluride, a wonderful festival whose need to appease its patrons has seen it become subtly but worryingly less adventurous in its programming, neglected to screen many of the recent films that feature the genocide as their primary subject (“Cover-Up” touches on Gaza with great purpose, but only in passing). Amid a lineup that was absolutely bursting with documentaries about everything from the American Revolution to the making of “Megalopolis,” and everyone from E. Jean Carroll to Elie Wiesel, I was disappointed not to see “Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk,” and only took an uncertain measure of consolation in the fact that Telluride chose to screen Netalie Braun’s “Shooting,” a self-reflexive Israeli film about how the country’s unchecked militarism has poisoned its cinema (I wasn’t able to see it myself, but the movie’s Letterboxd reviews make it sound appropriately damning). 

TIFF, which stepped on rake after rake in the process of premiering “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue,” an “inspiring” documentary by TIFF donor Barry Avrich about an Israeli man who saved his family from the violence of October 7, at least provided a venue for the North American premieres of Venice standout “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” as well as Locarno highlight “With Hasan in Gaza” and the rousing historical drama “Palestine 36.” The festival also, if not on its own accord, played host to a loud and defiant protest in front of the Lightbox last Sunday night, which did more to make TIFF seem relevant and in conversation with the world than most of the movies I saw there. 

And yet, of all these films, only “Put Your Soul” and “Palestine 36” have distribution, but Kino Lorber and Watermelon Pictures — the latter of which almost exclusively releases movies from or about Palestine — can’t be expected to be American cinema’s sole lifeline to the country. (“The Road Between Us” is being released on more than 1,000 screens in October.) Fingers crossed that “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” “With Hasan in Gaza,” and “Cover-Up” will all find proper homes soon, even if only under the auspices of awards season. 

Ambivalence Is Out, Emotion Is In

‘Hamnet’

I don’t want to make any sweeping pronouncements based on anecdotal evidence, a tiny sample size, and my own personal biases (just kidding, I’m a film critic, that’s pretty much my favorite thing to do), but at a time when being numb to the world is at once both a survival mechanism and a moral abdication, the festivals made it seem as if there’s a newfound premium on movies that make you feel anything strongly — even if only through brute force. 

As an introverted cynic whose love of movies can probably be explained on some level by the fact that sitting in the dark allows me to be present but not perceived, I naturally struggled with Chloé Zhao’s insistence on leading every “Hamnet” premiere audience in the same mindfulness routine that she conducted for the cast and crew on set every morning. Taking deep breaths, looking the person next to you in the eye, putting your hand on your heart, that sort of thing. I’m not proud to say that it had the opposite of the intended effect on me, making me more guarded and self-conscious rather less (though as someone who’s been prescribed stimulants to make myself less hyper for the last 20 years, I’m used to that sort of counter-intuitiveness). 

Less than an hour later, I was sobbing so hard that the woman next to me started to look worried. Maybe it was the mountain air, or that I missed my kids, or that “Hamnet” resonated with me as the story of a writer who goes on a work trip that leaves him unable to stop or bear witness to a tragedy back at home (Tweeting about movies in Telluride is basically the same thing as scripting “Macbeth” in 17th century London and don’t you dare suggest otherwise), but I forgot myself for the rest of the film.

I forgot that I was in public, and that leaving yourself completely open to the pain of others can be a paralyzing experience these days. I even forgot that Gracie Abrams was sitting right behind me. “Hamnet” will never be accused of having a light touch (my review accused the tear-jerker of “farming viewers for moisture”), but I found myself unexpectedly grateful for Zhao’s refusal to hold back, and  for how the almost pornographic sentimentality of her film invited its audience to participate in the same kind of emotional transference that Will Shakespeare and his poor wife Agnes experience towards the end of the story. 

It’s no coincidence that “Hamnet” stayed with me — sank deeper into my bones, even — over the course of the days that followed, while the stiff upper lip of “H Is for Hawk,” the probing ambiguity of “After the Hunt,” and the inert wistfulness of “La Grazia” made it that much harder to engage with those films on any level. There’s a reason why the last five minutes of “Jay Kelly” is one of the only memorable parts of that movie, just as there’s a reason why “Rental Family” loses points for not better weaponizing its treacle, and why the most interesting thing about “The Smashing Machine” is how gingerly it navigates between pain and stability. It’s never been more important to feel alive to the world, especially for those of us who are more inclined to be closed off, and it’s the movies which dispossess people of their numbness that are poised to leave the biggest mark this fall.

