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Russell Crowe credits 55lb weight loss to cutting back alcohol intake
Celebrity News

Russell Crowe credits 55lb weight loss to cutting back alcohol intake

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

8 November 2025

Russell Crowe says cutting back on his alcohol intake helped him drop 55lbs.

Photo: Lumeimages.com/Avalon

The Gladiator star, 61, loves a tipple, but he now limits booze to “one night a week” and is reaping the benefits, as a year after wrapping filming on Nuremberg, he’s shed an impressive amount of weight. 

Appearing on The Joe Rogan Experience, he said: “I’m a big proponent for having a drink.

“But as you get older, there are certain things that you start to learn about your capacities.”

He continued: “Now that I’m an older guy, I know that one night a week—if I’m having fun—is plenty. I try to cut out the interstitial stuff.”

These days, Crowe would rather have one glass of expensive wine as a treat than consume any old drink “for the sake of it”.

He explained: “If I decide I’m going to have a glass of wine with dinner, then it’s going to be a really nice wine.

“I try not to have casual drinks now, having a drink for the sake of it. Those add up.”

The Australian native has also suffered from “deeply arthritic” shoulder and knee injuries, and the treatments for that have helped to reduce his “body’s inflammation”.

He shared: “It’s calmed down my body’s inflammation.

“What was messy a year ago, now has just lessened probably by about 70 per cent. One area in right shoulder, probably by about 90 per cent.”

Crowe quipped: “Now, it’s f****** rock and roll, son.

“It’s all going good.”

Meanwhile, the Nice Guys star recently ruled out getting married again following rumours he and girlfriend Britney Theriot were engaged.

Crowe was previously married to Australian singer and actress Danielle Spencer, with whom he tied the knot in 2003 and divorced in 2018.

The 61-year-old actor and his 33-year-old partner are often rumoured to be engaged, but Crowe insists he doesn’t want to “ruin” his “joyous and happy” life with his partner with a wedding.

Appearing on Sunday’s 60 Minutes last weekend, he said: “All these reports coming out that Britney and I are engaged and I’m going to get married again? No.

“My life is joyous and happy, why ruin that with a wedding?”

He gushed over his five-year relationship: “We respect each other and wake up with a smile, and we are very happy.”

Doubling down on not wanting to walk down the aisle again, he added: “I’ve been married once, and I know where that can go.

“I’m not gonna get married again. Doing it once is cool, but I don’t want to get married again.”

Crowe – who has Charles, 21, and Tennyson, 19, with his ex-spouse – has been dating Britney since 2020.




November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Russell Crowe Reveals 55-Lb. Weight Loss
Celebrity News

Russell Crowe Reveals 55-Lb. Weight Loss

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84


Russell Crowe's beautiful mind is focused on his health.
The Oscar winner said he dropped from 126 kg (277 lbs.) to 100.9 kg (222 lbs.) since wrapping filming on the historical drama Nuremberg…

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Russell Simmons Owed Millions to His Accusers. Have They Found Justice?
Music

Russell Simmons Owed Millions to His Accusers. Have They Found Justice?

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84


S
ince 2018, Russell Simmons has been living the life of a well-heeled holy man primarily in Bali, cultivating an aesthetic that falls somewhere between Eat, Pray, Love and alternative-medicine practitioner. Calling himself a yogi and professing wellness expertise — he has been promoting his 2015 vegan cookbook on Instagram — the Def Jam Recordings co-founder posted an exuberant selfie with a group of apparent religious pilgrims earlier this year, with the caption: “The goal is self discovery when one knows the self she/he makes life a moving prayer.… he should practice living in prayer ❤️ and one day in this lifetime or the next all suffering stops…” This introspection has also served as a business opportunity: Simmons is a founder and investor in the Gdas Bali Health and Wellness Resort, “the destination for devotional and wellness practitioners,” he wrote on Instagram.  

His Instagram account is filled with dedications to his family, yoga mentors, and old-school rapper friends — “It has probably been at least one year since I missed 8 am meditation,” he wrote in August — with Simmons noting recently that “Govinda das Ananda (god’s blissful servant) was the name given to me by krishna,” and writing that one woman’s introduction to yoga and meditation “inspire[s] me to keep serving.”

However full the pioneering hip-hop mogul’s island life might appear, his relocation came amid numerous sexual-misconduct allegations back in the United States. For more than a year, Simmons’ continued residence in Bali dovetailed with allegations that he had yet to pay agreed-upon settlements to at least five women who have accused him of sexual misconduct.

Wendy Franco, Sil Lai Abrams, and Sherri Abernathy said in court papers filed in October 2024 that for more than a year, Simmons hadn’t paid 2023 agreements of more than $3 million total. Specifically, Simmons had agreed to pay Franco $515,000, and Abrams and Abernathy $1,265,000 each.

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Abernathy alleged that Simmons raped her in 1983, while Abrams claimed Simmons raped her a decade later in 1994. Franco has not publicly made claims against Simmons, but according to settlement paperwork filed in court, the settlement relates to alleged “physical injuries and sickness.” Documents filed in the legal proceedings also show that as of January 2025,, Simmons also owed a total of at least $8 million to three other accusers: Tina Klein-Baker, Toni Sallie, and Alexia Jones. These filings from earlier this year claimed that Simmons had paid only $220,000 total to them. (A firm spokesperson for Klein-Baker’s lawyer, Kenya Davis of Boies Schiller Flexner, said that “at this stage of litigation, the attorneys and clients could not comment.” The attorney for Sallie and Jones declined to comment and declined to make them available for this article.)

Rolling Stone sent a detailed list of questions related to the allegations of abuse and nonpayment to multiple attorneys representing Simmons. Simmons, through one of his attorneys, Imran Ansari, declined to comment. Two days after Rolling Stone sent Simmons questions for this article, a lawyer for Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy told Rolling Stone, “The matter has been resolved,” but declined to provide any additional details. Lawyers for Simmons did not reply to additional inquiries on the nature of the resolution, and it remains unclear what conditions and parameters, if any, are included in the resolution or how much money, if any, the women have received.

Wendy Franco, Sherri Abernathy and Sil Lai Abrams in New York in August.

