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At 'Jay Kelly' Venice Press Conference, Adam Sandler Enters Oscar Race
TV & Streaming

At ‘Jay Kelly’ Venice Press Conference, Adam Sandler Enters Oscar Race

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

In the absence of George Clooney at some of the events of this year’s Venice Film Festival (he is recovering from a sinus infection), it’s fitting that one of co-star Adam Sandler’s favorite lines in “Jay Kelly,” his third film working with director Noah Baumbach is “You’re Jay Kelly, but I’m Jay Kelly, too.”

While it is said in a wildly different context in the film, the line does speak to the already fast-moving awards narrative surrounding “Jay Kelly,” even before the film first screened at the 82nd Venice Film Festival. It may be Clooney who stars as the titular “Jay Kelly,” but it is Sandler who is already getting the most Oscar buzz for his supporting role as Ron, Kelly’s longtime manager and friend.

Star Wars: Starfighter

While the film sees the fictional Jay Kelly, an A-list actor and major Hollywood icon, try to process why he did not initially feel very conflicted about choosing his career over his family, Sandler’s Ron is having a lot more of a struggle not being around for his children, in a way that mirrors how the actor functions in real life.

“Adam does have such grace and such loyalty and generosity of heart around people. He works with his family. He really does make an effort to involve [them] that’s different from Jay Kelly. He really has found a way to successfully navigate this whole thing and do it so beautifully,” said Baumbach during the film’s Venice press conference on Thursday. “To have him play somebody that, to me, represents Adam and that generosity of spirit, and also that loyalty and love that I see that comes from him, that the character feels for Jay.”

Though the role is not totally against type, as Sandler has played plenty of family men over the past decade, it does allow the comedian to lead from love instead of anger, in a way that likely will tug on Academy voters’ heartstrings more than “Uncut Gems” ever could.

And “Jay Kelly” is really an actors’ film, shedding a positive light on Oscar winners Clooney and Laura Dern as well, who said, “Noah Baumbach had me at hello, so I’ll go wherever he asks.” The Netflix film is her first collaboration with Baumbach since she won Best Supporting Actress for her role in his 2019 film “Marriage Story.”

The most likely prospect for “Jay Kelly” is for Sandler to follow suit, with a big Best Supporting Actor push, though Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress nominations for Clooney and Dern are not out of the cards.

“I could not be more proud. … The feeling it gives you. You lock in. You’re invested. Your heart is broken. You get relief,” said Sandler of working with Baumbach. “He knows how to do everything, and he finds places to make you laugh. And all our characters have ways of you if you watch them, to laugh at any new moment, to feel pain. And as an actor, all of us, you read a script like this, you say, ‘Holy shit, I can’t believe that I’m getting this gift.’”

Netflix will release “Jay Kelly” in theaters on Friday, November 14 with a streaming release to follow on Friday, December 5. 

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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A$AP Rocky Receiving Oscar Buzz For Best Supporting Actor
Music

A$AP Rocky Receiving Oscar Buzz For Best Supporting Actor

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

A$AP Rocky is making serious waves in Hollywood as his performance in Highest 2 Lowest garners early awards-season attention, including consideration for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

According to Variety’s Oscars Prediction List, Rocky’s performance has landed him in the running for a Best Supporting Actor nod, putting him in rare air for a recording artist breaking into Hollywood.

Known primarily for his genre-defining work in music, Rocky’s latest turn as Yung Felon — a sharp-witted, ambitious rap artist — places him directly alongside screen legend Denzel Washington in some of the film’s most talked-about scenes.

A$AP Rocky, attends the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025 in New York City.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

In the film, directed by Spike Lee, Rocky’s character Yung Felon finds himself in Denzel’s orbit, setting the stage for a powerful and unexpected alliance. Their chemistry is electric, and critics have taken notice of Rocky’s ability to hold his own against one of the most revered actors of our time.

“Yeah, don’t sleep on A$AP,” Spike Lee said during an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in July. “In this film, Denzel and A$AP go toe to toe.”