Movies Are Meeting the Moment

‘No Other Choice’

On a related — if somewhat perpendicular — note, it was also telling to see that several of the season’s early standouts are movies that engage with our current moment head-on. That’s most obviously true of Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” which towered over the festivals despite skipping all three of them, and, along with “Eddington,” offered the most overt rebuke to/apology for the prevailing wisdom that many of today’s greatest filmmakers are more comfortable engaging with the past (more on that next week). But it was also thrilling to see Yorgos Lanthimos confront red pill conspiracy brain and corporate technocracy with “Bugonia,” whose relevance to the present day was made all the more pronounced by the fact that it’s a remake; “Bugonia” might like the sweep and inventiveness of Lanthimos’ best work, but sometimes a brilliant Chappell Roan needle-drop is all it takes to bridge the gap between any number of different worlds. 

No such luck in Park Chan-wook’s “No Other Choice” (which favors classic Korean pop ballads over the modern American kind), but none of the maestro’s work has stung quite as hard as this one does in the pyrrhic victory of its final moments, when the film’s “Looney Tunes” violence mournfully surrenders to a situation all too real. And while “Wake Up Dead Man” might lack the fun and humor of the previous “Knives Out” movies (I found the mystery in this one labored, its major supporting roles underwritten, and Benoit Blanc’s presence frustratingly ornamental), Rian Johnson’s ensemble Netflix movie comes back to life whenever it refocuses its attention on the political underpinnings of its story — on charismatic demagogues, the self-serving cowardice that fuels their power, and the absurdity of the politics that bind them together. The least of Johnson’s trilogy does the most to position it as a coherent treatise against the indecency of Trumpian narcissism, and as a bittersweet testament to the fantasy of solving it. 

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 12, 2025 0 comments
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The 10 Best Doppelganger and Doubles Movies
TV & Streaming

The 10 Best Doppelganger and Doubles Movies

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s official: 2025 is the year of the double. This year, cinemas have been flooded with movies in which actors play, quite literally, against themselves, taking on the roles of twins, clones, and strangers who look uncannily like each other.

In February, Theo James played two diametrically opposed brothers in Osgood Perkins’ horror film “The Monkey” this February. In March, Robert Pattinson played a series of clones in Bong Joon Ho’s aptly-named “Mickey 17.” By April, Michael B. Jordan had joined the fray, playing a pair of twin brothers in Ryan Coogler’s smash hit “Sinners.” And that was just the first half of the year.

There’s just something about a doppelganger that feels uniquely cinematic. A person who looks like you, thinks like you, and maybe even lives like you has always been a subject of fascination and dread in literature and philosophy, a concept that raises questions about individuality and the collective. But on the screen, seeing the effect of one person mimicked and duplicated proves all the more uncanny and unnerving. Science fiction, horror, and a multitude of other genres have used duality as a means to terrify, unsettle, and provoke.

In the Hand of Dante

And then, of course, there’s the acting challenge. For an experienced actor or an up-and-comer alike, playing dual roles is the ultimate flex, a way to show your range in a single project. Whether playing twins or identical strangers, an actor who takes on a dual role has to manage the trick of being both an individual and a duo, of separating the two through minute behaviors while finding the shared traits that link them. It’s a demanding task, and part of what makes a doppelganger movie so intriguing to watch.

Read on for IndieWire’s selection of the 15 best doppelganger films of all time.

“The Great Dictator” (1940)

THE GREAT DICTATOR, from left: Henry Daniell, Charlie Chaplin, Jack Oakie, 1940.
‘The Great Dictator’ Courtesy Everett Collection

For his first fully sound film, silent screen icon Charlie Chaplin made an audacious doppelganger film that served as a rebuke and condemnation of fascism and Nazi German antisemitism at a time when the U.S. was still neutral to Adolf Hitler’s reign and the position could still be seen as “controversial.” Chaplin plays both lead roles, of a dictator who rises to power following the Great War and enacts antisemitic policies, and as the Jewish barber who struggles to rebel against the horrific regime. The result is a terrifically funny comedy of errors that calls to mind Shakespearean mistaken identity plays, but one with blazingly furious messaging about the importance of standing against injustice. In the dual role, Chaplin does some of his best work, particularly in a poignant ending monologue that proved he had the acting chops beyond the silent films that made him an icon.

