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New US Trailer for 'Palestine 36' Historical Drama with Jeremy Irons
Hollywood

New US Trailer for ‘Palestine 36’ Historical Drama with Jeremy Irons

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

New US Trailer for ‘Palestine 36’ Historical Drama with Jeremy Irons

by Alex Billington
October 23, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I don’t want to fight.” “None of us do.” Watermelon Pictures has unveiled their own full US trailer for the acclaimed film Palestine 36, made by Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir as her fourth feature. This is Palestine’s submission to the Oscars this year and it will open in January. This first premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival last month, and it next plays at AFI Fest and the Denver Film Festival. The film is set during the years 1936 – 1939 following a man going between Jerusalem and his rural home amid escalating unrest with the British Empire rulers at the time. This is just before the Holocaust and the British Mandate in 1947 & 1948 that would lead to the creation of the State of Israel after 1945. Back in 1936, as Palestinian villages revolt against British colonial rule, Yusuf navigates between Jerusalem and his home during unrest and a pivotal moment for the British Empire just before the start of World War II. The historical drama stars Hiam Abbass, Saleh Bakri, Robert Aramayo, Billy Howle, Liam Cunningham, Yasmine Al-Massri, Dafer L’Abidine, Yumna Marwan, Karim Daoud Anaya, & Jeremy Irons as Commissioner Wauchope. This is a better trailer than the other one we posted recently. I really want to see it! Take a look.

Here’s the new official US trailer for Annemarie Jacir’s film Palestine 36, direct from Screen’s YouTube:

Palestine 36 Trailer

Palestine 36 Trailer

You can also view the other UK trailer for Annemarie Jacir’s Palestine 36 film right here for more footage.

Intro from TIFF: “Rare archival footage sets the stage, providing a potent counterpoint to the dramatic action: Jerusalem’s bustling mix of peoples in the wake of the Ottoman Empire’s dissolution, migration of European Jews fleeing the Nazis, and British attempts to impose colonial rule. In the midst of this, Yusuf (Karim Daoud Anaya) shunts between his traditional village & the rapidly changing city. Afra (Wardi Eilabouni) tries to navigate change with the aid of her grandmother (Hiam Abbass). A dissatisfied port worker (Saleh Bakri) finds the pressures of earning a living and supporting his family drawing him into a rebel movement. Can British officialdom, represented powerfully by Irons, even keep up?” Palestine 36, also known as فلسطين ٣٦ in Arabic, is written and directed by the Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir, director of the films Salt of This Sea, When I Saw You, Wajib, and episodes of the series “Ramy” previously. It’s produced by Ossama Bawardi, Cat Villiers, Azzam Fakhreddin, Hani Farsi, Nils Åstrand, Olivier Barbier, Nathanaël Karmitz, Katrin Pors, Hamza Ali. This initially premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Watermelon Pictures will debut Palestine 36 in US theaters starting January 2026. Who’s interested?

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

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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First Trailer for 'Palestine 36' Feat. Jeremy Irons & Liam Cunningham
Hollywood

First Trailer for ‘Palestine 36’ Feat. Jeremy Irons & Liam Cunningham

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

First Trailer for ‘Palestine 36’ Feat. Jeremy Irons & Liam Cunningham

by Alex Billington
October 15, 2025
Source: YouTube

“We are asking for your help in protecting our villages.” Screen International has revealed the first official trailer for an acclaimed new film titled Palestine 36, made by Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir as her fourth feature film so far. This recently premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival last month, and it next plays at AFI Fest and the Denver Film Festival. It’s also Palestine’s submission to the Oscars this year. The film is set during the years 1936 – 1939 and follows a man navigating between Jerusalem and his rural home amid escalating unrest with the British Empire rulers at the time. This is just before the Holocaust and the British Mandate in 1947 & 1948 that would lead to the creation of the State of Israel after 1945. Back in 1936, as Palestinian villages revolt against British colonial rule, Yusuf navigates between Jerusalem and his rural home, amidst escalating unrest and a pivotal moment for the British Empire. The fascinating film stars Hiam Abbass, Saleh Bakri, Robert Aramayo, Billy Howle, Liam Cunningham, Yasmine Al-Massri, Dafer L’Abidine, Yumna Marwan, Karim Daoud Anaya, and Jeremy Irons. This looks like a riveting story digging into the past and shedding light on the truth on the great awfulness of imperialism.