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

Meanwhile, Simmons has gone on the attack in response to allegations against him. This summer, he filed a defamation suit against HBO and Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick, the filmmakers who produced On the Record, a 2020 documentary featuring interviews with several Simmons accusers. (Simmons’ lawyer claimed “credible information, persuasive evidence, [and] witness statements” supporting Simmons were “disregarded” in the making of the film. HBO’s parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery, said in a statement to Rolling Stone that the lawsuit “lacks both merit and substance” and that they “stand behind the documentary.” The suit is ongoing.) 

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The settlement papers with Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy do not detail specific accusations — like Franco’s, the other two settlements reflect that “[t]he Settlement Amount constitutes a payment for damages for Claimant’s alleged personal, physical injuries and sickness” — nor does Simmons admit wrongdoing in the settlements, which state that his payment does not imply “any admission of liability, fault, or wrongdoing.” Sallie and Jones’ settlements also state that the agreements do not admit any liability of wrongdoing, nor specify exact allegations.

In interviews with Rolling Stone prior to the resolution, Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy largely described Simmons’ apparent delay in payment as another emotional blow in the already-arduous process of legal action against him. His nonpayment, which spanned more than a year at the time of these interviews, felt like another trauma.

“It was devastating,” Franco said in an April interview with Rolling Stone, before the resolution. “I just felt so stupid that I thought this person would follow through, that I thought that someone who could do what he did would turn around and acknowledge me and make some type of amends. You exposed yourself to this, and now this person again shows you that it doesn’t matter to him.” 

Simmons has said that “I own no property in the United States,” and has cried poverty in filings. His legal team, in a defamation suit filed by former music-industry executive Drew Dixon, who accused him of rape in 2017, said in September that he owes them more than $100,000 in fees. (Simmons has denied Dixon’s claims.) The attorneys also said that Simmons is unable to pay a $15,000 penalty imposed by the court on his legal team for missing a scheduled court hearing.

“You exposed yourself to this, and now this person again shows you it doesn’t matter to him.”

Wendy Franco

Dixon’s lawyer, Kenya Davis, shot back that Simmons has money, urging a New York judge to ignore Simmons’ “palpably false and self-serving claims of poverty.” Davis said that Simmons has a 75 percent stake in the Gdas resort and noted his “ongoing partnership with and ownership interest” in a Singapore-based talent agency.

Resolved or not, Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy’s years-long financial purgatory also exemplifies the unfulfilled promises of #MeToo. Women were encouraged to take action against men who had allegedly harmed them — often upending their lives in the process — only to find that the financial and emotional relief in coming forward might be ephemeral at best, nonexistent at worst. Simmons’ protracted nonpayment also reflects the logistical perils and broader challenges for anyone navigating the legal process. People can willingly enter into settlements — as Simmons did — but if they don’t pay, enforcement of these agreements could spiral into a labyrinthine and prolonged legal fight. 

“It could be indefinite,” says Daniel Tabak, a partner at the New York law firm Cohen & Gresser who focuses on bankruptcy and was not involved in any Simmons cases. “There’s no guarantee that [plaintiffs] will ever be able to collect.”

Meanwhile, Simmons’ financial liabilities don’t seem to have impeded his movements. On Aug. 11, he posted a video of himself and a fan to his Instagram shot in New York City. “NYC can be so magical,” he wrote. “Just met this wonderful young lady. She is full of love

A ‘Life-Changing Trauma’

For years, Franco dealt with her pain personally and alone, and tried as best as she could to avoid thinking about Simmons. “I did not follow Russell Simmons in any way. I was very averse to him and everything about him,” she says. Then came #MeToo. 

While Franco declined to discuss the specifics of her allegations — “Ms. Franco is reluctant to elaborate on her claims against Mr. Simmons, given his penchant for litigation,” her attorney, Andrew Wilson of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel, tells Rolling Stone — she spoke openly prior to the resolution about the deep emotional toll of Simmons’ apparent failure to pay the settlement. 

“A lot of people were writing about their experiences with powerful men having abused them,” Franco tells Rolling Stone. She had come across accounts of women speaking out against Simmons and had learned about a documentary on him while it was already in progress. “I missed my opportunity to be in this film because it had already been done,” Franco says. “It was a letdown.”

Simmons, circa 1994.

Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

Franco contended with economic and family hardships from a young age. The 50-year-old came to the U.S. with her family from the Dominican Republic at age 11, and describes the move as “a lot of trauma.” She and her siblings were separated and scattered into foster homes during the immigration process. Franco says she was “pretty much living on my own by the age of 14” and staying with friends in New York.  

She wanted to act, but her dyslexia and need to learn English on her own scared her from reading in public. But Franco, who ultimately became enmeshed in the downtown New York City arts world, taught herself by “reading The Outsiders with a dictionary, listening to the Smiths, and translating.”

The resilience carried forward. Franco kept up with Simmons’ accusers through social media and discovered the Adult Survivors Act. The 2022 New York state law created a one-year window for adult survivors of sexual misconduct to file civil claims against their alleged abusers that otherwise would have exceeded the statute of limitations. “It felt like divine intervention,” she says, sometimes twirling a ringlet around her finger when she speaks. “It felt crazy and it worked out. I felt like a little bit of my history was validated. It was amazing.”

The settlement addressed a sense of dehumanization that had weighed on her for years. “It’s like a life-shifting, life-changing trauma that makes you doubt who you are and your value and your worth, and it means so little to the person who traumatizes you, who abuses you; it means nothing to them,” she says. “They might not even fucking remember it. So to have that person have to admit, even if it’s just to get you off their back, that you existed … it’s incredibly important.”

Abernathy — who as Sheri Sher was a founding member of the pioneering all-female hip-hop group Mercedes Ladies — describes a sense of empowerment in her decision to come forward. The 64-year-old former rapper still delivers her words enthusiastically, often smiling as she recalls the group’s music. She tells Rolling Stone that she worried about reprisal amid her already turbulent life had she come forward back in the 1980s. Abernathy’s family, consisting of her mother and 10 siblings, constantly faced eviction in New York City. Writing was her solace. She was frequently scribbling in black-and-white-speckled notebooks, covering one side in rhymes and the other with diary-like missives.

