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Jane Schoenbrun Sets Netflix Show 'Black Hole'
TV & Streaming

Jane Schoenbrun Sets Netflix Show ‘Black Hole’

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

It won’t be long before all of our TVs are glowing with a new Jane Schoenbrun series.

The filmmaker is set to write and direct an adaptation of Charles Burns’ comic book series “Black Hole” co-produced by New Regency and Netflix, which has received a straight-to-series order from the streaming giant. The project will mark Schoenbrun’s first foray into television after directing the acclaimed films “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair” and “I Saw the TV Glow.”

News of the series was first reported by THR. IndieWire has reached out to Schoenbrun’s representatives for additional comment.

Published over the course of 12 issues between 1995 and 2005, “Black Hole” tells the story of a group of Seattle teenagers who develop severe genetic mutations after encountering a sexually transmitted disease known as “the Bug.” The material seems firmly within Schoenbrun’s wheelhouse, as the auteur often finds parallels between teenage sexual awakenings and genre film horrors.

Nobody Wants This Season 2 stars Kristen Bell as Joanne, Adam Brody as Noah, shown here sitting at a beer garden

The series marks Schoenbrun’s third major project to be announced since the success of “I Saw the TV Glow,” and the auteur will soon be rolling out work in three different mediums.

Their third feature film, “Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma,” is currently in post-production. The film, which follows a director hired to reboot a dated slasher franchise who becomes obsessed with reclusive star of the original movie, stars Hannah Einbinder and Gillian Anderson.

Schoenbrun will also soon release their debut novel, “Public Access Afterworld,” which was originally developed as a TV series that never materialized. Schoenbrun changed course and the novel was acquired by Random House imprint Hogarth, with the author describing it as a conclusion to their loose “screen trilogy” that began with “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair” and “I Saw the TV Glow.”

The official synopsis for “Public Access Afterworld” reads: An epic blend of literary fantasy, coming-of-age, sci fi, and horror, “Public Access Afterworld” traces the mysterious transmissions of a secret television network known as Public Access Afterworld that draws in a wide cast of characters, from two teenage best friends in a suburban New York basement to a housewife during the last days of World War II to a young trans content moderator at a YouTube-like corporation, who becomes an unlikely hero capable of rescuing a century of victims disappeared into the broadcast’s signal. “Public Access Afterworld” is a thrilling and profound novel of identity, conspiracy, the secret occult history of American entertainment, and the narratives that guide our lives and shape our world.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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(L to R) Adam Brody as Noah, Kristen Bell as Joanne in episode 203 of Nobody Wants This.
TV & Streaming

Netflix Hit Back, but Not Better

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

When Erin Foster’s Netflix rom-com Nobody Wants This premiered last year, I discussed it through one of my favorite prisms: Is it good for the Jews?

My answer was a mixed “Yes.” The first season, in which a rabbi (Adam Brody‘s Noah) falls for a shiksa podcaster (Kristen Bell‘s Joanne) — “shiksa” being the show’s oft-repeated preferred slur, not mine — aimed for laughter and swooning, but simultaneously took a serious-minded approach to interfaith relationships and a specific and detailed approach to Judaism. I appreciated that effort, especially in a television landscape in which any expression of religion, much less Jewishness, is decidedly rare.

Nobody Wants This

The Bottom Line

Not a shanda, but not quite a mitzvah either.

Airdate: Thursday, October 23 (Netflix)
Cast: Kristen Bell, Adam Brody, Justine Lupe, Timothy Simons, Jackie Tohn
Creator: Erin Foster

I still expressed serious concerns about the show’s lack of generosity toward its Jewish female characters — particularly Tovah Feldshuh’s Bina and Jackie Tohn’s Esther — and I was perplexed by why both Joanne and her sister/podcast partner Morgan’s (Justine Lupe) lack of knowledge or curiosity about Jewishness so frequently resembled playful antisemitism. 

Was the show itself also, you know, good? Well, my answer was similarly a mixed “Yes.” The appeal of Nobody Wants This hinged primarily on the chemistry between Bell and Brody, which isn’t uncommon for a rom-com. That the chemistry was palpable helped Nobody Wants This overcome its predictable reliance on genre clichés, while the supporting cast, especially Timothy Simons, Lupe and Tohn, helped elevate underwritten roles (though with Lupe’s performance, I was stuck pondering uncomfortable questions like, “If an actor is so charming that she makes you ignore that her character borders on antisemitic … is that GOOD?”)

Anyway, the show was a sensation, earning Golden Globe and Emmy nominations and reminding Hollywood pencil-pushers that the appetite for a proficiently made rom-com very much exists.

