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For Good' Needed These Two Scenes
TV & Streaming

For Good’ Needed These Two Scenes

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: This story contains spoilers for the end of “Wicked: For Good.”]

As bad as a scene can get in a movie that would work way better if the conflict was worse, the Underground Yellow Brick Road still seems like some ham-fisted symbolism, don’t you think? From Universal’s “Wicked: For Good,” that ridiculous moment comes midway through the second half of director Jon M. Chu’s epic musical blockbuster. It features a crowd of subjugated animals, so oppressed by their human overlords that they have been magically stripped of the ability to speak and forced to flee Oz on foot (or hoof).

The group uses a subterranean tunnel that’s literally beneath the Yellow Brick Road for the express purpose of evading animal slavery. That adapted American history lesson plays clumsily on the big screen, and even still, “For Good” doesn’t feel dramatic or important enough.

'Wicked: For Good'

In theaters now, Chu’s highly anticipated follow-up to last year’s “Wicked” meets and at times even exceeds expectations when it comes to providing sparkly spectacle. But the sequel plays like a needlessly drawn-out coda, putting a bloated encore where many “Wicked” fans hoped a real fairy tale with a timely message might be.

The creators of “Wicked: For Good” would’ve done well to budget more of the time and energy they spent on the visual design to get better scripts with real stakes. A couple pick-ups could do the trick, too.

C’mon, Jon, You Had the Book Right There

Starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande as vivid portraits of the one-dimensional witches we first met back in 1939’s “Wizard of Oz,” the modern “Wicked” duology follows in the imperial footsteps of Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and other major sci-fi and fantasy franchises to present an extraordinary world on the brink. Chu’s two “Wicked” movies are based on Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman’s long-running Broadway musical from 2003, which in turn loosely adapts author Gregory Maguire’s bleak 1995 novel, “Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West.”

Across page, stage, and screen, each version feels different from the rest. But the story of Elphaba and Glinda soars highest when its teller chooses to focus on the girls’ unique friendship — a dynamic that’s more sterile but still meaningful in the book. That approach paid off when “Wicked” introduced the beloved characters to the big screen last year, but “For Good” turns the narrative North Star into a tonally frustrating crutch Chu can’t seem to shake in the lesser film. 

WICKED: FOR GOOD, (aka WICKED: ACT II, aka WICKED: PART TWO), from left: Ariana Grande as Glinda, Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba, 2025. ph: Giles Keyte / © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo in ‘Wicked: For Good’©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Presenting a menagerie of beaded costumes and belted solos in lieu of any real perspective on political discourse, the “Wicked” sequel appears aimed at giving movie-goers more of the same song-and-dance they loved in the first half. But the result is far less. “For Good” loses the taut playfulness that made the earlier “Wicked” snap by attempting to pit Elphaba and Glinda against an enemy that’s often unseen and perpetually nondescript.

Both Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) and the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) leave their scariest moments back in 2024, and even the authoritarian cogs they set in motion then don’t make a significant enough impact on the framing of “For Good” to motivate the story that’s developing in theaters now.

Frequently compared to dystopian touchstones like Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” Maguire’s painstaking literary text was right there for Chu’s inspiration. It’s got creepy dolls hiding deep-state surveillance tech; Holocaust-like experiments performed on fluffy victims; the pervasive sense that anything and everything in Oz could be waiting to ensnare Elphaba like its Big Brother in “1984.”

And yet, “For Good” doggedly shies away from the darkness — something these witches needed if Chu wanted their tortured connection to really sing a second time.

Tell Me Cows Can Talk, or Give ‘Em Something to Cry About

In her review, IndieWire’s Kate Erbland explained how the year-long intermission between “Wicked” and “For Good” made the second movie not only more disorienting but harder to connect with emotionally. That disconnect might have been alleviated with a stronger first scene.

This alternate beginning doesn’t have to be seriously “scary” but it should at least show who in Oz is being hurt by the ruling class and why. Opening on a forgettable brick-laying sequence — in which some horned cow-things, who could talk probably at one point but can’t now and are having a bad time working their jobs in construction… or something? — “For Good” needed a harder rock bottom to successfully set up peril and unrest in Emerald City as tangible threats suggesting a hidden dystopia.

WICKED, The Emerald City, 2024.  © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Wicked’ (2024)©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

From the bloody sewers of “Sweeney Todd” to the storybook pages of “Into the Woods,” the overture has given countless musical filmmakers the ideal chance to show-not-tell audiences about the worlds they’re entering from the start. Instead, “For Good” feels like it comes out of nowhere. Chu fails to explain the magic lurking behind those cow-things’ eyes, and Elphaba makes an outsized display of riding in on her broom to save them from what looks like basically a crappy workday sans context. 

Not knowing what the herd’s life was like before they encountered the Wicked Witch or the jerks managing their long haul down the Yellowbrick Road, their gig doesn’t look great, but it’s not even “Office Space” bad. What’s worse, the other Ozians are effectively given a pass for doing nothing in the face of entire of species forced into slavery because the scenario is so weirdly wooden and unclear.

The central conflict is illuminated only marginally better when Elphaba’s sister Nessa (Marissa Bode), now a corrupt governor, passes a law forbidding her Munchkin prisoner, Boq (Ethan Slater), from traveling later in the movie. But even then, “For Good” flinches away from the cruelty at hand — rarely showing Nessa’s angry face (was her acting too good?) and exercising more restraint than they need when Boq becomes the Tin Man. That scaredy-cat ethos carries through a number of other scenes: some that do show animals locked in cages but remain ambiguous and inoffensive enough for the idea to miss most children. 

If You’re Gonna Keep the Goat Alive, Let the Professor Speak!

Through that underwhelming haze, the familiar muzzle of Dr. Dillamond (previously voiced by Peter Dinklage) breaks through — just not enough. In the first half of “Wicked,” the former Shiz University professor lost his ability to speak during a horrifying classroom scene that recalls all those nightmarish Defense Against the Dark Arts lessons we saw go wrong in Harry Potter.