Here’s the first official trailer for Annemarie Jacir’s film Palestine 36, direct from Screen’s YouTube:

Palestine 36 Poster

Intro from TIFF: “Rare archival footage sets the stage, providing a potent counterpoint to the dramatic action: Jerusalem’s bustling mix of peoples in the wake of the Ottoman Empire’s dissolution, migration of European Jews fleeing the Nazis, and British attempts to impose colonial rule. In the midst of this, Yusuf (Karim Daoud Anaya) shunts between his traditional village & the rapidly changing city. Afra (Wardi Eilabouni) tries to navigate change with the aid of her grandmother (Hiam Abbass). A dissatisfied port worker (Saleh Bakri) finds the pressures of earning a living and supporting his family drawing him into a rebel movement. Can British officialdom, represented powerfully by Irons, even keep up?” Palestine 36, also known as فلسطين ٣٦ in Arabic, is written and directed by the Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir, director of the films Salt of This Sea, When I Saw You, Wajib, and episodes of the series “Ramy” previously. It’s produced by Ossama Bawardi, Cat Villiers, Azzam Fakhreddin, Hani Farsi, Nils Åstrand, Olivier Barbier, Nathanaël Karmitz, Katrin Pors, Hamza Ali. This initially premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. It will continue to play at more festivals – no US release date is set yet. Stay tuned for more. Intrigued?

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October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for 'All That's Left Of You' Generational Palestine Movie
Hollywood

Official Trailer for ‘All That’s Left Of You’ Generational Palestine Movie

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for ‘All That’s Left Of You’ Generational Palestine Movie

by Alex Billington
September 25, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Your humanity is also resistance.” Watermelon Pictures has unveiled an official trailer for All That’s Left Of You, made by filmmaker Cherien Dabis, telling a powerful multi-generational story of a Palestinian family living in the West Bank. This premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year (where I saw it) and also played at the Karlovy Vary, Telluride, Zurich, and Hamptons Film Festivals. Now set for a US release in limited theaters starting in November. In the Occupied West Bank of the 1980s, a Palestinian teenager is swept into a protest that changes the course of his family’s life. Reeling from its aftermath, his mother, Hanan, shares the story that led them to that fateful moment. Spanning seven decades, this epic drama traces the hopes and heartaches of one uprooted family, revealing not only the scars of displacement, but the unbreakable spirit of survival. Starring Cherien Dabis, Saleh Bakri, Mohammad Bakri, Adam Bakri, Maria Zreik, and Hayat Abu Samra. The film is also Jordan’s submission to the Oscars this year. I’m a big fan of this one – I wrote a great review from Sundance, stating that “it is one of the defining movies about Palestine and its history.” I’m very glad it’s getting a proper release in US theaters soon. Take a look.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Cherien Dabis’ film All That’s Left Of You, direct from YouTube:

All That's Left Of You Trailer

All That's Left Of You Poster

Made by filmmaker Cherien Dabis, All That’s Left of You is a deeply moving, multi-generational drama following a Palestinian teenager who gets swept into a protest in Occupied West Bank and experiences a moment of violence that rocks his family. The story unfolds as his mother recounts the political and emotional threads that led to that fateful moment. Spanning seven decades, the film traces the hopes and heartaches of one uprooted family, bearing witness to the scars of dispossession and the enduring legacy of survival. All That’s Left Of You is written and directed by acclaimed Palestinian-American writer / producer / filmmaker Cherien Dabis, director of the films Amreeka & May in the Summer, and TV work including eps of “Empire”, “Ramy”, and “Only Murders in the Building” most recently. Produced by Karim Amer, Cherien Dabis, Martin Hampel, Thanassis Karathanos. This initially premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival earlier this year (read our review). Watermelon Pictures will release Dabis’ All That’s Left Of You film in select US theaters starting on November 28th, 2025 this fall. Who wants to watch this film?

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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Dutch independent radio stations announce 15-hour broadcast in to raise money for Palestine
Music

Dutch independent radio stations announce 15-hour broadcast in to raise money for Palestine

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Ten independent Dutch radio stations are joining forces for a special 15-hour broadcast to raise money for Palestine. Find all the details below.

The live-stream, dubbed ‘Transmission For Palestine’, is set to air between 10am local time on Sunday (September 28) and 1am on Monday (29).

Listeners will be able to tune into special programming on Radio Radio, Echobox, Folder FM, Pip Radio, Future Intel, Operator, Maxi Radio, Radio Hinter, Open Source Radio and Relate Radio.

