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Steve Albini on What Made The Rolling Stones Dummer Charlie Watts So Special
Music

Steve Albini on What Made The Rolling Stones Dummer Charlie Watts So Special

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

My book Backbeats: A History of Rock and Roll in 15 Drummers tells a familiar story from an unfamiliar vantage. Moving from Chicago blues to Phil Spector’s early-1960s confections to the British Invasion, the birth of punk, metal, grunge, and hip-hop, the book tracks the seven-decade story of rock and roll as if drummers were the main characters. 

And why not? Though they aren’t typically as famous as guitarists and singers, drummers have been just as crucial to the creation of this music, possibly even more so. Rock and roll was a rhythmic revolution above all, and who could imagine what it would look like without the Bo Diddley beat (created by drummer Clifton James), the “Be My Baby” intro (played by Hal Blaine), or the thunderous power of John Bonham? 

Charlie Watts embodies this book’s thesis. It’s impossible to imagine the Rolling Stones without him, and he was just as crucial to their sound as Keith Richards’ guitar or Mick Jagger’s singing. In this excerpt I discuss why his blues- and jazz-influenced style was so unique and important to their group’s development.


It’s hard to overstate how difficult it was for young British people to obtain records from American jazz- and bluesmen in the 1950s and ’60s. Figures like Blind Lemon Jefferson, Bukka White, and even Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf were still obscure in the US at the time. It wasn’t until 1958 that Waters and a few other performers came to Britain for a tour, and if you missed those concerts then you had to make do with what you could find in the few specialist record shops, where obsessives like Brian Jones and Keith Richards were your competition for the limited supply. Lonnie Donegan, a crucial figure in the development of UK rock and roll, got his early jazz and blues records by stealing them from the American embassy in London. But the scarcity drove these young men together.

“That scene became the only chance you had to play that music,” Charlie Watts said. “It was a chance to talk about those records.” When Keith Richards and Mick Jagger arrived in London’s burgeoning local blues venues, they found Watts already playing drums a few nights a week with another band while attending art school.

The trio of Jagger, Richards, and Watts played their first gig together in 1962, before Beatlemania. From the start, their tastes ran rougher than the pop-minded Liverpudlians: they made their reputation on Wolf and Muddy covers, and the Stones would never have been caught playing tunes from The Music Man, for instance. But in their early years, Jagger and Richards were relatively focused on traditional British songcraft, especially in their ballads. Original songs like “Ruby Tuesday” and “I Am Waiting,” even “Paint It, Black,” revealed eclectic, exotic tastes and studio approaches.

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Courtesy of Simon and Schuster

The latter became instantly iconic for its sitar melody, but it is also a major drum feature, especially for the time. Watts’s pounding toms set the tone for the thrumming verses, then he leaps into the chorus with a heavy backbeat and massive fills. And as much as Watts is known for demureness, both musically and otherwise, it’s worth noting that his wild playing is all over the band’s mid-1960s singles and hits, from “19th Nervous Breakdown,” which perfects the Who’s jacked-up R & B feel, to the swinging triplet blues “Heart of Stone,” and the power-pop buried gem “Gotta Get Away.” Then there’s “Get Off of My Cloud,” which opens with Watts’s bouncing beat, built on a snare fill. All these songs rely on a strong backbeat more than harmonies or guitar solos, for example. The drums are intrinsic to the arrangement, even in this more traditionally melodic era.

In the defining early Stones anthem “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” Watts’s drum break—performed only on the snare and hi-hat—is a hook to equal Richards’s three-note guitar melody. The song swings on Watts’s snare drum throughout, as he keeps a steady quarter-note pulse. Instead of a traditional backbeat on the two and four, Watts played every note on “Satisfaction,” one-two-three-four. The Rolling Stones were defined by the sound of Charlie Watts’s snare from their first public breakthrough.

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That snare sound is as instantly identifiable as Miles Davis’s muted horn or Eddie Van Halen’s pyrotechnic neck tapping. No one else has a backbeat like Charlie Watts, and it’s the first thing any drummer will say about him. So how did he achieve it? Like any iconic musical voice, he had his physical peculiarities. He played with a “traditional” stick grip, meaning his left stick, which hit the snare, went through his fingers at an angle like a bottom chopstick. Drumming with a traditional grip takes the power away from your elbow or shoulder—they won’t be any help. It has to come from the wrist, in a whip motion, like a viper attack. Charlie Watts held his trunk and head so still, and never played loudly or overexerted himself, but his snare sounds like he was whacking the dust off it, like he’d put in a dollar and never got his cigarettes.