“Vertigo” (1958)

Vertigo, Kim Novak, Jimmy Stewart
‘Vertigo‘ Everett

“Vertigo” is such a canonical classic that it can be easy to forget how deeply and genuinely disturbing it is. Alfred Hitchcock’s masterpiece is a consistently surprising watch best gone into blind, but at its core, the thriller tells a story of obsession and possession, as James Stewart’s failure of a detective grows mad about the woman he’s been assigned to track, and when he loses her, attempts to mold a look-alike in her image. Kim Novak plays both women (or maybe just one?), and gives a psychologically rich portrayal of how this double life frays her very sense of self.

“Kagemusha” (1980)

KAGEMUSHA, Tatsuya Nakadai, 1980. (c) Toho Company/ Courtesy: Everett Collection.
‘Kagemusha’ Toho Company/ Courtesy: Everett Collection.

Although it isn’t quite as famous as some of his other masterpieces, “Kagemusha” is one of Akira Kurosawa’s richest and most fascinating epics, featuring sumptuous battles and period recreations of Japan’s Sengoku period. But the conflict at the film’s heart is incredibly intimate, focusing on a common thief (Tatsuya Nakadai) forced to impersonate the dying lord Takeda Shingen. As he takes on this role, the thief grows increasingly ambitious, but he’s also haunted by the spirit of the man whose life he’s taken. Kurosawa often focused on the relationship between reality and illusion in his films, and “Kagemusha” proves one of the most direct and poignant portrayals of the murky lines between the two.

“Possession” (1981)

POSSESSION, (aka THE NIGHT THE SCREAMING STOPS), Isabelle Adjani, 1981. © Limelight International /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Possession’Courtesy Everett Collection

A cult classic horror story, Andrzej Żuławski’s “Possession” was filmed in the wake of the director’s own divorce, and its portrait of marital decay proves nightmarish. At the oblique narrative’s center is Isabelle Adjani’s phenomenal dual performance as Anna, a woman who abruptly divorces her husband amid what seems to be a psychological breakdown brought on by her mysterious doppelganger Helen. The film never entirely answers the question of their relationship conclusively, but there are more doubles in the film, including one for Anna’s husband Mark (Sam Neill). These doubles seem to represent perfect versions of the spouses at the film’s center, idealized fantasies of what the two want from each other, even as their separation tears their union apart. Whatever your interpretation, there’s no denying that “Possession” proves to be one of the most unsettling doppelganger stories of them all.

“Dead Ringers” (1988)

DEAD RINGERS, Jeremy Irons, 1988, TM & Copyright (c) 20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved.
‘Dead Ringers’ ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection

Unlike some of the films on this list, the doubles of “Dead Ringers” have a mundane reason for existence — Jeremy Irons’ dual gynecologists are merely just two twins, one shy and one confident, who run a clinic together. And yet, Elliot and Beverly Mantle prove highly unnerving, thanks in part to the off-kilter convincing performance from Irons, as well as the symbiotic relationship the film tracks. The two share everything, from their business to their lovers, a status quo that works well for Elliot but drives Beverly to madness when it hurts a woman he cares about. David Cronenberg’s chilling film is one of his least gruesome but one of his most disturbing, a portrait of a deeply toxic relationship that proves both off-putting and subtly heartbreaking.

“The Double Life of Véronique” (1991)

THE DOUBLE LIFE OF VERONIQUE, (aka DOUBLE VIE DE VERONIQUE), Irene Jacob, 1991
‘The Double Life of Véronique’ Courtesy Everett Collection

Enigmatic and bold, Krzysztof Kieślowski’s “The Double Life of Véronique” casts Irène Jacob as two identical women living in separate countries. Polish choir singer Weronika and French music teacher Véronique never come face-to-face, but they feel a sense that they aren’t alone in the world, and their strange bond causes their lives to reflect each other in strange and surprising ways. Kieślowski’s film is awash in dreamlike imagery, with hazy cinematography and an operatic score that pulses with emotion. The film is a love story of sorts, and “The Double Life of Véronique” makes you believe a bond between two people who never actually meet.

“Double Impact” (1991)

DOUBLE IMPACT, Jean-Claude Van Damme, 1991
‘Double Impact’©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Not Jean-Claude Van Damme’s best or most iconic testosterone-fueled early ’90s action flick, “Double Impact” still gets the job done by offering some dumb fun martial arts action into the world of the doppelganger. Its twist on the kind of revenge story that has fueled thousands of films of its ilk is that there isn’t just one beefy, badass Van Damme character seeking vengeance for the death of his father: there’s two. Chad is a peaceful martial arts instructor living in Los Angeles; Alex is his hotheaded estranged twin desperate to hunt down the Hong Kong crime boss who killed their father. Together, they need to overcome their differences to take down the ice-cold Raymond Zhang (Phillip Chan). Van Damme isn’t necessarily the most versatile actor, so the appeal of seeing him differentiate his two characters doesn’t really factor into the film’s appeal. Instead, “Double Impact” mostly asks the question, “Wouldn’t it be cool if Van Damme could kick twice as much ass?” The answer, predictably, is “Yes, very.”