The second season of Nobody Wants This, then, is a reminder of why television prefers, whenever possible, to give its rom-coms a procedural coating. Moonlighting? A mystery-of-the-week procedural (but really, at its best, a rom-com). Castle? A mystery-of-the-week procedural (but really, at its best, a rom-com). Bones? A mystery-of-the-week procedural (but really, at its best, a rom-com). It just helps for your characters to have other things to do in addition to falling in and out of love. Otherwise, a distinct risk of repetition and exhaustion sets in.

Nobody Wants This doesn’t fall off a creative cliff in its second season, but a lot of the charm is diminished. The new creative team takes evident pains to adjust some of the character-based problems from the first season, but in the process of expanding the profile for several supporting players, Brody and Bell are left playing often identical beats of uncertainty and insecurity to the ones that worked well in the first season. In the process, the chemistry and overall appeal dwindle dramatically.

The new season, boasting Jenni Konner and Bruce Eric Kaplan as new showrunners, picks up fairly soon after the first — though time generally doesn’t matter much in the world of Nobody Wants This, except for when people want to complain about things being “too soon” or “too slow.” 

Noah and Joanne are basically living together, except for when the show wants to remind us of Joanne’s insecurity that they’re not formally living together. The whole “Joanne isn’t sure she’s ready to convert to Judaism” thing remains their primary bone of contention, though the writers give Noah a contrived professional crisis so that they have things to talk about other than why Joanne can’t commit to converting or not converting.

Adding to the rom-com hijinks are extended storylines with Simons’ Sasha, whose professional life has vanished entirely along with father Ilan (Paul Ben-Victor, almost totally absent); Esther hitting bumpy patches; and Morgan embarking on a romance with Dr. Andy (Arian Moayed), an accelerated love story that Joanne disapproves of but the show seems to find amusing rather than ultra-disturbing given its origins. We spend more time with Joanne and Morgan’s parents (Stephanie Faracy’s Lynn and Michael Hitchcock’s Henry).

The season premiere, written by Foster and featuring the return of Noah’s rec league basketball team, again positions Feldshuh’s Bina, frequently my biggest source of discomfort in the first season, as an ongoing adversary. Then she nearly vanishes in the second half of the season, which is one way of dodging the Jewish mom stereotyping.

Another way is to write characters out of a maternal role, like Esther, whose teenage daughter has become invisible (figuratively), allowing Esther to concentrate on more important things like getting bangs and waffling on whether or not she’s jealous of Sasha and Morgan’s friendship. Esther’s still a little mean this season, but she’s playfully mean and makes no effort to break Joanne and Noah up, so we can like her without complication. As for Morgan — still my most consistent source of laughs — giving her a relationship of her own, however bad that relationship is, makes her less prone to saying dumb things about Jewishness.

Thus, Esther and Morgan become less problematic characters and Bina becomes a frequently mentioned but less frequently seen afterthought. That’s a way of fixing those problems! 

But new problems arrive with Noah and Joanne. In the first season, Noah was perhaps over-idealized, to a point at which it was hard to feel like the generally superficial and dithering Joanne was on his level. This season turns Noah into a smarmier, borderline sociopathic character — far more like Joe from Netflix’s You than anybody is likely to want to admit — whose condescension often became insufferable for me. I’d say I sympathized more with Joanne, but it’s almost like the writers realized that despite her being based on the series creator, she had no specific personality traits, so scripts are constantly trying to over-explain her limited eccentricities.

An episode featuring Brody’s real-life wife Leighton Meester tries to fill in some backstory blanks, as does an episode that spells out how Joanne’s parents’ divorce impacted her. But people kept making pronouncements about Joanne’s personality and I kept responding with, “Huh?” Plus, somehow Joanne and Morgan’s podcast is less plausible and less purposeful than it was last season.

There are still times that Brody and Bell generate some sweetness, but the heat and crackle between them is missing — by choice a lot of the time, but far from all of it. The entire first season sold the premise, “These two characters absolutely belong together, no matter the obstacles.” This season builds to a nearly identical finale decision and I was hard-pressed to care.

The vagueness extends to the season’s perspective on Judaism, which is simultaneously more and less. 

The season is very invested in exploring Jewishness as a way of processing the world, which of course it is, more than as a “religion,” which of course it is for many people. At the same time, Nobody’s Wants This becomes like the rom-com version of one of those high school-set shows in which the book they’re studying any particular week ties in directly to the theme of the episode. Noah is constantly making sermons or toasts cribbed from Talmud for Netflix Subscribers. Then again, there’s a full Purim episode, so I shouldn’t quibble.