WICKED, from left: Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, 2024. © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Wicked’ (2024)©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Dr. Dillamond is even more important in Maguire’s book, and his political assassination (yes, that goat gets straight-up murdered, bro!) serves as an important political symbol and driving force behind Elphaba’s radicalization. The live musical dropped that bit and Chu was probably right to soften the blow for the movies, too. But if you’re going to bother not keeping a recognizable victim around, and routinely use him as a visual reference to explain what Elphaba and Glinda do and don’t know about the plot that’s unfolding, then he deserves his due. 

“For Good” already has a number of celebratory scenes showing what happens as news of Elphaba’s death reverberates throughout Oz. But Chu needed to put a finer point on the societal transformation the Wicked Witch and her best friend gave up their friendship to create. Dr. Dillamond would’ve been the perfect way to do it, even if Dinklage cost the movie extra. 

For whatever reason, “For Good” seems hell-bent on throwing away many of its best reveals. Most painfully, Prince Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey) has his tragic Scarecrow evolution stretched over several scenes, before it concludes  in a romantic beat where body horror doesn’t fit. But Dr. Dillamond doesn’t even get to finish his arc between “Wicked” and “For Good,” as the duology, seemingly desperate to fill time at every other turn, makes the baffling choice to cast out the academic quadruped-like Animal. 

Despite Dinklage warmly promoting his small voice part in Chu’s films, the “Wicked” movies ultimately decide Dr. Dillamond works better as a subplot that’s seen but not heard in the back half. Amid all  the poppies and propaganda, you get a glimpse of his weary enlightened face. Of course, that could never replace the audible triumph he deserved in a scene that should have just let him speak. 

“Wicked: For Good” is in theaters now. 

November 24, 2025 0 comments
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Behind the Scenes Photos of Season 5 & the Early Years (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Behind the Scenes Photos of Season 5 & the Early Years (Exclusive)

by jummy84 November 22, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s almost time to return to the Upside Down for one last battle, but before the war against Vecna rages on in Stranger Things Season 5, we’re looking back on the good old days.

Set in the fall of 1987, Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts in Stranger Things‘ final season, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower). But he has vanished — his whereabouts and plans unknown. Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), forcing her back into hiding. As the anniversary of Will’s (Noah Schnapp) disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread. The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they’ve faced before. To end this nightmare, they’ll need everyone — the full party — standing together, one last time.

It’s going to get heavy. Before the danger sets in, look back on the good times with the Stranger Things cast in the gallery below, which includes BTS photos from the final season.

For an extended celebration of Stranger Things, from a Season 5 preview to must-see photos and more, pick up a copy of TV Guide Magazine’s Stranger Things: The Final Chapter special issue, available for pre-order online now and on newsstands now.

Stranger Things, Season 5 Volume 1, Premiere, November 26, 2025, Netflix

Stranger Things, Season 5 Volume 2, Premiere, December 25, 2025, Netflix

Stranger Things, Season 5 Finale, Premiere, December 31, 2025, Netflix and Select Theaters

November 22, 2025 0 comments
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Torture Scenes, Plotting Season 5
TV & Streaming

Torture Scenes, Plotting Season 5

by jummy84 November 20, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from the season four finale of The Morning Show.]

The Morning Show made good on a daunting promise when it opened its season four finale with Reese Witherspoon‘s Bradley Jackson being detained. After previously evading federal punishment for her complicity in Jan. 6 riot coverage because she struck a deal with the U.S. government, the TMS anchor ended season four imprisoned in Belarus over a story she has been investigating throughout the entire season.

Showrunner Charlotte Stoudt says the real-life Russian imprisonment of Wall Street Journal foreign correspondent Evan Gershkovich largely inspired the storyline, which on the Apple TV+ series saw Bradley being tortured in a cell with blaring lights, head-thumping music and little food or place to lay her head. “But what we read from Evan Gershkovich and even Brittney Griner [the WNBA All Star detained in Russia], honestly, Bradley’s cell was nice by comparison,” Stoudt tells The Hollywood Reporter. “She had an okay situation compared to what happens to these very high-profile prisoners. Bradley was in Belarus, but Russia does not mess around.”

In the end, they couldn’t break Bradley Jackson. And thanks to a Herculean effort from the rest of the ensemble with a coup from Alex (Jennifer Aniston), her father Martin (Jeremy Irons) and Bradley’s ex Cory (Billy Crudup), the UBN team publicly exposes C-suite boss Celine (Marion Cotillard) for her role in the cover-up Bradley was investigating, ultimately pushing Celine out of the top office (and the country), and returning Bradley to the U.S. after 35 days detained. The season ended with Alex and Bradley embracing once again, this time on a tarmac with the futures for them and many others in the ensemble open and unknown.

Below, Stoudt answers THR‘s burning questions on all of that, including filming Witherspoon’s stripped-down torture scenes, if there’s a future for Alex and Jon Hamm’s Paul Marks, whether or not Greta Lee’s Stella could make a return in the already renewed season five, if Cotillard’s days on The Morning Show are over, and much more.

***

Now that I’ve seen the finale, I understand why you didn’t begin this season with a detained Bradley Jackson after she turned herself in last season finale. During her detainment in Belarus here, Reese Witherspoon was physically stripped down, and Bradley was beaten down. Can you talk about the prep and conversations with Reese to portray Bradley as a prisoner?

I love Reese because she’s so willing to go there. You know the Reese of Wild and the incredible rawness of that performance, and how she can span from that to Elle Woods. She’s so extraordinary that way. Part of the language of this show is that it feeds off of her and Jen [Aniston] and how they inhabit their characters. So we really didn’t talk that much. You’re always worried about staying in the same show, in terms of the style. So we did keep the filmmaking very simple in the sequences, so you didn’t feel like you had moved into a different genre.