“The Parent Trap” (1998)

‘The Parent Trap‘

Most of the films on this list use doubles as a means to terrify, unsettle, or unease the audience. Nancy Meyers’ beloved family comedy “The Parent Trap” instead uses it to fulfill the fantasy of finding a friend, a whole sibling, who understands you on a level nobody else possibly could. Lindsay Lohan, in a genuinely great performance, plays Hallie and Annie, two twins separated shortly after birth by the world’s craziest custody arrangement, in which their divorcing parents each took custody of one and decided to never see the other twin again. But when the girls meet at summer camp, they realize their shared heritage and team up to switch places and get their parents together again. A remake of the 1961 Disney film, the ’90s “Parent Trap” looms tall over the others, thanks to Lohan’s spirited and charming work as the twin girls, and a warm ensemble — including Dennis Quaid and Natasha Richardson as the mismatched parents — that ensures the film remains an all-time comfort watch.

“Mulholland Drive” (2001)

MULHOLLAND DRIVE, Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, 2001, (c) Universal/courtesy Everett Collection
‘Mulholland Drive’Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

David Lynch’s work has always been concerned with identity and duality — see the doppelgangers that pop up throughout the “Twin Peaks” canon, or the strange replacements and stolen lives in “Lost Highway.” But his magnum opus “Mulholland Drive” is perhaps the most obvious distillation of this theme, casting the central lovers, played by Naomi Watts and Laura Harring, as two different sets of women living very different lives in the city of dreams. In one, Watts is Betty, a talented ingenue and aspiring actress looking to help Harring’s amnesiac Rita find her true identity. In another, Watts is the bitter and failed Diane, whose love for Harring’s emotionally unavailable Camilla drives her to ruin. How these two parallel lives intersect is a question that has beguiled fans of the film for over two decades, but regardless of how you interpret it, it’s an unforgettable look at the rot underneath Hollywood dreams, with an all-time phenomenal performance from Naomi Watts at its core.

“Adaptation” (2002)

ADAPTATION, Nicolas Cage (twice), 2002, © Columbia/courtesy Everett Collection
‘Adaptation’©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Spike Jonze and Charlie Kaufman’s inventive and hilarious dramedy “Adaptation” has a screenplay credited to Kaufman and his twin brother, Donald. The catch? Donald doesn’t exist; he’s instead a character in the film, about his brother Charlie adapting Susan Orlean’s nonfiction book “The Orchid Thief.” Yeah… it’s a lot. “Adaptation,” in general, is just a lot, a film bursting at the seams with ideas as it satirizes and parodies the writing process, incorporating real-life elements with fiction and even managing to sort of adapt the actual “Orchid Thief” via a plotline involving Meryl Streep as Orlean and the book’s central subject John Laroche. But the film’s center is the relationship between the fictionalized Kaufman and Donald, and “Adaptation” features a great performance from Nicolas Cage as the brothers. Kaufman literalizes the process of imposter syndrome and insecurity by making Donald into the confident man the fictional Charlie wishes he could be, and their push and pull is equal parts hilarious and genuinely moving.

“The Prestige” (2006)

THE PRESTIGE, Christian Bale, Hugh Jackman, 2006. ©Touchstone Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection
‘The Prestige’©Touchstone Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

There are multiple types of doubles within “The Prestige,” Christopher Nolan’s wonderfully icy and austere psychological thriller about the world of magic. Edwardian magicians Alfred (Christian Bale) and Robert (Hugh Jackman) are bitter rivals, and when Alfred debuts a teleporting act to much acclaim, Robert is determined to one-up him and replicate it. Both of the methods these men come from the use of doppelgangers, although explaining how is already a massive spoiler in a movie that gets much mileage via sleight-of-hand reveals of its inner-workings to the audience. What makes “The Prestige” tick is its portrait of two men determined to put everything of themselves into their craft, and the third-act reveals that contextualize everything brings that idea to quite literal places.