Organisers said fans can attend an in-person “community event” over the 15 hours, where they can enjoy music, drinks and food. “You might even get a prize in our raffle!” they added. “You can get lucky with club tickets, gift cards, merch, records, and much more.”

The event is open to the public on a donation basis, with all proceeds going directly to Dutch charity Plant een Olijfboom.

Per the listing, the organisation “supports Palestinian people with essentials like blankets, clothes, water, food and medicine, while also working to raise awareness in the Netherlands about the occupation and colonisation of Palestinian land by Israel and the reality of living in Palestine”.

Those who are unable to attend in person can make a donation online in the run-up to the broadcast, and via the live-stream itself.

“Bring your friends, show up and support!” organisers added. You’ll be able to listen to ‘Transmission For Palestine’ here.

Last week saw Brian Eno host his huge ‘Together For Palestine’ charity show at London’s OVO Arena Wembley. The event featured performances from Damon Albarn, Paul Weller, Cat Burns, Rachel Chinouriri, Yasiin Bey, Bastille’s Dan Smith and more. Presenters on the night included Eric Cantona, PinkPantheress, Richard Gere, Benedict Cumberbatch, Florence Pugh and Nicola Coughlan.

The concert, which was also available as a livestream, raised just under £1.5million for the ‘Together For Palestine Fund’. This will be distributed to Palestinian-led organisations such as Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service.

Speaking to NME at the gig, Eno said he “doesn’t blame” those feeling helpless about the ongoing situation in Palestine. However, he called on music fans to always have hope that change is possible with enough solidarity and conversation.

“Don’t be hopeless. You are in the middle of the biggest social movement in human history,” Eno assured. Watch the video interview in full above.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Jameela Jamil at Together For Palestine. Credit: Luke Dyson
Music

Jameela Jamil calls for artists to speak out at Together For Palestine

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Jameela Jamil spoke to NME backstage at the Together For Palestine concert last night, urging all artists to speak out and “be on the side of love and humanity”. Watch our interview with Jamil above.

The actress, activist and presenter was one of many hosts who gave impassioned speeches on stage at London’s Wembley Arena last night (Wednesday September 17), a night organised and curated by Brian Eno that saw huge performances from Damon Albarn, Paul Weller, Rachel Chinouriri, Yasiin Bey, and more, alongside guest speakers including Eric Cantona, PinkPantheress, Richard Gere, Benedict Cumberbatch, Florence Pugh, and Nicola Coughlan.

The event, which was also available as a livestream, raised just under £1.5million for the ‘Together For Palestine Fund’, which will be distributed to Palestinian-led organisations such as Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service.

The concert came just a day after a UN commission inquiry concluded that Israel had committed a genocide in Gaza. Israel continues to deny accusations of genocide or war crimes.

Together For Palestine. CREDIT: Samir Hussein/WireImage for ABA

This was the largest ever concert fundraiser to take place in the UK, with Eno having spoken about how it wouldn’t have been possible in years gone by.

When asked about what it means that this should take place in 2025, Jamil replied: “It tells us that we’ve reached boiling point of how much suffering people can watch on a livestream. It shows that there is a shift in the narrative and a tide that has turned. People are realising that we cannot live with ourselves anymore if we continue to look away and stay silent.”

With the nature of freedom of expression under scrutiny in the UK, Jamil argued that culture and politics have “always been intertwined”.

“Artists have such a duty to show up to impact culture,” she explained. “We have so much access to people’s eyes and ears. It is a huge failure on our part if we just take and take and take and never do anything to move culture and move people towards the right direction, which is that of love.”

Jameela Jamil at Together For Palestine. Credit: Burak Cingi
Jameela Jamil at Together For Palestine. Credit: Burak Cingi

However, Jamil said that should understood why artists might be fearful of speaking up for Palestine.

“I don’t want to shame anyone who’s only showing up now, but we desperately need you,” she pleaded. “When you look back later, you will realise that you were on the side of love and humanity. I think people will hugely regret not having said something when they could have.”

As for what Together For Palestine represents, Jamil said that she believed it represented a sense of hope that change could come as a result of solidarity and being seen.

“I can’t tell anyone not to feel hopeless in this current climate, but I think that a morsel of hope can be found in the calibre of artists who’ve shown up and aren’t afraid to speak up, say something and do the right thing,” she said. “I personally felt very moved looking around the room and seeing all the artist that are here like Massive Attack, Portishead, Damon Albarn and all these British legends, and then Eric Cantona who I guess we’re claiming as a British legend now.”