What motivated this storyline most for you?

We had been thinking about Evan Gershkovich for a long time and that we wanted to say something. There were periods where, especially in the early part of the Gaza conflict, we were hearing of so many reporters either being killed, injured or captured, and about this new hostage diplomacy that can involve journalists. We wanted to touch on what was happening everywhere. And you are right, ultimately everything on this show is character-logical. So it was like, “Is Bradley going to do time?” But the question was, “Where and how?” Everyone asked me between seasons, “Is Bradley going to wear an orange jumpsuit?” Since that was the expectation, it was like, “How can we subvert that?”

How long were you filming Bradley’s torture scenes in the Belarus detention center? And what was set like on those days?

I think it was one day, actually. One very intense day that may not have been Reese’s favorite day on set! [Production designer] Nelson Coates did such an incredible job on the set. It was this really awful green. We were interested in the lights. When you hear about these places, you can’t sleep, you can’t close your eyes. It’s always lit. A lot of times, they just pound the music through for weeks at a time. So just the idea of being able to withstand that seems pretty daunting. But, she’s tough! I wanted to show her scene with the Commandant who was running that detention center that you can’t break Bradley Jackson.

I knew when he turned over the napkin he was going to see Bradley wrote “Fuck you.” She never caves, despite the torture, or gives up her source.

Maybe that was not such a surprise! But she just can’t give it to him. This is a very tough woman. She’s grown up in this family of addicts with not a lot of money. You can’t break her that easily.

Alex Levy (Aniston) and her father (Jeremy Irons) publicly expose season four villain Celine Dumont (Marion Cotillard) and help return Bradley Jackson (Reese Witherspoon) from Belarus.

Apple TV+

When Bradley is detained, the show flashed back to Bradley and Cory sleeping together to show this vulnerable, intimate moment between them. This season didn’t use as many flashbacks as as you usually do. Why did you want to show this moment now?

If Cory’s mother hadn’t done what she did [and assisted in her own death], he’d be more focused and able to see what was going on around him, because he’s such an operator. We felt like for Celine to continue moving forward, he would need to be off his game in a profound way. I was also very interested in the idea of choosing your own death. I think that will become more of a question boomers face in the end, so it was important to tell that story of how a woman might make that decision for herself [with Cory’s mother, played by Lindsay Duncan].

Cory is totally off his game and one of the things he gets to learn is that if you’re really serious about someone you love, the closer you get, they’re going to disappoint you and do the wrong things. He has to be shaken out of his fugue state by Chip [Mark Duplass] confronting him about Bradley for Cory to realize, “I’m mad at her, but she told me, ‘I don’t know how to do this. Relationships are hard for me. I’m going to mess up, and a condition of going forward is: Please recognize that I’m human and I’m gonna mess up and I’m not your fantasy.’”

In the moment, he told her, “Yes, of course I’ll accept that.” And he makes the joke saying, “I look forward to disappointing you.” Then he realizes it wasn’t a joke. He did disappoint her. Because his anger has blocked him from really engaging with what’s happening to her [when she’s detained]. So that flashback was for him to go, “I made a promise to her that I kind of broke, and I have to now address that.”

Cory has a lightbulb moment this finale, when things circle back to the beginning to fill in how he landed at UBN to start. Was telling more of Cory’s story something you always wanted to do, or did it come when breaking season four?

We were always interested in bringing Claire [Bel Powley] back. The show in so many ways is about: How do you make change? Alex says you do it from the inside. Bradley says, maybe you have to do it from the outside. Claire is even further out going, “You have to blow things up. The system doesn’t work.” What would happen to someone like Claire Conway if she couldn’t get justice for Hannah [Gugu Mbatha-Raw] in a conventional legal way? We also always wondered how Cory was president of entertainment and then became head of news.

I never even spoke to [former showrunner] Kerry Ehrin about it, but we were always like, “Huh, that’s interesting.” Around that time, the Mitch [Steve Carell] thing was happening. Even though everybody loves Cory and is fascinated with him, and loves to see him play chutes and ladders, he is someone who really hasn’t questioned his privilege or his rise, or if other people could have played some part in it. He says to his mother, “Well, I’ve never asked that question because, you know — me!” So in the world of people going, “I thought I knew who I was, but maybe I don’t,” or “I thought I could see things clearly, but actually, I don’t,” we were just looking for a way thematically for him to undergo his own perception about himself. That was a big theme this season — perception and trust and deepfakes; a misrecognition of a situation. I was always curious why he had both those jobs.

Cory helps to save the day with Bradley. Alex is the one who physically comes to her rescue, but, assuming Bradley will eventually find out about Cory’s self-sacrificial role in her return, are Cory and Bradley endgame? Can they can work back to each other?

It’s funny you ask that, because it’s a question we are literally working through right now.

Are you in the writers room now working on season five?

Yeah, we have been in the room for a few months. It’s a big cast, so it just it takes a while to chip away. With Bradley and Cory, are they twin flames? Are they mirrors of each other and have similar pathologies? Generally, you’re not endgame with your twin flame. Your twin flame is somebody who shows you your pathology so you can address that and move onto a possibly better fit. So we’re talking about that right now, and it’s hard because they have an incredible intimacy on screen that’s very delightful to write and to watch.

The idea of letting them go is very difficult, because they have this connection. There’s something they drop into that I think they would both find very difficult to give up — that immediate closeness, even though it’s very charged and messy. They are not people who are intimate with many other characters. That’s what makes them similar. They sort of wall themselves off a little bit, and then wonder why they’re unhappy.

Cory Ellison (Billy Crudup) after losing his mother.

Apple TV+

Last season, Bradley was the one whose legal future was in question. Now I ask you the same question for Cory: How much trouble is he in? Is it feasible for him to ever be walking the halls of UBN again?