My biggest regret of the entire season is the lack of a return cameo from Leslie Grossman’s Rabbi Shira, whose lone episode last season represented one of its most meaningful spiritual moments. Sending up the no-stakes frivolity of progressive Reform Judaism, characters played by Seth Rogen and Kate Berlant get some insight-free chuckles. Plus, bringing in Rogen forces comparisons to Platonic, which had a tighter, funnier second season and emerged as a better “Los Angeles” show.

Or maybe Nobody Wants This just requires a mulligan after the creative overhaul of the second season. Reading THR‘s cover story after watching the season and writing most of this review, I find it amazing that the first season worked as well as it did and wholly unsurprising that the second season doesn’t seem as secure in who these people are or what their story is. Maybe season three will be what I actually want.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Nobody Wants This soundtrack | Full lists of songs from Netflix comedy
TV & Streaming

Nobody Wants This soundtrack | Full lists of songs from Netflix comedy

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Nobody Wants This returns for season 2 as Joanne and Noah attempt to try to make a righjt good go of it following a dramatic, swoon-worthy season 1 finale in which he thjrew caution to the wind and committed

Netflix’s latest romcom starring Kristen Bell and Adam Brody as star-crossed lovers has proved to be a huge hit, landing the No 1 spot on the platform’s most-watched list.

Nobody Wants This stars Bell as an agnostic podcaster and Brody as a rabbi who cross paths one day and, despite not being one another’s type on paper, fall madly in love.

The pair’s intense chemistry is accompanied by a sizzling soundtrack, featuring the likes of HAIM, Dua Lipa and Celeste, as well as some lesser known artists that are certain to become your new faves.

The soundtrack contains some already certified bangers, such as Sabrina Carpenter’s Manchild and Chappell Roan’s Good Luck, Babe!

But it also boats a raft of new recordings ,which you’ll no doubt have on repeat for the foreseeable.

Find them below.

Nobody Wants This season 2 soundtrack

  • In The Dark – Selena Gomez
  • You’ve Got Another Thing Coming – Teddy Swims
  • Who’s Your Boyfriend (Acoustic) – Royel Otis
  • Heart Letting Go – Chris Stapleton
  • If the World Burns Down – Kacey Musgraves
  • That’s What I’ll Be – Baylee Lynn
  • Palomino – FINNEAS
  • Your Girl – Towa Bird
  • My House – Alessia Cara
  • Saddle Again – Role Model
  • Climate Change – Just Jayne
  • This Version of Us – Ella Langley
  • What – BENEE
  • Reach You – Portugal. The Man
  • Dancing in the Smoke – GIVĒON
  • Melodies – Dermot Kennedy
  • Homesick – Cuco
  • Bite My Tongue – Cassandra Coleman

Nobody Wants This season 1 soundtrack

Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah in Nobody Wants This. Stefania Rosini/Netflix

Episode 1

  • Summer Girl – HAIM
  • ugi – strongboi
  • Cinderella – Remi Wolf
  • Now I’m in It – HAIM
  • You and I – LÉON

Episode 2

  • See Her Out – Francis and the Lights

Episode 3

  • Water the Flowers, Pray for a Garden – Valley
  • When The Love Is Gone – Anna Graves
  • Love on the Brain – Rihanna

Episode 4

  • Fly – Anna Graves
  • MY DEMONS – GLU & Phantogram
Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah, standing next to one another in a sex shop

Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah in Nobody Wants This. Adam Rose/Netflix

Episode 5

  • Together Forever – STRFKR
  • Wanna Go Back – babyidontlikeyou
  • Can’t Win – LABRYS
  • Always Been You – Shawn Mendes

Episode 6

  • Sure Feels Good – Willie J Healey

Episode 7

  • Knock Knock – Mac Miller
  • Say Cheese – Paul Russell
  • Mirror Mountain – Mini Mansions
  • Tubthumping – Chumbawamba

Read more:

Episode 8

  • Obsessed – Olivia Rodrigo
  • If You Need to, Keep Time on Me – Fleet Foxes

Episode 9

Episode 10

  • All I Ever Asked – Rachel Chinouriri
  • (Theme From) New York, New York – Frank Sinatra
  • Crank That (Soulja Boy) – Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em
  • Levitating – Dua Lipa
  • I’ll Make Love to You – Boyz II Men
  • Strange – Celeste
  • See Her Out – Francis and the Lights

Nobody Wants This is streaming now on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £4.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Mitchells vs Machines 2 in Works at Sony Animation, Netflix
TV & Streaming

Mitchells vs Machines 2 in Works at Sony Animation, Netflix

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

The Mitchells and the machines are readying for a rematch.

Sony Pictures Animation is making a sequel to its 2021 Oscar-nominated feature “The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” with Guillermo Martinez (head of story for the first “Mitchells” film) and JP Sans (co-director of “The Bad Guys 2”) signing on to direct, marking Martinez’s directorial debut. Wendy Molyneux and Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin (“The Great North”), known professionally as the Molyneux sisters, are writing the screenplay. Production is expected to begin in early 2026.

