celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Premieres
Tag:

Premieres

Minimalist Travel, Maximum Fun! Jimin And Jungkook's "Are You Sure?!" Season 2 Premieres On This Date | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Minimalist Travel, Maximum Fun! Jimin And Jungkook’s “Are You Sure?!” Season 2 Premieres On This Date | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

After completing their military service earlier this year, BTS members Jimin and Jungkook are ready to take fans on a new adventure. The duo, who enlisted together as buddy soldiers in the Republic of Korea military on December 12, 2023, were officially discharged on June 11, 2025. Just a week later, the two set off for Switzerland and Vietnam, filming the second season of their beloved travel variety show, Are You Sure?!

Now confirmed to premiere on December 3, 2025, Are You Sure?! Season 2 will stream exclusively on Disney+, featuring eight episodes released two per week over four weeks. The show follows Jimin and Jungkook on a 12-day minimalist journey across two Asian countries, equipped with only a limited budget, minimal luggage, and an old travel guidebook. Viewers will see how the duo earn their own living expenses, interact with locals, and embrace spontaneous experiences — all while showcasing their easy camaraderie and humor.

The new season promises laughter, heartfelt moments, and glimpses of how much the pair have grown since their pre-military travels in Season 1. Stills from the show capture the singers posing in front of Switzerland’s Matterhorn and enjoying a tranquil night view at Hoi An Beach in Vietnam.

The first season of Are You Sure?! took fans along as the duo explored New York State, Jeju Island, and Sapporo, with V making a brief guest appearance. The series became a fan favorite for its warm, healing atmosphere and genuine friendship moments.

Excitement is building among the ARMY, especially with rumors that BTS leader RM may join Jimin and Jungkook in Switzerland during his visit to Art Basel, adding another layer of nostalgia and connection to the show.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Supreme Truth: Proof Innocence – Premieres Today
Celebrity News

Supreme Truth: Proof Innocence – Premieres Today

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Supreme Truth: Proof Innocence – Premieres Today

In today’s racial and political climate, things are rarely what they seem!  Therefore, in this eye-opening documentary, The Supreme Truth: Proof of Innocence, viewers are invited to delve deep into the complexities of America’s so-called legal system through the lens of one man’s harrowing journey for vindication.  With Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff personally narrating his story, this powerful film not only recounts his battle but also casts a spotlight on the systemic injustices disproportionately affecting Black and Brown communities.  His riveting account brings fresh detailed facts to light concerning the case that lead to a life sentence.  He also raises doubts on the claim he ordered a hit on rapper 50 Cent, proposing the allegations was fabricated.  

Featuring poignant interviews and appearances from cultural icons like Jay Z and others, this real-life narrative offers a rare glimpse into the stories that often go untold—the stories of resilience, bias, and the relentless pursuit of justice.  With producers including industry giants such as Irv Gotti, Mike Tyson, Gerald “Prince” Miller, Luc Stephen, and Michael A. Payton, The Supreme Truth promises a compelling description that challenges perceptions and ignites crucial conversations around equality and reform.

“I just want to take a minute to thank everybody in advance for tuning in to The Supreme Truth.  Man, the response has been real — the messages, the support, the energy. This project wasn’t just a film; it was a testimony.  It’s about the pain, the lessons, the growth, and the truth that comes with living through it all offers Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff.

“Pride buries more men than bullets, and loyalty is only proven when the pressure hits. A king without discipline becomes a pawn, but the supreme truth lies in building something that outlives you,” said Gerald “Prince” Miller (assumed leader of the Supreme Team after McGriff was arrested).

“I have to take my hat off to the brother.  I handled the groundwork, but Preme and the director Michael J Payton really put this story together with some magnificent editing. Appreciate all that were involved and the opportunity I was given to be a part of this compelling project” added Luc Stephen.

The film focuses on Kenneth “Supreme”McGriff, assumed leader of the notorious Supreme Team crime syndicate in Queens, New York.  It explores McGriff’s life, his business ventures, and the criminal allegations against him too.