He is coming forward and raising his hand. Were he to not do that, and for his somewhat blurry role in this to be discovered [it might be worse], but he is raising his hand so I think that will probably serve him well. He’s getting ahead of it to the extent he can. He is doing the right thing, and yes, he’s rescuing Bradley, but everybody’s rescuing Bradley; it’s a group effort with Mia, Alex, Chip and even [Alex’s dad] Martin. So it’s Cory, but also everyone.

This is the second season in a row you end with an Alex and Bradley hug. So much has happened between these hugs. Last season, you said that moment solidified their closeness as the heart of the show. Where do these women go from here for season five?

They are ride or die. There’s no question about that. But they’re always going to disagree on the way to do things. That is their fundamental tension. We’ve only ever seen Alex be a part of this larger system. So even though there’s ultimately this, “I will protect you,” or “I will have your back,” there’s a lot of crunch left between them, especially in the environment we’re in right now. They’re going to have very strong opinions on what choices to make. They’re still going to have a lot of arguments. They’re never going to fundamentally decide, “We’ve agreed now.” There’s always going to be a tension, which is why they’re drawn to each other.

It’s an obvious thing to say, but I feel people do need to feel hope on that tarmac. It’s dark out there, and you can’t see beyond the runway; everything’s in the shadows. But as long as these two women have each other, they’ll be okay. It doesn’t matter how dark the world might become for a time, they’ll always be there for each other. Just saying a simple thing like that actually has some value.

Celine gets her public downfall in the end, but then we see her on a private plane heading back to her family. This proves the thesis you told me you and Marion Cotillard spoke about in the beginning, how women in these dynasty families get sacrificed and the men are elevated. What do the repercussions look like for Celine, and is this the end of her on The Morning Show?

I think she’s going to have to spend some time on the penalty box. I always say, with any character, that unless they’re dead, they could someday come back. It’s possible. The reality is these people don’t go to jail. There was a certain French dynastic family who did some trading with some sanctioned nations and had to pay a very giant, almost billion-dollar fine, and that’s what happens. They pay their way out of it. It’s very infrequent that anybody does any time.

Celine remains extremely privileged, but she’s still a woman in a man’s world. You may think she’s evil, and she permitted some pretty awful things on her watch with this chemical company that will always be on her. On this show we explore how we’re all subject to certain forces that seem a little bit beyond our control, so what choices are you going to make in the face of these forces? Often the only thing to do to keep your integrity is to completely walk away. But then you have no voice, no relevance and no power.

So are you going to let Marion Cotillard walk away, or do you feel like you have more you could do with Celine?

I’m not even trying to be coy. It’s still too early. I’m not sure yet. But listen, it was astonishing to have her show up every day as one of the cast members. She was so game. She just got to work, nothing fancy. She came in and wanted to do good scenes and have fun with people. She fit right in so quickly and effortlessly, despite being this giant, transcendent movie star. She just got down in the mud real quick.

When I spoke with her, it also sounded like she had a great time.

That’s good to hear. You’re always worried. It’s like you’re throwing a party and like, “Was it fun?” You feel that way with everybody, and this year we had such a crazy guest cast. We were very fortunate to have some of those folks with us.

Marion Cotillard as Celine Dumont.

Apple TV+

Also at the end, Mia (Karen Pittman) is elevated to the top office.

Well, not really.

You’re right — she hasn’t moved into that office. She’s up there, imagining moving in.

I’m glad you brought that up. The dust is settling in this situation, and it will for a while. The Stella-Mia story is one that goes across the season even after Stella is gone. Who should have that job? Where do these women belong? And how is that litigated through this friendship that breaks open this season?

I don’t think they picked anyone for the chariot. It’s more that Mia had her heart on head of news: “If I just get that, then all my dreams come true, and all this steady work I’ve been doing for this company and all this shit I’ve eaten will be worth it.” Then when she didn’t get that, she was like, “I’ve had a certain mindset and maybe that’s wrong.”

Stella gives Mia many gifts on the way out. One is a little dirt to help her negotiate. But an idea that Mia is suddenly able to have is, “Maybe I was chasing the wrong chair. Maybe head of news was too small of a chair. Maybe I want the big chair. Why don’t I walk into that office and see how it feels to touch that desk.” I think she’s saying, “I had the wrong dream. Maybe I need to scale up.” As she says, she’s in her villain era, so she’s like, “Maybe I could have it all.” But it’s still a wish for her.

How would Mia run things differently than the people before her, who so epically crashed and burned?

We haven’t gotten there yet, but I always feel like Mia is the single most competent person. She works really hard. A lot of the women who both write and watch the show really get Mia. Mia just fucking shows up and is deeply competent. Now we’re getting into five seasons of the show, and, do people learn anything? That’s the question. I think she would certainly try to do it differently. She has a unique perspective, but there’s always the pressure of having to answer to the shareholders.

That job on some level is both thrilling and a total nightmare, because you have to appease everyone and that’s exhausting. You’re stuck between, “Do I want to do something interesting, or do I want to save money and have the stock price go up?” There’s always a tension between Wall Street and your own vision, but I think she’s been there long enough that she would certainly be aware of what she was walking into. All these crises — Mitch, the merger. She would be well-armed. But no one is going to just say, “Mia, here’s the chair. It’s yours.” People will still be fighting over that chair.

I spoke with Greta Lee after I spoke with you about Stella’s exit, and Greta was honest about her stepping away being her decision. She sounded open to coming back for a few episodes, similar to Jon Hamm this season. Are you trying to think of a way to bring Stella back?

It’s hard to know how long this show could go on. And as you say, this year in season four, we were like, “Alex and Paul [Hamm] need to go off and do different things. They’re not ready to try it again, because they need to have other experiences and learn something.” So I think if Stella were to come back, I’d want to be completely surprised by what she was doing, and see that she’d had enough time to reinvent herself in a super, surprising way.