“Moon” (2009)

MOON, Sam Rockwell, 2009. PH: Mark Tille/©Sony Pictures Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Moon’©Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

One of the best science fiction films in recent memory, “Moon” captures the isolation and horror of space through the story of Sam (Sam Rockwell), a helium miner on the Moon who has spent three years alone in the base, separated from his family and nearing the edge of his sanity. As he begins to experience hallucinations, he encounters an older version of himself, and the question of who is the clone and who is the original haunts both versions of the man. Duncan Jones’ film is a smart chamber piece about individuality and identity, with an excellent dual performance from Rockwell at its core.

“Enemy” (2013)

ENEMY, Jake Gyllenhaal, 2013. ©A24/courtesy Everett Collection
‘Enemy’A24/courtesy Everett Collection

Practically an intimate chamber drama compared to the vast epics he has now become most known for, Denis Villeneuve’s “Enemy” wrests its twisty-turny psychological thriller plot on the work of Jake Gyllenhaal, who plays two men who are physically identical but (seemingly) completely unrelated, and whose existence slowly drives them both to ruin. Gyllenhaal makes both men convincingly different: the meek history teacher Adam is quiet and insular, while local actor Anthony is direct and curt. As they stalk and circle each other, the men begin sharing similar dreams, and the question of their relation and if they’re truly the same grows more and more puzzling. “Enemy” doesn’t totally land its heady attempts to explore themes of subconscious and identity, but as a tautly made thriller, it’s aces, and Gyllenhaal’s performance(s) is enough to make it frighteningly.

“Mickey 17” (2025)

MICKEY 17, Robert Pattinson (both), 2025. © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Mickey 17’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

There’s a lot about “Mickey 17” that doesn’t fully work: Bong Joon-ho’s adaptation of the satirical Edward Ashton novel has a messy script that undercuts its bleak capitalist satire, plus some fatally miscalculated supporting performances from Mark Ruffalo and Toni Collette as grating Trumpian stand-ins. What the film does offer, however, is one of the great dual performances in recent memory from Robert Pattinson as two clones of the original Mickey Barnes, an endearing sad sack loser who signed away his life rights to die repeatedly doing the menial work necessary for a colonial spaceship voyage. Both the 17th iteration that serves as the film’s main protagonist and the 18th iteration that becomes the dope’s main foil are, in Pattinson’s hands, very easy to tell apart. Long a chameleon vocally, the “Twilight” star gives 17 a flat nasal affect but roughs it up a little playing the more independent and rebellious 18. Playing against himself, Pattinson proves especially dynamic, crafting an odd couple dynamic that’s sincere, natural, and eventually quite tragic. In a film about how capitalism treats humans as expendable, Pattinson’s performances makes these two identical men well-rounded and totally distinct individuals.

“Sinners” (2025)

SINNERS, from left: Michael B. Jordan as Smoke, Michael B. Jordan as Stack, 2025. © Warner Bros. / courtesy Everett Collection
‘Sinners’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

Ryan Coogler’s smash hit success “Sinners” has a lot on its mind, fusing Southern Gothic and vampire genre trappings with reflections of Black culture and identity. At its center is a heartrending story of brothers, embodied in a pair of great performances by a slick and charismatic Michael B. Jordan. Unlike plenty of twins on this list, Smoke and Stack — the Great War vets turned gangsters who roll into their small Mississippi hometown eager to open up an illicit new juke joint for the Black community — are more similar than they are different, following a near-identical path in life and sharing the same clever wit and deep dedication to their community. Jordan makes their differences (Smoke is a bit more insular, Stack a bit more gregarious) apparent through his acting, and those differences — along with, of course, the vampire clan that invades their establishment — is what eventually leads their paths to diverge in poignant, operatically tragic fashion.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Fans Mourn the Legendary Actor from Movies and TV Shows
Hollywood

Fans Mourn the Legendary Actor from Movies and TV Shows

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

News broke that Graham Greene died at 73. He passed away on September 1, 2025, in a Toronto hospital after a long illness. Fans, colleagues, and the film community are mourning the loss of one of the most talented actors in Hollywood.

Graham Greene Actor: A Life on Screen

Graham Greene was born on June 22, 1952, in Six Nations Reserve, Ontario. He became a leading figure among Indigenous actors in film and television. People loved him not just for his talent but also for the way he brought real depth and authenticity to every role.

He appeared in many movies and TV shows. His characters often stayed with audiences long after the credits rolled.

Graham Greene Movies and TV Shows

Greene’s career took off with Dances with Wolves, where he played Kicking Bird. This role earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. The movie itself won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

He didn’t stop there. People remember him from films like:

On television, he made appearances in popular shows like:

  • Twilight

  • Longmire

  • The X-Files

Greene had a way of making every role memorable. He could play strength, wisdom, and heart all at once.