As with the original, Netflix will distribute the “Mitchells” sequel as part of a licensing agreement with Sony. The first film was initially slated to be released by Sony Pictures in 2020 after the title was changed to “Connected,” but following delays due to the COVID pandemic, Netflix picked up the film (under its original title) for reportedly more than $100 million. The studios are planning a more collaborative partnership on the second “Mitchells” movie. (Sony’s recent animated feature “KPop Demon Hunters” landed at Netflix under a separate output deal with the streamer; it’s now Netflix’s most-watched movie ever and the companies are in talks for a sequel.)

“The Mitchells vs. the Machines” follows the titular family as they drive their eldest daughter, Katie (Abbi Jacobson), across the country to film school in California. While en route, a rogue AI called PAL (Olivia Colman) commanders an army of robots to launch a worldwide rebellion against humanity. It’s up to the Mitchells — including Katie’s technophobic father, Rick (Danny McBride), overly sweet mother, Linda (Maya Rudolph) and hyperactive younger brother, Aaron (Mike Rianda) — to save the day. The film won wide praise for its hand-painted animation style, won eight Annie Awards, including for animated feature, and was nominated for best animated feature at the Oscars.

Phil Lord and Christopher Miller are producing through their company Lord Miller, and Kurt Albrecht is producing for Sony Pictures Animation. Rianda, who co-wrote and directed the original, is an executive producer, along with Lord Miller’s Aditya Sood.

Martinez started out on the 2019 Laika production “Missing Link”; after serving as head of story on the first “Mitchells vs. Machines” film, he worked on 2023’s “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” and on “KPop Demon Hunters.”

Prior to co-directing 2025’s “The Bad Guys 2” with Pierre Perifel, Sans worked as an animator on several DreamWorks Animation films, including “Ruby Gillman: Teenage Kraken,” “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” and “Trolls World Tour.”

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Documentary Offers a New Look at Selena
Music

Netflix Documentary Offers a New Look at Selena

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

In the 30 years since her death, Selena Quintanilla’s story has been told and retold dozens of times. Between the classic 1997 Gregory Nava biopic starring Jennifer Lopez and the 2020 Netflix series starring Christian Serratos, generations of fans have come to know the contours and edges of her rise to fame — the early years in South Texas with her family band, Selena y Los Dinos; their progression from local parties and nightclubs to concert venues across the U.S. and into Mexico; the self-titled debut album; and the string of hits and successes that followed. All of it earned her the title the “Queen of Tejano,” leading up to the album she hoped would allow her to cross over with English-speaking audiences, released less than four months after she was killed. 

Through countless posthumous releases, collaborations, and tributes, Selena has become one of the most influential and well-known figures in Latin music history. And yet, the upcoming Netflix documentary Selena y Los Dinos manages to do what feels impossible: deliver a new perspective on Selena’s story — this time, in her own words. Rolling Stone has an exclusive first look at the trailer here. 

The documentary, which is out on Netflix Nov. 17, premiered at Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, and later to an emotional hometown audience at SXSW in March. An intimate scrapbook of never-before-seen home videos, concert footage, and present-day interviews with her family and former bandmates comes together to paint a vivid portrait of Selena, not just as the superstar, but also the hard-working daughter, the teasing sister, the loving wife, the dedicated bandmate, and the ambitious young Mexican-American woman grappling with the weight of her success. 

For years, Selena’s sister Suzette had kept a treasure trove of archival videos at the family’s Q-Productions offices in Corpus Christi. And though she’d never planned to share it, in the decades after her sister’s death, she wondered if they might serve as inspiration for future generations of Latinos. “I had always wanted to leave behind something more personal than what the Selena movie or the Netflix Selena series had to offer,” Suzette tells Rolling Stone. “This is a personal glimpse into our lives of us coming together as a family.”

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Suzette and the family looked for filmmakers who could shape the footage into a cohesive narrative, and came across Emmy-Award winning director Isabel Castro. 

After watching her 2022 documentary, Mija, which explored the beauty and sacrifice of being a first-generation daughter through the story of two young Latinas trying to break into the music industry, they reached out. “It was a surreal experience and an unbelievable honor,” Castro tells Rolling Stone. 

Tasked with combing through mountains of footage, Castro spent two years poring over every cassette, VHS tape, and DVD in storage, tracking Selena’s rise, from her first-ever recorded performance to her transformation into one of Tejano’s biggest and brightest stars. 

