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Tyler, the Creator's Flog Gnaw Postponed Due To Rain
Music

Tyler, the Creator’s Flog Gnaw Postponed Due To Rain

by jummy84 November 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Tyler, the Creator’s annual Camp Flog Gnaw festival will move on short notice from this weekend to Nov. 22-23 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles due to heavy rain in the area.

“Due to the fact this storm became an atmospheric rain torrential downpour, we had two choices,” the artist wrote on Instagram. “Cancel or move to next weekend. We chose the latter. We understand this is not ideal, so we will offer refunds. For everyone else, we will see you next weekend.”

Beyond the artist himself, the bill will be led by A$AP Rocky, a rare Childish Gambino set, Clipse and Doechii, although some previously announced artists will no longer appear next weekend, including sombr, Clairo, Don Toliver and Men I Trust.

Now in its 11th year, Camp Flog Gnaw will also feature Earl Sweatshirt, GloRilla, Larry June and 2 Chainz, T-Pain, Malcolm Todd and Thundercat.

Flog Gnaw caps a massive year for Tyler, who is up for five awards at the upcoming Grammys, including Album of the Year and Best Rap Album for CHROMAKOPIA and Best Alternative Music Album for DON’T TAP THE GLASS. He’ll return to the road in March for South American headlining dates and appearances at Lollapaloozas in Argentina, Chile and Brazil.

November 14, 2025 0 comments
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'Little Amélie or the Character of Rain' Directors Interview
TV & Streaming

‘Little Amélie or the Character of Rain’ Directors Interview

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

There are too many animated movies to name that star children, but few capture how a child sees the world as well as “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain.” Based on a semi-autobiographical novel by author Amélie Nothomb, the film begins with the birth of the main character, a young Belgian girl whose father works as a diplomat in ’60s Japan, while the nation still had several scars from World War II. Precocious and believing herself to be a god, the young Amélie nonetheless has a child’s understanding of the world in which she lives, grappling with her identity as someone attached to the culture of her adopted home while also confronting death and real complex human feelings for the first time.

FRANKENSTEIN, Jacob Elordi as The Creature, 2025.  ph: Ken Woroner /© Netflix /Courtesy Everett Collection

“Little Amélie” is the feature directorial debut of Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han, French filmmakers who first met as students studying animation at Gobelins Paris. The two went on to work on several animated films together, most notably 2015’s “The Little Prince” and “Long Way North.” During production on 2018 of “Calamity,” a film by “Long Way North” director Rémi Chayé, Han gave Vallade a copy of the original novel by Nothomb, which he had first read when he was 19. Both directors were attracted to the book’s philosophical look at early childhood, with Vallade describing the novel as short but an “explosion of the senses.”

“I remember the first time I read that book at the end, I think it was the first time I cried while reading a book,” Han said in an interview with IndieWire. “So it had a very, very strong impact on me.”

To adapt the book, Mallade and Han took inspiration from the movies they made under Chayé, which have a simple and impressionistic hand-drawn aesthetic. The resulting work, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, is a gorgeous 2D animated creation, vibrantly combines colors to create Amélie’s world. For the animation, Mallade took some inspiration from “Japonisme,” a nineteenth-century French artistic movement that saw post-impressionist visual artists in the country take significant inspiration from Japanese artistic tradition.

“It’s one of the biggest references for everything that has to do with color in the movie, and also the simplification [of the art],” Mallade said.

Japanese animation also served as a visual reference during the movie’s production; Han said most of the team grew up during a time when the medium was popular in France, and described the film as a fusion between American, Disney-esque influences and those of Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki. Mallade, for her own part, describes live action filmmaking as her biggest inspiration, as it influenced the film’s cinematic framing and how she situated the “camera” to represent Amélie’s perspective.

During production, one of the biggest concerns for the team was representing Japan, and the book’s unique cultural mix between the country and Belgium. As Mallade put it, the Japan of the story is an idealized version of the real country, one seen through the precocious main character’s eyes, but they still wanted to pay attention to what Japan would have been like during the ’60s. Artistic director Eddine Noël did much of the research into the time period and the environment of the Kansai region in which the film is set, and built a replica of the house featured in the novel, and the team designed the house with Western furniture to represent the cultural fusion. Some areas, like a beach that plays a major role in the climax, are based on real places and drew from the plants and fish that are there in real life.

Although “Little Amélie” is a very grounded story of a girl’s coming-of-age, it contains several scenes in which the animators bent reality to represent Amélie’s point of view. Early in the film, she responds to the taste of a white Belgian chocolate bar as an almost nirvana-like awakening; when she experiences her first Spring, the flowers grow and expand into a limitless field. During the beach scene where she nearly drowns, the ocean parts for her in a symbolic moment. Han, who said the beach moment came from how he pictured the scene from the book as a kid, said these moments were intended to represent Amélie’s evolution, from a nearly mute baby in the beginning to a more mature girl by the end.

“We always tried to find some ideas that meet her emotional state,” Han told IndieWire. “You really feel that something happened to her brain, by connecting her neurons together, so she’s a bit more conscious about herself.”

Mallade described the process of putting the audience in the brain of Amélie as the most challenging part of making the entire film, as it was key to making the very simple story feel universal and emotionally resonant. Narration from Amélie, in which she conveyed her innocent worldview, helped to situate the audience in her perspective. As part of the process, Mallade and Han asked their team for memories they had from their childhood to pepper throughout the film. For example, a key scene where Amélie’s nanny Nishio creates and spins two tops, as a metaphor for their powerful soulmate connection, came from a memory a color artist offered. Mallade said these moments helped make the film both more specific and more universal, something that’s heavily rooted in its time and place while resonating with all audiences.

“We really want audiences to remember how things where when they were young, and that love can exist without barriers,” Mallade said. “Just remember the world when you were a kid, and you really cling to one’s memories.”

“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” is now playing in theaters nationwide.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Weekly Drop Watch: Birkenstock X La Ligne, Dr. Martens' First Rain Boot, Soft Services X Dedcool and More
Fashion

Weekly Drop Watch: Birkenstock X La Ligne, Dr. Martens' First Rain Boot, Soft Services X Dedcool and More

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84


For our Weekly Drop Watch column, Fashionista scours the market to curate the most noteworthy releases from our favorite fashion and beauty brands. Keep scrolling for this week’s highlights. Elsa Hosk stars in the campaign for eyewear brand Elisa Johnson’s Holiday Edit, which features nine frames …

Continue reading

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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LA Rain: Evacuation Warnings In Palisades, Eaton Canyon, Hollywood
TV & Streaming

LA Rain: Evacuation Warnings In Palisades, Eaton Canyon, Hollywood

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATED with latest: Even before the first drop of rain falls, the impacts of the coming storm are already beginning to be felt across Los Angeles.

Among them:

  • Due to the potential for flooding, Pepperdine University will shift to remote classes tomorrow for students at the Malibu and Calabasas campuses. Regular operations are expected to resume Wednesday.
  • Topanga Canyon Boulevard will be closed beginning at 10 p.m. tonight and continuing until 5 a.m. Tuesday, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The closure will occur over a 3.6-mile stretch between Pacific Coast Highway and Grand View Drive. That stretch of road is a work zone, with nightly closures occurring beginning at midnight, but it will close two hours early tonight due to the wet weather. The stretch is bounded by high cliffs and subject to frequent slides, even un light rain.
  • Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that swiftwater rescue teams, mud and debris flow crews, as well as heavy-duty high-water vehicles are moving into Los Angeles, Ventura, Orange and Santa Barbara counties. The state is prepositioning over 200 personnel and dozens of pieces of equipment including fire engines, bulldozers, hand crews, helicopters and front loaders.

PREVIOUSLY at 4:18 p.m.: In a good news/bad news combo typical of life in Southern California, the first appreciable rain in more than six months will help provide some much-needed moisture before the fall fire season, but also potentially cause mudflows around the burn scars from last season’s massive fires.

With 1.5 inches of rain forecast to fall in Los Angeles later today — and 2-4 inches in the mountains and foothills — officials have issued evacuation warnings for debris flows near recent burn areas from 10 p.m. tonight to 6 a.m. Wednesday. Residents in the areas burned this year in the Palisades Fire, the Eaton Fire, the Hurst Fire in Sylmar and the Sunset Fire in the Hollywood Hills are advised to prepare to evacuate quickly if ordered.

See specifics on the storm in the graphic below.

The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory for much of L.A. and Ventura counties warning of “Southwest winds 15 to 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph” that will be “strongest in the hills and peaks.” There was also a warning about potential thunderstorms or even possible tornadoes.

A just-issued alert from the NWS further warns, “Chances for Significant/Damaging Debris Flows in & below recent burn scars have increased, esp for the Eaton, Palisades & Bridge scars. If you live in/near a recent burn scar, follow guidance from law enforcement, limit travel to avoid flooding, debris flows & mud flows.”

See specifics on the arrival times for rain in the graphic below.

