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Fun Trailer for 'Sirocco & the Kingdom of Winds' Psychedelic Fairy Tale
Hollywood

Fun Trailer for ‘Sirocco & the Kingdom of Winds’ Psychedelic Fairy Tale

by jummy84 November 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Fun Trailer for ‘Sirocco & the Kingdom of Winds’ Psychedelic Fairy Tale

by Alex Billington
November 16, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Let’s go get your sister!” Check out this funky & colorful official trailer for the peculiar French animated film titled Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds, directed by Benoît Chieux. This actually opened in the US last year thanks to GKids – and originally premiered back in 2023 at the Annecy Film Festival. However, I’m just now catching up with it and it looks crazy cool. Especially for animation geeks. “A psychedelic fairy tale years in the making comes from the imagination of director Benoît Chieux. With captivating creatures and a vibrant Seussian world, Sirocco and the Kingdom of the Winds is a kaleidoscopic fantasy adventure bursting with charm and wonder.” Juliette and her sister Carmen are transported to the Kingdom of Winds after finding an enchanted book. They are also transformed into cats. Juliette causes an accident that upsets the Kingdom’s locals, leading its ruler to give Juliette to the songstress Selma, while also sentencing Carmen to marry his son. Will they find their way out? This looks super wacky and weird and tons of fun. Get a look.

Official trailer (+ poster) for Benoît Chieux’s film Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds, from YouTube:

Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds Trailer

Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds Poster

One day, the adventurous Juliette and her sister Carmen find an enchanted toy and get swept away into the Kingdom of the Winds. They are transformed into cats and find themselves in a fantastical new world full of flying divas, technicolor dragons, and other mind-melting creations. When Juliette causes an accident that draws the ire of the local inhabitants, the Mayor gives Juliette to the beautiful songstress Selma and sentences Carmen to marry his son as punishment. The sisters must find a way to escape before the wedding bells ring, but the key to their journey home lies with Sirocco, the mysterious wizard feared for his ferocious storms. Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds is directed by French animation filmmaker Benoît Chieux, director of Aunt Hilda! and Melting Heart Cake previously. The screenplay is written by Alain Gagnol and Benoît Chieux. Produced by Ron Dyens. This initially premiered at the 2023 Annecy Film Festival and was already released in France in late 2023. GKids already released Sirocco and the Kingdom of Winds in US theaters in August 2024 last year. For more info on how to watch it, visit their official site.

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November 17, 2025 0 comments
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Stunning Trailer for 'The Tale of Silyan' Doc Film from North Macedonia
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Stunning Trailer for ‘The Tale of Silyan’ Doc Film from North Macedonia

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Stunning Trailer for ‘The Tale of Silyan’ Doc Film from North Macedonia

by Alex Billington
November 4, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You poor bird. From today on, we will live together.” National Geographic has unveiled the official trailer for one of the best documentaries of 2025 – a film titled The Tale of Silyan, from acclaimed Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, best know for her doc Honeyland from 2019. She filmed a farmer for years in a town in North Macedonia following him and his friendship with one of the local white storks. The story follows Nikola, who is unable to sell his land & crops. His family abandons him to look for a future abroad. Nikola gets a job at a landfill, where he comes across an injured white stork, Sylian. Nikola saves the bird, with the two forming a bond. Through folklore, striking images and intimate observation, Kotevska crafts a story about absence and resilience, and about the delicate thread that ties human survival to the natural world. It’s a beautiful, stunning, amazing film about our connection with nature. My rave review from the Venice Film Festival is quoted in it: “a spectacularly cinematic creation it’s almost completely unbelievable that it’s actually a documentary and these are all real people and this is a real story.” A must watch new doc.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Tamara Kotevska’s doc The Tale of Silyan, direct from YouTube:

The Tale of Silyan Doc Trailer

The Tale of Silyan Doc Poster

Via AFI Fest: “Documentarian Tamara Kotevska returns with a poetic & lyrical documentary set in rural Macedonia where family farms are struggling as their traditional way of life has become unsustainable. Looking down on this are the town’s majestic storks perched in enormous nests atop telephone poles while their clattering beaks provide a constant soundtrack. Rooted in the Macedonian myth of Silyan — a boy transformed into a stork after defying his father — [drawing] a parallel to its subject, Nikola, a weathered farmer left behind when his adult son and family depart for Germany in search of a more secure future. When Nikola encounters an injured stork and tends to the fragile bird, a tender bond forms — one that reflects both his yearning for companionship and the looming uncertainty of his vanishing way of life.” 🇲🇰

The Tale of Silyan is directed by acclaimed, Oscar-nominated Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, director of the doc films Honeyland and The Walk previously, and a few other short films as well. Produced by Tamara Kotevska, Jean Dakar, Anna Hashmi, Jordanco Petkovski. This premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival this fall (read our review). National Geographic will debut Kotevska’s The Tale of Silyan doc in select US theaters starting on November 28th, 2025 coming soon this fall. Who wants to watch this doc?

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November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Bettany hasn’t watched ‘A Knight’s Tale’ because he misses Heath Ledger
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Paul Bettany hasn’t watched ‘A Knight’s Tale’ because he misses Heath Ledger

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Paul Bettany has admitted he hasn’t watched his breakthrough film A Knight’s Tale since it was first released because he misses late co-star Heath Ledger “too much”.

The WandaVision and Avengers star played English poet and writer Geoffrey Chaucer in the medieval 2001 action-comedy, which starred Ledger as William Thatcher, a peasant squire, fuelled by his desire for food and glory, who forges a new identity for himself as a knight when his master dies.

Ledger went on to be nominated for a Best Actor Oscar for his role in Brokeback Mountain in 2005 and he played the iconic Batman villain The Joker in Christopher Nolan’s 2008 blockbuster The Dark Knight. The actor died in January the same year, four months before the release of the film, after overdosing on prescription drugs. He was 28 years-old.

The late actor received a posthumous Oscar for his role in the film.

Speaking in a Q&A during an appearance over the weekend at the LA Comic Con, when asked if fans ever ask him to repeat some of his iconic lines from A Knight’s Tale, Bettany said: “It was a really long time ago. It was like another lifetime ago. And people do come up sometimes, people come up to me on the street and quote things at me, and I literally can’t remember. I can’t remember any of it.”

He added: “I saw [the film] when it first came out. I’ve never seen it again since. There are lots of reasons for that, and just one of them is that I miss Heath too much.”

Elsewhere, it was recently confirmed that Bettany is set to return as Marvel Studios’ Vision in the forthcoming Disney+ series Vision Quest, which is set for release in 2026.

Bettany last played Vision in the 2021 Disney+ series WandaVision, where the character was resurrected and revamped into White Vision following his death in 2018’s Avengers: Infinity War.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Review: PTA's 'One Battle After Another' Vivid Tale of Revolutionaries
Hollywood

Review: PTA’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Vivid Tale of Revolutionaries

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Review: PTA’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Vivid Tale of Revolutionaries

by Alex Billington
September 26, 2025

The new Paul Thomas Anderson lands in theaters right at the right time in America’s history. To say this is a “timely” movie isn’t really accurate – this story has been building in PTA’s mind for years. He just finally got the script together, and somehow got Warner Bros to give him over $100 million to make it, and they went out and shot it last year, and now we’re treated to an astonishing movie. To say it’s too soon to judge if it’s an “American classic” isn’t really accurate either – this movie is unquestionably an instant classic that will be loved by movie fans all over the world. And with time it will earn its place in cinema history, even though most of us who write about movies professionally can see the writing on the wall already. One Battle After Another totally rocks. This movie kicks so much ass. But using such a banal, trite phrase to describe it is a disservice – this sprawling, pristine, energetic, visceral modern movie deserves much more careful analysis & deeper intellectual appreciation. Not only entertaining, it’s the movie of the moment in that it represents the zeitgeist perfectly. It may be amusing satire, but it’s also pretty darn realistic if you really break it down.

Written and directed by master filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson as his 10th feature film, One Battle After Another is officially inspired by the novel “Vineland” by Thomas Pynchon. Clearly not an adaptation, PTA gives Pynchon credit in the movie anyway, as the ideas within the book provide some basis for the ideas in the movie. In one of his best modern roles, Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Bob Ferguson – a member of the “French 75” revolutionary group who falls in love with Perfidia Beverly Hills, played by Teyana Taylor, another member. The movie is the story of American activists / revolutionaries through time, a tale of one family and how fighting American oppression & racism is passed on to the next generation. Though it’s also a comedy, a satire about Stoner Dad Bob getting older. Most of the movie takes place when Bob’s daughter Willa, also known as “Charlene Calhoun” (her cover name), is a teen disinterested in anything her parents did. Chase Infiniti plays this role with a real “let me introduce myself” pizzazz that is instantly endearing and badass all at once. She represents Gen Z and their vibes / feelings / choices. But she also needs to learn about how the world really works & is quickly introduced to this truth when Bob’s past catches up with him.

Bob’s past is depicted in the form of one Col. Steven J. Lockjaw, nemesis of the French 75, a military fascist asshole who is forever on the hunt for Bob and his ilk. Sean Penn takes on this fascinating role as Lockjaw and nails this performance so profoundly perfectly, understanding and depicting the reality of this kind of person so precisely, that his on-screen villain character is as enigmatic and as iconic as the greatest movie villains of all-time. He’s up there with Anton Chigurh & Hans Gruber and all the others. And the funny thing is that way too many people will watch this movie and get upset that he’s portrayed as the bad guy. Too bad! Lockjaw is the epitome of every broken, hateful, violent, evil American jackass – right down to the authentic depiction of a guy who has to repress his own love for Black woman just so that he can get a corner office in the White Supremacist Group’s regional branch. PTA wants to ruffle some feathers, rattle the cages, and tell a story that evokes the truth about America, with all its nitty gritty details. All of what he shows is accurate, even if it’s shown through the lens of $100M+ satire: the police state all Americans exist within, the racism, the white supremacy, the xenophobia, the oppression; which remains despite years of activism & resistance.

Like pretty much everyone else, I totally loved PTA’s One Battle After Another. Easily one of the best movies of 2025, easily deserving of any/every award it’s going to get during the awards season, easily deserving of all the love it’s receiving from movie fans everywhere. PTA used that Warner Bros to also tweak the movie through test screenings and make sure the story – above all – soars and glides. It’s going to stand the test of time, it’s going to get even better on every repeat viewing. It’s not just the tale of these revolutionaries that I enjoy being pulled into, it’s also the pristine filmmaking, the riveting pacing, the off-the-charts magnificent performances galore: Stoner Dad DiCaprio, Saint Benicio Del Toro, Unforgettable Chase Infiniti, Bastard Lockjaw Sean Penn, a Defiant Regina Hall; and everything else going on in this. Featuring yet another all-timer evocative score by Jonny Greenwood, utilizing his sound for an effective emotional layer on top of all that we’re seeing on screen. Of course, everyone knows PTA is one of the best filmmakers out there, his technical knowledge is irrefutable. But it’s all about how that knowledge comes together to work in service of the story & this time it’s cinematic synergy at its best. And man oh man do I vibe with Stoner Bob in this.

My most intriguing theory about this movie is that it’s pretty much a PTA autobiography. Taking us through his life when he was a more rebellious youngster whipping out his first movies (Hard Eight, Boogie Nights, Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love) up to his current Stoner Dad era trying to pass along his rebellious spirit to his child (he has 4 children with actress Maya Rudolph). While One Battle After Another is an immensely inspiring & amusing portrayal of American revolutionaries, it’s also a heartfelt tale of a father and daughter. These activists are just regular people, too – trying to live their own lives and raise a family and take care of each other. And Bob’s lesson to Willa is that she needs to recognize that her family is a line of fighters and she’ll join the fight, too – whether she likes it or not. There’s always more work to be done. One battle after another, they must keep fighting the evil assholes like Lockjaw and the Christmas Adventurers Club. They’re relentless haters. But there’s also hope in the idea that PTA is passing on his revolutionary spirit, reminding us that even when you get older and start to forget things, there is hope in the next generation taking flight and heading out in the world to make a real difference and pick up where you left off. And this is real hope.

Alex’s Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: Guadagnino's 'After the Hunt' is Brilliant Tale of Denial
Hollywood

Venice 2025: Guadagnino’s ‘After the Hunt’ is Brilliant Tale of Denial

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: Guadagnino’s ‘After the Hunt’ is Brilliant Tale of Denial

by Alex Billington
August 30, 2025

“He crossed the line.” “But what actually happened?” The truth is out there, but no one really likes the truth anymore, because the truth can be destructive. That’s just the truth. Not every film is meant to make you feel all warm & fuzzy when you watch. In fact, some of the best films ever made are films that make viewers feel uncomfortable (like Tar at Venice 2022), and make them question their own views and thoughts and feelings. This is the case with After the Hunt, the 10th feature film from the acclaimed Italian filmmaker Luca Guadagnino. The film just premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival to many negative reviews from critics right off the bat. But I’m here to set the record straight – After the Hunt is a brilliant thriller, Luca Guadanigno’s best film after Call Me By Your Name. It may not as exciting or upbeat as Challengers or Queer, but that doesn’t make it any less masterful. The film features an exceptionally dense, philosophically / intellectually complex script that directly address sexual assault denialism. It’s also meticulously crafted, entrancing and harrowing to watch. And it hasn’t left my mind at all since the end of the screening days ago.

After the Hunt is a sensitive story about sexual assault and women, however it is directed by a man – Luca Guadanigno. Though the screenplay is written by a woman – American writer Nora Garrett with her first produced screenplay. The film is set at Yale and literally opens with a title card saying “it happened at Yale.” Clearly inspired by and/or based on a real incident, but that’s besides the point because what it shows is still sadly happening in so many places. Julia Roberts stars as professor Alma Olsson, on the verge of tenure at Yale. One of her friends / colleagues is Hank Gibson, played by Andrew Garfield, a beloved, outspoken, bearded young professor. Ayo Edebiri co-stars as Maggie Price, a PhD student in Alma’s program. After a late night party at Alma’s fancy home where everyone was drunk, Hank walks Maggie home and something happens. The next day a broken down Maggie comes to Alma and tells her something bad happened that night, hoping she might help her through this horrible situation. Alas, Alma increasingly becomes resistant, and the situation explodes – mainly because Hank and Alma start to realize this is going to mess with their hopes and dreams of tenure climbing up the career ladder in academia. It’s not actually a “he said, she said” situation – it’s much more about why won’t others believe what she said & refuse to deal with abusive men.

The filmmaking is entirely on point as it’s a very sensitive subject dealing with major issues of our time and generational differences. This film has some serious depth to what it’s getting at and implying about society – and it’s actually very specifically making an uncomfortable point. It’s not “fun” to watch by any means, but it is compelling and extremely fascinating. Michael Stuhlbarg also co-stars as Alma’s husband Frederik, an arrogant philosopher therapist who loves to argue and debate about heady topics. Much of the dialogue throughout he film is exceptionally complex, and I think it will take multiple viewings for those interested to dig into what is being said, what is being debated, and what each scene means. It’s hard for anyone to pick up on everything in the first viewing. Yes it’s a very talky film, but almost all of Luca Guadanigno’s films are about dialogue and conversations. Even Call Me By Your Name – they’re attracted to each other because of their conversations. “You know what things…” After the Hunt is actually quite similar to CMBYN but plays out entirely opposite. At the start, Alma and Maggie do sort of love each other (in a respectful professor / student way) however as the story goes on they split and get further & further from each other. I love how Guadanigno crafts this dynamic and builds a narrative around an intellectual understanding of the dialogue.

What might upset people the most is that the film has a very strong point to make about all the characters. Essentially it’s a film about generational differences, and specifically it’s about how the older generation is entirely wrong about the younger generation. Yes this is brought up in a few conversations, but the point of the script is digging really painfully into why someone like Alma gets so obsessed with denying and rejecting Maggie and what happened. Accusations are thrown about, conversations descend into yelling matches, and philosophy is used to excuse complaints. All because way too many people are afraid of losing their power, their career, all that they’ve worked for, because they don’t want to deal with the truth about sexual assault and rape, and how poorly it is handled in places like prestigious universities. The script and this film really want to remind us that older generations might not be right about everything and really do need to defer to the younger generations – even if this pisses them off. The writing is very, very heavy with intricate scenes and subtle reveals aplenty. I really think most are missing the point. But this is all too common nowadays – even the final revelations are going to piss people off because it’s not what they want to hear from anyone…

Aside from the narrative, this new Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross score is again superb though much more haunting, enhancing the unease of watching this story about accusations and truth. Of course everything is different from Guadanigno’s past films because this is not a topic that warrants any kind of playful, upbeat filmmaking. The lead performances are all exceptional & layered. Their characters are not underdeveloped at all, any claim of such is incorrect. There’s so much going on within each one of them, but of course they’re people in academia and that means their entire existence is wrapped up in the philosophy & intellectualism of academia, which is precisely what it is like on these campuses. The film will grow on people with time and will be appreciated properly with time. The best summation of how reflective it is comes from Garfield at the press conference in Venice: “If we don’t make the unconscious conscious, things will happen in our lives and we will call them fate. When our motivations are invisible even to ourselves, we become unreliable narrators – especially in a culture where survival is paramount. It’s fascinating that, in these characters, their wants and needs are invisible to themselves, so each of them believes they’re the hero of the story.” And in the end there is no hero, there is no one to celebrate in this story. But it’s still an important story told so brilliantly.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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August 30, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'The Tale of Sylian' is One of the Best Docs of the Year
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘The Tale of Sylian’ is One of the Best Docs of the Year

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘The Tale of Sylian’ is One of the Best Docs of the Year

by Alex Billington
August 29, 2025

This is the story of a man and a bird. But it is also a story about a family and their farm; about a town and the people who live there; about storks and humans; about nature and men and their synergy; about how the world is changing (for the worse); about how we must reconnect with nature to heal the planet again. It is a film about how humanity is trashing this planet, ruining the world, and how we really need learn to go back and reconnect with the earth and appreciate all life on this planet again. The Tale of Sylian is the latest documentary creation by the acclaimed North Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, following her first feature film Honeyland (which was nominated for two Oscars back in 2020). This time her focus is on a humble farmer living in a small village in the south of North Macedonia, a place which also has one of the largest white stork populations in Europe. These giant birds have established themselves as residents of this town and the locals live in harmony with them. But it is also the inspiring story of a man named Nikola who befriends a stork after his family moves away in hopes of earning more money and finding a better life.

Much like Honeyland before this, Kotevska’s The Tale of Sylian is such a spectacularly cinematic creation it’s almost completely unbelievable that it’s actually a documentary and these are all real people and this is a real story. It’s all so perfectly shot and crafted that it feels like a fictional film with actors in it giving precise performances. But that’s just not the case! Every single shot in this film is astonishing. It’s mind boggling how many perfect shots are in here. How long it must’ve taken, how many days they must’ve waited for that perfect moment, how many thousands of hours of footage they had to comb through to find that shot for this scene, how much work it was to the edit all this together into this beautiful 80 minute feature. Every shot of the storks is, and I really mean this, perfect. Whether it’s a sunset shot of them taking flight, or a silhouette of them standing in their nests above the town, or a how-did-they-get-that-zoom-shot peek at them cackling and bickering. These big carnivorous birds use their beaks to clap and create a chattering noise as their way of communicating and they’ve captured so many funny and beautiful moments of these birds doing this. I kept gasping at every new shot that appears as the story goes on. My goodness it’s so exhilarating to watch.

In addition to all these perfect shots, The Tale of Sylian is an especially moving story about a love for nature and nature’s love for us. Nikola’s relationship with a stork isn’t about their friendship, it’s about humanity’s relationship with animals, and how we appreciate and take care of each other. It’s about loving the natural world, and respecting it; and it’s about recognizing we can live in balance with nature. After establishing the characters and the story with the family, I knew something bad would happen. I knew this film would be about humans trashing earth, and indeed it is about literally this. However, unlike so many other films that show how humans are destroying this planet, there is a hopeful side to this. It’s a wholesome and heartfelt story. It takes the time to actually show us that we can return to & respect nature again. It is possible. They start growing again, they start trying again, and that’s more beautiful than simply saying it’s all bad and we need to do something and that’s it. Give me a great story about animals, and learning to return to harmony, and I will be shouting about it from the rooftops. This is one film I won’t be able to stop raving about. It’s a cinematic experience that will leave anyone who watches it changed for the better & completely rejuvenated.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Archie Madekwe Shines in Tale of Obsession
TV & Streaming

Archie Madekwe Shines in Tale of Obsession

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. “Lurker” opens from MUBI in select theaters August 22.

A transfixing morality tale cleverly turned on its head, “Lurker” opens with an overture: its protagonist, Matthew (Théodore Pellerin), goofing around for a camcorder wielded by a friend. When the person holding the camera jokingly asks Matthew where he sees himself in five years, Matthew replies sincerely. “I already have everything I want,” he says, stealing a glance into the lens.

Rewind to the before times, when Matthew is living with his grandma and working as a retail employee at a hip clothing store in Los Angeles. In walks Oliver (Archie Madekwe), a pop music artist famous enough to cause a murmur among the store patrons. Matthew, abuzz with anticipation, pops on a track that impresses the VIP, and the next thing he knows he’s being folded into the small, sycophantic entourage of not-quite friends and not-quite collaborators fortunate enough to accompany Oliver on his excursions.

'Good Boy'
'Eden'

So begins a parable of obsession and loneliness related with such immediacy that even its relatively low stakes start to feel like life or death. In his debut feature, the writer/director Alex Russell (who has written for the series “Dave” and “The Bear”) viscerally captures the complex dynamics of hierarchical friendships, in which a fear of alienation and craving for belonging can drive people to the brink. The movie’s greatest feat is its attention to the nuances of how these men use mocking or scorn to ascend a rung on their narrow social ladder — and if “Lurker” eventually succumbs to certain genre tropes and a handful of story bumps, it makes up for its limitations in perspicacity and the overall strength of its filmmaking.

After Matthew catches Oliver’s attention in the store, he ingratiates himself quickly. Soon, he’s making himself useful around the star’s Los Angeles pad, performing chores and sucking up to his circle of buddies. At this point, Matthew is still at the bottom of the pecking order, an appendage and acolyte who understands the delicacy of his station. We witness his wild desperation to maintain his status in scenes at home, where he screams at his grandma not to interrupt him while he’s on the phone and replays Oliver’s videos to study his taste and habits. There’s a derivative feeling to these latter moments; we’ve seen portraits of blind obsession before, and at this point in the movie, you may wonder where Russell will take the relatively familiar tale.

Lurker
‘Lurker’Courtesy the filmmakers

These social hierarchies shift in a strong scene set in a pasture. Oliver’s crew has gathered to make a music video, but soon into the shoot, the group’s videographer Noah (the talented up-and-comer Daniel Zolghadri), realizes that he’s misplaced his camera batteries. Sensing an opportunity, Oliver whips out his grandma’s old camcorder and suggests that he attach it to a sheep’s head for a point-of-view shot. It’s a middling idea at best, and the composition is entirely off. But that’s no matter to Oliver, who takes to the idea and whose approval is the only one that matters. Darkly funny and effective, the scene proves a point that Matthew seems to intuit: any power structure is flexible if you’re willing to challenge its shibboleths.

Throughout, Russell and the cinematographer Pat Scola (“Pig,” “Sing Sing”) demonstrate a keen understanding of where to position the camera to best calibrate perspective and emotion. One memorable example occurs after Matthew has ascended to the position of Oliver’s righthand man, and has even invited his own pal, Jamie (Sunny Suljic of “Mid90s”), to a music industry party. A relative innocent, Jamie ends up winning over Oliver’s entourage, much to Matthew’s chagrin. As Oliver and his friends fawn (rather ridiculously) over Jamie’s ugly handmade sweater, Scola trains his camera on Matthew’s face, capturing shades of envy, quiet rage and panic. These aesthetic flourishes find an auditory corollary in Kenneth Blume’s swelling, spectral score, which toggles between sinister and ecstatic.

Oliver — a Gen-Z-cusp singer-songwriter a la Dominic Fike — begins the story as a rather straightforward character. He enjoys the influence he exercises over those around him, which explains his tendency to hand-pick fans and convert them into lackeys. Yet as the story unfolds, Russell shows how Oliver’s fame is an alienating experience. Through small looks and line deliveries, Madekwe shines as he imbues Oliver with the genuine vulnerability of a young man who tends to doubt himself and his work, and who distracts himself from unease through incessant pleasure-seeking.

Pellerin, perhaps best known for his memorable turn in “Never Rarely Sometimes Always,” is a worthy match for Madekwe. He is a gifted physical performer, with his gawky frame and large, fidgety hands useful tools as he shifts from anxiety to anger and back again. Matthew and Oliver’s alignment as characters is thrown into sharp relief once the film reaches a rather far-fetched turning point. The events — which the film all but skips through, lest the viewer start to question its plausibility — turn the tables such that Oliver becomes beholden to Matthew’s whims, rather than vice versa. In an on-the-nose flourish, Russell scores this about-face with the James & Bobby Purify song “I’m Your Puppet.” Later, the filmmaker takes the literalization trend even further when Oliver and Matthew’s jockeying for dominance is made visual in a homoerotic wrestling match.

These later scenes of power struggle suffer from some unevenness compared to their earlier counterparts, which capture the subtleties of social maneuvering better than most. Still, when the third act finally arrives, Russell deserves credit for making the audacious decision to deny his characters their comeuppance and instead end the film on a cynical note. “Lurker” is a movie about lonely young men who know that, at the top of their social ladders, more emptiness awaits them. Yet they keep climbing them all the same.

Grade: B+

“Lurker” premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. MUBI releases the film August 22.

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August 24, 2025 0 comments
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Inside The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox and More True Crime TV Dramas
Celebrity News

Inside The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox and More True Crime TV Dramas

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

However, Knox says the Hulu show goes beyond the final verdict. 

“This series is not just a courtroom drama that ends when Amanda Knox gets out of prison,” the 38-year-old explained to The Hollywood Reporter in an Aug. 18 video. “That’s typically how you see these stories told. This story is really anchored in the long consequences of the trauma that happened in the courtroom and how a person rebuilds their life and rebuilds their faith in humanity by taking risks. There’s a story of me, Amanda, taking a big risk to have faith and trust in people again and the benefits of that and the costs of that.”

Teaming up with Monica Lewinsky—another public figure quite familiar with being at the center of a media storm—Knox was eager to share that piece of her journey.

“That’s why it’s so important to show the afterwards,” she added. “Once you’ve been labeled and diminished and buried as a human being, how do you emerge as a person who is more complex and has more value than what society gave you credit for?”

The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox premieres on Hulu Aug. 20. However, it’s hardly the first true crime case to inspire a based-on-real-events story. Check out the other IRL dramas that became must-see TV.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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