celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Thomas » Page 2
Tag:

Thomas

'RHOA' Alum Peter Thomas Launches New Podcast From Behind Bars
Celebrity News

‘RHOA’ Alum Peter Thomas Launches New Podcast From Behind Bars

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

‘RHOA’ Alum Peter Thomas Launches New Podcast From Behind Bars

Peter Thomas is bringing his voice to the world even while behind bars.

The reality star has announced the launch of his brand new podcast, set to premiere September 30 at 7:30 PM on his YouTube channel.

“Starting September 30 at 7:30 PM I will be launching my podcast on my YouTube channel, my first guest is the ONE & ONLY MISS LAWRENCE. Superstar, multi talented and my friend,” the official message from his team reads.

The account is currently managed by Team Peter while he remains incarcerated. “Peter is currently incarcerated in the FBOP, he thank y’all for all the support.”

Will you be watching?

@peterthomasrhoa


September 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sriya Reddy OG
Bollywood

Tovino Thomas Steps Into The Spotlight As Lokah Chapter 2 Teaser Drops

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Lokah: Chapter 1 – Chandra has rewritten box office history for Malayalam cinema. The fantasy action drama not only stormed past previous records to become the industry’s top-grossing film worldwide, but it continues to hold strong weeks after release. With India collections already crossing the ₹125 crore mark, the film’s numbers prove its extraordinary reach and hint at the appetite for its growing universe.

Against this backdrop, Wayfarer Films has dropped a surprise teaser for Lokah Chapter 2, directed once again by Dominic Arun. The big reveal? Tovino Thomas’ Michael, also known as Chathan, will take centre stage in the follow-up, while Dulquer Salmaan’s Charlie, the Odiyan, returns in a supporting but crucial capacity.

Inside the Teaser: Chathan’s Rise and Charlie’s Reluctance

The three-minute promo unfolds like a playful exchange between two old friends. Charlie teases Michael by calling him “boring,” only for Michael to retort that he is anything but. In fact, he quips that he and his 389 brothers share a penchant for drinking — a darkly comic touch that nods to his supernatural origins.

The conversation takes a turn when Michael references the book They Live Among Us, reminding viewers that the first chapter revolved around Kalliyankattu Neeli. Now, he declares, the second instalment will be his story. Michael then probes Charlie about whether he will join him if trouble arises. Charlie declines, saying family matters are not his business, but Michael insists he will rope him in regardless.

The teaser ends with an ominous sketch of Michael surrounded by his brothers, the air thick with betrayal as they appear ready to turn against one another. This closing image sets the tone for Chapter 2: a narrative that blends myth and magic with the tension of a family feud spiraling out of control.





A Universe Growing in Scale and Mystery

The promo makes it clear that Lokah is expanding beyond a single hero’s journey. With Chathan stepping forward, the series has the chance to explore darker shades of folklore, more complex moral conflicts, and an even larger canvas of mythic battles. For Tovino, it’s another feather in his cap as he shoulders a franchise that’s already captured the audience’s imagination.

Meanwhile, Dulquer’s Charlie remains a compelling presence, the Odiyan who may be unwillingly dragged into a fight that is not his own. The chemistry between the two actors, already evident in the playful promo, promises sparks in the sequel.

If Chapter 1 was about establishing the Lokah universe, the sequel seems intent on deepening it — with sibling rivalries, supernatural clashes, and shifting loyalties at its core. The bar has been set sky-high, and Lokah Chapter 2 looks ready to rise to the occasion.

Also Read: Tovino Thomas and Nazriya Nazim to Lead Muhsin Parari’s New Film

September 28, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Best Paul Thomas Anderson Movies: Every Film Ranked
TV & Streaming

The Best Paul Thomas Anderson Movies: Every Film Ranked

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

This list was originally published in December 2017. It has since been updated with further films from PTA.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s characters are all defective in some way — not flawed so much as broken and incomplete. In an unpredictable filmography that spans from the waining days of the mid-’90s indie boom to the tenuous post-celluloid landscape of the modern age — a scattershot collection of stories that hops across the last 100 years as though it’s unstuck in time, resolving into a strange and feral people’s history of America in the 20th century — a fundamental sense of inherent vice might be the most consistent through-line. That feels especially true in the aftermath of “Phantom Thread,” which finds Anderson ditching his hometown of Los Angeles for London, but still retaining (or even doubling down on) his sincere affection for obsessive people with holes in their hearts.

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - SEPTEMBER 18: Leonardo DiCaprio and Chase Infiniti pose during the photocall for the movie 'One Battle After Another' at the Monument to the Revolution on September 18, 2025 in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photo by Eloisa Sanchez/Getty Images)

Common wisdom suggests that Anderson’s career has been split down the middle, with 2002’s “Punch-Drunk Love” functioning as a gentle transition from the exuberant mosaics that announced PTA’s genius to the steely micro-portraits that made good on his potential. And while there’s a certain amount of truth to that superficial overview, the evolution of Anderson’s style is mostly interesting for how it illuminates the underlying things that bind his entire body of work together.