Did Graham Greene Die? Yes, Here’s the Story

Many people are searching, “Did Graham Greene die?” Yes, he did. His passing has touched fans around the world. Tributes are pouring in from actors, directors, and fans who admired his work and his spirit.

Graham Greene Dances with Wolves: His Most Famous Role

People will always remember Graham Greene Dances with Wolves. Kicking Bird became an iconic character in Hollywood. Greene brought the role to life in a way that few actors can. His performance helped define his career and opened doors for more Indigenous actors in major films.

Remembering Graham Greene

Graham Greene’s work lives on in his movies and TV shows. His legacy goes beyond awards. He showed the world what talent, dedication, and heart can do. Fans can watch his movies and TV shows to celebrate his life and remember the actor who gave so much to film and television.

Image Credit: Canada’s Theatre Museum, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Top 10 Underrated Hindi Movies
Bollywood

10 Underrated Hindi Movies: From Irrfan’s Paan Singh Tomar To Sushant Singh Rajput’s Sonchiriya

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Top 10 Underrated Hindi Movies
Top 10 Underrated Hindi Movies. (Photo Credit – Netflix/Zee5)

However, Bollywood offers a lot of hidden gems to those willing to dig deeper. Here are the top 10 underrated Hindi movies that deserve your attention.

1. Udaan (2010)

  • IMDB Rating: 8.1/10
  • Director: Vikramaditya Motwane
  • Streaming On: YouTube

Plot: A tale of dreams and aspirations, Udaan tells the story of Rohan, a teenager forced to live with his authoritarian father after being expelled from boarding school. Directed by Vikramaditya Motwane, this film beautifully captures the struggle between following one’s dreams and adhering to societal expectations. Rajat Barmecha’s stellar performance as Rohan is both moving and inspiring.

2. Masaan (2015)

  • IMDB Rating: 8.1/10
  • Director: Neeraj Ghaywan
  • Streaming On: Prime Video

Plot: Neeraj Ghaywan’s Masaan is a poignant exploration of life, death, and redemption in the holy city of Varanasi. The film intertwines two separate stories of loss and longing, with powerful performances by Richa Chadha and Vicky Kaushal. Its raw portrayal of human emotions and societal pressures makes it a must-watch.

3. The Lunchbox (2013)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.8/10
  • Director: Ritesh Batra
  • Streaming On: Prime Video

Plot: A charming tale of an unusual epistolary romance, The Lunchbox showcases the power of handwritten letters in the digital age. Irrfan Khan and Nimrat Kaur deliver heartwarming performances, making this Ritesh Batra directorial a delightful watch. The film’s subtle narrative and nuanced characters make it a gem in contemporary Bollywood.

4. Ship of Theseus (2012)

  • IMDB Rating: 8/10
  • Director: Anand Gandhi
  • Streaming On: YouTube

Plot: Anand Gandhi’s Ship of Theseus is a philosophical marvel that explores identity, justice, beauty, and the meaning of life through three interlinked stories. This thought-provoking film challenges viewers to question their beliefs and perceptions. Its intellectual depth and artistic execution set it apart from mainstream cinema.

5. Paan Singh Tomar (2012)

  • IMDB Rating: 8.2/10
  • Director: Tigmanshu Dhulia
  • Streaming On: YouTube

Plot: Based on the true story of an Indian athlete turned dacoit, Paan Singh Tomar is a riveting biographical drama. Irrfan Khan’s portrayal of the titular character is both powerful and heart-wrenching. Directed by Tigmanshu Dhulia, this film sheds light on the plight of unsung sports heroes in India.

6. Manorama Six Feet Under (2007)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.5/10
  • Director: Navdeep Singh
  • Streaming On: Prime Video

Plot: A neo-noir thriller, Manorama Six Feet Under is an underrated gem in the mystery genre. Abhay Deol plays an amateur detective who gets embroiled in a complex web of deceit and murder. The film’s atmospheric tension and intricate plot twists make it a gripping watch.

7. Titli (2015)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.5/10
  • Director: Kanu Behl
  • Streaming On: Prime Video

Plot: Kanu Behl’s Titli is a gritty portrayal of a young man’s struggle to escape his oppressive family environment. Shashank Arora’s compelling performance as Titli, coupled with the film’s stark realism, provides a raw and unflinching look at the darker side of Indian society. It’s a hauntingly beautiful film that leaves a lasting impact.