During one eviction, Abernathy recalls, city marshals took her composition book. “That really hurt me,“ she says. She crossed paths with Simmons a few times while she was pushing hard for Mercedes Ladies’ success. She has previously said that Simmons attacked her one evening after luring her to his office under the false pretence of a business conversation. 

Abernathy alluded to the alleged rape in her 2008 autobiographical novel, Mercedes Ladies, but did not name Simmons despite her friends’ encouragement to do so. She mulled naming him for four months, but ultimately decided against it. “I felt that if I came out,” she tells Rolling Stone, “I would have a lot of trouble on my hands.”

Wendy Franco

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

That changed in late 2017. Following allegations against Harvey Weinstein that October, more women were coming forward with sexual misconduct claims against powerful men in the entertainment industry, including music, notably leading to the conviction of R&B star R. Kelly and sprawling allegations against Marilyn Manson. (Manson has denied the claims.)

Model Keri Claussen accused Simmons of sexual assault in a November 2017 article in the Los Angeles Times. Less than two weeks later, screenwriter Jenny Lumet alleged in The Hollywood Reporter that Simmons sexually assaulted her. Three women, including Dixon, accused Simmons of rape in a Dec. 13, 2017, New York Times article. (Simmons is fighting Dixon’s defamation suit, in part by insisting that his broad denials of sexual misconduct on a podcast did not directly name her.) 

“I felt that if I came out [in 2008], I would have a lot of trouble on my hands.”

Sherri Abernathy

That same day, Abernathy was one of five women who accused Simmons of misconduct in a Los Angeles Times article. “I never really expected that all these women would come out. I thought I was the only one,” she says. “When it came out, I felt a little bit of empowerment behind it. I thought there was never gonna be justice, but justice did come out.”

Simmons has repeatedly denied the claims, saying in 2017 that “these horrific accusations have shocked me to my core, and all of my relations have been consensual.” He apologized in another statement for being “thoughtless and insensitive.” Weeks earlier, he said that he had “never committed any acts of aggression or violence in my life. I would never knowingly cause fear or harm to anyone.” 

The settlement “wasn’t about money,” says Abernathy, noting how she didn’t name Simmons despite her book coming out at the height of his fame. “I’m not a money person. I always worked and kept paying my own way.” For Abernathy, who recently retired after working as a New York state court officer for 20 years, the settlement meant that Simmons was “being held to account for his actions.”

Abrams, a writer and survivor advocate, says she was surprised that there might be any way to get justice. “When I first heard of the Adult Survivors Act, I was shocked that it would even pass. I always held reservations about it as a mechanism for justice, because I know how extensive sexual victimization is in our society,” she says. “We treat it as if it is this aberration, and while it is aberrant, unfortunately it is common. And one of the things we’ve learned from #MeToo was how widespread this issue is. It’s not something that just happens on the fringes of society.”

Abrams, who has said that she came from a chaotic home, told The Hollywood Reporter that she met Simmons in 1989. She had moved to New York City the prior year, and was working as a nightclub hostess. (She also worked as an executive assistant at Def Jam in 1992.) A few years after meeting Simmons, they had sex at various points. In 1994, Abrams saw Simmons for what she believed was a platonic meeting. She had previously told him she no longer wanted a sexual relationship and he agreed to that, according to her interview with The Hollywood Reporter. When they were out that night, Abrams has previously said, she was drinking alcohol while Simmons drank sparkling water, claiming he was sober. 

Later that evening, Abrams asked Simmons to direct his driver to bring her home, but she was driven to his apartment instead. Abrams said that she passed out on his bed with her clothes on. Abrams, who has said she was wavering in and out of consciousness, alleged that Simmons raped her despite her repeatedly saying no, and then directed her to leave his apartment because he was waiting for a romantic interest to call him. 

Sherri Abernathy

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

‘Living a Nightmare’

In November 2023, it seemed like things would finally come to a close for the three women. Simmons signed settlements with Abrams, Abernathy, and Franco and agreed to an October 2024 deadline for payment. These settlement agreements were confidential — meaning that the women were legally barred from disclosing the amount or even the existence of a potential settlement. Nobody would know that he paid the women a dime, obviating the possibility of additional bad press. As part of these settlements, Simmons also signed paperwork attesting that he owed them the settlement money and confirming the payment deadline. 

Because these statements effectively validated the settlements, they should have expedited enforcement. The statements also stipulated that if Simmons didn’t pay, the women’s attorneys could file these statements — and the total amounts owed — in court and make them public. 

Simmons blew past the deadline without paying any of the women. The women’s attorneys filed these statements in October 2024, publicly revealing that he had brokered confidential agreements, alongside the amounts. “I was looking at my phone every day,” Franco says of waiting for Simmons’ payment. When she spoke to her attorney at the deadline and learned that he hadn’t paid, “it was devastating.”  

“It just made me feel crazy. I cried for days. I was completely incapacitated,” she tells Rolling Stone. “I didn’t work for a little bit, and not because I’m melodramatic and [not because] I’m a fucking take-to-my-bed person.” Franco was angry. The burden of that limbo, she says, was “like an anchor.”

Abernathy voices similar sentiments. After a “very tedious and long” process, she and Simmons had come to an agreement, and for her, it seemed like it would be as over as it could be. “I thought, and I’m quite sure the rest of the girls thought, that Russell was going to keep [his promise].” When he delayed payment for more than a year, all the while leaning harder into his Zen vibe and luxe tropical lifestyle on social media, “it was just like living a nightmare over and over.”

“How do you go from the godfather of hip-hop to this broken, cornered animal on this tiny island? That’s quite sad.”

Sil Lai Abrams

Last spring, Abernathy underwent brain surgery for an aneurysm and was “in the hospital fighting for my life.” As a result, Abernathy says she must avoid stress and keep her blood pressure down. She also needs a clear head for a hopeful Mercedes Ladies project. “I didn’t want myself to get upset,” she said at the time of the ongoing nonpayment. “I didn’t want to start crying again.”