With “One Battle After Another” soon to arrive in theaters, we’ve decided to rank Paul Thomas Anderson’s films from worst to best (essentially just assigning them varying degrees of greatness), focusing on all things that have changed in his movies, and all the things that have stayed the same.

11. “Hard Eight” aka “Sydney” (1996)

HARD EIGHT, (aka SYDNEY), from left: Gwyneth Paltrow, John C. Reilly, 1996. ph: Mark Tillie / © Rysher Entertainment / Courtesy Everett Collection
“Hard Eight”©Rysher Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection

Paul Thomas Anderson was only 26 when he managed to wrangle Philip Baker Hall and a $3 million budget for his first feature, an impressive feat by any measure. However, in light of what the upstart auteur would go on to make next, “Hard Eight” is more striking for its modesty — for its lack of ambition — than anything else. The low-key story of a friendship that forms between a mysterious gambler (Hall) and the penniless burnout (John C. Reilly) he meets at a diner somewhere between L.A. and Las Vegas, PTA’s preternaturally self-assured debut feels like a collection of leftover Sundance tropes trying to wrestle themselves free from a straitjacket. Dusty southwest environs, rundown motels, neo-noir shadings, Samuel L. Jackson, coffee, and cigarettes… if not for the wounded stoicism of Hall’s performance and the expert contributions of future PTA mainstays like Robert Elswit and Jon Brion, it might be tempting to lump this in with all the other Tarantino riffs that washed ashore after “Pulp Fiction.”

Still, as easy as it is to lose sight of this film in the vast shadow of what came next, “Hard Eight” rolls with a gentle humanism that gives it some life of its own. Sydney might have ulterior motives in lending a stranger $50 and showing him the ropes for how to rig a casino, but his deepening relationship with John only enriches the question that hangs over their first encounter: How much is a friend really worth to you? This is a small movie, and an awkwardly fractured one at that, but it’s full of inscrutably compelling actors at their best, their characters helped along by a writer-director who palpably believes in their pain.

10. “Junun” (2015)

Nobody really saw this delightful curio — Anderson’s only feature-length documentary — which premiered at the New York Film Festival before bypassing a theatrical run and heading straight for the internet. But “Junun” is hardly just a B-side for the director’s hardcore fans. If anything, it’s the most accessible thing he’s ever made, a hugely enjoyable 54-minute banger about the lightning-in-a-bottle joy of good people making great music together. An uncharacteristically invisible fly on the wall, Anderson hangs around the dusty environs of India’s Mehrangarh Fort, watching with rapt attention as regular collaborator Jonny Greenwood and Israeli composer Shye Ben Tzur record a group album with the Rajasthan Express.

Seemingly made on a whim and without much of an agenda, the movie captures a once-in-a-lifetime collision of musical talent before everyone scatters to the winds. As jarring as it might be to see PTA shoot digital (the drones demand it), the music is so catchy and the vibe so full of life that you soon forget who’s behind the camera. “Junun” might be a footnote, but it’s transporting and whole and hard to forget.

9. “Inherent Vice” (2014)

INHERENT VICE, from left: Hong Chau, Joaquin Phoenix, 2014. ph: Wilson Webb/©Warner Bros./courtesy Everett Collection
“Inherent Vice”©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

So dense that it was probably destined to be the most under-appreciated of Paul Thomas Anderson’s films — there’s a certain prickliness to Thomas Pynchon’s source material, as even the most casually stoned of his novels is difficult to wrap your arms around — “Inherent Vice” is a sweet and strung-out noir odyssey through the fog of late capitalism. It’s also a movie where Jena Malone has wooden teeth, Josh Brolin fellates a frozen banana, and pixie folk goddess Joanna Newsom plays a narrator who might be a figment of Joaquin Phoenix’s imagination… so it’s not like PTA is trying to make things hard on us.

Shot like a faded postcard and full of fantastic characters, “Inherent Vice” borrows a lot from sun-dappled P.I. yarns like “The Long Goodbye,” but it’s sillier and sadder than Philip Marlowe ever was. Per genre tradition, the central mystery is actually several different mysteries all knotted together; good luck untangling what a heroin addict’s missing husband has to do with a real estate developer named Mickey Wolfmann and a drug cartel that calls themselves the Golden Fang. But while the plot may be hard to follow, PTA compensates by making the film’s emotional underpinnings as clear as Doc Sportello’s view of the California coastline.