Kenneth Gifford Founder / CEO The Vault Access states, “It’s a powerful moment for us to release The Supreme Truth on Vault Access, In The Black Network and PrinceMillerNYC.com — platforms that we own and built. This documentary represents more than just storytelling; it’s about ownership, unity, and purpose. When we come together and take control of our narrative, we remind the world that our stories matter — and that we have the power to tell and distribute them on our own terms.”

“I want to express my deepest gratitude to Supreme, Kenneth McGriff, and the entire team for entrusting Black-owned networks like In The Black Network with The Supreme Truth—a captivating and powerful documentary that redefines cultural storytelling.  It’s through unity and collaboration that we shift the narrative. In an industry where solidarity is often a rarity, we stand together as a collective force to make it the standard. Our stories.  Our platforms.  Our narrative,” said Omarr A. Salgado, Chief Content and Branding Officer for ITBN.

Check out the trailer here:  

The In The Black Network continues its mission to amplify Black voices and culture through this authentic representation of systemic inequality.  Stream Supreme Truth on ITBN and its app platforms.

 

About In the Black Network:

Founded by entertainment veteran James Dubose, the IN THE BLACK NETWORK (ITBN) is the platform that brings authentic and powerful stories to life by inspiring Black narratives and impactful representation.  Get FREE access to a rich variety of entertainment or choose Premium content to expand your options further.  ITBN delivers an exceptional viewing experience and makes essential stories easily accessible.  This service intentionally and unapologetically offers Black-centered programming in many categories — including sports, music, faith, films, and beyond.  Whether it’s an original series celebrating heritage or classic titles from prominent creators, there’s a wealth of options for every viewer.  Whether you enjoy live streaming or explore, ITBN is available from any location.  Simply go to www.intheblacknetwork.tv (http://www.intheblacknetwork.tv/) or download the app on Smart TVs, iOS, Android devices, and streaming services such as Apple TV, ROKU, and Amazon Fire TV.

Find us on social media at @intheblacknetwork.


October 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Fest Rio Announces China Focus in 2026, Premieres CMG's 'Shenzhou 13'
TV & Streaming

Fest Rio Announces China Focus in 2026, Premieres CMG’s ‘Shenzhou 13’

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — The Rio International Film Fest will feature China as its country focus in next year’s edition, as part of the 2026 China-Brazil Cultural Year, said Walkiria Barbosa, Rio Fest’s executive director and int’l marketing.

The governments of the two countries announced in Nov. 2024, during a visit of China’s president Xi Jinping to Brazil, that the  2026 China-Brazil Cultural Year will feature a broad programming element, currently in preparation.

“China is the largest film market in the world. Our intention is to have in the 2026 edition of Rio Fest the main Chinese film production companies, streamers and exhibitors for a big business meeting and screening of Chinese films,” Barbosa told Variety.

The China Media Group (CMG) made a presentation Oct. 3 in RioMarket, the business section of Rio Fest, with the presence of the company’s Latin America chief bureau Zhu Boying, as well as of China’s consul in Rio, Tian Min.

Following the presentation, CMG premiered the feature “Shenzhou 13,” the country’s first 8K film shot in space, which was theatrically released nationwide in China Sept. 5.

The film depicts the routine of astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Wang Yaping, and Ye Guangfu on the Shenzhou-13 mission, which was launched Oct. 16, 2021. The crew spent a total of 183 days in orbit, setting a new record for the longest continuous spaceflight by Chinese astronauts.

The film reveals awe-inspiring cosmic vistas and glimpses of daily life in orbit, captured with 8K ultra-high-definition cameras. Most of the footage was filmed by astronauts, with Wang’s perspective guiding the story.

The main Brazil-China co-production now in course is produced by Rio-based LC Barreto and CCTV Animation, a subsidiary of CMG. They are developing a TV animation series and an animation feature, both with Panda HoHo, a well-known character starring in other CMG productions.

“Hoho & The Tropical Sound Clash” is a 3D animated series aimed at preschoolers. The series is due to have four seasons, each with 13 episodes running 10 minutes in length.

Series showrunner Joao Amorim told Variety the first season is expected to open in the second half of 2026 on free-to-air TV channels TV Cultura in Brazil and CCTV Animation in China. Zhang Fan is the series’ animation director.