Watts also played a lot of rim shots, where the stick hits the head and the metal hoop around the drum simultaneously. It further sharpens the sound into a crack rather than a thud, and forces additional reverberations from the drum’s shell. Watts’s snare sound was really a mix of sounds—a thwacking snap on the head, the vibration of the air in the drum itself, the click of wood on the rim. Recorded in faux-blues verité style, his backbeats were alive. And like fingerprints, no two were precisely the same.

It shouldn’t surprise any blues fan, but Watts achieved this sound on banged-up vintage equipment, even as the trend for giant, customized sets grew through the 1970s and ’80s—even when he was competing for stage space with Mick Jagger riding on a giant inflatable penis. Gina Schock is the drummer for the Go-Go’s, who opened for the Stones on the Tattoo You tour in 1981. “The drum tech said the rug underneath it was worth more than the kit,” she told me. (She added, in a south Baltimore drawl that she has heroically preserved despite a half century on the West Coast, “Charlie was a perfect gentleman.”)

Moreover, he played his ancient drums quietly. No matter how big the Stones’ crowds got, no matter how enormous the stage show, you’d never see his elbows raise. He played everything at a reasonable, even modest volume, and let microphones capture the nuances of his sound—another jazz technique. If your art depends on developing a unique voice, you don’t seek it by screaming all the time.

I spoke with Steve Albini, the fiercely, iconically independent musician and recording engineer, in February 2024. Known for his unadorned, documentary techniques and specifically for his full-bodied drum sounds, Albini recorded all-time records for the Pixies, Nirvana, Slint, PJ Harvey, Low, and literally hundreds of other bands over three decades, in a schedule that ranged from experimental groups in his actual neighborhood to Robert Plant and Jimmy Page. His artistic philosophy was closer to that of Alan Lomax (or his fellow adopted Chicagoan Leonard Chess) than what we typically think of as a “record producer.” “I like it when a recording is convincingly naturalistic,” he told me. “That’s the most successful basic recording scenario, when it’s a convincing representation of what was happening in the room. The band should be allowed to do whatever the fuck they want to do. I’m here to help.”

I called him to ask about drummers, and he brought up Watts unprompted. “The thing that’s amazing about Charlie Watts is the little rhythmic peculiarities in his playing. It’s almost like his playing is for him alone. He marches right through the song. His natural gait has a loping to it, it’s not boom-boom-boom. There’s a pulse, separate from the tempo, and I love how committed to it he is.”

In the 1970s, Watts started to omit his hi-hat when he played backbeats, which put even more emphasis on the snare. You can hear just how clear it is on “Sway,” “Happy,” “Beast of Burden,” and other masterpieces from this era. “His hi-hat peccadillo, the lift,” Albini described it, “it’s like a hardcore drummer. And it creates a stutter in the rhythm.” He compared Watts to two other masters of rhythmic simplicity, AC/DC’s Phil Rudd and Bun E. Carlos from Cheap Trick, both of whom had such uncluttered styles that their personalities, like Watts’s, shone through in the spaces between their notes. They defined their bands by their unrelenting swing and backbeat. They made themselves elemental to their bands’ personalities.

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Those two hard rockers came well after the Stones, however. Tremendous as they both are (and my goodness, I love Cheap Trick at Budokan, a drastically underrated drum album), Watts never hit hard. He emphasized his backbeat by keeping his playing loose; everything in his entire bodily approach to drums was designed to highlight the snare. His fellow drummers, always his sharpest observers, said as much. “Charlie played even less than me,” Ringo once joked. Stewart Copeland of the Police noted that Watts’s jazz influence meant he “derived power from relaxation. Most rock drummers are trying to kill something; they’re chopping wood. Jazz drummers instead tend to be very loose to get that jazz feel, and he had that quality.”

This essay is adapted from John Lingan’s new book, “Backbeats: A History of Rock and Roll in Fifteen Drummers,” which will be published by Scribner on Nov. 11.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Inside Emma Stone's Winning Romance With Dave McCary
Celebrity News

Inside Emma Stone’s Winning Romance With Dave McCary

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

While McCary’s account still exists, no posts remain, and Stone not only doesn’t have Instagram, she doesn’t even possess a computer (though she has a full-service smart phone).