The lost love between Sportello and his ex (Katherine Waterston) is achingly well-realized in just a few short scenes, while the pervasive sense of a country in decline is suffused into the atmosphere like so many patchouli farts (to borrow one of the best insults from a film that has dozens to spare). Forget “Boogie Nights” and the illusion of American possibility, “Inherent Vice” burrows into the feeling that we’ve already let it get away from us — that we’re all out there chasing our own tails. It gets a little bit sadder every time you watch it.

8. “Boogie Nights” (1997)

BOOGIE NIGHTS, Heather Graham, 1997
“Boogie Nights”©New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection

“It’s a real film, Jack.”

A dizzying epic of reinvention, Paul Thomas Anderson’s seedy and sensational second film found the 28-year-old directing with the swagger of a young man in possession of a massive amount of natural talent. But it’s not just the mind-boggling confidence behind the camera that makes “Boogie Nights” such an incredible piece of work, it’s also the sheer generosity that Anderson shows towards his characters, even the most pathetic and beautiful among them. Look at how the camera lingers on Jesse St. Vincent (the great Melora Walters) after she’s been stranded at the 1979 New Year’s Eve party, or how Anderson redeems Rollergirl (Heather Graham, in her best role) with a single push-in during the closing minutes. Anderson loves these people. When Amber Waves, played by a peak Julianne Moore as the original MILF, tells Dirk Diggler (Mark Wahlberg) that he deserves his brand new 1978 Corvette, she means it from the bottom of her heart.

More than just a breakneck look inside the porn industry as it struggled to get over the hump of home video, “Boogie Nights” is a story about a magical valley of misfit toys — action figures, to be specific. All of these horny weirdos have been cast out from their families, all of them are looking for surrogate relatives, and all of them have followed the American Dream to the same ridiculous place. There’s something very special about the Altman-esque frenzy in which these lost souls become together for having found each other, an ineffable energy that survives the young Anderson’s need to triple-underline every flourish.

This remains one of the most quotable and well-realized things that the director has ever made, even if the darker second half — in which PTA makes his feelings very clear re: the warmth of film vs. the creepiness of video — feels both overlong and undernourished. But who cares? Burt Reynolds sell the hell out of every movie, Wahlberg is operating well beyond the limits of his talent, and the hits just keep on coming as the flaws start to fade away. There’s no use getting bent out of shape about it; there are shadows in life, baby!

7. “Phantom Thread” (2017)

PHANTOM THREAD, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky Krieps, 2017. ph: Laurie Sparham /© Focus Features /Courtesy Everett Collection
“Phantom Thread”©Focus Features/Courtesy Everett Collection

In 2017, before we had seen so much as a still photo from Paul Thomas Anderson’s film, it was widely rumored that “Phantom Thread” was an S&M period piece that had more in common with “Fifty Shades of Grey” than it did any of the classic British melodramas that were made around the time this story is set. Alas, the perverse romance that blossoms between a renowned dressmaker (Daniel Day-Lewis as Reynolds Woodcock) and a soft-spoken waitress Alma (Vicki Krieps) is a strictly PG affair, one far more interested in adding clothes than taking them off. Be that as it may, elements of dominance and submission persist, and the film’s deceptive chasteness is precisely what allows Anderson to sew such a compelling piece about love and control, threading the needle between haute escapism and something much closer to home.

Speaking after the film’s first New York City screening, Anderson told the crowd that “Phantom Thread” was inspired by a recent bout of the flu. The filmmaker was laid up in bed, feeling like refried death, when he noticed that his wife looking at him with a degree of pity and care that she typically reserves for their young kids. He loved it. You don’t need to be a revered film director or a tyrannical fashion designer to appreciate that powerlessness has its own pleasures, and that surrendering control to the right person can be as satisfying as hoarding it for yourself. There’s probably not a married couple in the world who doesn’t understand that dynamic or recognize the ugly strength they derive from their partner’s weakness.

“Phantom Thread” takes that ugliness and turns it into something beautiful, Anderson riffing on the likes of “Rebecca” (with a whiff of “The War of the Roses” for good measure) to create an immaculately old-fashioned portrait of obsession. Anderson has made a number of spirited duets about two strange people who need each other for balance, but the magic trick that Krieps’ terse performance allows him to do here — slowly allowing Alma to overshadow Reynolds and take control of the wheel, herself — is a new one for him. Beautiful and beguiling in equal measure, this is the most inviting movie that Anderson has made since “Punch-Drunk Love,” and the best proof yet that his collaboration with composer Jonny Greenwood might be the defining element of his recent work.

6. “Licorice Pizza” (2021)

LICORICE PIZZA, Cooper Hoffman (left), Alana Haim (front), 2021.  ph: Melinda Sue Gordon /© MGM / Courtesy Everett Collection
“Licorice Pizza”©MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

“Gary Valentine is 15 going on 30, Alana Kane is ’25’ but in air quotes that basically allow her to be whatever it might say on her eventual dream ticket out of Encino, and they first cross paths on a pale 1973 morning in the San Fernando Valley at a strange moment in history when Old Hollywood and New Hollywood have started to overlap. Bing Crosby is still alive even though Jim Morrison is already dead, and it feels like everyone is more or less the same age because no one really knows what time actually means anymore.