Jamil added: “When you realise the people you’ve looked up to your whole life are actually great and they actually stand alongside the principles you hoped they would, it’s an incredible feeling. I hope music fans feel at least moved by that. I can’t force anyone to feel hopeful, but I know that what we’re doing here tonight is really beautiful.

“Everyone’s here for such a beautiful cause and that fills me with a tiny bit of light amidst this terrible darkness.”

Jameela Jamil at Together For Palestine. Credit: Luke Dyson
Jameela Jamil at Together For Palestine. Credit: Luke Dyson

Check out all of what went down at the Together For Palestine concert here, and visit here to donate to the Together For Palestine fund.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Javier Bardem says he won’t work with any company in business with Israel: “Free Palestine”
Music

Javier Bardem says he won’t work with any company in business with Israel: “Free Palestine”

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Javier Bardem has said he “won’t work” with any company that is in business with Israel.

The actor is among a number of names in the film industry who recently signed a pledge by Film Workers For Palestine to not work with Israeli film institutions amid the conflict in Gaza.

Bardem spoke out on the Emmys red carpet last night (September 14) regarding his decision, telling Variety that he was “denouncing the genocide in Gaza”.

Referencing a recent declaration by a leading association of genocide scholars (via BBC News), the Oscar-winning actor said: “I am talking about the IAGS, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, who study thoroughly genocide and has declared it is a genocide. That’s why we ask for a commercial and diplomatic blockade and also sanctions on Israel to stop the genocide. Free Palestine.”

The star explained that as “a human being” and “a father” he “really cannot take anymore what’s going on”, before speaking about the pledge he’d signed.

“Film Workers for Palestine do not target any individuals based on identity,” he said. “The targets are those film companies and institutions that are complicit and are white-washing or justifying the genocide and its apartheid regime. We do stand with those who are helping and being supportive of the oppressed people.”

Bardem further explained why he “won’t work” with companies in business with Israel, saying: “I cannot work with somebody who justifies or supports the genocide. I can’t. It’s as simple as that. We shouldn’t be able to do that in this industry or any other industry.”

He continued: “The world has changed and what we are witnessing is a genocide in 4K, alive on a daily basis. This has to stop.”

The star also revealed how he speaks to his children about the subject, sharing: “By telling them openly what is going on. By telling them that, of course, what Hamas did on October 7th is horrible. There’s no excuse or justification for that.

“But I have serious doubts that [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s agenda was ever the possibility or the will to rescue any hostages. And the family of those hostages are suffering so much are every day on the streets reminding him of that.

“I’m hopeful after unfortunately so many deaths and children being murdered, the world is waking up finally to something that has to be fixed, politically fixed now.”

The recent pledge was also signed by the likes of Olivia Colman, Mark Ruffalo, Tilda Swinton, Ayo Edebiri, Riz Ahmed, Yorgos Lanthimos, Ava DuVernay and Asif Kapadia.

“In this urgent moment of crisis, where many of our governments are enabling the carnage in Gaza, we must do everything we can to address complicity in that unrelenting horror,” it says.

Bardem was nominated at last night’s Emmys for the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie award for his role in Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story. The ceremony’s big winners were The Pitt, The Studio and Adolescence.

September 15, 2025 0 comments
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Javier Bardem dons keffiyeh at 2025 Emmys to support Gaza, calls for 'Free Palestine', sanctions on Israel on red carpet
Bollywood

Javier Bardem dons keffiyeh at 2025 Emmys to support Gaza, calls for ‘Free Palestine’, sanctions on Israel on red carpet

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Sept 15, 2025 08:04 am IST

Javier Bardem showed solidarity with Gaza as he appeared at the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday wearing a keffiyeh.

Actor Javier Bardem made a strong political statement at the 2025 Emmy Awards, as he wore a keffiyeh in a mark of solidarity for the people of Gaza and the state of Palestine, which has been embroiled in a war with Israel for over a year. The actor gave a passionate speech on the red carpet, urging the world to back Gaza and ‘stop the genocide’ there.

Javier Bardem wears a keffiyeh as he poses on the red carpet at the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles, California, U.S., September 14, 2025. REUTERS/Daniel Cole (REUTERS)

Javier Bardem at the 2025 Emmys

The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards were held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles this Sunday. Bardem, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in a Limited Series, appeared on the red carpet wearing a keffiyeh with his tuxedo, and even raised a fist to show support for Palestine. The keffiyeh scarf is worn by men in the Middle East, and over the last few years, has come to be seen as a symbol of support for Palestine in its conflict against Israel.