“I’m not outwardly on social media,” she told Fresh Air host Terry Gross on NPR in January 2024. “I look at things on social media…I see it but I don’t have any desire to have a social media presence myself or have my own account. It’s not for me, it’s not for my brain.”

Stone, who’s spoken frankly about her struggles with anxiety and panic attacks, explained that the pressure to engage would be too great, and the inevitable regrets wouldn’t be worth it.

“I think it would make me spiral,” she said. “I think any time any event occurred anywhere in the world I would be afraid that I need to write something, and then I would be afraid I wrote the wrong thing and that I’m being reactive and that I’m not thinking enough. I think I would see too much targeted… stuff. I just don’t think it’s good for me, mentally.”

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Bugonia Dialogues: The Most Mind-Blowing Revelation Of The Year! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Emma Stone’s Bugonia Dialogues: The Most Mind-Blowing Revelation Of The Year! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

With a few months left in the year, moviegoers still have plenty to look forward to — and Yorgos Lanthimos’ upcoming film Bugonia is quickly becoming one of the most anticipated releases of the season. Known for his unique cinematic style (The Favourite, Poor Things), Lanthimos returns with a darkly humorous, genre-bending tale that blends conspiracy, sci-fi, and psychological tension.

Bugonia stars Emma Stone as Michelle, a powerful, self-assured corporate executive whose life is turned upside down when she is kidnapped by two eccentric men obsessed with conspiracy theories. But this isn’t a standard kidnapping — there’s no demand for ransom, no threats over money or power. Instead, her captors are convinced that Michelle is not a human being, but an alien sent to Earth as part of a plot to destroy it.

The trailer hints at an offbeat and chaotic ride, with Michelle desperately trying to reason with her abductors, only to realize that logic doesn’t work when you’re up against delusion. At one point, in an effort to escape the endless interrogation, she even sarcastically confesses to being an alien — a moment met with skepticism. “The truth, lies, what’s the difference?” she asks, summing up the film’s themes of perception, identity, and control.

Also Read: Emma Stone Stuns in Custom Louis Vuitton at ‘Bugonia’ London Film Festival Premiere!

Lanthimos’ signature style is on full display, with disorienting camera angles, surreal color palettes, and an atmosphere teetering between absurdity and dread. As the kidnappers’ plan unravels, the lines between reality and belief become increasingly blurred.

Joining Stone in the cast are Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Vanessa Eng, Cedric Dumornay, and Alicia Silverstone. With its mysterious premise and razor-sharp satire, Bugonia promises a thrilling and unconventional addition to this year’s lineup of monster and alien-themed films.

“I am crucial, in all humility, I can say that. Think of it you abducted the governor, but worse. There is no possible scenario where you benefit from this incident” – Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone)
"i'm not an alien" - michelle fuller (emma stone)
“I’m not an alien” – Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone)
"you know this is crazy. you know this is wrong" - michelle fuller (emma stone)
“You know this is crazy. You know this is wrong” – Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone)
"what you asking me to do is not quite clear to me" - michelle fuller (emma stone)
“What you asking me to do is not quite clear to me” – Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone)

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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D'Angelo and Angie Stone's son speaks out after losing both parents months apart: 'It's been a very rough year'
Bollywood

D’Angelo and Angie Stone’s son speaks out after losing both parents months apart: ‘It’s been a very rough year’

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Grammy-winning artist D’Angelo has died at the age of 51 in New York City following a prolonged battle with cancer. According to PEOPLE, the legendary soul singer had been hospitalized for several months and spent the last two weeks in hospice care.

D’Angelo passed away after a prolonged battle with cancer.(REUTERS)

His family confirmed the news in a statement released on Tuesday.

“The shining star of our family has dimmed his light for us in this life,” the singer’s family said. “After a prolonged and courageous battle with cancer, we are heartbroken to announce that Michael D’Angelo Archer, known to his fans around the world as D’Angelo, has been called home, departing this life today, October 14th, 2025.”

Also Read: D’Angelo net worth: A look at R&B icon’s career and fortune

Relationship with Angie Stone

In the late ’90s, D’Angelo was in a four-year relationship with fellow soul singer Angie Stone. The two welcomed a son, Michael D’Angelo Archer II, in 1998.

Stone passed away on March 1 this year at the age of 63 following a car accident.