They meet on yearbook portrait day at the local high school, and Alana — working as an assistant for the handsy photographer — walks up to Gary with a mirror in her hands, only to find that this pimple-faced hustler is less concerned with last looks than he is with first impressions. Gary starts hitting on Alana with the unslakable thirst of a teenage boy and the empty courage of someone who doesn’t think anyone will ever take him seriously. He spits a lot of motor-mouthed game about being a child actor, but flirts as if he’s being interviewed by William F. Buckley on an episode of ‘Firing Line’ (‘There’s too much reality in pictures now’ is but one choice line in a marathon-length meet-cute throbbing with electric banter).

When Alana calls him out (‘you’re 12,’ she says, nailing the age he plays on TV), Gary responds by asking her to meet him for a drink later. Like so much of the whirlwind friendship that follows — and like almost every scene of the spectacular, intoxicating, and thoroughly hilarious film that watches along — it’s hard to tell if it’s a date or a dare.”

Read IndieWire’s Complete Review of “Licorice Pizza.”

5. “Punch-Drunk Love” (2002)

PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE, Emily Watson, Adam Sandler, 2002, (c) Columbia/courtesy Everett Collection
“Punch-Drunk Love”©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Paul Thomas Anderson has been known to say that each of his films is a reaction to the last one, and the fact that he made the tight and constrained “Punch-Drunk Love” on the heels of the sprawling “Magnolia” is enough to prove that he’s not blowing smoke. This is the work of a prodigiously gifted artist who realized his most ambitious idea by the time he turned 30 and found that he still had room to grow — that his movies couldn’t be bigger, but they could be more suffused with feeling. What Anderson learned between “Boogie Nights” in 1998 and “Punch-Drunk Love” in 2002 is that size isn’t everything.

A frantic quasi-musical about violently isolated people who learn that they don’t have to condemn themselves to their sadness, Anderson’s fourth feature distills an epic’s worth of emotion and bottles it up in a cheap blue suit. Adam Sandler is revelatory as Barry Egan, the low-brow comedian repurposing his signature rage into something new just by denying it a place to go. He can’t just win a golf tournament and or retake second grade; he’s got a business to run, a thousand sisters to handle, and a hole in his heart the size of Hawaii. And then there’s Lena Leonard (Emily Watson), who looks at Barry and sees a harmony, her desire setting off a love story where the senses blur together like the whole film has been touched by synesthesia.

“Punch-Drunk Love” is a tiny movie, but Elswit’s camera roves around Barry’s factory with a manic curiosity that borders on Chaplin-esque, resulting in the first PTA film that doesn’t feel like it’s carving out a story so much as building one from the ground up. That spirit of creation is infused into the characters, who discover that opportunity abounds in this world (in pudding and people alike), and that they have the power to get on a plane and chase love down before it gets away. Love is out there, you just have to pick up the phone. If you’re lucky, you might find Lena Leonard in her hotel room. And if you’re really lucky, you might get patched through to Philip Seymour Hoffman, whose heavenly appearance galvanizes this strange concoction with a bunch of spittle and an arsenal of f-bombs. If this isn’t the greatest scene ever committed to celluloid, it’s damn close to it.

4. “One Battle After Another” (2025)

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER, Chase Infiniti, 2025. © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection
“One Battle After Another”©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

“Until his monumental new film, Paul Thomas Anderson had only made a single narrative feature set in the 21st century, and that movie — a love story about a plunger salesman who hoards pudding cups, gets extorted by the owner of a phone sex line, and shares an iconic kiss to the sound of a Shelley Duvall song from 1980 — was less of its time than out of it. After that came an origin story about the birth of American capitalism, two post-war fables about people trying to sow their own visions of the future, a patchouli-scented lament for the lost promise of ’60s counterculture, and a star-crossed romance set against the 1973 oil crisis.

At a certain point, Anderson’s seeming attachment to the past became conspicuous enough that it began to appear as if he might be mystified, scared, and/or bored of the modern world to some degree, and therefore arguably less relevant to it.

Enter: ‘One Battle After Another,’ the power and the mercy of which lies in how it simultaneously functions as both a backboard-shattering windmill dunk on that line of attack and an open-hearted surrender to its merits.