In the series, Panda HoHo will form part of a trio of Brazilian animals, with a Golden Lion Tamarin, a symbol of Brazilian biodiversity, and Capy, an adventurous capybara. In each episode, the trio will embark on adventures across Brazil, discovering unique biomes, cultural traditions and important lessons about environmental preservation and the power of collaboration.

The second LC Barreto-CCTV project, “Amazonika – The Origin” is a 3D animated feature about the recreation of the Amazon Rainforest, presented as an ancient link between Asian and Brazil’s Indigenous cultures. Panda HoHo will help Zo, a young man who can communicate with nature, and Nika, a bold princess warrior, to restore harmony in a world on the edge of collapse.

“We are working with two Indigenous Brazilians as consultants for the projects. Benki Piyãko is of the Asháninka original people and Zezinho Yube is of the Huni Kuin people,” Amorim said.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Raoul Peck Documentary Premieres at Cannes
TV & Streaming

Raoul Peck Documentary Premieres at Cannes

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: “Orwell 2+2 = 5” originally debuted at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. It opens at the IFC Center in New York City on Thursday, October 2 and the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles on October 9.

On January 8, 2021, Donald Trump Jr. took to X (then Twitter) to declare that his father’s suspension from the platform was a sign that “We are living in Orwell’s ‘1984.’ Free speech no longer exists in America.” The irony that the elder Trump’s actions leading to the ban — spreading false information that the 2020 election was rigged on the platform and directly causing an attempted insurrection of the U.S. Capitol building — fit far more into George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel and its vision of a future ruled by misinformation and propaganda is one that Jr. was seemingly entirely unaware of.

Mark Kerr, Dwayne Johnson at arrivals for THE SMASHING MACHINE Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) 2025, VISA Screening Room at the Princess of Wales Theatre, Toronto, ON, September 08, 2025. Photo By: JA/Everett Collection

It was a sign of how, in spite of the cultural ubiquity the short, pioneering 1949 science fiction novel has obtained — introducing terms like “Big Brother,” “doublethink,” and “thoughtcrime” into the cultural lexicon and remaining a staple of high school curriculums in its native Britain and across the pond in the United States — a frighteningly large amount of people seem incapable of processing what Orwell’s vision of a future ruled by fear, surveillance, and a controlling superstate actually means, and how close to home it hits in our current political landscape.

So if Raoul Peck‘s new documentary “Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5” might sometimes feel like it’s preaching to the choir, drawing comparisons between modern politics and the terrors of Oceania that plenty of academics have already made, perhaps it’s best to keep in mind that for many viewers, its conclusions will be far less obvious.

Peck, a Haitian filmmaker whose work has always had a strong political bent, is best known for his 2016 essay film “I Am Not Your Negro,” which uses the unfinished James Baldwin manuscript “Remember This House” as the skeleton for an examination of the deaths of Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Jr. “Orwell” plays like a spiritual successor to his Oscar-nominated breakthrough, mixing Orwell’s writings and letters — narrated by “Homeland” star Damian Lewis — with archival photographs, footage from various adaptations of “1984” (including the 1956 version starring Edmund O’Brien as bureaucrat Winston and the version starring John Hurt released on the actual year), footage from other movies ranging from “Oliver Twist” to “Notting Hill,” and modern day news reports to argue how Orwell’s fears of a totalitarian state have already come true.

The result isn’t as riveting as “I Am Not Your Negro” — it feels less personal and more generic, like a term paper someone could have written in undergrad. Still, Peck makes his points well, and accomplishes what he sets out to do by getting your blood pressure rising.

The film starts with text explaining how, in 1946, Orwell decamped to Jura, an island off the coast of Scotland, where he would spend the remaining four years of his life working on a manuscript that would become “1984.” Rather than taking the traditional path of focusing on Orwell’s life during this time, however, Peck is more interested in how the ideas the author developed in Jura still feel so relevant today. Loosely, the film structures itself around the famous doublethink party motto of Oceania: “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength,” using each component as another avenue into exploring modern fascism.