Abrams says the past year touched on her longstanding reservations about the legal process: “With the Adult Survivors Act, my concern was that once these cases began to be settled through the civil courts, a pushback would come [with] the narrative that had always existed: that the intention of a survivor coming forward is monetary gain.”

She says she still decided to give it a shot, going into the negotiation “with an open mind.” She was baffled at Simmons’ delay in upholding the agreement, saying the situation “just [kept] him tethered to all of us.”

“How do you go from the godfather of hip-hop to this broken, cornered animal on this tiny island?” Abrams says. “That’s quite sad.”

Abrams says the entire situation points “to the limitations that civil suits can have on actually bringing survivors some measure of justice that’s intended.”

Remaining Optimistic

The whole point of coming to a settlement is to avoid lengthy lawsuits and trials that can cost both sides more money. Most settlements include confidentiality clauses that not only conceal the settlement figure, but also bar anyone involved from publicly discussing it. When someone doesn’t pay, collecting the owed money isn’t as straightforward as sending an angry letter. The person with the purse strings could decide to stall or skip out on their tab. Attorneys can take them to court. A judge can order payment. Banks can be forced to comply. But if the money isn’t readily available, getting it becomes a challenging process.

“A sophisticated, wealthy defendant often can hide their assets in a way that makes it very difficult for plaintiffs to collect,” explains Tabak, the Cohen & Gresser lawyer who helmed Hulk Hogan’s legal team in Gawker’s bankruptcy, resulting in a $31 million settlement. 

Sil Lai Abrams

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

The state of Simmons’ finances remains unclear. For years, Simmons has been fighting his ex-wife, Kimora Lee, in court over millions of dollars in Celsius energy drink shares that the feds want to seize following the money-laundering conspiracy conviction of Kimora’s ex-husband Tim Leissner. (Through a rep, she declined to comment for this article.)

How exactly the Celsius case will play out is unknown — a recent court filing suggests that Simmons and Kimora might have come to some sort of agreement that’s yet to be finalized — but at the very least, Simmons has tens of millions on the line. Three of his accusers — Sallie, Baker, and Jones — have appeared in court filings as “interested parties” in the Celsius case, though it’s unclear if any of the disputed money would go to his accusers. 

Wilson, Franco’s attorney, has subpoenaed a business firm that works with Simmons for information about his finances. He has also subpoenaed one of Simmons’ daughters, Aoki Lee Simmons, for financial information. Wilson’s firm also sent Aoki Lee a letter dated April 4 warning that if she spent any of her father’s money, she could be on the hook for his nonpayment. (A rep for Aoki said he was not able to reach her for comment.)

Resolution aside, the months of waiting both took a toll and prompted questions for the women. “He has his freedom, technically, but he’s trapped in a prison of his own making, mentally and otherwise — he’s not dealing with reality,” Abrams said in July. “The reality is: He owes a significant number of people a significant amount of money. And that’s not going to get wiped away just because he chooses to hide on an island in the ocean.”

PRODUCTION CREDITS

Hair by SABRINA ROWE. Makeup by GREGG HUBBARD. Makeup Assistant: BLEN WASIHUN.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Robert Irwin grateful for 'very in-depth' Dancing With the Stars critique from Russell Crowe
Celebrity News

Robert Irwin grateful for ‘very in-depth’ Dancing With the Stars critique from Russell Crowe

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

31 October 2025

Russell Crowe gives Robert Irwin “very in-depth feedback” over his Dancing With the Stars performance every week.

Robert Irwin is grateful for Russell Crowe’s support

The 21-year-old conservationist and his family have been friends with the Gladiator star for decades and Robert feels “incredibly grateful” for all the advice his pal has offered while he takes party in the celebrity Latin and ballroom competition with professional dancer Witney Carson.

Robert told Access Hollywood: “I’m incredibly grateful for his support on this dancing journey. It’s actually been really cool because Russell will message after [each] performance.

“Instead of going, ‘This was a really great dance,’ he’ll really delve into the detail of, ‘Okay these steps were great, love the lines, love the clarity in the storytelling.’

“To really get that very in-depth feedback is amazing, and it means a lot.”

Robert is pleased to have the support of the Nuremberg star during his stint on the show because the actor is aware of how much his appearance means to him.

He added: “What I’m doing — I’m not a dancer, I’m trying to tell my story through dance, I’m trying to spread my message of positivity and passion and enthusiasm through dance, and Russell being there to support that means a lot.”

Robert – who is the son of late conservationist Steve Irwin and his widow Terri Irwin – admitted many of his childhood memories involve 61-year-old Russell and he’s grateful to have someone outside of the family to speak to about his dad.

He told People magazine: “I’ve known him for as long as I’ve been alive. I have some very early memories, actually. Some of the earliest memories of me with my dad were also with Russell, which is really special.

“I’m really grateful that I have someone in my life who … he’s actually been there to, in a way, keep my dad alive in my life.

“He has so many stories to share of him and dad, and I feel like I build an even better picture of my dad when I’m around Russell.

“Russell and dad were just great mates, so it’s a different perspective than when you’re hearing about your mom.

“It’s meaningful. He’s someone that I look up to and has truly inspired me.”

And Terri is grateful that Russell took the family “under his wing” following Steve’s death in 2006.

She said: “Russell was friends with Steve first, and then when Steve passed, he really took our family under his wing and looked after us, took care of us, and helped me with advice about my kids.”




November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Keri Russell in 'The Diplomat' season 3.
TV & Streaming

Keri Russell Explains Kate Hal Split, VP

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

[The following story contains spoilers from the first two episodes of The Diplomat season three.]

By the second episode of season three of Netflix‘s The Diplomat, viewers may have thought that the political thriller was on the verge of blowing up its entire premise.

After a series of changes, including Allison Janney’s Grace Penn becoming president after President Rayburn (Michael McKean) dies, Celia Imrie’s Margaret Roylin dying and Penn appointing Rufus Sewell‘s former ambassador Hal Wyler as her vice president instead of his wife Kate Wyler (Keri Russell), who’d been pursuing the position, Kate is ready to leave her post as American ambassador to the U.K., the role she took in the opening minutes of the series’ first episode, and return to the U.S. with Hal with the promise of a newly created special envoy to Europe position alongside her role as second lady. But as she’s about to board the plane, she looks up at Hal from the tarmac and can’t do it. He looks back at her in a knowing moment for the long-married couple and turns around and boards the plane.