Also Read: D’Angelo dies at 51: All on R&B icon’s family and three children

Son speaks out

Their son, Michael Jr., spoke out publicly for the first time since both of his parents’ deaths.

“I am grateful for your thoughts and prayers during these very difficult times, as it has been a very rough and sad year for me,” Michael told PEOPLE in a statement Tuesday. “I ask that you please continue to keep me in your thoughts as it will not be easy, but one thing that both my parents taught me was to be strong, and I intend to do just that.”

A source close to the family told PEOPLE that Michael Jr. had remained by his father’s side during his final days.

“People are really worried about Mike right now,” the source said, noting that the 27-year-old has “been through a lot in such a short amount of time.”

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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90s Concert Doc 'Rolling Stones - At the Max' IMAX Re-Release Trailer
Hollywood

90s Concert Doc ‘Rolling Stones – At the Max’ IMAX Re-Release Trailer

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

90s Concert Doc ‘Rolling Stones – At the Max’ IMAX Re-Release Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 7, 2025
Source: YouTube

“The closest fans can get without being arrested.” Get ready for another spectacular concert experience! IMAX is re-releasing one of their original IMAX concert docs again on the big screen in theaters December. First released in 1991, Rolling Stones – At the Max is the first and only concert feature shot with IMAX cameras. “At the Max was always about bringing fans as close as possible to the energy of our live shows. With IMAX, that experience is bigger, louder, and more immersive than ever—we can’t wait for audiences to feel it all over again.” –The Rolling Stones. The film, which has not been in theaters since 2007, has already made $17 million worldwide before. Packed with career-defining performances of iconic hits including “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” “Brown Sugar,” “Start Me Up,” and more, the film puts audiences at the heart of the crowd, where every moment is enhanced by IMAX’s unmatched scale and sound. Starring Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood, and Bill Wyman. While it’s a common occurrence nowadays, it’s actually pretty cool to think about this being the very first concert doc they shot with actual IMAX film cameras and IMAX film stock (it was a big thing in the 90s – often screening at science museums). And now it’ll be even bigger & louder than ever! Go rock out with the Rolling Stones again in theaters this December.

Official trailer (+ poster) for IMAX’s original concert doc Rolling Stones – At the Max, from YouTube:

Rolling Stones - At the Max Poster

Rolling Stones - At the Max Poster

Filmed during the band’s 1990 Steel Wheels/Urban Jungle Tour, Rolling Stones – At the Max was shot across five concerts in three European cities using eight IMAX film cameras. The result was the first-ever feature-length IMAX concert film, showcasing the incomparable talents of the Rolling Stones and their stadium-filling power. First released in 1991, the critically acclaimed film is the first and only concert feature shot with IMAX film cameras. Starring Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood, and Bill Wyman, the film has been newly remastered with IMAX’s proprietary Digital Media Remastering (DMR) technology and features a brand-new sound mix—delivering the most immersive and electrifying presentation of this legendary performance to date. Rolling Stones – At the Max is a live concert doc co-directed by the filmmakers Noel Archambault, David Douglas, Roman Kroitor, and Julien Temple. Executive produced by André Picard and Michael Cohl. The IMAX movie was originally released in theaters in June 1992, and was also re-released again in 2007. IMAX will re-release Rolling Stones – At the Max remastered in IMAX theaters worldwide starting on December 10th, 2025 later this year. Want to watch?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, To Watch, Trailer

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Angie Stone's Family Reportedly Files Lawsuit Against Trucking Company Following Fatal Car Crash
Celebrity News

Angie Stone’s Family Sues Trucking Company After Fatal Crash

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Angie Stone’s children have reportedly filed a lawsuit against a trucking company and manufacturer. The suit arrives months after the singer tragically passed away in March following a fatal car crash in Alabama.

RELATED: UPDATE: Social Media Account Believed To Belong To Angie Stone’s Daughter Shares Message Following Her Tragic Passing

Details On Lawsuit Filed By Angie Stone’s Children

Page Six reports that Angie Stone’s children, Diamond Stone and Michael D’Angelo Archer, filed a lawsuit on September 2 in Atlanta. The suit states that Angie originally survived the first crash when her Sprinter van was carrying her and her crew, but flipped over. While trying to escape, Angie was struck by an 18-wheeler, ejected, and trapped underneath, where she later died. The court docs also claim that the truck driver was distracted, the safety system failed, and he didn’t break before hitting the van at 70 mph.