Everybody adores Greta and adores writing for her. I really enjoyed digging into this Mia-Stella story and what happens when two people who are very close have a conflict like this, especially two women. Can they stay human in this environment or is it going to tear them apart because of forces of ambition, capitalism and Stella’s big, fat secret [of her affair with Celine’s husband]? Stella unfortunately blows up Mia’s life, but then it also creates this space.

Mia (Karen Pittman) at the end of season four.

Apple TV+

Each season you typically write yourself into an impossible corner. This season, it feels like you left yourself an open runway to take the show anywhere. Will you do a similar time jump? Does it feel like there are several possibilities?

This show is about the news and the tension of who tells the story, and what kind of story they tell. Because you have to set it in the near past when it comes out, it’s a zeitgeist show where we’re trying to really express what it’s like to be alive and alert to what’s going on in America. Obviously, we’ve gone through a huge change recently [with the election], and there’s a lot of fallout. But this show is not just about the White House. Everything’s changing; AI is coming in more. There’s more mergers and takeovers, and the place is consolidating. News is changing fast, so I think there’s a big wide world.

The presence of billionaires has always been there, but they are beginning to encroach on politics and media less quietly and have such a large footprint on what’s going on. They have so much impact on people doing acquaint things like trying to tell the truth. This show is about showing the larger picture. How are things shifting and how does that make life difficult for our characters?

Since the pandemic, it’s unsteady. You can’t quite get your footing. That’s what I feel from people. This sense of, is there a future? Some people think it’s AI and to put all your money there, and others are like, “I don’t want to go back to work. The whole idea of climbing the ladder is a ridiculous notion, and is there even going to be a job to go to in 10 years?” We’re still living in a sense of uncertainty that’s actually very good for drama. So it’s about capturing that feeling, which crosses a lot of worlds, not just politics, but also how we’re living; like the fact that young people do AI vision boards and imagine themselves winning Nobel Prizes. The world’s moving very quickly. It’s fun to see these characters try to catch up.

The Morning Show has been renewed for season five, and goes into production in January. How many seasons do you see the show going?

These people have not learned everything they need to know about themselves. There are still areas where they haven’t integrated things into their personalities, and are still reaching. Alex’s relation to power was, “What do I need to feel like I truly have a voice and power? I thought it was in the C-suite.” Now she’s like, “That’s not where I belong.” That’s a very common question: How can women actually have some control over their lives?

Bradley hasn’t found a place to belong. She’s always split between New York and West Virginia. Cory’s like, “Is my mother right? Am I unlovable? Can I ever be close to somebody? And now this person I was close to is now gone.” They’re just like us. Can they get their shit together? Can they figure out what they could be better at? Can they think differently about themselves? And that is what every show has to be about in the end. Can a character move forward and become smarter? An attempt to either find their mission or find some contentment, and once they do that, then the story is over.

I inherited these characters. They’re very stubborn people, they don’t want to learn; they want to just keep doing. When you write them, they resist you. They resist their eurekas. Cory had to confront this thing about his mother, and face what people are going to think about him publicly, but he’s still going to be like, “What am I making? Where’s my status? Where am I on the ladder?” That’s a compulsive thing he has that I don’t think is going to go away just because he raised his hand and said, “This company is doing a bad thing.” I think he’s going to keep barreling through. He will always be closing. Will there come a point where he doesn’t need to close something? That might take longer.

We also have new characters like Bro [played by Boyd Holbrook]. With Chris [Nicole Beharie], we’ve barely scratched the surface. Yanko [Néstor Carbonell], there’s always another card to turn over, and he’s such a wonderful actor. There are a lot of stories left to tell. The joy of the ensemble means you can keep keep digging. I always feel like people’s first seasons are a character introduction, and then you start scratching the next season. They show up and you go, “Here’s the picture. What’s underneath?”

How have you been finding the reception to this season?

I try to engage minimally, especially when you’re thinking about a new season. It’s very distracting. I’m happy for people to write and say whatever they want. Once you make it, it becomes the audiences’ and it’s not yours anymore, and that’s all good. There are small things that are satisfying, like when I hear that people really responded to Chris’ interview in episode five. When we really labored on and were very difficult and demanding on the actors; I’m happy to see when actors and the writers dig deep and are recognized for doing so. People really went to the bottom of the well with the finale, so I like to hear that it was resonant with the audience.

Paul Marks (Jon Hamm) with Alex Levy (Aniston) at the end of season four.

Apple TV+

Have you thought about Alex and Paul Marks’ relationship for season five?

I think that dance is not over, that’s for sure. They barely started to have a relationship in season three. It was very fast. It was sort of a collision. What would it look like if they were together for a long time? Alex has not been partnered for a long time. We saw that her marriage in the earlier seasons was entirely performative. So she hasn’t really let someone in deeply yet for a long, extended time. What would it look like if she really tried to do that? What happens if she made an actual effort?

Do you think you’ll release season five this time next year?

I think so. I haven’t spoken to Apple about any release dates, but between season three and four there was a writers strike, so that was quite a long delay. So without that this year, maybe we’ll move a little more quickly. That’s when I knock on wood!

***

The Morning Show season four is now streaming on Apple TV+.

November 20, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Casino Scenes in Movies
Celebrity News

The Best Casino Scenes in Movies – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Hollywood films include some iconic casino scenes, spanning a wide number of different movie genres. Setting a film in a casino is nostalgic, timeless, and creates a great environment for viewers to enjoy an unfolding plot.

Let’s review the best casino scenes in movies. These are not ranked in any particular order, but each scene deserves to be mentioned for its enduring impact and memorable moments. 

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The James Bond movies have a casino reference in several titles, so this is an appropriate place to start. Specifically, the Macau Casino dragon pit scene from “Skyfall”. The cinematography of the dragon pit is alluring. 

“Casino Royale”, a James Bond film released in 2006, includes the poker showdown scene. Bond squares off against Le Chiffre, the movie’s antagonist, playing a poker game in Montenegro. It’s a pivotal point of the plot in the film, as Bond attempts to win the pot, forcing his opponent to join MI6 protection in exchange for valuable information. 

George Clooney’s iconic movie, “Ocean’s Eleven”, is a film that focuses its plot on a casino heist. Fans are given access to each phase of the heist’s plan, with plenty of suspense inserted to elevate its intensity. Danny Ocean, played by Clooney, sets out to rob three different casinos for $150 million alongside 11 other associates. 

Robert De Niro stars in “Casino”, a movie released 30 years ago that also features other A-list actors, including Joe Pesci. In the film, De Niro’s character gets into a confrontation with a player who defies his request to leave the casino, forcing security to act accordingly. 

Zach Galifinakis’ character in “The Hangover” leans on his mathematical ability to win several table games in Las Vegas, earning a massive payday at the casino. In the scene, numbers float across the screen, physically capturing Galifinakis’ rare and lucrative skillset, unbeknownst to the bachelor party. 

That scene in The Hangover paid tribute to Dustin Hoffman’s character in “Rain Man” from the 1980s. Tom Cruise starred alongside Hoffman, whose autism allowed him to read numbers and win by card counting in blackjack. 

Edward Norton and Matt Damon starred in the movie “Rounders.” Released in 1998, these two protagonists attempt to win big money by traveling around to win high-stakes poker to alleviate debt. The best scene is at the end, when Mike, Damon’s character, winds up beating Teddy “KGB” by baiting him to go all-in before the final hand. 

Casinos are a prominent setting in Hollywood films and movies. Now that online casino gaming is taking off, it’s only fitting to pay tribute to some of these iconic casino scenes in pop culture lore. 

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Andy Muschietti, Chris Chalk, and More Talk Key Scenes (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Andy Muschietti, Chris Chalk, and More Talk Key Scenes (Exclusive)

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The cast and creators of It: Welcome to Derry break down key moments in the latest episode.
  • “Now You See It” features a major cameo, a flashback, and a trip to Pennywise’s lair.
  • Plus, the new Losers Club hatch a new plan to prove there’s something supernatural terrorizing the kids in town.

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for It: Welcome to Derry Episode 3, “Now You See It.”]

There’s a familiar face that ushers us all into the twisty world of It: Welcome to Derry‘s latest episode. Andy Muschietti, cocreator of the series, cameos as a carnival pianist in a flashback to a 1908 town fair.

Muschietti told TV Insider that he did so at the request of the episode’s director, Andrew Bernstein — “He twisted my arm into playing that role, and I begrudgingly did it,” he joked. (He also teased that fans will see him again in Episode 8.)

Also present for the scene is a kid version of Francis Shaw, who takes in the oddities before exchanging his slingshot for a bottle of water from a young Rose. The two become fast friends and play in the woods together before things take a dark turn; he goes too far and comes face to face with a one-eyed demon and has to use the slingshot to take out the creature’s other eye and escape.

They’re soon parted when Francis’ father is stationed elsewhere, and she gives him the slingshot back as a token of remembrance — even though she knows he’ll forget her once he leaves Derry. It takes 50 years, but remember, he does, and the very grown-up Francis (James Remar) and Rose (Kimberly Guerrero) have a very warm reunion at her store.

He’s there to ask for her help with his mission after finding a car from the Bradley Gang massacre with the help of Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), but he lies and says he wants her to help him avoid sacred lands in a military dig.

“That’s classified,” James Remar explained of Francis’ decision not to tell Rose the truth, even after their shared childhood experiences. “We’ve got to get it done, but it’s still a military secret. In my mind, it’s protective of her. I’m not going to say, ‘We’re looking for some entity, and we’re going to take over the world.’ It’s clandestine. It’s a military secret. And military secrets at that time, things that were highly classified, was just a matter of course. I mean, it was the Cold War, Strategic Air Command, Khrushchev, the Soviets. It wasn’t personal. I don’t feel like I was lying as such to my friend Rose.”

Thanks to that encounter, Rose convinces her fellow tribe members to take a wait-and-see approach about what Shaw and his team are doing, and they’re able to embark on a new mission — this time, with Leroy (Jovan Adepo) piloting a helicopter as Dick plays human compass with the slingshot providing him new insight into It. Dick goes into a trance and mentally visits Pennywise’s sewer lair, where his grandmother appears to tell him to leave, and It senses him as he almost jumps out of the back of the bird, with Leroy stopping him just in time.

HBO

Later, the two debrief after dinner with Charlotte (Taylour Paige), and Leroy says he knows Dick was there snooping around in his mind during the masked attack in his bunk. Dick says, based on what he saw, he wouldn’t ever want to cross Leroy again.

“I think when Dick looks into Leroy’s head, there’s a respect for what he has endured,” Chris Chalk told us about the scene. “But also there’s something nice about being seen, almost… Dick gets caught, and it’s like, ‘Oh, will you be my friend?’ It’s like, ‘I can tell you things now because, you know I can do things.’” Chalk added, “I think, for Dick, the first time, going, ‘Is this an ally? Is this person a person I might actually depend on?’ And then, as you watch the show, you find out if it happens or not, if they become allies or not.”

The other storyline of the episode is that of Lilly (Clara Stack), upon returning from Juniper Hill, committing to helping Ronnie (Amanda Christine) exonerate her father, Hank (Stephen Rider), whose alibi has now been contradicted. They decide that they need proof beyond Lilly’s account, so they work with Will (Blake Cameron James) and Rich (Arian S. Cartaya), after the latter says he knows of a ritual they can use in the graveyard.

Welcome to Derry Clara Stack, Arian S. Cartaya, Blake Cameron James, Amanda Christine

HBO

Though his prayer for the dead was bogus, they were still greeted by the ghosts of Teddy, Phil, and Suzie as the cemetery began to erupt in an earthquake, as the kids tried to get away on their bikes while taking photos of the spirits on the way out. Once they developed the film, they saw that they’d captured the specters perfectly — along with a clown.