8. Aligarh (2016)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.8/10
  • Director: Hansal Mehta
  • Streaming On: Zee5

Plot: Hansal Mehta’s Aligarh is a sensitive and poignant portrayal of the true story of Dr. Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras, a professor who was suspended for his sexual orientation. Manoj Bajpayee’s portrayal of Siras is deeply moving, and Rajkummar Rao’s performance as a journalist adds depth to this powerful narrative on human rights and dignity.

9. Sonchiriya (2019)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.9/10
  • Director: Abhishek Chaubey
  • Streaming On: Zee5

Plot: Set in the ravines of Chambal, Sonchiriya is a gritty tale of dacoits and redemption. Directed by Abhishek Chaubey, this film features standout performances by Sushant Singh Rajput, Bhumi Pednekar, and Manoj Bajpayee. Its realistic depiction of the harsh life of bandits and the moral dilemmas they face makes it a compelling watch.

10. Ankhon Dekhi (2014)

  • IMDB Rating: 7.9/10
  • Director: Rajat Kapoor
  • Streaming On: Prime Video

Plot: Rajat Kapoor’s Ankhon Dekhi is a whimsical and profound exploration of life through the eyes of Bauji, an elderly man who decides to believe only what he sees. Sanjay Mishra’s portrayal of Bauji is both humorous and touching, making this film a delightful yet thought-provoking experience.

These underrated Bollywood films offer a rich tapestry of stories and characters that often go unnoticed. They may not have garnered the box office collections or widespread fame, but their artistic brilliance and emotional depth make them essential viewing for any Bollywood aficionado. So, grab your popcorn, dim the lights, and dive into these cinematic treasures!

Check out our recommendations on What to Watch

Must Read: Top 10 Bollywood Thrillers That Will Keep You On The Edge Of Your Seat: From Anurag Kashyap’s Ugly To Sriram Raghavan’s Ek Hasina Thi

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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Mescal & Jessie Buckley Rip Your Heart Out
TV & Streaming

Telluride 2025 Kicks Off Oscar Race: Awards Movies to Follow

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

The Oscar race has one established frontrunner, which is often not the ideal place to be. As it happens, “Sinners” (Warner Bros.) auteur Ryan Coogler was checking out the competition at Telluride this Labor Day weekend, which unveiled a healthy slate of Oscar contenders.

Best Picture Contenders

One movie emerged that could challenge “Sinners” in multiple categories: Oscar-winner Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”) delivered heart-wrenching family drama “Hamnet” (Focus), featuring two powerhouse lead performances from Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley as William and Agnes Shakespeare. Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 bestseller, the film tracks their early romance and marriage and the birth of three children, two girls and a boy, Hamnet. Their lives are rocked by grief when they lose Hamnet to the plague, and Shakespeare buries himself in writing the tragedy “Hamlet.”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 06: Director Gus Van Sant attends the Directors Series: Gus Van Sant with Vito Schnabel during the 2024 Tribeca Festival at Spring Studios on June 06, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival)

The directors will support Zhao’s meticulous period craftsmanship and scriptwriting with O’Farrell, along with the tech categories Cinematography, Production and Costume Design, Score, and Editing — and of course Mescal and Buckley are top contenders for Best Actor and Best Actress, respectively. How will it do at the box office? Critics are raving (Metascore: 95), but it was a favorite with audiences as well. Sometimes it feels good to cry.

Also playing well at Telluride was Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest assault on audiences, timely sci-fi comedy-thriller “Bugonia” (Focus), which Will Tracy (co-writer of “The Menu”) adapted from a 2003 Korean movie. Lanthimos’ usual suspects Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons are both at the top of their form. Plemons plays a conspiracy nut who kidnaps a Big Pharma CEO (Stone), believing she’s an alien out to destroy the planet. Watching these two actors face off is great fun — until the torture begins. This movie won’t be for everyone (Metascore: 76), but Lanthimos (“The Favourite” and “Poor Things”) is beloved by Oscar voters. Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, Actor, and Actress (Stone could also go supporting), and multiple crafts are likely possibilities — unless the movie bombs at the box office.

Netflix showcased several Best Picture contenders, including “The Shape of Water” Oscar-winner Guillermo del Toro’s 19th-century horror spectacle “Frankenstein,” starring Jacob Elordi as a terrifying, towering, but sympathetic monster, and Oscar Isaac as his abusive creator. Del Toro plays with a $120 million budget, and it shows. The well-reviewed film (Metascore: 75) could compete for Picture (if its horror elements aren’t too off-putting), Director, Actor and Supporting Actor, Adapted Screenplay, and multiple crafts including Cinematography, Production and Costume Design, Editing, and most especially, Original Score. The score from Oscar-winner Alexandre Desplat (“The Shape of Water,” “The Grand Budapest Hotel”), one of his best, carries the different tones of the movie. Netflix will give the film some theater play to qualify, but its box office won’t matter.