Vaguely abstracted from Thomas Pynchon’s 1984-set ‘Vineland’ but eager to reflect a variety of post-Reaganite advancements in ethno-fascism (the action starts in a recognizable today before jumping 16 years forward into a pointedly unchanged tomorrow), this propulsive, hilarious, and overwhelmingly tender paranoid comedy-thriller car chase blockbuster whatever doesn’t just stare a broken country in the face with its already prescient tale of immigrant detention centers, white nationalist caricatures, and bullshit pretenses for deploying the military into sanctuary cities. It’s also the first movie of its size to accurately crystallize how fucking anxious it feels to be alive right now — to capture the IMAX cartoonishness of our reality and provide a convincing roadmap as to how we might survive it.”

Read IndieWire’s complete review of “One Battle After Another.”

3. “The Master” (2012)

THE MASTER, l-r: Joaquin Phoenix, Philip Seymour Hoffman, 2012, ph: Phil Bray/©The Weinstein Company/courtesy Everett Collection
“The Master”©Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett Collection

The most inscrutable and enigmatic of Anderson’s films, “The Master” is always mesmerizingly just out of reach, turning you inwards every time you reach out to meet it. A.O. Scott hit the nail on the head when he described it as “a movie that defies understanding even as it compels reverent, astonished belief.” But there are answers here, even if Anderson doesn’t provide any clear indication of what they might be; whatever meaning you manage to tease out of this story is yours to keep.

On its most basic level, “The Master” is a gripping two-hander about a man and his dog. Philip Seymour Hoffman is almost unfathomably brilliant as the volatile Lancaster Dodd, a new age pseudo-prophet in the mold of L. Ron Hubbard (he’s not unlike a film director, the ringleader of a traveling circus who has to string people along through sheer force of will). Joaquin Phoenix is every bit his equal as the alcoholic Freddie Quell, a man whose face is twisted into a perpetual sneer even before he’s set adrift in the wake of World War II. One barks commands and the other rolls over, but neither one of them can play fetch alone. As Dodd puts it, with no small amount of spite: “If you figure a way to live without serving a master, any master, then let the rest of us know, will you? For you’d be the first person in the history of the world.”

Dodd and Quell really aren’t so different, and Anderson’s dream-like storytelling helps swirl them together until it’s hard to tell where one ends and the other begins (Jonny Greenwood’s seasick score roots that confusion in the pit of your stomach). These are two men who are haunted by past trauma and have happened upon opposite ways of trying to outrun it; two men who are using each other as beacons to navigate the choppy waters between memory and imagination; two men who “can’t take this life straight.” But then again, who can? Just look into someone’s eyes, don’t blink, and repeat your name until you start to believe that it tells you something.

2. “Magnolia” (1999)

MAGNOLIA, Julianne Moore, 1999, © New Line/courtesy Everett Collection
“Magnolia”©New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection

“I’ll tell you the greatest regret of my life: I let my love go.”

“Magnolia” is many, many (many) things, but first and foremost it’s a movie about people who are fighting to live above their pain — a theme that not only runs through all nine parts of this story, but also bleeds through both phases of Paul Thomas Anderson’s career. There’s John C. Reilly as Officer Jim Kurring, who’s effectively cast himself as the hero and narrator of a non-existent cop show in order to give voice to the things he can’t admit. There’s Jimmy Gator, the dying game show host who’s haunted by all the ways he’s failed his daughter (he’s played by Philip Baker Hall in one of the most affectingly human performances you’ll ever see). There’s motivational speaker Frank T.J. Mackey, who has everything under control until someone mentions his father, and trophy wife Linda Partridge, who emerges from a fog of prescription drugs just a little too late to tell her terminal husband how she really feels. And on and on and on, Anderson’s small army of characters threading together in a deliriously unsubtle modern opera about hurt people hurting people until the weather changes and they all realize that it’s not going to stop until they wise up.

Have you ever noticed that PTA is pretty good with actors? For a guy who’s almost peerlessly expressive with a camera, it’s always a surprise to watch one of his films and be reminded of how much he defers to his cast and their faces. “Magnolia” might be the most striking example of all, not just because of its raw melodrama, but also because everyone here is so aggressively playing against type that you can feel them trying to run away from something.

An 188-minute movie without a second out of place, “Magnolia” is the byproduct of bloodshot egomania, the film infused with a wild arrogance that starts from its roots and grows like a tumor until God shows up and it feels like he’s just another member of the cast. And thank heavens that someone had the confidence or the cocaine or whatever the hell it took to attempt something like this, because the bigger the movie gets, the more it seems like it couldn’t afford to be any smaller. As Anderson says towards the end of the (incredible) making-of documentary on the DVD, “it’s too fucking too,” and it is, but it’s also just enough to show how fiction can sometimes reflect the strangeness of real life. “Magnolia” is a movie that puts you through the wringer, and can pull you out of almost anything.