Watch the full aftershow with even more cast and creative commentary on the latest It: Welcome to Derry episode above!

Welcome to Derry, Sundays, 9/8c, HBO

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Shah Rukh Khan
Bollywood

Exclusive: Shah Rukh Khan Revisits His Iconic Scenes From Devdas to Kal Ho Naa Ho

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Shah Rukh Khan is not just an actor but someone who understands the language of cinema. He breathes live into every frame he is in, turning moments into memories. That’s why his performances are remembered across generations. During an old conversation with Filmfare, the actor spoke to us about some of the scenes he liked doing and decoded them.

Talking about his favourite scene in Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Devdas, he said, “When I go home for my dad’s funeral, I tell my mother “Achche aadmi the woh…” It is one of my favourite scenes.” He starred with Madhuri Dixit, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Jackie Shroff in this film.


About Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, SRK said, “When I come running to the summer school and see Kajol for the first time after so many years and I say, ‘Sari!’ As an actor I really enjoyed doing that scene.
In Baazigar, he shared the screen with Shilpa Shetty and Kajol. Talking about his favourite scene, SRK said, “When I say sorry to Shilpa before throwing her off the terrace. In my head the word ‘sorry’ meant ‘I love you a lot’.

About his iconic love story Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, he expressed, “At the station when Kajol invited me for her wedding and I say, ‘Nahin, mein nahin aaunga.’

Shah Rukh Khan also spoke about his film Swades, which is considered one of his career best. He continued, “Whe the kid sells me water in a kulhar at the station and then runs to give me my change. I was moved even while doing it.”Shah Rukh Khan films

He concluded with Kal Ho Naa Ho and said his favourite scene was, “When I tell Preeti how she should learn to smile and show her how with a ‘Hee hee.’ The timing was just right.


Also Read: Top Comic Films of Shah Rukh Khan

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Adam Brody and Seth Rogen
TV & Streaming

Adam Brody on Seth Rogen’s Scenes in Season 2

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Adam Brody is revealing what it was like to have Seth Rogen join Nobody Wants This.

In a new interview with People, he spoke about working alongside Rogen on a project for the first time and the energy The Studio boss brought to his scenes with fellow guest star Kate Berlant.

“He just let it rip. He and Kate Berlant, who I’m also a huge fan of, just went way off script,” Brody said. “I just got to buckle up and hang on.”

In season two of the hit Netflix show, The O.C. alum’s character, rabbi Noah and his agnostic girlfriend Joanne (Kristen Bell) are trying to navigate their differences. In Noah’s search for a temple more accepting of Joanne’s timeline and of when — or if — she’ll convert to Judaism, he finds a progressive temple run by Neil (Rogen) and Cami (Berlant). However, Noah has a hard time adjusting to their laid-back approach to religion.

Brody calls Rogen’s Neil a “rock ‘n’ roll rabbi to Noah’s more buttoned-up one.” He also praised Rogen as being “so funny and talented.”

“He’s incredibly gregarious, and he’s identifiably Jewish,” Brody continued to describe why Rogen was right for the role. “I think he’s just a great fit.”

Earlier this year, the actors were both up for best actor in a comedy series at the 2025 Emmys, for their respective shows. Rogen won the prize for playing Matt Remick in The Studio.

Another highly anticipated guest star this season is Gossip Girl star Leighton Meester, who is married to Brody in real life. Meester plays Abby, Joanne’s nemesis from middle school. At Nobody Wants This‘ season two premiere last week, the show’s creator, Erin Foster, told The Hollywood Reporter about rewriting Meester’s episode so she interacts with Brody.

“It’s because the character was already written into the script without being cast at all,” Foster said. “When [Meester] said yes, I went back into the script — they didn’t even have any scenes together, so I gave them their little scene together and I really wanted him to say, ‘She’s not my type.’ He says that in the episode and it just meant a lot to me to get to say something funny like that because I thought it could become a meme.”

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Ajay Devgn's Drishyam 3 Loses Paresh Rawal: Find Out What Went Down Behind The Scenes! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Ajay Devgn’s Drishyam 3 Loses Paresh Rawal: Find Out What Went Down Behind The Scenes! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Drishyam franchise is gearing up for its much-awaited third instalments in both Hindi and Malayalam, with Ajay Devgn and Mohanlal returning to their iconic roles. However, recent buzz surrounded veteran actor Paresh Rawal, who was reportedly approached to join the cast of Drishyam 3. After widespread speculation, the actor has now confirmed that he was indeed offered a role — but turned it down for personal reasons.

In a statement to Bollywood Hungama, Paresh Rawal shared, “Yes, the makers did approach me. But I didn’t feel that the role was suitable for me. Maza nahin aaya (I didn’t have fun with the part).” The 70-year-old actor clarified that while he admired the film’s writing, he did not feel the same excitement about his character. “The script is very good. I was really impressed. But even in a compelling script, you need a role that excites you. Warna maza nahin aayega (Otherwise, it’s no fun),” he added.

Rumours had earlier suggested that Rawal had already joined the project and would begin shooting soon. However, his revelation confirms that he opted out early on. The specific role offered to him remains undisclosed, and details about his potential replacement are still under wraps.

Also Read: Get Ready for the Ultimate Thrill! Ajay Devgn’s Drishyam 3 Announcement Teaser Dropping on this date

Meanwhile, Drishyam 3 will see Ajay Devgn and Shriya Saran reprising their roles, with the teaser expected to drop soon. However, reports indicate a delay due to creative and contractual issues between the Hindi and Malayalam teams. According to The Times of India, one of the adaptation clauses prevents the Hindi makers from announcing content details without approval from the original creators, Jeethu Joseph and Antony Perumbavoor.