Peck casts a wide net in who he applies to his gaze to, looking broadly at the rise of alt-right movements across the globe, from the USA to Europe to Asia. “War is Peace” incorporates footage of George Bush declaring war on Iraq, as well as disturbing footage of both Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s genocide of Palestine. Via “Freedom is Slavery,” Peck takes a look at how modern fascist and right-wing movements build complicity within their bases, as well as the growing income inequality crisis occurring globally. With “Ignorance is Strength,” the film peers into the rampant misinformation caused by conservative news outlets and growing anti-intellectualism and book banning.

Unsurprisingly though, a very large portion of the film centers around Donald Trump, and how his cult of personality, his disregard for the truth and obvious lies, and his willingness to subvert democracy all prove eerily similar to the omnipresent, unseen Big Brother of “1984.” In many respects, the film already feels out of date, mostly covering Trump’s crimes during his first term as well as the January 6 Capitol insurrection rather than dipping into the more flagrant fascism of his past few months back in office. And, in relitigating controversies that have been been pecked and prodded at for years at this point, “Orwell” sometimes winds up making points you’ve probably read in a hundred online essays already.

Still, as pat as a point of reference as “1984” and the phrase “Orwellian” has become on the internet, that doesn’t mean Peck doesn’t make the comparisons well. His research is thorough and persuasive, and occasionally finds a new, refreshing angle to apply the analysis, such as one segment that explores how AI-generated “art” ties back to the themes of the novel. On a technical level, “Orwell” is sharply made, cross-cutting between “1984” footage and modern day interviews to allow the audience to bridge the gap on their own terms, with only occasional graphics used to illustrate particularly disturbing or stark statistics when needed. It helps that Lewis is an excellent narrator, giving his version of Orwell a perfect touch of wry humor in his voice that makes some of the more upsetting moments easier to stomach.

With the film’s sociological critiques so pointed, “2 + 2 = 5” loses its edge whenever it sporadically attempts to include material fleshing out Orwell’s life outside of his most famous creation. His other well-known allegory for Stalinist Russia, “Animal Farm,” gets a brief acknowledgement, but the other work goes largely ignored. Sparse content about his personal life — including the death of his first wife Eileen O’Shaughnessy and how his second Sonia Brownell inspired the character of Julia in “1984” — feels vestigial rather than illuminating.

Most frustrating, Orwell’s limitations both politically and personally — especially the sexism, homophobia, and classism that occasionally seeped into his novels and essays — don’t receive much implicit or explicit acknowledgement within the film. A revealing bit of narration from Orwell notes how, as a young man, “he was both a snob and a revolutionary,” an Eton-educated member of the middle class whose socialism was based more on theory than struggle. But Peck doesn’t take the time to look into how that background affected his portrayal of the proles in “1984” as unwashed, undignified masses. You could read something radical into Peck’s choice to take the words of a white British man who never had much, if anything, to say about race in his writings and apply his concepts to modern-day systemic racism: one segment compiles several quotes from Trump about the Black community juxtaposed with fake AI images he used for his campaign in 2024, while footage from the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests is prominently featured.

“1984” famously ends on a pitch black note of despair: Winston has been broken by the Party’s torture and released back into the world as a complacent puppet, one who passively writes 2 + 2 = 5 on a coffee table while declaring his love for Big Brother. Peck’s film climaxes with a montage of this sequence as depicted in the novel’s various film adaptations, but it ends by looping around to an earlier section of the book, where Winston muses to himself that “If there was hope, it must lie in the proles, because only there, in those swarming disregarded masses, eighty-five percent of the population of Oceania, could the force to destroy the Party ever be generated.”

In some respects, this appeal to the common man conclusion feels a bit false, given how uncompromising Orwell was at denying his audience catharsis. Still, one has to take account of the different functions Orwell and Peck’s works serve: while Orwell wrote “1984” as a warning of where the world could be headed, Peck made a film about the world we already live in. How do you find the strength needed, living in totalitarianism, to believe that things can change for the better?

“My chief hope for the future,” Lewis narrates as Orwell as the film draws to its close, “is that the common people have never parted company with their moral code.”

Grade: B-

“Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5” had its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. It opens at the IFC Center in New York City on October 2 and at the American Cinematheque in Los Angeles on October 9.

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. 

October 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming