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Tomorrow x Together Talk Contract Renewal, Solo Stages, New Era
Music

Tomorrow x Together Talk Contract Renewal, Solo Stages, New Era

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

The roar starts before the lights go down — a low, collective thunder that shakes the arena floor. By the time the five members of Tomorrow X Together (TXT for short) appear, not from the stage but through the pit doors, weaving past the barricades and into the sea of fans, the noise has swelled to seismic levels. All day, fans have been buzzing online, daring each other to out-scream every stop before them after Yeonjun teased that some crowds weren’t loud enough. Consider the challenge accepted.

On this final U.S. night of the ACT : TOMORROW tour, the fans deliver a wall of sound that rattles the seats of Newark’s Prudential Center. And when Yeonjun leans into the mic, grinning as he says, “Let’s burn it all tonight, OK?” the roar somehow gets louder.

These are the kinds of screams that follow TXT wherever they go. In the six years since their debut, Tomorrow X Together have cemented themselves as one of the biggest K-pop boy bands on the planet, selling out arenas worldwide, topping charts, and cultivating a fiercely devoted fandom. Beyond the stage, they’ve extended their influence globally — they recently partnered with UNICEF on a campaign called TOGETHER FOR TOMORROW, even visiting the organization’s New York headquarters, where leader Soobin gave a speech on youth mental health. (Soobin admits he was nervous, but a thoughtful message from BTS leader RM helped him “calm down a bit.”) 

“The music we’ve always made is about helping youth and adolescents raise their voices and express their emotions,” Beomgyu tells Rolling Stone an hour before their last soundcheck of the tour. “We’ve been through the same obstacles and struggles that many people face, so we wanted to create a space where others can feel cared for and supported.” 

The five members — Soobin, Yeonjun, Beomgyu, Taehyun, and Hueningkai — are now entering a new phase of their careers. With their most recent album behind them, they have renewed their contracts with HYBE, securing their long-term future as a group while also carving out space for individual pursuits. The balance between collective identity and solo ambition has now become central to TXT’s story, and nowhere was that more visible than on this tour. 

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For the first time, each member brought a solo stage to the setlist, a showcase of personal artistry that revealed new sides of the group. Taehyun chose restraint, standing in the spotlight for the lyrical ballad “Bird of Night.” Soobin leaned into playfulness with “Sunday Driver,” a breezy track that matched his easy smile. Hueningkai took a surprising turn with the sultry “Dance With You,” while Yeonjun used the moody “Ghost Girl” to tease his upcoming solo debut album, confirming the release onstage. (“All the songs and the choreo are done, and I even shot the music video,” he says, adding that he did the choreography in Atlanta and that American fans are “gonna love it.”) Beomgyu closed out the solos with “Panic,” a mellow, guitar-driven track that nodded to his roots as a songwriter.

If the ACT : TOMORROW tour marked a new chapter for TXT — louder crowds, solo spotlights, and a long-term future secured with HYBE — the next will be written in their own voices. Backstage at the Prudential Center, the members sat down with Rolling Stone to talk about what this moment means: the balance between group and individual, the weight of being senior artists at their label, and how they plan to carry TXT into its next era.

I was at your very first showcase in New York back in 2019, and now I’m here at the final U.S. stop of your latest arena tour. It really feels like such a full-circle moment and a milestone in your growth as TXT. How does this tour feel compared to your earlier ones, not just in terms of performance, but also in how you see yourselves now as a group?
Hueningkai: Compared to 2019, I feel like I became a pro. I sometimes watch videos from that debut time, and I look so much more professional nowadays in terms of demeanor and attitude onstage and in performances. We look a lot cooler. 

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Is there a moment on this tour, specifically, that really captures that evolution? 
Hueningkai: For the first time, we had our solo stage during this tour, and the solo stages are really different from the group work. Everyone was pretty nervous, and there were a lot of things to care for and think about, but as time went by during the tour, everyone felt more at ease, and everyone seemed more relaxed. I think we have this confidence that, as a group, we’re good, but through these stages, we realized that we can be good on our own, too. 

Hueningkai

courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC

Like you said, this is the first time you’ve brought your solo stages on tour, and they really showcase your individual artistry. What did each of you want to express or explore through your solo performances?
Beomgyu: I’ve always had a love for indie music and the band sound, so it was really meaningful to share that through my solo stage. It felt amazing to be able to give people hope through my music — it was a truly elating experience for me. 

Soobin: I chose an easy-listening song for our fans, MOA. I was really excited to produce and prepare it [for the tour], and I felt so happy performing it on stage for them.

Hueningkai: I wanted to try a style of music I wouldn’t normally choose, something just for this concert. I really wanted to make an impact through both my dancing and singing.

Yeonjun: I’ve always had a love for rock ballads, so I knew what I was doing. I was pretty confident in my performance. It wasn’t anything fancy, but I wanted to focus and concentrate on myself — and that music really helped me do that.

Taehyun: I have a love for a variety of genres. I’m still on a journey to discover my strengths. So I chose a song that could highlight my vocals. It’s all part of the process of exploring where my future direction might be. 

Taehyun

courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC

Rolling Stone interviewed your producer Slow Rabbit a few months ago, and he mentioned that you’re in a transitional period right now. I get that sense from your answer,  too. It feels like you’re in the process of finding your individual sounds. What has that experience been like for you?
Hueningkai: Since our debut, we’ve had a specific musical color that we’ve carried as a group, but that chapter is coming to an end. As a group, that phase is closing, but as solo artists, we’re still exploring and still figuring out the direction we’re headed. So I’d say we’re very much still on that journey.

You’ve all had the chance to watch each other’s solo stages. Did you learn anything new about one another through that? Were there any sides of each other that surprised you or stood out during those performances?
Yeonjun: In terms of order, I always get to watch Hueningkai’s stage the most, so I’ve been able to observe his performances closely. We’ve always thought of him as the youngest brother of the group, but seeing him onstage, I really felt like he’s grown up so much. He just looks so cool and confident up there.

Beomgyu: I perform right after Yeonjun, so I get to watch his stage a lot. He mentioned that he took out a lot of choreography for this performance, but he was absolutely on fire onstage — fully immersed and really cool. Watching his performance was so motivating and inspiring for me.

Hueningkai: I often get to watch Soobin’s performances while I’m doing my makeup, and the first thing that comes to mind is how handsome he looks. Watching his stage presence, you can really feel that. My second thought was how well he pulls off this genre. He just did a sexy duet [with Yeonjun] before, and yet he can also handle this style with the two dancers so effortlessly. I found myself really immersed watching his performance.

Yeonjun

courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC

Taehyun: I don’t think anyone gets to see my performance because I’m the first in the order. 

Hueningkai: But we’re listening, though! We can hear him singing, and we can also hear the fans getting hyped up during his stage. 

Soobin: I actually get to see his stage sometimes, and his demeanor and attitude are really relaxed. He just takes off his jacket and gets the fans hyped up. Since the song has no dancing, he has to carry the whole performance with just his singing, and he pulls it off really well. It’s cool and exciting to watch.

Beomgyu: Mine’s last in the order, so I don’t think anyone gets to see it because we’re always busy preparing for the next stage.

Hueningkai: But we’re still listening! Even when we’re preparing for the next stage, we’re always listening. When he’s performing, he knows how to get emotional during the song. 

Taehyun: I always get that feeling whenever I hear [Beomgyu] think about his solo stages that he’s really trying to improve his vocal performance. It’s not easy to strike a balance between pursuing what you love and excelling at what you do best. Those two don’t always align naturally. But I think he’s managing to pull that off.

Beomgyu: [Flashing a peace sign] I’m lucky!

Beomgyu, what’s it like going from sharing the stage with four other people to being completely by yourself onstage?
Beomgyu: My solo stage is more focused on showcasing my vocal abilities, so I put a lot of effort into making that the core of my performance. But when I get to do a solo dance stage next time, I think that will be a new challenge I’ll have to overcome. 

Beomgyu

courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC

Do you guys feel like your solo work adds new dimensions to TXT overall?
Taehyun: We haven’t come out with another album yet, but this challenge — we could even call it a bit of a struggle — has been real. We’ve had to fill a stage that used to be shared by all five of us, and doing that alone is no easy task. But I believe facing this kind of challenge will definitely have a positive impact on our teamwork moving forward.

Yeonjun: We’ve been a team for such a long time, so even when we perform solo stages, they still reflect the color of our group, whether we intend them to or not. Exploring these personal layers through solo performances adds new dimensions to who we are individually, and that inevitably feeds back into the group. It’s a process that not only helps us grow as artists but also strengthens us as a team.

You guys recently renewed your contracts with HYBE, which feels very significant. What made you confident in that decision?
Taehyun: When it came time to renew our contract, we were all on the same page. We’d heard from senior artists in the K-pop industry that this part is often the hardest — getting everyone to speak up and agree at the same time. But for us, it felt natural. 

Beomgyu: We had trust in each other, confidence in one another’s growth, a shared love for music, and a common desire to keep improving as one team. All of that came together, and it made the decision feel right for all of us.

When you sat down to have this conversation and you thought about the next several years together, what was one promise that you made to yourselves?
Hueningkai: At the end of the day, we’re musicians. We make music, we live for it. And when it came to renewing our contract, one thing we all wanted to hold onto was our love for music. That was something we promised ourselves we’d never lose, no matter what.

What does the next chapter of TXT look like?
Beomgyu: We’re still in the middle of that conversation, so we haven’t figured it all out yet. But one thing we can promise is that it’ll be a better version of TXT.

Hueningkai: This moment itself has become a new kind of challenge for us. In the past, our music followed one big story, one connected narrative, so we always had a clear direction for the next chapter or the next album. But now we’ve reached the end of that storyline. Figuring out where to go from here is the next task we have to face.

I interviewed you back when you had just debuted, and at the time, everyone referred to you as BTS’ “little brothers.” Now, you’re stepping into the role of seniors yourselves. How does it feel to take on that position as a senior group within your company?
Taehyun: Time has passed so fast, so it doesn’t feel real at all. 

Hueningkai: It’s honestly a bit surprising. We always thought of ourselves as one of the younger K-pop acts. But now, seeing trainees and new idols born in 2009, 2010, even 2011, it’s starting to hit us that we’re becoming… well, the older group now. Maybe even the elders in some ways.

Do you remember a specific moment when you realized, “Oh wow, we’re the senior artists now?” Especially now that a new group has debuted under your company, CORTIS. 
Taehyun: I think I feel it the most whenever we go to a music show. The older or more senior the group, the bigger the green room they get, and they usually perform last. One time, we noticed we were given the biggest green room and got to perform last, and that’s when it really hit us: “Wow, we’ve become the seniors in K-pop.” 

Soobin

courtesy of BIGHIT MUSIC

What advice would you give to younger artists just starting their journey?
Soobin: We have a group chat with other artists, and recently, a newly debuted group was asking what they should say to fans during their fan meet-and-greet. It was cute. I think those are the kinds of thoughts and challenges everyone goes through when they’re just starting out. It’s something we can all relate to.

Beomgyu: I’ve always believed that having that freshness, being a little nervous or not fully relaxed onstage or in front of fans, is actually one of the charming things younger groups have. So I just want to tell them to let it flow and be themselves. And if things get busy, to stay healthy and try to enjoy every moment.

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Taehyun: I didn’t know that I would feel this way, but having those younger brothers [CORTIS] debut, like, they’re just so cute. They’re adorable. 

And very tall! 
Hueningkai: Oh, yeah, really very tall. [Singing a part of “Go!” by CORTIS.] Martin, play that beat!

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Dave Chappelle Says It's Easier To Talk Freely In Saudi Arabia Than America
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Dave Chappelle Says It’s Easier To Talk Freely In Saudi Arabia Than America

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

“It’s easier to talk here than it is in America,” Dave Chappelle told an audience in Saudi Arabia on Saturday.

Chappelle was in the kingdom as part of the Riyadh Comedy Festival. His decision — and that of other comics — has become controversial, given Saudi role in 9/11 and the 2018 assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as well as other human rights abuses and anti LGBTQ+ policies.

“I mean, how do you even promote that? ‘From the folks that brought you 9/11. Two weeks of laughter in the desert, don’t miss it!’” an astounded Marc Maron said in a video from a recent stand-up bit. “I mean, the same guy that’s gonna pay them is the same guy that paid that guy to bone-saw Jamal Khashoggi and put him in a fucking suitcase. But don’t let that stop the yucks, it’s gonna be a good time!”

Others have objected on free speech grounds, especially after comedian Atsuko Okatsuka revealed what she said were strict contract terms that would have had her “adhere to censorship rules” about the kinds of jokes she could make. Those criticisms were set in even higher relief during the recent standoff between Jimmy Kimmel and ABC.

Chappelle’s quip onstage at the festival was likely a rejoinder to such complaints.

“Right now in America, they say that if you talk about Charlie Kirk, that you’ll get canceled,” the comedian said, according to the New York Times. “I don’t know if that’s true, but I’m gonna find out.”

Since Deadline exclusively revealed the initial lineup in July, the Riyadh Comedy Festival has announced Kevin Hart, Aziz Ansari, Hannibal Buress, Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle, Louis C.K., Whitney Cummings, Pete Davidson, Zarna Garg, Gabriel Iglesias, Jim Jefferies, Jo Koy, Bobby Lee, Jeff Ross, Andrew Santino, Tom Segura, Chris Tucker and more as participants. It runs through October 10.

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Joel Murray as Commander Devlin, Jason Beghe as Hank Voight —
TV & Streaming

‘Chicago P.D.’ Boss, Star Talk Voight’s New Enemy in Devlin, Happiness for Burzek, and More

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Chicago P.D. Season 13 premiere, “Consequences.”]

The title of the Chicago P.D. Season 13 premiere certainly is apt, with Intelligence paying the consequences of last season. The unit has been disbanded, Voight’s (Jason Beghe) working Rapid Response — which means he should only be responding to crimes in progress — Burgess (Marina Squerciati) and Torres (Benjamin Levy Aguilar) don’t have badges, and Ruzek (Patrick John Flueger) and Atwater (LaRoyce Hawkins) are assigned elsewhere. But the team still manages to come together in the first episode.

When Voight catches a shooting, frustrated with Commander Devlin (Joel Murray) from Internal Affairs dragging his feet on reactivating his unit, he works the case anyway, eventually bumping into ATF’s Imani (Arienne Mandi) while she’s undercover. Voight calls in Burgess, who ends up saving Imani’s life, then Ruzek and Atwater join Voight and Imani in working the rest of the case.

By episode’s end, Intelligence is back up and running, everyone has their badges back, and Imani is the newest member. But to make that happen, Voight made an enemy out of Devlin, who was prepared to keep Intelligence shut down for good: Some of the guns that were part of the case traced back to the CPD, a batch that Internal Affairs never reported stolen. It would be embarrassing should that come out now, Voight points out.

Below, showrunner Gwen Sigan and star Jason Beghe unpack the premiere and tease what’s ahead for Voight and Devlin, Burgess and Ruzek, and more.

Voight gets his unit reinstated, but it feels like his way of doing so could have made an enemy out of Devlin. Is that the case? What’s coming up with that dynamic? It feels like it has to be so contentious after that.

Jason Beghe: Yeah, I don’t think that Devlin is thrilled. I don’t think he feels like “Voight’s my favorite guy on the planet.” He’s an alpha male in his own way, and he just got alpha’ed. So, I think that he is going to be determined to regain the upper hand.

Gwen, what can you preview about that?

Gwen Sigan: Yeah, I think he’s really — Devlin’s an interesting character because I think he’s very different than a lot of our bosses have been before. He’s a pretty folksy sort of guy. He’s a little more plainspoken. He’s quieter, softer. He’s come up from behind a desk; he hasn’t been working on the streets, and so his motivations are very different than Voight’s. I think he cares a lot about how he ends this job with as many friends as he can have at the end of this thing and with a full pension. So, having an enemy like that is very different for Voight. I think this guy is a little more quiet and sort of unassuming, and so it’ll be interesting to see how he reacts and then what he does about it and how that differs from what we’ve seen in the past.

Burgess and Ruzek start the season off happy. Things seem to be going great for them, but knowing the show, how soon before you start to challenge either or both of them?

Sigan: No. They’re happy. They’re happy. I swear they’re happy. Yeah, I mean, definitely we need conflict, so we’re going to have some conflict, but I would say the conflict that they end up dealing with through this season is not with each other. It’s really with situations that are normal life situations that I think everyone can relate to, but now they’re dealing with them together, and maybe they’re both bringing in different things to those decisions, their own perspective and backgrounds, and so I think it becomes a lot more about their family as opposed to just their relationship with one another. They also have a lot of things that come up through the job, and then how they deal with that together. So, they’re in a good spot, but life will keep going, and they’ll still have to go through some things

Voight tells Imani he’ll give her a long leash. Why is he willing to do so so soon after meeting her?

Beghe: I think there’s just a real natural comfort and also an understanding of who she is, and I think subconsciously, probably, he understands that she’s a good foil for him in that she’s, in a sense, a mirror image of him. So, it’s a good way for him to discover himself and do his job as a man and as an officer better.

Elizabeth Sisson/NBC

And what are we going to see from her with that long leash? That can mean problems — you have to factor in what’s going on with Devlin, all of that.

Sigan: Yeah, exactly. I think that the nice thing about the pair of them [is] because they share some instincts and because they share a style of policing, there’s a lot of good that can come from that, and then there’s a lot of leading each other astray that can come from it. So, we see a bit of both of that. We see through how their relationship evolves this season, the two of them growing, which I think has been really lovely to see. And yeah, it’s fun. It’s going to be a fun ride.

One of my favorite dynamics on the show is between Platt and Voight. Are we going to see a storyline for Platt where Voight’s there for her?

Beghe: That would be nice.

Sigan: We have something cooking, but yeah, we’ll have to wait and see. But yes, I would love to see that and more Platt is always good.

Beghe: Yep.

Chicago P.D., Wednesdays, 10/9c, NBC

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Elijah Wood & SpectreVision Team Talk 'Rabbit Trap's 70s Folk Horror
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Elijah Wood & SpectreVision Team Talk ‘Rabbit Trap’s 70s Folk Horror

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

While the 70s electronic music and Celtic folk horror vibes of writer/director Bryn Chainey‘s Rabbit Trap make it ideal for a cozy autumn movie night, they also make up the unique cross-section that attracted the team behind SpectreVision to the project.

With the film now available on digital after premiering earlier this year at Sundance, Deadline caught up with producers Elijah Wood, Lawrence Inglee and Daniel Noah about finding projects that fit their banner’s “full spectrum of weird,” like Rabbit Trap.

Wood said he knew the film was “very much up our alley” after fellow producer Elisa Lleras sent them a lookbook for Bryn’s project, “a movie set in the Welsh countryside in 1970s, whose one of the primary characters is a female electronic musician sort of in the tradition of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, these sort of electronic pioneers that are obsessed with. And it’s a folk horror film that we utilizes sound as its primary means of infiltration.”

“It spoke to all of our individual niche interests, so beautifully, and had such a clear vision that felt unlike anything we’d seen, that sort of was able to combine these elements,” added Wood. “And then you pair that with a filmmaker who has such an articulate vision for what he wants to accomplish and how he wants to accomplish it. We were so on board.”

In Rabbit Trap, musician couple Daphne (Rosy McEwen) and Darcy Davenport (Dev Patel) move to the Welsh countryside to finish their new record. While making field recordings in the ancient woodlands, Darcy captures a forbidden sound not meant for human ears. This brings a strange boy (Jade Croot) to their doorstep who draws them into an enigmatic realm where the line between reality and myth begins to blur.

For Noah, he appreciated that the script “doesn’t feel like it’s slave-ish to explaining itself, and it has the courage to be a little mysterious, to be a little ambiguous, which is something that is all too missing in cinema today.

“I think there’s this almost fearful compulsion to over-explain everything, and that’s not how life works,” he explained. “Life is mysterious and ambiguous, and so the film to us, is a beautiful representation of that type of experience that is just not captured very often in movies.”

As the film navigates the couple’s turbulent marriage and their decision to have baby, their strange visitor brings up old traumas for Darcy, which are explored ambiguously through sound and magic.

Lawrence Inglee, Daniel Noah, Jade Croot, Bryn Chainey, Rosy McEwen and Elijah Wood attend the ‘Rabbit Trap’ premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, UT on Jan. 24, 2025. (JA/Everett Collection)

“What a remarkable environment and atmosphere to come at these sort of things, like unspoken traumas or anxieties about family, or a sense of the strange or where you’re being led,” said Inglee. “All these things were at play here.”

With a comic book, a podcast and a new Norwegian horror film also in the pipeline, read on about the SpectreVision team’s experience making Rabbit Trap, now available on digital.

DEADLINE: I loved Rabbit Trap, I saw it at Sundance. Tell me what you guys first thought when you read the script and how it fit into the SpectreVision mission.

LAWRENCE INGLEE: Let’s first say that it is a beautifully written script, right? Bryn is an exceptionally good writer, and the notion of rendering those descriptions into cinema would have been one of the big giant question marks when you first read the script because they were so elegant and beautiful.

Jade Croot and Rosy McEwen in ‘Rabbit Trap’ (2025) (Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection)

ELIJAH WOOD: We were sent the lookbook from a colleague who’s also a producer on the movie, Elisa Lleras, who knows our taste, and read the script and saw this lookbook, and knew that it would be very much up our alley; a movie set in the Welsh countryside in 1970s, whose one of the primary characters is a female electronic musician sort of in the tradition of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, these sort of electronic pioneers that are obsessed with. And it’s a folk horror film that we utilizes sound as its primary means of infiltration. It spoke to all of our individual niche interests, so beautifully, and had such a clear vision that felt unlike anything we’d seen, that sort of was able to combine these elements. And then you pair that with a filmmaker who has such an articulate vision for what he wants to accomplish and how he wants to accomplish it. We were so on board. 

DEADLINE: Can you tell me a little bit about some of those cult influences that went into the making of this? 

DANIEL NOAH: I think some of what Elijah just mentioned, Delia Derbyshire and Suzanne Ciani and Daphne Oram, they’re sometimes cheekily called the ‘Sisters with Transistors’, but there was this movement of these incredibly brilliant British women in late 50s and early 60s who were absolutely breaking ground in experimental electronic music, and we’re huge geeks for that period. So, a movie about that was really thrilling. But I think in the cinema tip, there’s a great legacy of folk horror from the 70s, like Witchfinder General and Wicker Man, they have this this very peculiar haunting quality, but I think the biggest one was we talked a lot about Don’t Look Now and it’s kind of kaleidoscopic view of events. And one of the things I think that really thrilled us so much about Rabbit Trap is that it doesn’t feel like it’s slave-ish to explaining itself, and it has the courage to be a little mysterious, to be a little ambiguous, which is something that is all too missing in cinema today. I think there’s this almost fearful compulsion to over-explain everything, and that’s not how life works. Life is mysterious and ambiguous, and so the film to us, is a beautiful representation of that type of experience that is just not captured very often in movies.

INGLEE: And also, it was a representative of a way of trying to find a language to express things that you don’t know how to express, this poetic foundation. And we’ve all looked at this movie in different ways, and it can work like a Rorschach test in that sense, but for me, I read a script that was about the fear of having children for people who have been traumatized as children, and being aided in that healing from a supernatural force that’s walking them, dragging them through this healing in the middle of a marriage in crisis. What a remarkable environment and atmosphere to come at these sort of things, like unspoken traumas or anxieties about family, or a sense of the strange or where you’re being led. All these things were at play here, and just the literal texture of the movie itself was so unique and so beautiful that its relationship to the natural world, I think that’s another element that drew us in, and its commitment to the local nature of its mythology. 

Dev Patel in ‘Rabbit Trap’ (2025) (Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection)

DEADLINE: I really love the the whole Celtic folklore that I feel like I’ve seen a few movies lately that have really been channeling that, and this really expanded my love of that sub-genre. Tell me a little bit about filming in that specific location, with that beautiful countryside.

NOAH: It was a really glorious surprise to many of us who haven’t been there before, and one of the dark secrets of the movie, which I’ll reveal … is that it was shot in Yorkshire, even though it’s set in Wales. And this had to do with the smoking. The characters, of course, exist in the mid-70s, they smoke. It’s against the law to smoke in a workplace in Wales, so the production moved just like this, and we got to live in an equally magical world that sort of spoke back to the movie in many ways. Like every location scout starts to tell you about your movie in ways that you don’t expect, and here, our jaw kept dropping. It’s like, “There really is this cave? Wait, there really is cliff? There really is that forest?” And what have you. And so, every day it was an element that surprised us. Also, the weather was so wildly unpredictable. The movie was being shot in July, and there are days that it was like, “Oh, it’s winter today, everybody, and it’s going to be wet and cold like you have never felt before in your life in the middle of July in this forest.” So that was happening too.

DEADLINE: I really did love the whole element of sound in the movie and the way music is utilized as well. Can you tell me about working on that on the technical side and some of the challenges? 

INGLEE: Sound’s always been extremely primary for us, and we love to be in the mix. The mix is my favorite part of the filmmaking process, personally, and have mixed our movies in sort of slightly unusual ways, not to get too much into the weeds. But, one of the things we’ve often said is that it’s not necessarily correct to separate score and sound design, because every sound that you hear in a movie is part of the its music, and so this was a place we could actually literalize that. So, [sound designer] Graham Reznick and [composer] Lucrecia Dalt worked in tandem, and it’s difficult to kind of say who did what because they just built this sonic universe together that’s so incredibly alive, and so to get to have an opportunity to make a movie that’s literally about sound, not just celebrating sound in its creation, but about sound, was like a bucket list item.

Rosy McEwen in ‘Rabbit Trap’ (2025) (Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection)

DEADLINE: You touched on this earlier, just about accepting the trauma that we experience as children and trying not to inflict that on our own children, and that was another thing I really appreciated, how this movie explores so much sound, but when Dev’s character is finally ready to say what happened to him, that’s the one time you don’t need to hear it, you just know that he’s healing.

NOAH: I mean, it was a hot topic of conversation, and this may be shocking, but there were certain voices that felt we should hear what he’s saying on that tape, which we were just absolutely insistent on not doing it. I think one of the most thrilling moments for me was—when you’re workshopping and edit, you show the movie to friends—and so, we screened and edit of it, and in the scene where Dev tells a secret that we don’t hear, my friend next to me was like sobbing, and when the movie was over, I said, “You were really affected by the end. Can you tell me, what do you think was on the tape?” And he said, “Oh, it’s so obvious, they’re getting a divorce.” Well, he was getting a divorce. And I thought, “We nailed it. Everyone’s gonna put their particular issue on that recording.” And it was exactly what we hoped would happen.

DEADLINE: That’s great. Yeah, I love, like you said, leaving it up to the audience to kind of make up their own mind. I really appreciate that.

WOOD: Because, it sort of doesn’t matter what it is. It’s just that he had a trauma that he’s now articulated. And like Daniel said, it’s for the audience to kind of put their own experience on it, to make of it what they want, you know?

DEADLINE: Absolutely. What else does SpectreVision have going on right now?

INGLEE: We have our comic book imprint now with Oni Press called High Strangeness, it’s a series of stories about the paranormal, and the first issue was released on October 8, and we’re very excited about it. The first season is five interconnected stories, about different paranormal phenomena. And we also recently rolled out this podcast network called SpectreVision Radio, which is this extremely comprehensive overview of anything in any way related to genre or esotericism or the paranormal or consciousness, psychedelics, the full spectrum of weird, so it’s all part of the story that we’re telling with SpectreVision throughout our different divisions.

Jade Croot in ‘Rabbit Trap’ (2025) (Magnet Releasing/Courtesy Everett Collection)

DEADLINE: Awesome. That sounds cool. Are you maybe considering adapting the comic books for film or television? 

WOOD: Potentially. It happens to be a great space to sort of incubate something. It wasn’t necessarily the intention behind this, it was really like wanting to partner with a company we loved. And Oni’s awesome, and they had this opportunity for us. So, it was something that we had wanted to express for a while, and it just kind of all coalesced. So yeah, maybe, we’ll see. And we also have a Norwegian film that is premiering at Fantastic Fest in a few days, called Dawning [aka Demring], that we’re really excited about, from a really thrilling Norwegian filmmaker [Patrik Syversen], who’s made something really singular and special that I think is gonna freak some people out. It’s great. 

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Seventeen's S.Coups and Mingyu Talk Debut Mini-Album
Music

Seventeen’s S.Coups and Mingyu Talk Debut Mini-Album

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

The 13 members of Seventeen have been shuffling through new pairings and sub-units beyond their official units of vocal, hip-hop, and performance over the past year, starting with Jeonghan and Wonwoo’s JxW and Hoshi and Woozi’s HxW. (And of course we can’t forget the beloved BSS, with DK, Hoshi, and Seungkwan, who debuted a few years earlier.) Now, get ready to meet the latest Seventeen spin-off: Leader S.Coups and Mingyu’s CxM, who have a new mini-album called HYPE VIBES.

The way the members of Seventeen are so close-knit and truly like brothers is something their fans, known as Carats, adore. With each unit that the group reveals, they’re unveiling a deeper look at the chemistry and synergy between the members.

S.Coups and Mingyu are both part of Seventeen’s hip-hop unit, so they’ve always been close collaborators, but CxM takes them to the next level as a duo. At the time of their chat with Rolling Stone, we’re still over two weeks out from the mini-album’s Sept. 29 release. The two members have been building up anticipation by teasing photos from a shoot in Hawaii, which they say they approached with the goal of making the photos feel truly raw.

There’s been a handful of sub-units within Seventeen at this point. How would you describe CxM? What makes this unit feel like you?
S.Coups: [Laughs.] I feel like if I say the wrong thing, it’ll sound like I’m saying something about the other units. But I think we put in a variety of genres into the album. And compared to the other units, rather than a put-together look, we aimed to be more effortless, thinking there could be a type of coolness that comes from being natural. 

Mingyu: It might not be right to say we were “not flashy,” but I think that encapsulates how we tried to be more comfortable and natural? This is a hard question.

S.Coups: It is hard. [Laughs.] I don’t want to put down the other units.

Mingyu: If we say “Our songs are chill and cool!” it may end up sounding like we’re saying the other members’ weren’t. [Laughs.]

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You can all be cool, though! You went to Hawaii to do your shoot for this mini-album– I heard that the collective goal for these photos was for it to feel like a trip with close friends. Can you share any fun stories from the shoots? 
Mingyu: First off, it was so tiring. Instead of having a set time for the shoot to start and end, like how you said, we were trying to shoot while we’re comfortably hanging out. We shot from the second we opened our eyes in the morning to the moment we went to sleep. Once we were done I was so exhausted. I had so much fun all day, rested, and felt like I was relaxing, but physically it still took a toll on me. It was a hard shoot. We wore a lot of different outfits too.

S.Coups: [Laughs.] I feel the same way. The shoot was certainly less tiring than if it was on a set, and we went into it thinking “We can just take photos of us hanging out.” But compared to any shoot we’ve done for Seventeen, suprisingly, it actually was more exhausting. 

Any specific things that you remember from the trip?
S.Coups: For me, I haven’t travelled internationally much, but Mingyu kept telling me how nice Hawaii is. The nature left a big impression on me. To go somewhere like that with someone I’m so comfortable with — someone like Mingyu, who can guide me to try a variety of experiences…. I really enjoyed surfing. Being able to experience those things and also do a shoot was really great. 

What did you guys listen to while shooting to set the vibes?
Mingyu: When we were in Hawaii for the shoot, the early versions of our music were just starting to come in, guides were coming in, so we listened to the album a lot. Like the super early versions, versions we recorded in Hawaii. We really listened to the music as we were making it.

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You’ve been together for many years now, and even though you are already so close, I’m sure you spent a lot of one-on-one time together to prepare for this project. Was there anything you learned about each other that surprised you?
S.Coups: About each other? [Laughs.] Rather than something new, I realized once again that Mingyu’s stamina is even better than what I had thought. During our shoot, we would swim for two to three hours, and I’d be over it, but he’d be swimming at night, too. And he even shot that! Seeing that made me think, “Wow he’s really amazing.” 

He was also really worried about our final product, more than I thought he would be. We had so much fun and did a good job. We selected each and every piece and put the team together. I thought Mingyu would be the type to have the mindset of “Once this is complete, everything will be great,” but he was actually so worried and had a different mindset from when working on Seventeen. 

Mingyu: I didn’t feel anything new from S.Coups. 

S.Coups: [Laughs.]

Mingyu: But I felt it for myself: “I’m really sensitive.” I’m more sensitive that I had thought. Ah, I do have one for S.Coups! He has low stamina.  

S.Coups: [Laughs.] Wait—

Mingyu: Whenever we do anything, in Hawaii or in L.A., he’s suddenly sleeping on the sofa. He’s up one moment and then asleep on the sofa again.  

With jetlag, of course he could be tired!
S.Coups: Mingyu doesn’t even get jetlag. [Laughs.]

Taking a step back outside of CxM, if you had to pick other Seventeen members to cover songs from this mini-album, who would you pick?
Mingyu: It’s gotta be us.

S.Coups: Right. Aside from us… I would say… Ah! [Snaps.] “Young Again.” I’d love to hear our two main vocalists [DK and Seungkwan] singing that song. When we were recording, I thought a lot to myself, “If only I could sing a little bit better…” So I’d love to feel the emotion that would come from those members who are truly good at singing. 

Mingyu: I think Hoshi and Woozi would match “Worth It” well. Because both of them have liked that type of hip-hop sound since they were younger. I think when they hear it, it’ll feel familiar to them and they’d like it.

S.Coups: For “Earth,” I say Myungho [The8’s Korean name]. When I played the six songs for him, he really liked it. It’s in line with the type of music he’s been seeking out recently. It would be cool to see him try that. 

What other reactions did the members have when you played them the music or showed them your content?
Mingyu: To be honest, as of today while we’re doing this interview, a lot of them actually haven’t heard the music. 

S.Coups: Seungkwan hasn’t heard it yet, right? I’m hiding it from them. 

Mingyu: We want to play it for them at the right time in the right atmosphere — not just like, “Hey, do you want to listen?” and play it for them lightly. And the music video is… not completed yet. [Pouts.]

S.Coups: [Laughs.] We’ve only seen parts, too.   

Mingyu: But I am really curious about the members’ reactions. Our fans reactions, reactions from those who are close to us, our peers — I’m so curious, but I’m most curious about our members. While working, since it’s just the two of us working on this mini-album, we’re able to show sides to us that we haven’t before. Things that we haven’t or just didn’t show, how will the public and how will our members react? I’m really so curious.

What do you think the fans will love most about this album?
Mingyu: There are some songs that will have a powerful, strong performance, and there’s also easy listening, but I think one of the charms is that it will be comfortable to listen to from start to finish. 

S.Coups: I think they will appreciate the chemistry between me and Mingyu, and I think it will be shown on stage as well. I think Carats will enjoy seeing that. 

Getting into each track in order, tell us about the first song on the mini-album, “Fiesta”? That’s my favorite song on this project.
S.Coups: “Fiesta” is a track that has the vibe of what those who know us and Carats would expect for CxM to come out with. In the beginning, we were working on it for it to be the lead track. And during the process, we really liked how our raps came out, and I really like the chorus.

Mingyu: And from my memory, a lot from the recording process comes to mind, but we did the guide for “Fiesta” in Hawaii after having some drinks. Usually if you do that, when you listen in the morning, it’s not that good, but it was better than we were expecting when we listened in the morning, so we used lyrics from that night in the song. That was fun. 

What about “5, 4, 3 (Pretty Woman),” where you interpolate Roy Orbison?
S.Coups: We went into each track with the idea that it could be the lead song. We really wanted all six songs to be good. As soon as “5, 4, 3” was made, Mingyu, me, and Bumzu [producer and longtime collaborator of Seventeen], all three of us were like “Oh! This is it!” We knew at once that this would be the lead track. 

Mingyu: We wanted the lead song to be one that anyone could easily listen to, so we interpolated “Oh, Pretty Woman.” The process was not easy, but the results came out to be a good mix of vintage music and our sound, so I think across ages and genders, people can listen and enjoy. 

I remember when I first found out that “Oh, Pretty Woman” would be interpolated, I couldn’t wrap my head around how it would end up sounding, but it came out so well.
Mingyu: You think so? Nice. I was really worried, but I think it came out well. Lay Bankz, who’s featured on the song — we didn’t have the chance to meet her in person but we talked on the phone. It was a little rushed. After we came back from shooting in L.A., we got the OK and it came together quickly. Her feature added a modern twist and edge to our image of the track and Beverly Hills. 

Now going into “Worth It,” which has more of a hip-hop, R&B sound to it.
S.Coups: This song was completed last. We were recording in the studio we normally record in, and I think Mingyu suggested that we finish the song in America, in L.A., because the vibes there would be so different. So when we went to L.A. to film the music video, we rented a studio for a day to complete the song. It’s a song we cherish as the last song to be made. It’s also a good one to dance to. We’re thinking, like, “Should we give it our all and dance to this song one day?”

Mingyu: While “5, 4, 3” is really chill and easy to listen to, this song is more sexy, and hot, and we could really dance when we perform it. 

What are the main differences you notice when recording in L.A. compared to recording in Korea?
Mingyu: I’m curious too. Why is it so different? 

S.Coups: [Laughs.] I think it’s different in that it feels like we’re going for fun and recording. When we record here in the company building or a studio, before we get there, in Korea, the mindset is, “Oh, I have to go into the studio today. I’m going to go record.” Rather than it being a difference between America and Korea, I think we’re there to have fun, and are vibing in a good mood, so it feels like we’re recording while just hanging out.

Mingyu: I’m not sure what the difference is.

Well I know here in L.A., I’m in West Hollywood, and there’s photos of you everywhere. 

S.Coups: CK? [Laughs.]

Mingyu: Yay! Really? Are there a lot? I want to see it too! 

Going into “For You,” I heard you both contributed to the lyrics and composition even more so for this track and the next one.
S.Coups: You’re right. We were going for easy listening, and it’s the song we worked on first. The two of us are friends. And our Carats around the world are also our friends. And anyone you come across via fate, walking past on a street, can become friends too — that’s the message we wanted to deliver. We wanted to make music that you can just listen to comfortably.

Are there any lyrics from “For You” that you particularly like? Or any specific moments you drew inspiration from for this one? 
S.Coups: Mingyu’s part for me. The first verse! [Places his hand on Mingyu’s shoulder.] “Going to the gym…” 

Mingyu: “From one to two…” What was the lyric? What’s your part? How does it end? “One, two—” Ah! [In Korean.] “But 1 to 2, gotta go to the gym…3 to 4 we could meet up, 5 through 9 just tell me when/But the real hot spot opens at 10.”

S.Coups: It just feels like our real lives.

Mingyu: While we were writing, it was like, “What are you doing at 1?” “I think I’m going to work out.” “What are you doing tomorrow at 2?” “I don’t have anything at 2.” “What about for dinner?” “But doesn’t that place open at 10?” It was a conversation like that that became the lyrics.

S.Coups: I think because it reflects our lives, I like it most.

Mingyu: It feels very close to reality. 

When I first heard “Young Again,” it felt very Seventeen to me, with a message of living life to the fullest. Can you walk us through that track?
Mingyu: This song is the type that I normally like most within Seventeen’s discography, the acoustic sounds. I also personally like country music. It has a sound that I’ve always wanted to try. When we did a session in Korea, I shared that I really wanted this type of music. A song that could be at the end of a festival set, or close out a concert, for us to all sing together. The topic is also, because it’s a song I want to do as a performance is ending: “To keep this moment special and to say this moment won’t come back, so stop being on your phone, being distracted, and let’s live in the moment.” That’s the message we wanted to put in the song. It’s a song I personally really like. I don’t know if our fans will notice it right away when we’re performing it, but there’s a line that goes “Right now, put your hands up.” To say “put your phone’s flash on and put your hands up together, and enjoy this moment…” It was fun to actually put that message in the song. 

S.Coups: I think if the fans really do that in the moment during a concert, the message we’re trying to get across will be realized. I’m really looking forward to it.

Mingyu: Also, the song is a little over two minutes, and the first line is “I just need two minutes.” [Laughs.] Give us just two minutes, because we’re about to sing.

Did you purposely cap the song at that length?
S.Coups: [Nods and laughs.] Yes, that’s right. 

Mingyu: It was originally “I just need three minutes.” But we gave it more thought and the song only came to two minutes. Three minutes was a stretch.

There’s a lot of two minute songs these days, so…
S.Coups: There are so many! 

Mingyu: But at a show, I want to sing this one for four to five minutes.

S.Coups: Like on repeat, singing it all together. 

Like “Aju Nice,” never-ending.
S.Coups: [Laughs.]. Right. 

And now moving onto the last song, “Earth.”
S.Coups: “Earth” is a song we worked on in Hawaii. Mingyu, Bumzu, and I were on a yacht and were shooting a scene. I was passed out on the sofa from swimming at night. [Laughs.] I was sleeping, but it’s a song where Mingyu and Bumzu drew inspiration from the moon, nature, and just us being together. And we also wanted an EDM-based song in the album. We put the song together from inspiration from Hawaii after the part where the beat drops was made.  

Mingyu: For this song too, when we first made it in the studio, I liked it so much. Although that is my personal opinion. 

S.Coups: The day we worked on this song, I was at home and Mingyu did some extra work with Bumzu. And I came in the next day to continue working on it, and Mingyu was like, “We made something amazing” and played it for me. And I was like “Wow, this is crazy.” I think we can show a new side of ourselves, and if there ever comes a time where we can perform the six tracks, we put it together the way we’d craft a setlist. I want it to be the double encore.

I know you like all the songs, but if you had to choose your favorite song as of today, what would you choose?
S.Coups: I choose “For You.” I tend to like easy listening, and with “For You,” I have so many good memories from when we were making it, or when we were shooting the track sampler or highlight medley. Hanging out with Mingyu and putting it on in the car, so many fun memories, so it’s been number one in my heart. 

Mingyu: “Young Again” for me. Ah, no, “Fiesta.” I choose “Fiesta” for today. No, for this exact moment.

S.Coups: Just for this little moment? [Laughs.]

What’s your reason? 
Mingyu: Because you said you liked “Fiesta” most.

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For my last question, what are you looking forward to most with this CxM unit? 
Mingyu: Honestly, I’m looking forward to performing, and of course meeting our fans, but in addition with all that, like how I said earlier, I want these songs to be part of real moments and memories. I’m eager to see those types of reactions. And I want it to really happen. Like for example, “I was listening to this song on a drive and it was so nice,” “I came out on a picnic with my family and listened to ‘For You’ and it was so nice,” “I went to a club and ‘Fiesta’ was playing.” I think seeing reactions like that will make me feel really proud and like we did a good job. 

S.Coups: I think as much as we put in to make each song a different genre, I hope people can appreciate the variety and really enjoy each one. And my hope is that, long into the future, these songs will remain woven into the people’s lives. 

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Fashionista's London Fashion Week Spring 2026 Recap
Fashion

ICYMI: Fashionista's London Fashion Week Coverage, Simone Bellotti's Jil Sander Debut & New York Designers Talk AI and Tariffs

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84


In case you missed them, we’ve rounded up our most popular stories of the week to help you stay in the loop. No need to thank us — just toast a lavender matcha latte in our honor when you’re discussing who did what over your apple danish. Homepage photo: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images Fashionista’s …

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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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What to See at New York Film Festival — Screen Talk
TV & Streaming

What to See at New York Film Festival — Screen Talk

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The New York Film Festival enters its 2025 edition this Friday, and IndieWire’s “Screen Talk” podcast clues you in on a few under-the-radar titles to see.

Co-host Ryan Lattanzio is a big fan of Bi Gan’s “Resurrection,” which stars Shu Qi as a woman who invades the dreams of the last person capable of having them. The Chinese director’s latest film is a Lynchian odyssey with a oner for the ages, in which a vampire rave is descended upon by a raincoat-clad mafia. Anne Thompson, meanwhile, advocates for Oscar-nominated “Mirai” director Mamoru Hosoda’s animated feature “Scarlet,” which Sony Pictures Classics will push for Academy Awards.

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Also, make sure you see Harry Lighton’s “Pillion,” a gay sub-dom romance between Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling, which A24 will release early next year. Ryan says it’s like Richard Curtis directing “The Piano Teacher,” and if that’s not enough to sell you, well, we can’t help you there.

Heads up, “Screen Talk” will also host a live edition with Anne and Ryan in person at the New York Film Festival on Monday, October 6. We’ll be joined by guest Daniel Battsek, who is now president of Film at Lincoln Center. Attendance is free and open to all at the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center that afternoon at 4 p.m.

Elsewhere on this week’s episode, we also take a look at the box office prospects for Paul Thomas Anderson’s masterful “One Battle After Another,” which is projected to gross in the $20 million range. Low for a movie of this scale (and budget!) but typical of Anderson’s boundary-pushing work. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio as a retired and drugged-out revolutionary and with breakout performances from Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti — not to mention Sean Penn, who we love now? — this is a movie that has legs and will play well into the fall.

We also dive into the latest brouhaha surrounding Jimmy Kimmel, whose late-night show was pulled from the airwaves after he made comments about Charlie Kirk. He’s back on the air, and with a ratings surge to boot, but can it be sustained? And will his tearful monologue, filled with appreciation for those who backed him, be enough for audiences less keen on him already?

Listen to the podcast in the episode below.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Sherri Shepherd Pushes For Chris Brown To Appear On Her Talk Show Despite Possible Backlash, Says It 'Comes With The Territory’
Celebrity News

Sherri Shepherd Pushes For Chris Brown To Appear On Her Talk Show Despite Possible Backlash, Says It ‘Comes With The Territory’

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Screenshot

Sherri Shepherd Pushes For Chris Brown To Appear On Her Talk Show Despite Possible Backlash, Says It ‘Comes With The Territory’

Despite how you may feel about it, #SherriShepherd wants to sit down with Chris Brown!

“I would love to have #ChrisBrown on, but it’ll be a lot of backlash,” she admitted to Vulture, acknowledging the criticism that still follows the singer over his history of legal troubles, several allegations of v!olence, and his 2009 a$$ault on then-girlfriend #Rihanna. Still, Sherri insisted she isn’t deterred by potential pushback, adding, “Sometimes it comes with the territory.”

Sherri explained that her goal isn’t to grill guests but to give them space to share their perspective. “I don’t have a journalism degree,” she said, pointing out that she took a similar approach earlier this year when she interviewed #JonathanMajors amid his own controversy. “So it would be completely off-brand for me to be going, ‘What about this and what about that?’ I wanted to hear his side of the story.”

Sherri believes CB deserves the same grace she extended to Jonathan, even if inviting him on could divide viewers.

Do you agree?


September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Nishijima Hidetoshi, Gwei Lun-Mei, Mariko Tetsuya Talk 'Dear Stranger'
TV & Streaming

Nishijima Hidetoshi, Gwei Lun-Mei, Mariko Tetsuya Talk ‘Dear Stranger’

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Following the explosive violence of “Destruction Babies,” Japanese filmmaker Mariko Tetsuya has pivoted to explore a different kind of devastation in “Dear Stranger” — the quiet collapse of a marriage under the weight of unspoken truths and cultural displacement.

The drama, which had its international premiere at the Busan International Film Festival, stars Nishijima Hidetoshi (Oscar-winning “Drive My Car”) and Gwei Lun-Mei (“Black Coal, Thin Ice”). Set against the backdrop of New York, the film follows Kenji (Nishijima), a Japanese professor desperately seeking tenure, and Jane (Gwei), a Taiwanese-American puppeteer struggling to balance motherhood with her artistic identity. When their young son Kai goes missing, the couple’s carefully constructed life begins to unravel.

For Mariko, whose previous work “Destruction Babies” earned him the Golden Leopard for Best Emerging Director at Locarno, the shift to emotional rather than physical violence was sparked by his return to Japan during the pandemic. “The starting point was on the plane returning to Japan after a year living in the U.S., when a national state of emergency was declared,” Mariko explains. “The world suddenly changed and was engulfed in uncertainty, and I began to think about the family — the smallest unit of society.”

The director deliberately moved away from the “absurd violence” of his earlier work to focus on “the tragedy of drifting apart precisely because they care for each other.”

Central to the film’s visual and thematic language is the motif of ruins, both literal and metaphorical. Kenji lectures on the difference between Japanese static views of ruins versus Western dynamic interpretations and carries the memory of past earthquakes. “For Kenji, who studies ruins, the collapse of his own family into ruins marked both a beautiful and fleeting beginning,” Mariko notes. “I set this as the backbone of the screenplay and built the themes of the story around it.”

The ruins metaphor extends to Jane’s puppet performances in abandoned theaters, where larger-than-life puppets become extensions of her suppressed emotions. Working with Blair Thomas, Mariko developed choreography that allowed the puppetry to serve as Jane’s emotional outlet. “For Jane’s character, it was essential to show both her passion for puppetry and her conflict in balancing it with family life,” the director explains.

The film represents a true international co-production between Japan, Taiwan and the U.S., with filming in New York, editing in Taiwan, and a multinational cast and crew. For Mariko, the experience reinforced cinema’s power as a universal language. “I approached filmmaking with that ambiguity in mind,” he says regarding the challenges of multilingual communication. “Since the staff and cast came from different languages and cultures, our ongoing communication naturally became reflected in the film itself.”

Nishijima brings his characteristic intensity to Kenji, a man whose academic arrogance masks deep insecurity and desperation. “I wanted to portray Kenji as someone who is doing his best to live though imperfect — a character that reflects most of us,” the actor explains. Nishijima, who has built a career spanning Japanese and international productions from “Drive My Car” to Apple TV+’s “Sunny,” filmed in New York with a small, multinational cast and crew.

“Through this experience, I was reminded that film itself is a kind of universal language, and when everyone shares a strong passion to create something meaningful, it can take shape in ways that don’t rely on language,” he reflects.

Gwei Lun-Mei delivers an equally nuanced performance as Jane, a woman caught between her artistic ambitions and maternal responsibilities. The Taiwanese actor, who has worked across multiple film industries, found particular resonance in Jane’s struggle with cultural displacement. “Having studied abroad myself, I’ve felt that truly settling and being recognized by people from another culture is very difficult,” she says.

The puppet sequences became crucial for expressing Jane’s interior life. “The puppet scenes were extremely important for Jane. On one hand, they represented her passion; on the other, they were like another soul,” Gwei explains.

At its core, “Dear Stranger” interrogates the nature of love itself — particularly the gap between feeling and expression, intention and understanding. For Mariko, the question was sparked by photographer Masafumi Sanai’s assessment that he had “no affection, but having love” when they worked together on “From Miyamoto to You.”

“For me, love exists in cinema,” Mariko says. “It’s not an easily understandable emotion — it accumulates quietly and surely, through countless human connections. It arises so naturally from passion that it feels almost embarrassing to put into words, yet it’s also fragile, as if it might disappear if left unspoken.”

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Relationship coach shares 3 simple tips to keep the excitement and spark alive with your partner: ‘When you talk 24x7…’
Lifestyle

Relationship coach shares 3 simple tips to keep the excitement and spark alive with your partner: ‘When you talk 24×7…’

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Sept 22, 2025 10:47 am IST

Boredom and irritation often creep into long-term relationships – but relationship coach Javal Bhatt reveals 3 super easy ways to keep the spark alive.

Being in a long-term relationship isn’t always as effortless as the honeymoon phase makes it seem. Over time, many couples find themselves feeling bored, irritable, or even disconnected from their partners – small issues that, if left unchecked, can snowball into bigger relationship problems.

Relationship coach Javal Bhatt has shared 3 simple tips you can follow to prevent boredom in a relationship.(Unsplash)

Also Read | Couple therapist shares the biggest sign of healthy relationship: ‘It’s not about how much you love your partner’

Javal Bhatt, a relationship coach, motivator, and writer, shared three simple tips to keep the spark alive in your relationship. In an Instagram video posted on November 26, 2022, he explained how to prevent boredom from creeping in, even after you’re fully committed. His advice focuses on building small but meaningful habits that keep love, curiosity, and excitement intact over time.

Don’t stop flirting

According to Javal, it’s important to keep the spark of flirting alive, not just in the early stages of dating, but even after committing to a relationship or marriage. He explains, “Flirting keeps the romantic relationship alive and helps you prevent taking your partner or relationship for granted.”

Avoid talking all day

Javal points out that talking to your partner 24×7 means you are always updated about each other. This takes away the curiosity and excitement of sharing things when you finally meet or talk at the end of the day. Jawal’s advice? “Decide the mutual timings of the day when you both are available and fully free to invest the quality time.”

Also Read | Woman says her alcohol abstinence is making her husband feel so ‘lonely, rejected’ that he threatened her with divorce

Laugh together

The relationship coach recommends sharing memes, watching comedy movies together, and teasing each other in a playful way. He further elaborates, “I’m not saying you laugh all the time but research shows that a couple who often laughs together is a couple who stays together in a long lasting relationship.”

Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional advice. It is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.

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September 22, 2025 0 comments
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