Lee went on to highlight the uncanny resemblance between the two stars, suggesting it added a layer of unspoken depth to their scenes.

A$AP Rocky

(L-R) Denzel Washington and A$AP Rocky attend the “Highest 2 Lowest” New York Premiere at Brooklyn Academy of Music on August 11, 2025 in New York City.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

“What’s interesting is, even before I got involved with this film, I always thought that A$AP looked like he could be Denzel’s son. There’s a big resemblance. So when you see it on the screen, it adds an element of father and son. Don’t sleep on A$AP. Don’t sleep on A$AP,” he emphasized.

Lee added, “I’ve done five films with Denzel, and when he’s in a scene with somebody, they just get overwhelmed. He’s one of the world’s greatest living actors. But A$AP wasn’t having that. Toe to toe. I mean, they were going at it.”

While Highest 2 Lowest marks Rocky’s most significant acting role to date, he’s no stranger to the screen. His previous film credits include Dope, Monster, Zoolander 2, and the indie short If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.

A$AP Rocky

A$AP Rocky at A24’s “Highest 2 Lowest” New York Premiere held at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Harvey Theater on August 11, 2025 in Brooklyn, New York.

John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images

Rocky’s musical contributions to the film, including the moody single “Trunks” and the introspective “Both Eyes Closed,” have also added to the film’s cultural weight, reinforcing his versatility as both an artist and performer.

With names like Mahershala Ali (Jurassic Park: Rebirth), Chiwetel Ejiofor (The Life of Chuck), Miles Caton (Sinners), Delroy Lindo (Sinners), Damson Idris (F1), and Idris Elba (A House of Dynamite) also in the Best Supporting Actor mix, A$AP Rocky’s inclusion speaks volumes about the impact of his performance — and his undeniable presence on screen.

ASAP Rocky

A$AP Rocky at Apple Original Films And A24’s “Highest 2 Lowest” Los Angeles Premiere held at The Academy Museum on August 13, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Early Oscar Predictions From Fall Festivals: No Frontrunner Yet
TV & Streaming

Early Oscar Predictions From Fall Festivals: No Frontrunner Yet

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Nine months into 2025, the machinery of Oscar campaigning has reached peak operational velocity. But beneath the familiar choreography lies something unprecedented: genuine uncertainty about who will emerge victorious.

The Academy has lit the first torch of awards season with the release of its initial wave of digital screeners. Seven modest offerings have been uploaded to its portal: “Becoming Led Zeppelin,” “Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight,” “Hello Beautiful,” “How to Train Your Dragon,” “KPop Demon Hunters,” “The Luckiest Man in America” and “The Ugly Stepsister.” These appetizers now populate the Academy Screening Room for more than 11,000 voting members — the first course in a sprawling feast of hundreds more titles set to drop weekly leading up to the 98th Academy Awards.

Yet this season, and also hinted by the past few years of Oscar predicting, we’re witnessing nothing less than the collapse of Hollywood’s established hierarchy.

For the first time in recent memory, no cinematic deity seems to be dominating the early landscape. There’s no Spielberg, no Scorsese — no filmmaker whose mere attachment to a project prompts industry genuflection before principal photography even begins. This absence of an ordained frontrunner has created something resembling actual democracy — unpredictable, messy and thrilling for awards obsessives, even as it unnerves studio strategists.

Unless Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” emerges from Venice with the force of “undeniability,” or Chloé Zhao’s period drama “Hamnet” delivers Shakespearean gravitas at Telluride, we’re confronting a field where previous Oscar winners may be relegated to spoiler status rather than frontrunners.

And let’s be honest, we should welcome that.

Peter Mountain/Netflix

In an industry long governed by the assumption that past success predicts future triumph, this shift levels the playing field — at least somewhat — for up-and-coming auteurs and actors to make a meaningful impact.

Netflix is executing what insiders call a strategy to focus on its “holy trinity” of hopefuls. Noah Baumbach’s dramedy “Jay Kelly” pairs George Clooney with Adam Sandler — a calculated bridge between generations designed to spark cultural conversation. Alongside it stands Kathryn Bigelow’s thriller “A House of Dynamite,” bolstered by Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson. And, of course, del Toro’s much-anticipated “Frankenstein.”