Bardem calls for Free Palestine

On the sidelines, he spoke to Variety and explained his choice. ” Here I am today denouncing the genocide in Gaza. I am talking about the IAGS, which is the International Association of Genocide Scholars, that thoroughly studies genocide and has declared it to be a genocide. That’s why they asked for a commercial diplomatic blockade and sanctions on Israel to stop the genocide,” the actor said.

He ended his speech with a call to “Free Palestine!”

How the 2025 Emmys opened

Stephen Colbert was the first person to take the stage to present the award during the CBS telecast at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles despite the recent controversial cancellation of his show by the network. He was greeted by a rousing and lengthy standing ovation. “While I have your attention, is anyone hiring?” Colbert said.

In an unusual show order, host Nate Bargatze delivered his opening monologue only after the first award was handed out.

The show opened with a sketch where Saturday Night Live stars Mikey Day, Bowen Yang and James Austin Johnson joined Bargatze, who played television inventor Philo T. Farnsworth opining on what the future of TV will be like.

(With inputs from AP)

Stay connected with all the glitz and glam from the world of entertainment, right from Hollywood gossip to Bollywood chit chat. Also don’t miss out on music buzz, anime scoops and OTT action.

Stay connected with all the glitz and glam from the world of entertainment, right from Hollywood gossip to Bollywood chit chat. Also don’t miss out on music buzz, anime scoops and OTT action.

News / Entertainment / Hollywood / Javier Bardem dons keffiyeh at 2025 Emmys to support Gaza, calls for ‘Free Palestine’, sanctions on Israel on red carpet

September 15, 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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Billy Bragg Shares New Protest Song “Hundred Year Hunger” for Palestine: Listen
Music

Billy Bragg Shares New Protest Song “Hundred Year Hunger” for Palestine: Listen

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Billy Bragg, the British folk-rock singer and lifelong figure in protest music, has shared a new song for Palestine. The release coincides with the launch of the Global Sumud Flotilla, which set sail yesterday (August 31) to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza. Written and performed by Bragg, with additional keyboards and backing vocals by JJ Stoney, “Hundred Year Hunger” takes its title from the book of the same name by E Mark Windle. Give it a listen below.

Bragg explained the song’s backstory on Instagram, writing, “‘Hundred Year Hunger’ looks at the current famine that Israel has created in Gaza through the lens of a century of enforced food insecurity and malnutrition imposed on the Palestinian people, firstly by British imperialism, then as a weapon of mass displacement by the state of Israel.”

“Sumud is an Arabic word which translates into English as steadfastness or perseverance,” he continued. “It is used by Palestinians to describe their nonviolent everyday resistance against Israel’s occupation. Sumud emphasises the commitment of the Palestinian people to remain on their land despite hardship and oppression, elevating their everyday existence into a form of resistance. Lan narhal translates as ‘we will not leave’. Together ‘Sumud! Sumud! Lan narhal’ conveys the determination of the Palestinian people to refuse to be displaced.”

It’s been four years since Bragg last released a full-length album, 2021’s The Million Things That Never Happened. He did team up with R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe for a collaborative cover of Eric Bogle’s “My Youngest Son Came Home Today” in 2023, though. Bragg originally covered that track for his 1990 album The Internationale, slightly modifying the 1982 war protest song, which was inspired by the Troubles.

Read “Cease-Fire Now: 16 Benefit Compilations for Palestine.”

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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Hozier speaks out for Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality during Reading 2025 headline set
Music

Hozier speaks out for Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality during Reading 2025 headline set

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Hozier used his set at Reading Festival 2025 to speak out in support of Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality.

  • READ MORE: Reading & Leeds 2025 liveblog: Check out the action as it happens

The Irish musician performed on the main stage last night (August 22), and gave an impassioned speech, which began by referencing artists with an “instinct to tell the truth in their music”, listing Nina Simone, Woody Guthrie, Joan Baez and Ewan MacColl.

He then spotlighted Mavis Staples and her family, The Staples Singers, who “used to sing before speeches during the American Civil Rights movement that took place in the 1960s.”

Hozier went on to say that he was particularly interested in the civil rights movement “as an Irishman coming from Ireland”, as it directly inspired the Northern Irish civil rights movement, which challenged the inequality and discrimination against ethnic Irish Catholics, many of whom were unable to vote.