Captured in various stages of her life, new pieces of the singer fall into place: in a home movie, a young Selena with wild, frizzy hair trades jabs with her sister about their clothes; in an old interview, she admits she’s lost touch with her friends because she’s always on the road; footage filmed by Suzette documents the band’s big trip to Hollywood, where Selena beams before signing her first major record deal with EMI. “Going over all the videos of what our life was then brought on different emotions,” Suzette says. “Nothing will ever heal my heart, but it made me feel happy to be able to sit back and see what we created together and to realize our hard work paid off.”

The viewer also sees Selena studying Spanish, acutely aware of the pressures attached to her identity as a Mexican American performer. But just as crucially, we also see her bucking against the expectations placed on her as a Mexican American woman. 

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When one interviewer questions her description of herself as “dominant and aggressive,” Selena responds confidently in Spanish saying, “You have to be … There are a lot of men in this business, and if you can’t speak for yourself, they’ll run you over.” 

In a story that is sometimes outweighed by its tragic end, Selena y Los Dinos manages to radiate joy by showing Selena as a human being, vibrating with energy, determination, and an infectious sense of humor. “For me, what makes me so emotional is that every time you see it, you want the ending to be different,” Castro says. 

The director spoke with Rolling Stone about the making of the documentary, her relationship to Selena, and how she helps this film will add to the singer’s legacy. 

When the Quintanilla family first reached out to you about this project, I’m assuming there were a million thoughts going through your mind. Did you have any fears or hesitations about signing on?
Oh my God, I had so many fears going in. First and foremost, because it’s just such a deep sense of responsibility to be entrusted with this archive and to be tasked with the decision of whether or not to include certain parts of it in this official documentary. But also, threading the needle between all these different facets of her story was really difficult. 

What was your initial reaction to the idea of a Selena documentary? 
When they first reached out, my first instinct was one that I think a lot of people have, which was “Why are we telling the story now? Why are we telling it again? What is the function of that?” So I was honored and excited, but I was also a little bit apprehensive. I didn’t know how we would be able to tell her story in a new way, which was my goal. 

What was it that made you say yes?
As soon as I saw the archive, I realized not only that there was a way to tell the story in a new way, but I also realized that the family was at a point in their lives that they were ready to talk about it in a way that they never had before. With those two things combined, I thought we were going to make the film something completely special. 

I also realized the importance of telling the story again for new generations, for new audiences that might not know her or her music. So for all those reasons, even though I had some initial questions and doubts, as soon as I went down to Corpus Christi to meet the family, I knew I wanted to do this film more desperately than anything I’ve ever wanted to do in my career. 

What was your connection to Selena prior to making this documentary?
I mean, the movie was deeply inspiring to me. I’m Mexican, and I moved to the United States when I was a really young girl, and I grew up in New England in a town that was not really diverse. When I first saw the movie, it was this really seminal moment in the formation of my identity, where I saw somebody that spoke to me, and to what I was experiencing as a Mexican American. My connection to Selena really began with that movie, and I grew up watching it all the time. 

In a lot of ways, the documentary feels like a perfect companion piece to the 1997 film. It touches on a lot of the same moments, but with the added insights from Selena, the family, and the band members themselves. 
I watched the movie so many times over the course of digitizing the archive, doing research, and going into the interviews. It served as inspiration in that it takes a similar approach in not fixating on her death, and exploring the things that played out behind the scenes. The movie was also really significant for the family, so it provided a way for us to talk about and reference different points in their lives. 

Now that the documentary is finished, it’s been really fun and exciting to go back to the movie and see the ways in which Selena is almost commenting on these different plot points from this narrative I grew up knowing by heart. I feel like the documentary is an opportunity to hear directly from Selena about her life. 

The documentary doesn’t spend much time on Selena’s death, or her killer. Was that a conscious choice you made going in?
Right from the beginning, what I told the family is that I just wasn’t really that interested in her death. In my opinion, people get a little bit preoccupied with this story of how she died, and to me, it’s this totally nonsensical tragedy. It just wasn’t as interesting to me as getting a better understanding of the trajectory of her career, her life, and trying to understand who she was as a person through all of this footage. 

Tell me a little bit about the archival process for this film. How much material were you sorting through, and how did you decide what you wanted to use?
This was the first archival film I’ve ever made, and I feel like I just jumped right into the deep end. Me and [producer J. Daniel Torres] ended up traveling to Corpus Christi over a dozen times. We added it up at one point, and it was over six months that we spent going through raw material, logging footage, and trying to find the best version of it. We transcribed every interview Selena ever did, from her earliest interviews, all the way until her untimely death. That was all over the course of two years, just screening the footage with Ricky [Vela, Selena’s former bandmate], who still works at Q Productions. 