For Russell, the moment, which maintains her character’s current diplomatic position, is also an unusual shift for both Kate and many women.

“The interesting part is that she’s just gonna go along miserably and do what the good girl is supposed to do. And when Stuart (Ato Essandoh) brings it up, like maybe you could just stay, I think she hadn’t even thought of it, and I love that she chooses to stay. It’s a monumental moment to choose yourself. And I think women, in particular, don’t. I think it’s really hard for women to choose themselves,” Russell tells The Hollywood Reporter. “Women don’t do that that much for a million reasons, but at this point, Kate decides to choose herself, which is amazing.”

Kate’s choice also reminded the actress of another acclaimed series she starred in that tackled the intimate relationship of a marriage amid larger geopolitical stakes: The Americans.

“When we were making The Americans, Joe [Weisberg] and Joel [Fields], who wrote that show, said they followed a feminist guidebook, or these guidelines, so every single decision Elizabeth made followed this set of rules,” Russell explained of her Soviet spy character in the FX series. “You did it for yourself, not for your family, not for your kids. You made the decision for yourself.”

Even though there is still “more work to be done” in the U.K., particularly as CIA station chief Eidra Park (Ali Ahn) and Kate’s friend is certain she’s about to be fired, Russell says her character’s decision is more about making a break from her pattern with Hal.

“There’s been enough of following this guy and his career. Let him go do his career, let him have it, live it up,” Russell says. “The rivalry and the messiness of it and all the complications of that relationship, it was just too much. You just have to clear your head. And I think she wanted to clear the slate and focus on what her priorities were.”

The episode in which Kate and Hal part ways also features flashbacks to their early days as a couple, including Hal’s proposal, in what Russell called “contemplative in a way that is a different rhythm for our show.”

She adds, “That whole idea of, ‘How did I end up here?, What steps led me here?’ It’s interesting.”

And she praised Kate being passed over for Hal as VP as great storytelling.

“When I read that, it was so fucking good. To be stripped of that when you’re building and all the work in the first episode of handling things for the president, even though they’re at odds, doing the right thing, making everything work and then for Hal to waltz in with his good looks and his good suit, and be offered the position is just deliciously heartbreaking. It really sets this season off to a completely different place,” she says. “Any character, for me anyway, is better when you’re losing. And [creator and showrunner] Debora [Cahn] writes some pretty fantastic, humiliating losses.”

Speaking at a post-screening Q&A with former American ambassador to the U.K. Jane Hartley in New York earlier this week, Cahn joked about the real-life parallels of someone as qualified as Kate not getting a top job.

“How did we come up with the idea that a really smart woman with a lot of experience and a real granular understanding of how things work would be sort of ready, willing and able to take a big leadership job and then didn’t get it at the last second?,” she said.

But in all seriousness, she said that they wanted to keep Kate in the foreign service.

And, she said, “The idea of having two women in the White House, sadly, felt like science fiction.”

At the beginning of episode two, viewers see Kate methodically remove the multiple bobby pins holding together her vice presidential hair and sweep them away, signaling an end — at least for now — to Kate’s ambitions to be vp.

And that’s where Russell points out that Kate “didn’t want that job.”

“You get into this whipped up environment, and you do sort of think, ‘Well, maybe this is what I want, maybe this is what I’m supposed to be doing,’” she says. “And then when [Hal becomes vp], I think it just strips everything away and makes her rethink the whole thing and what she believes and what she wants. I think that’s a great place to start the season.”

Sewell was also excited by the shifting dynamics that came with Hal being picked for vp, saying he was “aghast” when he found out about the “fantastic” development.

“What it does to the dynamic is so explosive, so unexpected, it throws so much in the air. We’ve always enjoyed those kinds of things,” he says. “You don’t want to be the dog that caught the car, so the change in dynamic, I was very grateful for, because I think there’s only a limited amount of interest that you can get out of the dynamic staying the same for too long. So something that really rebalanced the status and created new problems opened the story up.”

The multiple shifts in season three, Cahn indicates, were just natural consequences of the “tiny” change of Rayburn’s death.

“We just did this one tiny little thing, which was the president dropped dead, and it created a whole lot of fallout,” she quips.

Still, she was intrigued by the possibilities of what these changes would do for the characters.

“It was really fascinating to watch a bunch of characters who believe that the world can turn over, but they will stay essentially the same. They will be the same people in relationship to each other,” she says.

And for those who think that some threads from the first two seasons have been tied up early in season three, Cahn teases that those ties may unravel yet again.

“I always think that we’re going to resolve storylines and embark on a new path, but then we end up with some new wrinkle from the old path, which I guess is a lot like life,” she says.

All three seasons, including the eight-episode third season, of The Diplomat are now streaming on Netflix.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Who Is Russell Brand’s Wife Lauren Gallacher? Inside Their Marriage – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Who Is Russell Brand’s Wife Lauren Gallacher? Inside Their Marriage – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84




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Russell Brand and Laura Gallacher
British Curry Awards, London, UK - 26 Nov 2018
Russell Brand and Laura Gallacher
British Curry Awards, London, UK - 26 Nov 2018
Russell Brand and Laura Gallacher
Russell Brand out and about, Los Angeles, USA - 06 Jan 2018
Image Credit: GC Images

By Katy Perry’s own admission, her 14-month marriage to Russell Brand was less of a whirlwind and more of a “tornado.” While the chaos hasn’t vanished entirely, things have certainly mellowed since then. Since 2017, Russell has been married to Laura Gallacher, and the two have built a more grounded life together. Now parents and partners, their relationship has weathered its own ups and downs, especially in light of headlines in 2025 surrounding the actor and comedian.

Here’s what you need to know about Laura and their life together today.