1. “There Will Be Blood” (2007)

THERE WILL BE BLOOD, Daniel Day-Lewis, 2007. ©Paramount Vantage/courtesy Everett Collection
“There Will Be Blood”©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection

“There Will Be Blood” is the Great American Movie of the 21st century, which is less of a compliment than it is a taxonomic classification. It’s a genre unto itself, an outdated one forged by earlier films like “Citizen Kane” and “The Godfather” and defined by stories of self-made sociopaths — always men — who build empires atop the bodies of their enemies and hold onto the American Dream until it’s the only thing they have left. These are elemental pictures full of people who see capitalism as a bloodsport, making money with a fervor that exposes the fundamental violence of the open market.

How fitting, then, that riches and death are so inextricably linked in “There Will Be Blood,” a film that wears its intrinsic “greatness” like a genre that it grows weary of as it goes along, eventually turning against it and beating it to death with a bowling pin. There’s nothing we love to see more than a rise and fall saga about someone ruined by the same voracious ambition that we lack in ourselves, and audiences have learned that stories like this seldom have happy endings (these narratives teach us not to want too much). But “There Will Be Blood” resolves in victory, not defeat. There’s no “Rosebud” for Daniel Plainview, just a bottomless abyss.

Daniel Day-Lewis inhabits Plainview as the unwitting star of a monster movie, an apex predator who walks with the gangly hunch of a Scooby-Doo villain and crooks his head so that he can only see the worst in people. Thanks to Jonny Greenwood’s Toru Takemitsu-like string compositions, Plainview enters every scene like Jaws circling her next victim. Between Paul Dano’s opportunistic preacher and the plumes of oil and fire that shoot out from the Earth that Plainview claims for himself, the whole film begins to assume a biblical fervor, the drama’s natural gravitas twisting into something vaguely apocalyptic. “There Will Be Blood” is a perfect storm of talent at the top of their game, a movie that drills into America’s past in order to tap into the rot that we’re suffering through in its present. Not only is it the Great American Movie of the 21st century, it actually deserves to be.

Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Paul Thomas Anderson's 'One Battle After Another' brings revolution to the (very) big screen
Bollywood

Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ brings revolution to the (very) big screen

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

LOS ANGELES — Paul Thomas Anderson spent about 20 years writing “One Battle After Another.” After two decades, it’s never felt more relevant.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ brings revolution to the (very) big screen

The epic action thriller, inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s “Vineland,” hits theaters Friday. With a running time of 2 hours and 50 minutes, “One Battle After Another” wastes no time immersing audiences in its politically charged world.

The revolution will not be televised, but it will be placed at the front and center of Anderson’s film. The director isn’t there to make his audience comfortable, star Teyana Taylor says, as he zeros in on themes of immigration, racism and systemic corruption showcased at their most absurd.

“I feel like PTA calls out a lot of things that are trying to get swept under the rug,” Taylor told The Associated Press, referring to the director by his nickname. “And that’s what I respect. This is really waking, shaking and baking some s -. Like, you gotta shake the table.”

Taylor’s character, Perfidia Beverly Hills, is a member of the Weather Underground-inspired French 75 revolutionary group. From the film’s first scene, we see the French 75 take matters into their own hands, liberating undocumented detainees, destroying corrupt political offices and launching their own form of justice, one right after the other. The group is peppered with members portrayed by musicians-turned-actors like Dijon Duenas, Alana Haim, and Shayna McHayle and notable actors like Regina Hall and Wood Harris.

“I mean, this movie is based on some of the revolutionaries and anarchists of the late ’60s, the Weathermen that were fighting for civil rights, environmentalism too at the time, capitalism, Vietnam,” star Leonardo DiCaprio told the . “But it’s about the implosion of that too, about the extremes that people go to for their own ideology.”

DiCaprio portrays Bob Ferguson, known in the French 75’s initial scenes as Ghetto Pat, known for his knowledge of explosives and undying devotion to both Perfidia and the revolution. Together, Perfidia and Pat seem unstoppable, until the racist and xenophobic Col. Steven Lockjaw sets out end the group to fuel his rise to power.

“And this is a movie, fast-forward, in today’s day and age, where you see this sort of systematic breakdown that comes from it, if it’s not done with grace and purity and consistently, the whole sort of— our revolution is dismantled and our past comes back to haunt us,” said DiCaprio. “So that’s what I love that Paul did. He shows extremity on both sides of the spectrum and how no one seems to be communicating or getting things done in the right way nowadays.”

The film jumps 16 years into the future. Perfidia has disappeared and DiCaprio’s character lives under a new alias in a sanctuary city as a paranoid, stoner dad with his teenage daughter, Willa . Everything is seemingly mundane until Lockjaw reappears, forcing the father-daughter duo on the run.

“There’s a lot of moments where I was like, I don’t know if I’m gonna be able to do this, but thankfully I had amazing scene partners and a great support system to kind of assure me that I was here to do my job and I knew exactly that I could do it,” Infiniti said.

“One Battle After Another” is Anderson’s most expensive project to date and shot entirely in VistaVision — a decades-old format that’s been revived in recent years by movies like “The Brutalist.”

Benicio del Toro, who plays karate instructor Sensei Sergio St. Carlos, says blending improv scenes with DiCaprio and shooting in the antique format forced the actors and Anderson to have unwavering faith in each other’s decisions, knowing they only had a limited amount of takes. His character, also the head of an undocumented migrant hideaway, hopes his storyline will be an example of showcasing compassion beyond political affiliation.

“I wouldn’t be pompous enough to say movies change people. But it might just open a door that leads to another door that leads to a hallway to another door,” he said.

DiCaprio says portraying Bob Ferguson is his own version of freedom of speech, allowing him to “shine a light on certain issues about humanity and different subject matters.”

“I’m always searching for a movie that doesn’t necessarily have meaning but is thought-provoking, that holds a mirror up to who we are as a society, as people, of humanity,” said DiCaprio. “And that’s what I think the heart of this movie is, is how to find humanity in a world that is incredibly divided. … It’s not a film where there’s a specific sort of ideology that Paul is putting into it. It’s saying this is who we are, this is the world we live in.”

For Taylor, the 20-year-old script’s relevance is evidence of American history continuing to repeat itself.

“It didn’t need a change; it didn’t need to be updated because it was all still so relevant,” said Taylor. “It’s time to wake up, and it’s time to shed light on the necessary conversations.”

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Joins ‘Sinners’ and ‘Hamnet’ as Early Oscar Frontrunner
TV & Streaming

Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Joins ‘Sinners’ and ‘Hamnet’ as Early Oscar Frontrunner

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

At a packed Warner Bros. VistaVision industry screening on Tuesday night, Christopher Nolan, A.G. Iñárritu, Daniel Scheinert, and Rian Johnson were on hand to watch, followed by a half-hour Q&A with Anderson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Teyana Taylor, Benicio del Toro, and more.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Leon Thomas, GELO Perform at Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Power Players Show
Music

Leon Thomas, GELO Perform at Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Power Players Show

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

When word got out that the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Power Players event would be taking over Webster Hall for a free concert on Friday (Sept. 5), New Yorkers from all walks of life consumed three blocks waiting — and hoping — to get inside. Those lucky enough to gain entry celebrated every second of the night, as DJ Ohso meticulously spun through hip-hop bangers, sultry afro tunes and a little bit of Paramore to keep the crowd energized, engaged and hungry for a showcase from Billboard‘s Rookies of the Year.

Armanii kicked the night off with his signature blend of dancehall and hip-hop grooves, as fans swayed to “8:00 PM,” “JUMP (Bounce)” and others. Attendee’s workday blues than completely vanished thanks to Billboard‘s Hip-Hop Rookie of the Year GELO, who swaggered about the stage and ignited the party with the littest cuts off his debut album, League of My Own. While fans cheered and supported the newer tracks, it of course was his viral hit “Tweaker” that fully locked the crowd in with its unifying “woah’s” and “ahh’s.”

After a short breather, Odeal‘s presence was immediately felt throughout Webster’s Hall, as people erupted just at the mere sight of the African Rookie of the Year. There were dozens of diehard supporters in the audience, who screamed out every syllable of “Soh-Soh,” “London Summers” and of course “Miami,” with the soon-to-appear headliner Leon Thomas. Before that, though, Ravyn Lenae floated onto the stage to quickly transport the crowd to a more mystical realm. Lenae gracefully sang through her biggest hits including “One Wish” and “Love Me Not,” sprinkling pixie dust along the way like an R&B fairy godmother.

But it was Thomas that really brought the house down. He railed on the drums, shredded on the guitar, sang his absolute heart out — firing off every firearm in his musical arsenal and leaving no survivors. The crowd, admittedly a bit worn after such a lengthy showcase, rallied behind Thomas and fully came back to life as Ty Dolla $ign casually strutted out while singing his verse on “Far Fetched.” The DJ then queued up “Carnival” right after, the Ye (formerly Kanye West) and Ty’s Vultures 1 cut that hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart back in 2024. As Ty sang through the single and hyped up the crowd, Leon and his band — for lack of a better term — rocked the f—k out. Then, almost like a fever dream, the night was over, leaving the crowd sweaty and satisfied in every way.

Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox


Sign Up

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
How Leon Thomas Is Using His Fender Strat To Hold Down R&B
Music

How Leon Thomas Is Using His Fender Strat To Hold Down R&B

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Leon Thomas is well aware that R&B is not the first style of music that comes to mind when the guitar takes the lead. Now, as a member of the 2025 Fender Next class, the 32-year-old is excited to bring his Fender Stratocaster along for the journey as he continues to evolve in the genre.