What were you looking for in these mountains of footage? 
We wanted to find moments in her interviews that spoke to her emotional experience. It was really important to me that this story be told through the archive as opposed to being told through interviews. I wanted the interviews to provide supplemental and emotional context to what we were seeing. It wasn’t until we’d seen the entire archive and digitized it that we started interviews, so that was over two years into the process before we even brought cameras down. We wanted to have the story tracked, but I also thought it was really important that we build up a relationship with the family, and build a kind of shared understanding of what we wanted the film to be. 

How did going over this footage change your understanding of who Selena was?
To me, what emerged during the process was Selena’s personality. I’ve seen videos of her performing, I’ve seen her interviews, and she was always so poised. Even from a young age, she was incredible at stepping onto a stage and just immediately turning on. But the moments that I felt closest to her were when you see her backstage, and you get a window into what she was really like. She was just really funny. When I tried to understand the charisma of Selena, because she really has this magnetism that is just impossible to turn away from, I think her humor is a really big part of it. 

Over the years, there’s been one major voice “missing” from most of the interviews about Selena: her mother, Marcella. How did her participation in this documentary come about? 
The interview with Marcella was so unbelievably special and unique, because she doesn’t like to be in front of the camera, understandably so. At first, she wasn’t sure whether or not she wanted to do an interview for this film, but one day she called us and said, “I’m ready. I want to do the interview.” It’s the first time she’s done an interview in almost 30 years, and it was shorter in comparison to the others in the film, but it was so incredibly powerful. That conversation was so authentic and it really came from her heart. 

Selena’s relationship with Chris Perez is so important to understanding who she was, but their elopement also represents a challenging time for Selena and her family. How did you want to go about that? 
The interview with Chris was so beautiful and so crucial. He was part of this moment in Selena’s life where she kind of went against her family’s wishes, and that created tension between her and her family. But I really genuinely feel now that they’re so close and it was important both to Chris and to the family that he was a part of this project. Their love story was ultimately such a big part of Selena’s story, and also of her growing older and making her own decisions.

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In the documentary, we hear from the family directly about the elopement. They all seemed hurt about the way it happened, but all these years later, Suzette comes around saying she’s glad Selena didn’t wait, because “she got to experience love.” 
Yeah, it’s a really beautiful line, because I think it also speaks to the fact that there’s so much love there for Chris. Even though it’s a fraught moment in the story at the time, it really lands in a place of love and respect for what they had.

Suzette and the Quintanilla family talked about this documentary being an opportunity to introduce Selena to new generations of fans. How do you hope the film plays a role in adding to her legacy? 
The goal from the beginning was to hear from Selena herself. I think from watching the raw footage of her, you really get a sense of what she was feeling and what she was experiencing as this unbelievable professional trajectory was playing out, and as her star was growing and growing. I hope that what’s different with this film is that it gives people the chance to connect, on an intimate and emotional level, with Selena, her family, and their music.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Harlan Coben's Thriller For Netflix Gets First-Look Images
TV & Streaming

Harlan Coben’s Thriller For Netflix Gets First-Look Images

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Here are a bunch of first-look images at Netflix‘s latest Harlan Coben drama series.

Run Away stars James Nesbitt, Ruth Jones, Minnie Driver and Alfred Enoch, and will once again transport a Coben novel from the U.S. to the UK, with the story being filmed in and around Manchester. It launches on January 1, 2026.

The eight-part series follows Simon (Nesbitt), whose perfect life with a loving wife and kids fell apart his eldest daughter Paige ran away. He finds her, vulnerable and strung out on drugs in a city park, but she’s not alone, and an argument escalates into shocking violence. In the aftermath, Simon loses his daughter all over again, and his search to find her will take him into a dangerous underworld.

Frequent Coben collaborator ITV Studios-owned Quay Street Productions is making the show. Coben will serve as executive producer through his company, Final Twist Productions. Fool Me Once and Brassic writer Danny Brocklehurst is the lead writer and executive producer. Quay Street, its founder Nicola Shindler and Richard Fee are the other executive producers. Tom Farrelly, Amanda Duke and Charlotte Coben are episodic writers. Series producer is Guy Hescott, Will McDonagh is producer, Charlotte Coben is associate producer, Nimer Rashed and Isher Shaota are the lead directors and Orla Maxwell led on casting.

Also starring are Lucian Msamati, Jon Pointing, Tracy-Ann Oberman, Annette Badland, Maeve Courtier-Lilley, Ellie de Lange, Adrian Greensmith, Ellie Henry, Ingrid Oliver, Finty Williams, Joe McGann and Amy Gledhill.

The series follows on from Coben’s latest thriller Netflix, Missing You, which is now a top-ten all-time English-language show for the streaming with over 94 million views since launch in January 2024. Both are among the 13 titles bestselling author Coben has made for Netflix. Others include Fool Me Once, Gone For Good, The Stranger and Stay Close. Following Run Away will be Caught, Just One Look and I Will Find You.