Laura Gallacher

Russell and Laura at the British Curry Awards (Simon Ford/Shutterstock)

Laura Gallacher, reportedly born on June 28, 1987, dated Russell before they tied the knot. “When we first met we were both in a completely different place,” Laura told the Made by Mammas podcast in August 2019, per the Mirror. Her sister is television presenter and model Kirsty Gallacher.

Laura, a lifestyle blogger, dated Russell in 2006. Nine years later, the two bumped into each other randomly out and about. “I hadn’t seen Russell for years… I came down the steps to the canal and Russell was standing there,” she said. “We both immediately knew it was going to be serious.” Laura said that she had “a deep appreciation and love for this person even though I don’t know this person now. He was so different.”

The two had to “rebuild foundations and trust again,” since he was a divorcee and it had been nearly a decade since they were a couple. “It was very slow, it was getting to know each other and going out on day trips together,” she said.

Russell Brand and Laura Gallacher in 2018 (Broadimage/Shutterstock)

“Suddenly it went fast, six months later, shall we move in, shall we get a puppy, and then after that I found out I was pregnant. We moved in in November and Valentine’s Day the next year I found out I was pregnant,” she added. Russell and Laura welcomed their first daughter, Mabel, in November 2016. Their second child, daughter Peggy, arrived in July 2018. In June 2023, Russell revealed that he and Laura were expecting their third child while appearing on the podcast The Diary of a CEO.

The couple married on August 26, 2017, in an intimate ceremony near their home in Henley-on-Thames, England, per Us Weekly. The wedding was held at Remenham Church. Guests included Oasis singer Noel Gallagher, comedian David Baddiel, and British TV host Jonathan Ross.

Katy Perry

Singer Katy Perry arrives with her husband comedian Russell Brand for the 53rd annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on February 13, 2011. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)
Singer Katy Perry arrives with comedian Russell Brand for the 53rd annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on February 13, 2011. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

While Russell has found wedded bliss with Laura, the same can’t be said about his first marriage to Katy Perry. The couple tied the knot on October 23, 2010, only to divorce 14 months later. “It was the first kind of breaking of my idealistic mind,” Katy in a 2020 interview with 60 Minutes Australia. “I was having great success at 23, 24, and 25 and then I met someone that was interesting and stimulating. It was just like a tornado. Everything happening at once.”

The two began dating after meeting at the 2009 MTVA VMAs. Russell proposed on the following New Year’s Eve while on a trip to India. The couple returned to India for their wedding, but Katy’s career kept them apart. Her 2011 California Dreams world tour took her around the world, and the distance was too much for Russell. He texted his wife on Dec. 31, 2011 – two years after he first proposed – to tell her that he was divorcing her.

“I’ve changed a lot in the last five years,” Russell told Us Weekly in 2017 when reflecting on his past marriage. “I don’t compare my relationships now to previous relationships out of respect to my present wife and to Katy Perry. I think I’m an easier person to be with now. I’m also in a very different situation. I’m dependent on my wife. In relationships, there is always going to be a level of dependency. But I try not to project my problems onto other people and perhaps I’ve not always been like that.”

Since the split, Katy has gone on to find love with Orlando Bloom and start a family with him. She gave birth to their daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom, in 2020. However, by 2025, reports confirmed that the couple had quietly ended their relationship, choosing to co-parent their daughter while focusing on their individual careers.

If you or anyone you know has been sexually abused, call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673). A trained staff member will provide confidential, judgment-free support as well as local resources to assist in healing, recovering and more.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Russell Tovey on 'Plainclothes,' 'Looking,' and Sex Scenes
TV & Streaming

Russell Tovey on ‘Plainclothes,’ ‘Looking,’ and Sex Scenes

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Russell Tovey, the gay British actor who’s been out of the closet since he was a teenager, has played characters both repressed (see: Mormon closet-case Joe Pitt onstage in “Angels in America”) and proudly queer (HBO’s “Looking”).

In his latest “Plainclothes,” the Sundance winner written and directed by first-feature filmmaker Carmen Emmi, he plays a closeted family man who sparks an affair with an undercover cop, played by Tom Blyth. In the 1997-set drama, Lucas (Blyth) is a police officer tasked with baiting men for a bathroom stall hookup in one of those depressing Malls of America, only to arrest them, caught not in the act but just before it. Lucas, though, is secretly gay, and his encounter with Andrew (Tovey) sends his world ricketing off its hinges.

'IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT', (aka YEK TASADEF SADEH, aka UN SIMPLE ACCIDENT), Vahid Mobasseri, 2025.

In this New Queer Cinema-inspired drama that doubles as a coming-out story and a romance — Lucas is feeling a new flush of things for Andrew that might not be totally reciprocated — Tovey gives a marvelously restrained performance as a closeted man who may have plenty of furtive gay experience already, but he has more in the way of secrets.

Tovey, though, is perhaps best known for his role as video-game entrepreneur Kevin in creator Michael Lannan’s HBO series “Looking,” which ran for two seasons between 2014 and 2015 and was followed by a TV movie directed by Andrew Haigh. The “All of Us Strangers” filmmaker also executive-produced the groundbreaking Bay Area-set show about gay best friends and their ordinary lives, and directed many episodes.

Fans of Tovey and co-star Jonathan Groff, who played Kevin’s eventual boyfriend and the series’ lead, have called upon HBO for a revival. Tovey would do it in a second, and in his interview with IndieWire at the Magnolia Pictures offices in New York City ahead of the “Plainclothes” release, he unpacked the younger generational appeal of the series, and spoke about his own experiences with repression that led to his latest role.

This interview has been condensed and edited for length.

IndieWire: You’ve played gay characters who are, for the most part, out of the closet in recent years. What drew you back into playing someone so repressed?

Russell Tovey: Normally, I can tell if I want to do something by the first few lines of dialogue, and I loved his dialogue, and then meeting Carmen was just very exciting, because he’s like a little Labrador puppy. He’s very keen and bouncy and enthusiastic and complimentary to me, which is obviously affirming. Yes, he affirmed, he validated my ego. And I thought, “Well, that’s lovely. I want to do this.” And then I met Tom, and Tom’s brilliant. So that felt like, to play this together would be a real privilege, and I wanted to go to Syracuse, weirdly. I dated someone years ago who was from Syracuse, and in my head, it had this romantic sort of like I was like, this, Syracuse sounds so kind of mystical and magical. I mean, there’s parts of it that are, but the majority of it is pretty run-of-the-mill.