Angie Family Speaks Out After The Fatal Crash

Days after Angie tragically passed away on March 1, her family issued a statement about her death.  Per 11Alive, her loved ones thanked everyone for their support.“It is with heavy hearts that the children of the R&B Singer Angie Stone along with her extended family want to thank you all for your love and well wishes at what is an extremely difficult time.” The statement also highlighted that Angie stood a strong example for Black women and girls and also championed Black men. 

“Angie was an example for Black women and girls everywhere. Angie also loved and championed for Black Men with her number one hit entitled ‘Brotha.’ Angie Stone believed in giving back to her fans and the community with her Foundation, ‘Angel Stripes, the Angie Stone Foundation.’ She lived and died doing what she loved most, which was music,” the statement read.

More Details On Angie’s Tragic Passing

Fans across the internet mourned Angie Stone’s death after a car crash claimed her life on March 1. The incident occurred hours after she wrapped up a performance in Montgomery Alabama. According to AP News, the Alabama Highway Patrol said the Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van carrying Angie and her team overturned on Interstate 65 and then collided with a 2021 Freightliner Cascadia truck. Emergency responders pronounced Stone dead at the scene and later rushed the Sprinter’s driver and seven other passengers to a hospital.

RELATED: Prayers Up! Angie Stone Reportedly Passes Away After Fatal Crash

What Do You Think Roomies?

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's New ‘Spiced Sienna’ Hair Is the Perfect Copper Shade For PSL Season
Fashion

Emma Stone’s New ‘Spiced Sienna’ Hair Is the Perfect Copper Shade For PSL Season

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

To all those dreaming of Emma Stone’s grown-out pixie cut, just wait until you see her “spiced sienna” dye job.

By now, we all know that Emma Stone did not cut her hair off because she was tired of styling it in the morning or restless for change or hoping to highlight her incredible jawline—all of which would have been valid and relatable reasons for such a dramatic chop. In reality, she fully shaved her head for her role in Yorgos Lanthimos’ newest film, Bugonia, earning herself a seven-minute standing ovation at Venice Film Festival for her efforts. Okay, they probably weren’t clapping just because she went bald, but her latest hair color by Tracey Cunningham is certainly worthy of applause.

On August 28, the 36-year-old actor debuted a “luminous copper auburn” tone at the Venice Film Festival, which Stone’s longtime hairstylist dubbed “spiced sienna” just in time for PSL season.

Emma Stone arrives at Palazzo del Casinò during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 28, 2025.

Victor Boyko/Getty Images

“Crafted with Schwarzkopf Vibrance Alkaline Color Gloss, this shade radiates warmth, depth, and glow, perfectly framing her fearless transformation,” Cunningham, the U.S. creative director of color & technique at Schwarzkopf Professional, wrote of Stone’s latest update on Instagram, sharing her exact custom formula for those who are already texting photos of her client to their local color specialists.

Those who frequent salons know that lightening one’s hair is much longer, more delicate process than going in the other direction, and Stone has slowly been making her way back to auburn since switching to a dark brunette shade in the summer of 2024. Back in January, she debuted a nutmeg pixie cut at the Golden Globes, subtly inching closer to this warm copper auburn as her hair grew out.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Bugonia'
TV & Streaming

Emma Stone’s Channels Katharine Hepburn in Yorgos Lanthimos’ ‘Bugonia’

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

With a shaved head, expert line deliveries and the assembly of another all-time memorable character, Emma Stone continues driving this golden age of cinema. She might just be our modern-day Katharine Hepburn.

Greek auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, Oscar-nominated director of “Poor Things” and “The Favourite,” has fully stepped into his Alfred Hitchcock era with “Bugonia,” which represents a bold new realm for the filmmaker. At the Telluride Film Festival, executive director Julie Huntsinger introduced Jesse Plemons as “Jesse F***ing Plemons,” and the actor lived up to the billing in every way.

After debuting at the Venice Film Festival, Lanthimos’ wildly audacious “Bugonia” unveiled itself to audiences at the Werner Herzog Theatre. The dark comedy presents the best kind of problem for distributor Focus Features for this Oscar season: how to shepherd two powerhouse contenders (the other being “Hamnet”) through the long, unpredictable marathon of awards campaigning and determine which narrative will resonate most with the Academy.

Adapted from Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 South Korean cult classic “Save the Green Planet!,” the film follows two conspiracy-obsessed men — played by Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis — who kidnap a high-powered CEO (Stone), convinced she’s an alien bent on destroying Earth.