James Nesbitt and Minnie Driver

Netflix

Ruth Jones

Netflix

Ruth Jones and James Nesbitt

Netflix

Ruth Jones

Netflix

James Nesbitt

Netflix

Maeve Courtier-Lilley and Jon Pointing

Netflix

Albert Enoch

Netflix

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Max Parker and Kris Mochrie; Angus O
TV & Streaming

Netflix Show Cast’s Relationship Statuses

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

In the new Netflix series Boots, Cameron Cope (Miles Heizer) enlists in the Marines in the early 1990s. As he’s put through his paces in boot camp training, Cameron also has to contend with keeping his sexuality a secret. He could be arrested if anyone finds out that he’s gay — the show takes place before it was legal for LGBTQ+ people to serve in the military.

Since the subject of who one loves is so central to the plot of Boots, we thought we’d do a deep dive into the actors’ real-life romances. What is Heizer’s relationship status in real life? What about the dreamy Max Parker, who plays Cameron’s complicated instructor? Scroll down to find out who in the Boots’ cast is single or taken.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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Will the Netflix TV Show Return? – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Will the Netflix TV Show Return? – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Patti Perret/Netflix © 2024

Netflix’s Boots quickly became a hit after its debut on the streamer on October 9, 2025. Based on Greg Cope White’s 2015 memoir, The Pink Marine, the series follows bullied gay teenager Cameron Cope (Miles Heizer), who joins the United States Marine Corps with his best friend. Since all episodes were released the same day, fans are wondering if a season 2 is in the cards.

Hollywood Life has the latest updates on the possibility of a second season of Boots below.

What Is the Boots TV Show About?

According to its logline, Boots follows Cameron, a “bullied gay teen [who] joins the Marine Corps with his best friend despite risks. In boot camp they experience profound personal change amid danger, as their platoon confronts both literal and figurative landmines.”

Will There Be a Season 2 of Boots?

At the time of publication, Netflix has not announced a season 2 of Boots yet. However, Heizer hopes to continue the show. He previously told Variety that there were still “a lot of stories to tell, from more of Greg’s different experiences in the Marines to ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ to when it was repealed.”

“I would do it for 10 seasons if they let us,” the 13 Reason Why alum added.

'Boots' Season 2: Will the Netflix TV Show Return?
Courtesy of Netflix

Who Is in the Boots Cast?

Heizer leads the cast, playing Cameron Cope, in addition to Liam Oh as Ray McAffey, Max Parker as Sergeant Liam Robert Sullivan, Vera Farmiga as Barbara Cope, Cedrick Cooper as Staff Sergeant Marcus McKinnon, Ana Ayora as Captain Denise Fajardo, Angus O’Brien as Thaddeus Beau Sterling Hicks and Dominic Goodman as Isaiah Nash.

Pentagon’s Reaction to Boots: Read Statement

The Pentagon slammed Netflix for its “woke garbage” (without directly naming Boots) in a statement obtained by Entertainment Weekly.

“Under President Donald Trump and Secretary [Pete] Hegseth, the U.S. military is getting back to restoring the warrior ethos,” Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said in the statement. “Our standards across the board are elite, uniform, and sex neutral because the weight of a rucksack or a human being doesn’t care if you’re a man, a woman, gay, or straight.”

Kingsley went on to note that officials “will not compromise our standards to satisfy an ideological agenda, unlike Netflix whose leadership consistently produces and feeds woke garbage to their audience and children.”

Is it Illegal to Be Gay in the U.S. Marines?

It is not currently illegal to be openly gay in the U.S. Marine Corps. However, it was illegal in the 1990s, when Boots is set. At the time, the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy was in play from 1994 until 2011. Under this policy, if a Marine’s homosexuality or bisexuality became known, they could face discharge.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | Duchess Meghan talks As Ever, Netflix, WLM & more at the Fortune summit
Celebrity News

bitchy | Duchess Meghan talks As Ever, Netflix, WLM & more at the Fortune summit

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

The Duchess of Sussex was a speaker at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Summit in Washington, DC on Tuesday. She wore a creamy ensemble from Brochu Walker, lowkey one of her favorite post-Sussexit labels. She also wore some jewelry pieces from Ukrainian brand Guzema! She wore some Guzema pieces in New York as well. I have no idea if she was gifted all of these rings and earrings, or if she received one or two gifts and decided to buy more. I do know that Harry came back from Kyiv absolutely loaded down with gifts, many of which were specifically for Meghan. Anyway, the blouse is beautiful, and Meghan just looked amazing here.