Los Angeles County Supervisors Chair Katheryn Barger issued a statement a little after 4 p.m. today. It indicated that “the storm’s intensity has increased,” per county officials, and that evacuation orders may be in the offing, at least for the Eaton Canyon/Altadena area which falls under Barger’s purview.

“County emergency officials are actively working to determine next steps and the timing of official orders. If issued, nearly 400 properties could fall under mandatory evacuation. Many of these are standing homes in high-risk burn areas,” she wrote.

“I know that asking residents to leave their homes is disruptive and difficult,” added Barger. “But I would rather see people temporarily relocated than anyone put in harm’s way. Please, if you are in an evacuation warning zone, prepare now and be ready to leave immediately once an order is issued.”

On the plus side, the rain should help the region avoid a repeat of this past January’s fires. Those blazes were primed by growth from a 2022 wet season that registered a total of 28.40 inches of rainfall in the Los Angeles region, followed by 25.19 inches during the year 2023. The seasonal average is about 14 inches. The key here is that in 2024 that growth was dried out as the region experienced moderate drought conditions, including a period of eight months devoid of any measurable rainfall running up to fire season.

We’ve more or less gone seven months since the Palisades and Eaton Fire burn areas received a deluge and saw mudflows that added to the damage caused by the fires. This coming precipitation, while dangerous itself, could prevent a repeat of the wet-dry fire cycle as the region rolls into fall and awaits the rains of winter.

City News Service contributed to this report.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Review: A Small Animated Wonder
TV & Streaming

Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Review: A Small Animated Wonder

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Possibly the first bonafide coming-of-age movie about a two-year-old girl who learns her place in the world and how it works, Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han’s “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” might operate on a similar emotional wavelength as recent genre classics like “Boyhood” or “Lady Bird,” but this animated bildungsroman — impressionistically adapted from an autobiographical novel by the Belgian novelist Amélie Nothomb — feels as though it belongs to a different universe altogether. 

For one thing, its chubby-cheeked namesake believes that she’s God. Or, begrudgingly, at least a god. Buddhist tradition holds that children are “of the gods” until the age of seven or so, when they make their transition into the mortal world, but something must have gotten lost in translation for the French-speaking Amélie, who was born to Belgian parents in the mountains of Japan toward the end of the 1960s. The youngest of three children, Amélie is so slow to develop that a doctor tells her parents that she’s a vegetable, and instructs them to place her in a protective bubble. “God did nothing, and was forgotten,” says her constant and precocious inner monologue (voiced by the older Loïse Charpentier). 

'Wayward,' a Netflix series, stars Toni Collette as Evelyn Wade, shown here watching over group therapy

And then, one fateful day, her visiting grandmother (Cathy Cerde as Claude) feeds Amélie a piece of Belgian white chocolate and the little girl erupts in a blaze of light like something out of “Dragonball Z.” From that point on, the former “vegetable” is a walking, talking vessel of wonder. And the movie around her — which is just as short, strange, and suspended between reality and imagination as its pint-sized heroine — is likewise open to the mysteries of the universe, as “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” blossoms into a uniquely childlike meditation on all of the beauty that life has to offer, and on all of the loss which makes that beauty worth cherishing while you can. 

As anyone who’s ever had a two-year-old could tell you, kids that age don’t quite see things in such abstract terms. And yet, Vallade and Liane-Cho Han’s borderline anthropomorphic film is so arresting for how beautifully it approximates a child’s experience of entering the world, and of realizing that it extends beyond the limits of their gaze. That it existed before they were born, and doesn’t revolve around any single one of us. 

That awakening is both subject and story for “Little Amélie,” and yet it would be hard to imagine a less didactic approach to the lessons involved. Plotted like a series of ever-expanding bubbles, the movie is primarily driven by splendor more than anything else, and by the sheer joy of discovering what life has to offer for the first time. Amélie’s world is a feast for the senses, and the rotoscope-like style of the film’s digital animation — not performance-captured, but illustrated to make it look as though a soft and hyper-vivid filter has been placed over reality as we know it — transforms even the most ordinary kitchens or flower gardens into the stuff of core memories. 

The girl’s massive green eyes constantly re-center the movie around the act of looking, and that focus — when combined with the overall aesthetic — has the added effect of making everything she encounters seem equally real. When Amélie imagines her mean older brother as a mindless carp sucking away at the surface of a pond, we understand that’s how she thinks of him in her mind’s eye. When she becomes convinced that her mother’s vacuum cleaner must also be a god (how else could it make things permanently disappear like that?), there’s no sense in doubting her conviction. 

In the film’s most effective sequence, Amélie’s loving young housekeeper — a Japanese woman who’s either fluent in French for some reason or our first hint of the movie’s interchangeable approach to language — uses a rice cooker to explain the horror of the bombs that rained down on the country during the war, and to do so in a way that a (super-advanced) two-year-old might be able to understand. There isn’t so much as a hint of violence, and yet the image of grains being separated from each other amid the void of a closed pot offers a potent evocation of what it must be like to hear about and process such things for the first time.

Voiced by Victoria Grobois, Nishio-san will become Amélie’s best friend and most beloved teacher. The child’s world literally grows more fleshed out as a result of their time together, and while “Little Amélie” is rarely suspenseful or meaningfully story-driven, its visual progression from vague color splotches to Monet-like detail offers a compelling kind of plot development unto itself. 

The film gets sadder as it goes along and forces Amélie to contend with a handful of uncomfortable realities (including the reasons why their Japanese landlord is so standoffish towards her foreign tenants, and the fact that Amélie’s family won’t be staying in the country forever), but it becomes more beautiful at exactly the same rate. Lasting only 71 minutes, or just a little bit longer than a sunshower, sunshower, “Little Amélie and the Character of Rain” isn’t a moment too short for its material, and yet its brevity allows it to maintain that delicate balance between joy and grief — discovery and heartache — from start to finish, and to use the sweet cocoon of childhood as a way of crystallizing how that dynamic grows with us as we get older. “Life is a great chomping mouth that spares nothing,” Amélie surmises at her lowest moment, but there’s oh so much to see between each bite.

Grade: B

“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” screened at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. GKIDS will release it in select theaters on Friday, October 31, and nationwide on Friday, November 7.

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 10, 2025 0 comments
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Lovely US Trailer for 'Little Amélie or the Character of Rain' Animation
Hollywood

Lovely US Trailer for ‘Little Amélie or the Character of Rain’ Animation

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Lovely US Trailer for ‘Little Amélie or the Character of Rain’ Animation

by Alex Billington
September 3, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You were the only one who saw who I really was.” This film! GKids has unveiled the official US trailer for Little Amélie or the Character of Rain, also known as just Little Amélie, a beautiful animated film from France. From directors Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han, Amélie et la métaphysique des tubes (the original title) is the story of Amélie, a Belgian girl living in Japan, who adores nature and all the spectacular beauty of the outdoors. The story explores life with her companion Nishio-san, a caretaker for the family. Her third birthday becomes a turning point, marking the beginning of life-altering events that will shape her understanding of the world. With the voices of Emmylou Homs, Loïse Charpentier, Laetitia Coryn, Yumi Fujimori, and Isaac Schoumsky. I saw this at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival and it really left me in awe – which is the exact quote they use on this trailer and poster! I’m a huge fan of this film. There aren’t enough superlatives to describe how beautiful it is. Even though the 2D animation style seems simplistic, it’s certainly not, once it gets moving and everyone is swept up in all these adventures in her little world it is breathtaking. I’m very happy they’re giving this a proper theatrical release in this US this November. Enjoy.

Official US trailer for animated movie Little Amélie or the Character of Rain, direct from YouTube:

Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Trailer

Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Poster

You can watch the intial festival trailer for the Little Amélie movie right here to view the first look again.

Follows the young Amélie – born in Japan to Belgian parents – as she navigates an extraordinary early childhood. For the first two-and-a-half years of her life, she exists in a state of pure sensation, detached from typical human experiences – metaphorically described as “a digestive tube, inert and vegetative”. But on her third birthday, a transformative event awakens her to the world. Over the next six months, she discovers language, family, a heavenly garden, Japan, water, the changing seasons and the passage of time. Drawing on the Japanese belief that children are considered divine until the age of three, the film explores how this brief period, filled with joy & sorrow, is a foundational element in shaping her identity.

Little Amélie or the Character of Rain, originally known as Amélie et la métaphysique des tubes in French, is co-directed by filmmakers Liane-Cho Han Jin Kuang (animator on The Illusionist, Long Way North, Ethel & Ernest, Calamity a Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary) & Mailys Vallade (of The Lighthouse Keeper short, artist on Calamity a Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary), making their feature directorial debut with this project. The screenplay is written by Liane-Cho Han Jin Kuang, Eddine Noël, Aude Py, and Mailys Vallade. Adapted from the book written by Amélie Nothomb. Produced by Claire La Combe, Edwina Liard, Henri Magalon, and Nidia Santiago. This first premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival earlier this year (read our review) and it’s next playing TIFF this month before release. GKids will debut Little Amélie or the Character of Rain in US theaters nationwide starting November 7th, 2025 late this fall. Beautiful?

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September 4, 2025 0 comments
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