Netflix has long understood that a successful Oscar campaign requires portfolio diversification — multiple entry points into voters’ consciousness rather than banking on a single prestige title.

A24’s potential masterstroke is the company’s attempt to recast Dwayne Johnson as a dramatic actor and legitimate Oscar contender in Benny Safdie’s “The Smashing Machine,” a sports biopic that pairs him with Emily Blunt, fresh off her “Oppenheimer” nomination. It’s audacious cultural arbitrage — leveraging Johnson’s populist appeal to expand the Academy’s demographic comfort zone. If successful, it could further redefine what Oscar-worthy casting looks like. How many of us thought the Academy would ever nominate a body-horror film like “The Substance” or and its star, Demi Moore?

Over at Venice, several international specialty titles serve as tactical wild cards. GKids’ anime “Scarlet,” Gianfranco Rosi’s Neapolitan nonfiction “Below the Clouds,” and Park Chan-wook’s South Korean drama “No Other Choice,” acquired by Neon, could all shake up category expectations.

Meanwhile, Alberto Barbera, Venice’s artistic director, has curated an out-of-competition section that could now function as sophisticated reputation management. Gus Van Sant returns with “Dead Man’s Wire” — his first major play since 2008’s “Milk” — starring Bill Skarsgård and Colman Domingo. Julian Schnabel’s “The Hand of Dante,” arriving 18 years after “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” will provide a new chance to see his name in the marquee.

Oscar Isaac appears in both Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” and Julian Schnabel’s upcoming film. This dual presence may renew awareness that, despite acclaimed performances in “Inside Llewyn Davis” (2013) and “A Most Violent Year” (2014), Isaac has yet to receive an Oscar nomination. His co-star Jacob Elordi could also emerge as a viable contender in what looks to be a highly competitive supporting actor race, going head-to-head with his Netflix counterpart Adam Sandler, who is rumored to deliver a standout turn in “Jay Kelly.” Let’s not forget Stellan Skarsgård is already an early frontrunner after Neon’s “Sentimental Value,” directed by Joachim Trier, was the runner-up at Cannes and will also play various fall festivals on the circuit.

Telluride’s secretive lineup continues to generate speculative — albeit organic — buzz. The Aug. 26 lineup, curated by Julie Huntsinger, is expected to include Edward Berger’s gambling thriller “Ballad of a Small Player,” starring Colin Farrell, and Scott Cooper’s Bruce Springsteen biopic “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” featuring Jeremy Allen White, who’s riding a two-Emmy streak (and a possible third) from “The Bear.”

While Netflix and Neon boast deep arsenals, it’s Focus Features that’s presenting its most audacious and dynamic lineup of contenders in years. In addition to Oscar winner Chloé Zhao’s “Hamnet,” the indie studio will premiere Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest film, “Bugonia,” at the Lido at Venice, with Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone and newcomer Aidan Delbis — all rumored to deliver standout turns. Then comes the return of three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis, who emerges from an eight-year retirement for the family drama “Anemone,” set to premiere at the New York Film Festival. He co-wrote the film with his son, Ronan Day-Lewis, who makes his directorial debut.

One A-lister set to command attention is Julia Roberts, making a triumphant return to the big screen in Luca Guadagnino’s “After the Hunt” from Amazon MGM Studios. The film, which premieres at Venice, marks the Oscar winner’s first major awards vehicle since “August: Osage County” (2013), following her Academy Award win for “Erin Brockovich” (2001). Early buzz suggests it could be a real head-turner, with a trailer that evokes the psychological tension of “Notes on a Scandal” and the artistic intrigue of “Tár.”

This season is sure to be challenging to navigate. And not only for strategists but for pundits alike.

The traditional awards season journey, from the National Board of Review to the Golden Globes and major guilds, will be disrupted by shifting timelines and evolving demographics. BAFTA and the Writers Guild of America have scheduled its nomination announcements until Tuesday, Jan. 27 — five days after the Oscar nominations are revealed. That means not a single industry-driven screenplay nomination, which would include those with AMPAS overlap, will be named before the Oscars’ big reveal.

As many know, the screenplay category has long been a vital component of a film’s chances at winning best picture. Only seven films have won best picture without a screenplay nomination: “Wings” (1927), “The Broadway Melody” (1928), “Grand Hotel” (1932), “Cavalcade” (1933), “Hamlet” (1948), “The Sound of Music” (1965) and “Titanic” (1997).

Studios are expected to mount highly focused and concentrated campaigns to ensure their screenwriters are not overlooked, in order to not making their ultimate Oscar goal, anymore difficult.

Nonetheless, in the last decade, simply following “Oscar stats” has proven less reliable. Consider “CODA’s” best picture win for Apple with zero technical nominations, or how “Everything Everywhere All at Once” transformed from quirky genre piece to a cultural juggernaut. Traditional metrics are becoming archaeological relics in the predicting world.

I’ll admit, predictions made in August are little more than sophisticated brand positioning. Early frontrunner status tends to reflect industry esteem — not necessarily voter enthusiasm for films nobody has watched yet. Remember: Few pundits had 2016’s “Moonlight” on their radar before it premiered at Telluride and went on to topple the musical “La La Land” in the eleventh hour.

The Academy’s demographic transformation has created ideological and generational rifts that go beyond artistic taste. Kleber Mendonça Filho’s “The Secret Agent,” bolstered by a Cannes best director win, could challenge American dominance in storytelling with another strong Brazilian entry. Jafar Panahi’s Palme d’Or winner “It Was Just an Accident” can do the same — especially from an auteur who has been imprisoned for his art. That’s a narrative that can go far if it manages to become France’s official submission, if it can fend off Richard Linklater’s “Nouvelle Vague,” which Netflix picked up at Cannes.

The monthlong marathon from Venice to the New York Film Festival remains the industry’s most transparent meritocracy — where artistic quality can still (occasionally) overcome marketing budgets and studio influence. Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus’s decision to thread their Seymour Hersh documentary “Cover Up” through all four major festivals signals either supreme confidence or strategic necessity. That film will be looking for a U.S. distributor along the way.

The newly introduced best casting category adds another layer of uncertainty and complexity. Whether it becomes a stepping stone to best picture — perhaps like film editing — or might stand alone like BAFTA’s casting category, it will reshape campaign planning for years to come.

What emerges from this analysis is a simple truth: Oscar season has evolved beyond prediction models into something closer to a real democracy, believe it or not. It’s messier, less predictable and far more compelling. The festival circuit remains the battleground where artistic merit can triumph over institutional power. A long standing ovation can launch a campaign. A muddled response can tank one.

May the best story win.

The first official charts for best actor have been published. The overall Oscar predictions updates are below.

Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in “Frankenstein” directed by Guillermo del Toro.
Photo Credit: Ken Woroner / Netflix

Ken Woroner / Netflix

*** = PREDICTED WINNER
(All predicted nominees below are in alphabetical order)

Best Picture
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“Bugonia” (Focus Features)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***
“Is This Thing On?” (Searchlight Pictures)
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
“Marty Supreme” (A24)
“Sentimental Value” (Neon)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Director
Noah Baumbach, “Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
Ryan Coogler, “Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
Guillermo del Toro, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Joachim Trier, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Chloé Zhao, “Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***

Actor
Timothée Chalamet, “Marty Supreme” (A24)
Oscar Isaac, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Dwayne Johnson, “The Smashing Machine” (A24)
Wagner Moura, “The Secret Agent” (Neon)
Jesse Plemons, “Bugonia” (Focus Features) ***

Actress
Jessie Buckley, “Hamnet” (Focus Features) ***
Rose Byrne, “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” (A24)
Cynthia Erivo, “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)
Renate Reinsve, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Julia Roberts, “After the Hunt” (Amazon MGM Studios)

Supporting Actor
Aidan Delbis, “Bugonia” (Focus Features)
Jacob Elordi, “Frankenstein” (Netflix)
Paul Mescal, “Hamnet” (Focus Features)
Adam Sandler, “Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
Stellan Skarsgård, “Sentimental Value” (Neon) ***

Supporting Actress
Emily Blunt, “The Smashing Machine” (A24) ***
Zoey Deutch, “Nouvelle Vague” (Netflix)
Elle Fanning, “Sentimental Value” (Neon)
Ariana Grande, “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)
Teyana Taylor, “One Battle After Another” (Warner Bros.)

Original Screenplay
“Is This Thing On?” (Searchlight Pictures) — Will Arnett, Mark Chappell and Bradley Cooper
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Noah Baumbach and Emily Mortimer ***
“The Secret Agent” (Neon) — Kleber Mendonça Filho
“Sentimental Value” (Neon) — Joachim Trier and Eskil Vogt
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Ryan Coogler

Adapted Screenplay
“Bugonia” (Focus Features) — Will Tracy
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Guillermo del Toro
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) — Chloé Zhao ***
“Nuremberg” (Sony Pictures Classics) — James Vanderbilt
“Train Dreams” (Netflix) — Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar

Casting
“Bugonia” (Focus Features) — Jennifer Venditti
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Robin D. Cook
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Douglas Aibel and Nina Gold
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Francine Maisler ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) — Tiffany Little Canfield and Bernard Telsey

Animated Feature
“Arco” (Neon)
“In Your Dreams” (Netflix)
“KPop Demon Hunters” (Netflix)
“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” (GKids)
“Zootopia 2” (Walt Disney Pictures) ***

Production Design
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Nouvelle Vague” (Netflix)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Cinematography
“F1” (Apple Original Films/Warner Bros.)
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Train Dreams” (Netflix)

Costume Design
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Kiss of the Spider Woman” (Lionsgate/Roadside Attractions)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Film Editing
“Frankenstein” (Netflix)
“Hamnet” (Focus Features)
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix)
“Marty Supreme” (A24)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) ***

Makeup and Hairstyling
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) ***
“Mother Mary” (A24)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“The Smashing Machine” (A24)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Sound
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios)
“F1” (Apple Original Films/Warner Bros.)
“A House of Dynamite” (Netflix)
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) ***

Visual Effects
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century Studios) ***
“The Fantastic Four: The First Steps” (Marvel Studios)
“How to Train Your Dragon” (Universal Pictures)
“Superman” (Warner Bros.)
“Tron: Ares” (Walt Disney Pictures)

Original Score
“After the Hunt” (Amazon MGM Studios) — Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross
“Frankenstein” (Netflix) — Alexandre Desplat
“Hamnet” (Focus Features) — Max Richter
“Jay Kelly” (Netflix) — Nicholas Britell
“Sinners” (Warner Bros.) — Ludwig Göransson ***

Original Song
“Dear Me” from “Diane Warren: Relentless” (Greenwich Entertainment)
“Sinners” from “Sinners” (Warner Bros.)
“Golden” from “KPop Demon Hunters” (Netflix)
TBA Elphaba Song from “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures) ***
TBA Glinda Song from “Wicked: For Good” (Universal Pictures)

Documentary Feature
“Cover Up” (U.S. Acquisition TBD) ***
“The Eyes of Ghana” (U.S. Acquisition TBD)
“Love + War” (National Geographic)
“The Perfect Neighbor” (Netflix)
“Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk” (U.S. Distribution TBD)

International Feature
“It Was Just an Accident” from France (Neon) ***
“Palestine 36” from Palestine (U.S. Distributor TBD)
“The Secret Agent” from Brazil (Neon)
“Sentimental Value” from Norway (Neon)
“Sirât” from Spain (Neon)

Top 5 projected Oscar leaders (films): “Sinners” (13); “Frankenstein” (12); “Wicked: For Good” (10); “Hamnet” (9); “Jay Kelly” and “Sentimental Value” (7)

Top 5 projected Oscar leaders (studios): Netflix (28); Warner Bros. (17); Focus Features (14); Neon (13); Universal Pictures (11)

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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