What was your experience there like?

I went to a movie theater one day because I had a day off, and I felt an aggression in there that I wasn’t prepared for. There was some guy who bumped into me, and whispered in my ear, “You’ve got a tiny dick, dude.” I remember going, “Wow.” And I thought, well I’m not going to turn around and say, “Sorry, what did you just say?” I sort of laughed at myself because I found it very funny, and I called my friend up and I said, ‘Guess what’s just happened?’ But it was intimidating, and it was wanting or provoking a response to instigate violence. It jarred me for sure. That sort of energy then informed the rest of my experience in that mall. He wanted to fight, and I knew that.

This idea of a plainclothes cop luring and busting gay guys is most famous in the U.S. because of George Michael, which happened in the year this movie takes place. Was there a parallel of this phenomenon in the U.K.? Anti-gay Section 28 laws were still in effect when you came out, so there was still clandestine behavior like that being surveilled

We also still feel inherent trauma as a community from fucking Oscar Wilde, from sodomy laws, from illegalities, from being pushed further into the margins and doing dangerous things because it’s not a safe world, there’d never been a safe space that was created from us. I came out at a time that Andrew Haigh refers to as the “middle generation,” where we can be treated for HIV, but we’re coming out at an age where you’re working out liking people of the same gender, but with disease and risk. That’s a terrifying notion when you’re 13, 14, 15, that you have to think about that for many years, and it’s still the same thing where sex and death were very much in the same thought when you went to bed with someone. Then afterwards, the insecurities and the paranoia about illness were playing out constantly. I’m going to be 44 soon. It can take a long time to shake those things off.

You’re not aware when you’re in school that this law [Section 28] has been put in place because you’re a kid and you’re not really watching the news. You’re unaware that your education has been determined, and your opportunity for an authentic life or another option has been denied. All those feelings of shame, all those feelings of inherent denial of your sense of self, they all exist within [my character] Andrew. They all exist within Joe Pitt in “Angels in America.” They all exist within many characters I play, so that is something I can access. Artists can use our own shit to cherry-pick from and build characters, and in some ways exorcise these things that linger.

'Plainclothes'
‘Plainclothes’Magnolia

The scene in which Andrew and Lucas finally do have sex explicitly shows a condom being unwrapped, almost like it’s held up to the camera. Was that in the script, or your idea?

I can’t remember if it was or wasn’t, but I wanted safe sex to be in there. That was very important. We see a lot of sex scenes. There’s lube and everything but — I love the paraphernalia of that because it is clumsy and it slows things down, and maybe when you’re coming to writing a film or playing a scene, it breaks up the rush of “I need your body right now.” The realities of it shows the realities of Andrew, who is very much like, “This is what we do. This is how we do it. We’re going to do it my way.” What’s beautiful about this is you’ve got two characters, and there is a power dynamic. Andrew’s older, more experienced, the one who seems to be aware, he sets the location, he’s the one who says, “I can’t right now.” When you see him in the greenhouse, and he finds out Lucas’ job, the power dynamic shifts in an instant. I love that this film can take that tone in such an innocent tone, where suddenly he’s the one that’s vulnerable, being splayed open, and this younger guy who’s got no experience has suddenly got the power over him. Andrew has never been challenged before.

It was really important to me that we see condoms being used because it’s that period in history. Andrew could have been horrific to him, and it would’ve been a completely different movie, but it’s two guys who fall in love. You [wonder], “Why are they not together then?” They can’t be because they’re on such different spectrums. Andrew can see in Lucas an opportunity of freedom and authentic life. [Andrew] gives [Lucas] permission to do that, even though he can never give that gift to himself.

You obviously didn’t have an intimacy coordinator on “Looking” during the mid-aughts. Do you feel a difference now?

My relationship with Jonathan Groff was heaven. We absolutely adored each other. We felt so safe. We were looked after. At no point did I feel unsafe or uncomfortable, and I don’t think anybody did. That show was full of love, and we would all love to come back and do it. Even Andrew Haigh has said that.

“Looking” served a similar function for gay millennials that “Girls” did for women and straight ones — well, also gay ones too! “Girls” was recently rediscovered by Gen Z. Are you hoping the same for “Looking,” or have you already observed that?

A whole new generation has found it. It’s all over TikTok. I love the fact that people are outraged that there’s only two seasons and a movie, and they want more. I get asked weekly, “Do more ‘Looking.’” If you can talk to someone, I’d absolutely do more “Looking.” It’s one of the only shows I’ve done where I watch it as a fan.

What can Gen Z identify with in “Looking”?

It’s showing queer people hanging out, being mates, and the mundanities of what it is. They’re not extraordinary people. They’re very average people who have jobs, and they live for weekends, and they’re not super rich. I think it’s very aspirational of just peace, or just being, existing, and not needing more. There’s not really much phone stuff. There’s no social media really in that show. It’s like a pause, a moment of just peace, and I hope people will watch that and feel [they’re] finding some contentment in having good friends, someone to talk to, and be gay, be queer. That’s the goal: You’ve made it. That’s success.

“Plainclothes” is now in theaters from Magnolia Pictures.

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Russell Wilson Convinced A Dying Teen To Stick With Treatment 
Music

Russell Wilson Convinced A Dying Teen To Stick With Treatment 

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Celebrities oftentimes use their fame and notoriety for positive influence, but arguably nothing ranks above helping to save a life. Ciara recently opened up about a time her husband, Russell Wilson, convinced a teenager with leukemia to stick with his treatment, an act that wound up changing his story from coming to an end.

“You talk about being able to be a part of saving someone’s life essentially, right? It’s such a gift,” the “Lose Control” singer told Power 106 Los Angeles on Wednesday, Sept. 10. She shared the story of the New York Giants quarterback’s experience with Milton Wright, who had just half a day left to live at the time.