“Frankenstein”

Also coming into Telluride from Venice was Noah Baumbach’s elegiac “Jay Kelly,” a portrait of an aging Hollywood star who resembles (and was written for) George Clooney, who is moving as a star assessing his life and the time not spent with his daughters. Adam Sandler also shines as the long-suffering manager who has sacrificed much of his life serving his needy boss. He could land a Supporting Actor nomination, his first. The entertaining movie ends on a satisfying note. It’s less of a critic’s picture (Metascore: 64) but plays well, and should satisfy Academy audiences who often respond to show business stories.

Neon will push Norway’s Cannes prize-winner “Sentimental Value” (Metacritic: 88) in multiple categories including Best Picture, director Joachim Trier (“The Worst Person in the World”), screenwriters Trier and Eskil Vogt, actors Stellan Skarsgard (long overdue for a nomination) and Renate Reinsve, and Best International Feature Film.

Other Contenders

Scott Cooper’s “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” (Metascore: 69) could be a commercial success for Disney’s Twentieth Century Pictures, and proves that “The Bear” star Jeremy Allen White can carry a movie. Acting award nominations for him and Jeremy Strong as his manager Jon Landau are in the offing.

You can’t win them all. Edward Berger’s “Conclave” follow-up “Ballad of a Small Player” (Netflix) did not wow the critics (Metascore: 51) and crowds at Telluride, although Colin Farrell’s performance earned raves.

Building on its good will at Cannes was Richard Linklater’s Netflix pickup “Nouvelle Vague” (Metascore: 71), which is a delightful black-and-white homage to Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” recreating the making of the movie in 1959. The French cast is flawless, as is Zoey Deutch in a pixie cut as Jean Seberg. But which categories will it wind up in? Cinephiles will be charmed, and writers and directors will recognize Linklater’s chops. Cinematography is a competitive category. Which is why Netflix is pushing the movie for Best International Feature Film, given its French producers, cast, and crew.

Zoey Deutch and Richard Linklater
Zoey Deutch and Richard Linklater at the Telluride BrunchAnne Thompson

Telluride tributee Jafar Panahi’s French-produced Palme d’Or winner “It was Just an Accident” (Neon) is another possibility (Metascore: 87). However, word is that this year the French committee may lean into a well-reviewed local production that played Cannes, animated feature “Arco” (Neon). Neon showed three possible Best International Feature contenders from Cannes at Telluride, including Brazil’s likely Oscar submission, “The Secret Agent” (Metacritic: 87).

Sony Pictures Classics brought one Oscar contender to Telluride, Linklater’s Berlin prize-winner “Blue Moon” (Metascore: 76) starring Ethan Hawke as declining songwriter Lorenz Hart. The movie is an emotional high-wire act that writers, directors, and actors will admire. Hawke could land his fifth Oscar nomination, and his fourth for collaborating with Linklater. The box-office prospects for this outside New York City are iffy, however.

A24 Sundance entry “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” (Metacritic: 82) built up some steam for actress Rose Byrne, who gives a stellar performance as a mother overwhelmed by a special needs child. And Harris Dickinson’s “Urchin” (Metascore: 77) starring Un Certain Regard actor-winner Frank Dillane also played well.

Some of the movies playing at Telluride, like “H Is for Hawk,” which earned raves for Claire Foy, are looking for distributors; most of the available buyers have full slates.

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Snoop Dogg Slams LGBTQ+ Representation in Kids Movies
Celebrity News

Snoop Dogg Slams LGBTQ+ Representation in Kids Movies

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Lightyear’s representation of a same-sex couple caused quite a bit of controversy at the time of its release, with countries like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates banning it altogether.

At one point, the scene was even cut from the film, per Variety, before it was later added back following former CEO Bob Chapek’s apology for the company’s silence surrounding Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill.”

“Speaking to you, reading your messages, and meeting with you have helped me better understand how painful our silence was,” Chapek wrote in a March 2022 email to employees. “It is clear that this is not just an issue about a bill in Florida, but instead yet another challenge to basic human rights.”

“You needed me to be a stronger ally in the fight for equal rights and I let you down,” he continued. “I am sorry.”

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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