During her Q&A session, Meghan spoke at length about women’s financial independence, what her first year of As Ever taught her, and what was her headspace in 2020, when she and Harry were just starting to build their lives in California. I was really interested in a lot of business talk. She confirmed that With Love, Meghan has an eighty-person crew, which still astounds me. And yet, she says that As Ever has a ten-person team. Hm. She also spoke about the new Netflix deal, which the Sussexes signed a couple of months back. Some quotes:

Meghan’s 10-person As Ever team: “I think you have to work as a team. You’re only as solid as the rest of the people around you. And also, I want the life-work balance, if such a thing exists. I’m still going to go and chaperone the first-grade field trip and run back and try to finish the meetings. I love the creative part, which I think I’ve touched on quite a bit, and the brand is an extension of my aesthetic, but it’s more than that. The operational side is so key.”

The Sussexes’ new first-look deal with Netflix: “My husband and I were in an overall deal with Netflix then, not dissimilar to Higher Ground and the Obamas’ deal, once that had come to its term, the extension of it — which was such an incredible sign of the strength of our partnership — was now being in a first-look deal. Which is also exciting because it gives us flexibility to go to our partners first, then at the same time, shop content that might not be the right fit for Netflix but has a home somewhere else.”

Whether we’ll get a WLM Season 3: “Well, the holiday special is coming out in November. It’s a really good one. So I think looking at that format — again, it’s a year of learns — so we’re able to say, ‘Eight episodes for two seasons — it’s a lot of work. And having done Suits for seven years, I remember what goes into a production. I also recognize how much people want content in different sizes. Part of what we’re testing out now is, it’s amazing to sit and watch a show for 30 minutes, but how can I give you a recipe in two minutes? And where can I share that with you? And how that continues to grow As ever.”

[From People Magazine]

I’m including the full video of the Q&A session below. Meghan expands even further on the new Netflix deal and mentions that there’s been work behind-the-scenes developing content, and she makes it sound like there are some projects coming up in the next year. That being said, it doesn’t sound (to me) like she’s super-committed to With Love, Meghan. Her priority is clearly As Ever above all else, and she sees WLM as primarily adjacent to As Ever at this point. It will be very curious to see if there’s a Season 3. While her WLM crew is insanely large for such a small, intimate show, I also feel like they’re shooting the episodes pretty quickly. So… I don’t know.

Screencaps courtesy of Fortune’s video.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Knight of Cups: Netflix streaming underrated Christian Bale starrer this week
Bollywood

Knight of Cups: Netflix streaming underrated Christian Bale starrer this week

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Millions of Christian Bale’s fans around the world know the actor for his classic portrayal of Batman or Bruce Wayne in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight trilogy. But there is one particular movie in the 51-year-old’s filmography that is counted among one of his most underrated works. In 2015, the English actor joined hands with filmmaker Terrence Malick for romance-drama Knight of Cups, which is now available for streaming on Netflix.

Christian Bale in Knight of Cups (2015)

Knight of Cups: What to know?

The plot of the movie revolves around an aimless LA-based screenwriter who is wandering in search of “something missing,” while reflecting on his past relationships, especially with women.

Alongside Christian Bale, the movie features several other A-listers like Cate Blanchett, Natalie Portman, Nick Kroll, and Antonio Banderas.

The title of the movie has been taken from a deck of tarot cards, and includes other references like The Moon, The Handman and The Judgement from major and minor arcana of a tarot deck for its characters.

Bale stars as the Knight of Cups in the movie. With no defined structure, it has been divided into 10 parts and has a philosophically rigorous approach, presenting multiple different ideas all at once.

Also Read: Victoria Beckham gets real in Netflix docuseries; reveals struggles with bullying, body image, motherhood

Malick’s filmmaking, critical appreciation

Knight of Cups includes scenes from the protagonist’s dreams, drug experiences, memories and reality, thus creating a mystery for the audiences to unfold while they hold on to their guesses. A reflection of Malick’s personality, Knight of Cups takes an overused premise and gives it a whole new makeover.

Art connoisseurs might find a poetic sense in the tone of the movie. For this major project, Malick was inspired by some religious texts like Christian allegory The Pilgrim’s Progress and a hint of Dante’s mode of expression, thus linking the narrative with a tarot deck. The movie is now streaming on Netflix.

Also Read: Netflix unveils TV gaming: How to play, what’s available and more

FAQ:

Is Christian Bale famous?

Yes, Christian Bale is popular for his commendable acting skills in Hollywood movies.

Was Christian Bale in The American Psycho?

Yes, Christian Bale was the lead in The American Psycho.

Is Terrence Malick American?

Yes, Terrence Malick was born in Ottawa. He is an American filmmaker.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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