The singer said Wilson “convinced this kid” to stick with stem cell therapy, explaining, ”This kid did not want to try it. He had twelve hours left to live.”

In an effort to connect with the patient, Wilson opened up about losing his dad and how that has impacted his life. Ciara continued, “Russ went in and talked to him and convinced him, ‘Hey, kid,’ told him his story about losing his father, everything. Before you know it, the kid changed his mind, got up and was like, ‘I want to do it.’ Now fast forward to this kid is in the hospital telling other kids to try it.”

“It’s such a blessing and we’re just really big on encouraging people to have a ‘why not you’ attitude because we still have to tap into that ourselves. We know the power of that, right? Why not you? It’s real special to us, real near and dear to our hearts.”

Wilson’s father, Harrison, died in 2010 at age of 55 from diabetes complications.

The football player wrote about his side of the story in 2016 for The Player’s Tribune. He reflected on how his father had lost his ability to walk and see, but when doctors told him he had 24 hours left to live, “he kept on fighting for two more years.”

“I told Milton to keep fighting like my dad did,” Wilson wrote. Wright went into remission after his treatment.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JUNE 20: Russell Wilson and Ciara walk the blue carpet at JAY-Z’s Iconic The 40/40 Club in partnership with Fanatics Sportsbook at the center of Fanatics Fest NYC at Javits Center on June 20, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Fanatics)

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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Kurt Russell Joins 'Yellowstone' Spinoff Series
TV & Streaming

Kurt Russell Joins ‘Yellowstone’ Spinoff Series

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Kurt Russell is saddling up for Yellowstone spinoff series, The Madison.

The Emmy and Golden Globe nominee has joined the forthcoming series, from Taylor Sheridan and starring Michelle Pfeiffer, as both a castmember and executive producer.

Previously announced cast includes Patrick J. Adams, Elle Chapman, Matthew Fox, Beau Garrett, Amiah Miller, Alaina Pollack, Ben Schnetzer, Rebecca Spence, Danielle Vasinova and Kevin Zegers.

The Yellowstone universe has no signs of slowing down following the likely series finale of the flagship that aired back in December 2024. The Madison is one of several spinoff series currently in production, also including CBS’ Y: Marshals, starring Luke Grimes reprising his role as Kayce Dutton in the fall, and Paramount+’s Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler spinoff, Dutton Ranch (working title), which returns Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser to their roles and doesn’t yet have a premiere date. Another prequel, 1944, is in development following the likely conclusion of 1923.

The Madison is a modern-day spinoff with little known about how the characters will relate to the main Dutton family of the flagship series. Here is the official logline: “The series is a heartfelt study of grief and human connection following a New York City family in the Madison River valley of central Montana.”

Michelle Randolph, who married into the Dutton family on Dutton prequel series 1923 as Elizabeth, mused about if her character could crossover to The Madison, given how her story ended. “I don’t know a ton about The Madison,” she told The Hollywood Reporter after the 1923 ender, “but I know they come from the East Coast. I so I’m like, is there some sort of web [connecting] Elizabeth?”

Russell joins the growing list of A-list talent within Sheridan’s Yellowstone-verse, also including Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren on 1923 and Ed Harris, newly cast in Dutton Ranch.

The movie star known for Overboard, Tequila Sunrise and The Hateful Eight to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is currently starring in the Apple TV+ series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters alongside his son, Wyatt Russell. He is repped by UTA.

The Madison is executive produced by Sheridan, David C. Glasser, John Linson, Art Linson, Ron Burkle, David Hutkin, Bob Yari, Christina Voros, Michael Friedman, Pfeiffer, Russell and Keith Cox, and is produced by Paramount Television Studios, 101 Studios and Bosque Ranch Productions.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Second Teaser for 'Nuremberg' Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek
Hollywood

Second Teaser for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Second Teaser for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek

by Alex Billington
August 27, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I’m not gonna make them martyrs… There will be no statues of them.” An important lesson from history. Sony Pictures Classics debuted another teaser trailer for Nuremberg, written and directed by screenwriter James Vanderbilt, the second feature he has directed (after producing and writing many other movies). Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” by Jack El-Hai, it’s set at the famous Nuremberg Trials from 1945-1946 in Germany after WWII ended. It’s set to premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival next month before opening in theaters this November. A psychiatrist evaluates Nazi leaders before the trials begin, growing increasingly obsessed with understanding evil as he forms a disturbing bond with Hermann Göring. This is a full-on recreation of the iconic Nuremberg trials, where they exposed the real evil within the Nazi mindset and what they perpetrated. Starring Russell Crowe as Hermann Göring, Rami Malek as Douglas Kelley, Michael Shannon as Robert H. Jackson, Leo Woodall, Richard E. Grant, John Slattery, Mark O’Brien, Colin Hanks, Lydia Peckham, and Wrenn Schmidt. Much better footage in this than the first look teaser. I really hope this turns out good and won’t be something instantly forgettable.

Here’s the second teaser trailer for James Vanderbilt’s film Nuremberg, direct from SPC’s YouTube:

Nuremberg Teaser

Nuremberg Teaser

You can rewatch the first teaser trailer for Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg movie right here for more footage.

The Allies, led by the unyielding chief prosecutor, Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), have the task of ensuring the Nazi regime answers for the unveiled horrors of the Holocaust while a US Army psychiatrist (Rami Malek) is locked in a dramatic psychological duel with the former Reichsmarschall Herman Göring (Russell Crowe). Nuremberg is written & directed by the American writer / producer James Vanderbilt, making his second feature film after directing Truth previously. He also produced many films and wrote the screenplays for The Rundown, Zodiac, The Losers, The Amazing Spider-Man 1 & 2, White House Down, Truth, Murder Mystery 1 & 2, Fountain of Youth. Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” written by Jack El-Hai. It’s produced by Bradley J. Fischer, Cherilyn Hawrysh, István Major, Paul Neinstein, Richard Saperstein, William Sherak, Frank Smith, Benjamin Tappan, James Vanderbilt. This will premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Sony Pictures Classics will debut Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg film in select US theaters starting November 7th, 2025 later this year. First impression? Who’s interested in it?

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August 27, 2025 0 comments
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