Plemons, already an Oscar nominee for Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog” (2021), goes for broke in what may be his most audacious and riveting work yet. A best actor nomination feels not only possible but inevitable. It’s hard to pinpoint Oscar winners in history who embody this type of role, but the closest comparison seems a mixture of Anthony Hopkins (“The Silence of the Lambs”) and Geoffrey Rush (“Shine”).

Stone, a two-time Oscar winner for “La La Land” (2016) and “Poor Things” (2023), shows an almost frightening fearlessness in her craft. At 36, the actor-producer is still building what could become one of Hollywood’s most decorated careers. Like Hepburn, who won four Academy Awards over a lifetime of iconic performances, Stone seems poised to keep redefining what a leading lady can be.

Stone has already made history as one of two women nominated for acting and producing in the same year (“Poor Things”). The other was Frances McDormand for “Nomadland” (2020), who won both actress and best picture — her third and fourth Oscars. McDormand’s other two Oscars came for acting in “Fargo” (1996) and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017).

Stone’s résumé already reads like the arc of an entire generation. From the sharp comic timing of “Easy A” to the aching vulnerability in “The Favourite,” and from her razor-edge balancing act in “Birdman” to the surrealist bravado of “Poor Things,” Stone has never repeated herself. Each performance arrives with a sense of reinvention — not unlike Hepburn, whose leap from screwball comedies in the 1930s to searing dramas in the 1960s charted an artistic evolution rarely equaled in Hollywood.

Both women also share a restless, almost defiant streak against the industry’s rigid expectations. Hepburn was notorious for refusing to play ingénues and insisted on characters with wit, grit and a pointed refusal to apologize for their ambition. Stone, in her own era, has forged a similar path — often playing women who are messy, intelligent, sensual and deeply flawed, making them magnetic nonetheless. The throughline between the two actresses is not imitation, rather an inheritance: a lineage of artistry where authenticity triumphs over convention.

Delbis, an autistic actor who prefers that term over “neurodivergent,” is remarkable in his screen debut. His portrayal of Don, a young man torn between loyalty and the yearning for truth, is raw, honest and is the emotional backbone. His presence alongside seasoned performers like Stone and Plemons gives the film a livewire quality — the sense that something unpredictable, and therefore thrilling, could spark at any moment.

Like many of Lanthimos’ films, “Bugonia” is a full-scale awards contender, with potential across acting, directing and screenplay categories, and strong prospects in every craft category — including visual effects.

In many ways, the film achieves what Adam McKay wanted “Don’t Look Up” to be: sharp, brittle social commentary on our world. The stark difference is that screenwriter Will Tracy never feels as though he’s talking down to the audience. He’s reflecting the world, holding a mirror up to our flawed selves.

But with the blend of multiple genres, I’d suspect the film to be polarizing to a select few (think “The Substance” last year). However, I think it will perform on par with “Poor Things,” which netted 11 nominations.

For Focus Features, this presents an enviable challenge of abundance: When your films are this good, the real art becomes deciding how to tell the story to voters.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Emma Stone's Bugonia Trailer Is Out: Can She Outsmart Her Alien Captors? Watch To Find Out! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Emma Stone’s Bugonia Trailer Is Out: Can She Outsmart Her Alien Captors? Watch To Find Out! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Following the critical acclaim and box office success of The Favourite, Poor Things, and Kinds of Kindness, director Yorgos Lanthimos and actress Emma Stone join forces for a third time this time to collaborate on a bizarre, genre-defying sci-fi black comedy called Bugonia. A warped reinterpretation of the 2003 South Korean cult hit Save the Green Planet!

The movie opened at the Venice Film Festival on August 28 and will play in a limited release on October 24, expanding to a wide release on October 31.

A Daring Concept with a Darkly Humorous Twist

In Bugonia, Emma Stone stars as Michelle Fuller, a dominant CEO who is the target of two conspiracy-ridden young men (played by Jesse Plemons and newcomer Aidan Delbis). Believing she is an extraterrestrial sent to destroy the planet, the two abduct her, shave her head to stop “mothership communication,” and lock her away in an underground bunker. The offbeat premise plays out with the quirky tone typical of Lanthimos’ approach, mixing absurdity with psychological unease.

The cast also features Alicia Silverstone and comedian Stavros Halkias, both adding to the darkly comedic world of the film.

Creative Powerhouse Behind the Scenes

The script is by Will Tracy (Succession), with an all-star production team behind it including Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Ari Aster, Lars Knudsen, Miky Lee, Jerry Kyoungboum Ko, Lanthimos, and Stone herself. The international ensemble production ensures a visually creative and thematically complex cinematic experience.

The trailer, which landed on the same day the Venice premiere, boasts a new, striking look for Stone and opens to Chappell Roan’s viral song Good Luck, Babe!. The song reinforces the film’s campy yet queasy vibe and picks up on the uncanny tension between captor and captive.

Art Imitates Life in Lanthimos’ Dystopia

Lanthimos and Stone both explained the film’s themes at the Venice press conference. “Unfortunately, not much of the dystopia in this film is very fictional,” Lanthimos said, referencing such concerns as AI, climate change, and conspiracy culture as inspiration. Stone added some lighthearted, earnest flair, confessing, “I’m coming out with it — I believe in aliens!”

A Genre-Bending Must-See This Fall

With its satirical bite, daring performances, and genre-bending narrative, Bugonia is shaping up to be one of the most intriguing films of the fall. Equal parts disturbing and hilarious, it’s a cinematic reflection of modern anxieties—served with Lanthimos’ signature weirdness.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Watch The Maccabees bring out Jamie T for 'Marks To Prove It' and 'Sticks 'N' Stones' at All Points East headline gig
Music

Watch The Maccabees bring out Jamie T for ‘Marks To Prove It’ and ‘Sticks ‘N’ Stones’ at All Points East headline gig

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Maccabees were joined by Jamie T during their All Points East headline show. Check out the footage below.

The indie band topped the bill at Victoria Park last night (August 24), after first announcing the gig in October 2024 and ending their eight-year hiatus. The huge gig also coincided with the 10th anniversary of their fourth and final album, ‘Marks To Prove It’, which was released back in 2015.

To celebrate, they brought out Jamie T for a surprise performance of the LP’s title track – marking the first time they’ve played it with him since their 2017 “final” gig at Alexandra Palace.

Two years prior to that, Jamie T also joined them during their Glastonbury 2015 set to perform the track.

He also stuck around to play his 2009 hit ‘Sticks ‘N’ Stones’ with the newly reformed band. Ahead of this gig, he brought out The Maccabees‘ guitarist Hugo White to perform the song during his huge 2023 Finsbury Park show, and before that, at Glastonbury 2022. White also produced Jamie’s T 2022 album ‘The Theory of Whatever’.

Check out the moment below.

So so good to have The Maccabees back what a band! What a surprise to have Jamie T and stick “n” stones! What a moment! pic.twitter.com/NvF73lfi7o

— Steven George (@steven_george) August 24, 2025

 

In the run-up to their All Points East gig, Felix White and co. also reunited for a huge show at this year’s edition of Glastonbury and, before that, played their first gig back on June 20 at London’s The Dome for a charity gig in aid of MS Society.

While at their South London practice space, the band told NME that it felt like “no time has passed” in their eight-year hiatus. “It’s so strange,” Felix told us in January. “In the chunk [of time] from the last show, you could conceive of The Maccabees as a different existence, but as soon as we started playing, it was as if we hadn’t stopped.”

When asked about the possibility of new music then, he added: “The plan is to do [All Points East] and see how much we love it.” Sam Doyle then chimed in, jokingly saying that they were reluctant to look too far ahead as they “might hate each other by August.”

The Maccabees live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

More recently, Felix said that announcing the band’s return “almost felt embarrassing” after their “definitive” break-up, and confirmed that they are “not writing anything at the moment”.

While at Glastonbury, the band spoke to NME again about playing their first show back together earlier this year. “There was a lot of feeling in that room. It surprised me, actually, because I was finding that on stage, in a split second, I was euphoric and then I was actually crying at Tufnell Park Dome and then feeling other things,” Felix said.

“You felt all this feeling inside your body that the action of playing the music brings out in us, and it was all happening in there and just felt amazing.

At their Glasto set, The Maccabees were joined by Florence Welch, who provided guest vocals on ‘Love You Better’ before performing Florence + The Machine‘s ‘Dog Days Are Over’. NME gave the performance a full five stars and praised the slot as “their most euphoric show to date”.

The band currently have no future performances lined up, but did recently say that they are “tempted” by the idea of recording new music together.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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