The Malayalam producers reportedly objected to the Hindi team’s sudden release announcement for October 2, 2026, enforcing the clause to maintain coordination between both versions.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Why Are ‘The Diplomat’ Sex Scenes So Distractingly Awkward?
Fashion

Why Are ‘The Diplomat’ Sex Scenes So Distractingly Awkward?

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

We need to talk about The Diplomat. Specifically, the romantic relationships on The Diplomat. And even more specifically, the sex scenes.

The Netflix thriller has been sitting comfortably in the top 10 most-watched TV shows since its third season premiered on October 16, and not since House of Cards has the public been so invested in the juicy inner lives of despicable elected officials. (The fictional ones, at least.) In the series, Keri Russell stars as Kate Wyler, a longtime behind-the-scenes strategist who, in season 3, plays double duty as both the second lady of the United States as well as the US ambassador to the UK. She appears slightly disheveled at all times and is not afraid to put ethics aside for the sake of her preferred outcome. She and her husband, Vice President Hal Wyler (Rufus Sewell), also a duplicitous politician, are well-matched antiheroes.

I am a fan of the show. In a world full of flops, The Diplomat is a diamond in the rough, a rare TV series that has me reaching for my phone not because I want to mindlessly scroll on a second screen, but because I want to embark on a Wikipedia deep dive into the Law of the Sea treaty (a real thing!), the Runit Dome (a concrete structure in the Marshall Islands that “entombs” nuclear waste), the politics behind the Scottish independence movement (what’s really behind its failure?), and so on and so forth.

However, when deeply engaging moments like this are interrupted by out-of-left-field dialogue like, “I want to lick you until you scream,” it can feel like a slap in the face. I’m sorry, but what is going on with The Diplomat’s sex scenes?

For the record, I’m not a prude, or one of the Gen Z contingent who believes there’s too much sex on TV (a young millennial, I was raised on Gossip Girl—it takes a lot to shock me). Nine times out of 10, I’m all for a little sexy time on screen. But the relationships between Kate and UK foreign secretary Dennison (David Gyasi), Kate and Callum Ellis (Aidan Turner), and Kate and Hal in season 3 of The Diplomat felt forced in a manner that completely took me out from under the show’s otherwise unbreakable spell.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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BTS Jungkook
Bollywood

Diwali 2025: A Look at Top Festive Scenes in Hollywood Films and TV Shows

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Diwali has always found its way into some of the most beloved Hollywood TV shows and films, featuring heartfelt moments to humorous misunderstandings. As the Festival of Lights continues to gain recognition around the world, these on-screen portrayals reflect a growing appreciation for South Asian culture. Here’s a look at how Diwali has been celebrated, or referenced, in popular Western media, from The Office to Never Have I Ever.

1. The Office – Diwali (Season 3, Episode 6)

This is the most iconic Diwali episode in American TV. Michael Scott (Steve Carell) and the Dunder Mifflin team attend a Diwali party hosted by Kelly Kapoor (Mindy Kaling). Michael mistakenly thinks it’s a costume party and arrives in costume but he eventually embraces the event’s true spirit and ends the night by proposing to his girlfriend, Carol. Elsewhere, Jim stays late at the office and gets involved in a drinking game with Andy. Pam later reaches out to connect with Jim, but he doesn’t respond.

2. Ms. Marvel – Episode 2

Diwali

While not entirely focused on Diwali, the show includes beautiful South Asian cultural representation, including festive attire, music and family gatherings that resemble Diwali celebrations. Kamala Khan continues to discover and test her new powers with the help of Bruno. She goes to a party with her friends and begins to uncover more about her family history through her great-grandmother’s mysterious bangle. Meanwhile, her friend Nakia decides to run for a position on the mosque board. Kamala also meets the charming Kamran, and later, he’s revealed to have a deeper connection to her story when he introduces her to his mother, who appears linked to the bangle. The episode ends with Kamala and Kamran bonding over their shared love of Bollywood, just before Kamran reveals that his mother has been wanting to meet Kamala.

3. Outsourced – Season 1, Episode 8

Diwali
Outsourced is a rom-com where a U.S. executive is sent to India and experiences cultural immersion, including a beautiful Diwali festival scene. In the episode, the American manager Todd immerses himself in the festival and gains a deeper understanding of its cultural importance. Wanting to support his team, he gives his employees time off to celebrate, choosing to handle work calls on his own. During this time, he ends up spending the night with his Australian colleague, Tonya.

4. Big Bang Theory – Occasional References

Diwali
While there’s no full Diwali episode, Raj Koothrappali (Kunal Nayyar) mentions Diwali multiple times and there’s at least one scene with the gang attending Indian festivities. They sing Bollywood songs like Munni Badnam and reference Indian culture humorously.

5. The Simpsons – Treehouse of Horror XXVIII

Diwali
A very short but colourful Diwali reference happens in one of the episodes of Simpsons. It is a glimpse in a montage-style moment. It is not a full scene, but worth a mention for including Diwali in a pop culture icon like The Simpsons.

6. Never Have I Ever – Season 2, Episode 4 (…Been a Perfect Girl)

Diwali
Devi attends a Ganesh Puja, which is similar in setting to Diwali with colourful outfits, family drama and cultural events. She attempts to befriend Aneesa, a new Indian student but things take a turn when she spreads a rumour. True but sensitive, the rumour is about Aneesa having an eating disorder. At the same time, Eleanor sneaks out with Devi and Aneesa to meet Malcolm. Meanwhile, Devi has an uncomfortable run-in with Ben, who makes it clear he’s still upset with her and that their friendship hasn’t been repaired.

7. The Resident (Medical Drama) – Season 2 Episode “00:42:30”

Diwali

The episode features a hospital-hosted Diwali celebration with Indian staff and patients taking part. It attempts to show diversity in medical settings with subtle but respectful Diwali representation.

Also Read: Diwali Moments in Bollywood Films That We Can’t Forget

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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