“That right to vote, that we have, that democratic voice, that we have, like so many rights that we enjoy every single day, without even thinking about – rights of free Speech, workers rights, union rights, gay rights, women’s reproductive rights – it’s so easy to take these things for granted,” Hozier continued. “And it’s so easy to forget how much work had to go into these things existing for everybody, how they had to be fought for, how they had to be worked for.”

He went on to say: “As we’ve been traveling over these last nearly two years, I’ve been inviting people to use their rights of free speech, use their democratic voices, use their purchasing power, whatever it is that they can do, to support a meaningful political solution for the kind of violence we’ve been seeing on our TV screens over the last two years, and not lip service, but a meaningful peace process, a meaningful political investment that would bring about peace and safety and security for everybody in that region.”

hozier’s beautiful speech on palestine, lgbt+ rights and standing up for what you believe in that was cut by the bbc pic.twitter.com/CUEiP9XbDx

— ִֶָ (@saintscain) August 23, 2025

“Reading, at the core of it, I don’t think it’s complicated,” he continued. “I think people want to see human beings live in peace and safety, and security. I think that people would want to see that for their neighbours. They would want to see that for members of their community. I believe that people would want to see people they don’t know live with peace and safety, and security. Am I right?

“They wouldn’t want to see their neighbours live in fear of hatred or racism,” he added. “Wouldn’t want to see their Jewish friends live in the fear of anti-Semitism, and Muslim brothers and sisters live in the fear of Islamophobia. They want to see their members of the LGBTQ community treated with respect and dignity, and peace.”

The musician continued: “Safety and security for everybody in the Middle East means seeing a Palestine that’s free from occupation, that’s free from these cycles of genocide and violence, and it means seeing a Palestine that’s free to move towards meaningful self-determination and statehood.”

His comments come amid yesterday’s news (August 22) that famine is taking place in Gaza, which was confirmed in a report by The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), backed by the United Nations. The report acknowledged that the situation is “entirely man-made”, and aid organisations are also accusing Israel of the “systematic obstruction” of food entering the Gaza Strip.

Since Hamas’ attack on Israeli citizens on October 7, 2023 that killed over 1100 people and saw 250 taken as hostages, multiple UN human-rights experts and UN bodies have stated that Israel’s military actions in Gaza may amount to genocide, and the International Court of Justice has found claims of genocide plausible.

According to the Gaza Health Ministry, at least 62,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 2023. Israel rejects the genocide accusations and denies committing any war crimes, maintaining that its operations are lawful acts of self-defence.

“I know I don’t need to tell you that spray painting an aeroplane does not constitute an act of terrorism, or supporting the people who do does not constitute an act of terrorism. I know you know that,” Hozier continued.

His comments are in reference to Palestine Action, a direct action organisation that has been proscribed as a terrorist group by the UK government.

The group’s proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000 means membership or public support for the group is classified as a criminal offence and could result in up to 14 years in jail. Earlier this month, over 500 people were arrested at a huge protest in central London that featured widespread support of the group, per The Guardian.

O MAIOR QUE TEMOS! Sendo o único headliner do Reading Festival que não teve seu set transmitido pela BBC, Hozier falou por vários minutos sobre a Palestina, direitos LGBTQIA+, direitos reprodutivos das mulheres e etc 🇵🇸✊ pic.twitter.com/REljKP6Pze

— Portal Hozier Brasil (@PortalHozierBr) August 22, 2025

“Or indeed,” he continued, “Irish musicians rapping or supporting the people of Palestine is not an act of terrorism either,” specifically shouting out Kneecap’s and member DJ Próvai.

It comes as the group’s Mo Chara is currently facing terrorism charges levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag onstage at a London show last November. Chara appeared in court on Wednesday (August 20), where the case was adjourned until next month.

Kneecap have consistently denied supporting either Hamas or Hezbollah, and said that they do not incite or condone violence. They have also argued that the footage at the UK shows had been taken out of context, and described the legal action as a “carnival of distraction”.

Hozier concluded, saying: “Use your voice, use your kind power, use your vote in any way from that place of empathy and compassion to support peace and safety and security and free policy.”

Fans have criticised the fact that his performance was not livestreamed on BBC iPlayer and, at time of writing, has not yet been uploaded to the website.

It follows the BBC saying that it will no longer be broadcasting any performances it thinks may be “high risk” in the future, after they were criticised for livestreaming Bob Vylan’s set at Glastonbury 2025, which saw them lead chants of “Death to the IDF”.

Fans watching Reading & Leeds from home can follow the NME’s liveblog here. Also find out how to watch and listen on TV and radio here.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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