“Coming up being a fan of music, I was a big fan of Jimi Hendrix, and he always played a red Strat. The red Fender Stratocaster has been a potent part of my sound on R&B since the inception of my career. It’s my favorite guitar to play live on stage, so working with Fender was just a no-brainer, and to be recognized by them is definitely legendary to me,” the New York native explained to VIBE on a friendly Zoom call. He later declared that this would be the only guitar of his choice.

“It was so cool to see my picture up there with a lot of different rock stars. In R&B, guitar is one of those instruments that makes its appearance here and there, but it’s nice to be one of the few guys out there in my generation and in my class of R&B that actually plays plays.”

Kofi Ansah-Agyei

And he’s right. His breakout single “Mutt” widened his audience as listeners latched onto his strong musicality and unique style. In fact, the song and the album of the same name, were ranked VIBE’s top R&B offerings of 2024. With his star rising, Leon Thomas is always armed with the Fender Strat in his uniquely paved lane.

“I think the first time I picked up a guitar was the first time I ever wrote a song. It’s synonymous to everything that is me as an artist. It’s not something I really tried to do. It’s just me kind of being at this point,” he explained.

“So respect to everybody, but I know for me personally, I like to feature a lot of live instrumentation throughout my records because I’m not just writing on a lot of the songs. I’m also co-producing, so it’s nice to kind of have those elements that feel authentic to me featured on the record. Now you’re seeing the effects of that. As I promote it, as I’m on those stages, I don’t really feel comfortable hitting the stage without my baby.”

Leon Thomas wearing black jacket

Leon Thomas III at the Nickelodeon 2025 Kids’ Choice Awards held at Barker Hangar on June 21, 2025 in Santa Monica, California.

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

The former Nickelodeon star continued to detail how his creativity translates to energetic live shows.

“It’s just a part of my process as an entertainer. I’m not hitting a bunch of choreography like Chris Brown. I’m not rapping like Kendrick [Lamar] or anything, so I got to find a way to really make a crowd go wild. I think my wow factor lives not just in what I’m doing vocally but also what I’m able to do on those instruments,” he relayed.

“I just want to make people smile. I want to make them feel good when they come to see me. It’s not cheap to buy a ticket to a show these days. I definitely respect the amount of work people are putting in outside of coming to see me live. If they spent that dollar, I want to make sure that they’re getting a show that’s worth it.”

Leon Thomas performing

Leon Thomas III performs onstage at the VVIP Superlounge Experience during Day 2 of the 2025 ESSENCE Festival of Culture presented by Coca-Cola at Caesars Superdome on July 05, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Josh Brasted/Getty Images for ESSENCE

While last year may stand as his biggest yet, 2025 brought the Grammy winner the BET Award for Best New Artist, and a full-circle Kids’ Choice Award nomination for Favorite Male Breakout Artist. He is also nominated at the upcoming 2025 MTV VMA awards for “Mutt” remix with Freddie Gibbs.

“It’s a beautiful thing, man,” he reflected on the nomination.

He continued to joke, “They gave us like $20 to shoot them videos, so I’m excited. We’re even up there amongst all of those crazy other budgets that other people had. So, I’m just blessed to be mentioned in that category. It’s a real pleasure. I’m super excited to pull up. I’m still picking out my fit, but I’m going to grace that carpet, and I’m going to have a good time.”

And his career is just getting started. Thomas is set to release an EP, Folks, which he notes as “continuing to push the needle, and “a little bit more experimental.”

He continued to assure, “I think I’m just going to continue to be as creative as I can be, and I’m going to continue to take risks and chances in popular music. I hope the world really understands me.”

Listen to MUTT below.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Thomas Schumacher to Depart Disney Theatrical Group
TV & Streaming

Thomas Schumacher to Depart Disney Theatrical Group

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Thomas Schumacher, a leading force in growing Disney Theatrical Group into one of the most successful and influential theater producers on Broadway and around the world, will step down as DTG’s chief creative officer at the end of this month after a decades-long tenure at the company.

The move was announced in a studio-wide memo sent Sept. 3 by Alan Bergman, the co-chairman of Disney Entertainment. After Schumacher’s departure, DTG will be led by managing director Andrew Flatt and executive producer Anne Quart, two longtime company veterans who have worked closely with Schumacher for some 20 years.

After his Disney exit, Schumacher “will continue shaping the face of the global theatrical landscape as a behind-the-scenes force focused on the next generation of artists and audiences,” Bergman said in his memo. He’ll also work as a consultant for DTG in the wake of the transition.

Schumacher initially joined Disney Animation as a producer on the 1990 movie sequel “The Rescuers Down Under,” at a time when the conglom’s animation arm was beginning its resurgence with megahits including “The Lion King,” “Beauty and the Beast” and “Aladdin” — all three of which the company has adapted into internationally successful stage properties. Schumacher was eventually named president of Disney Animation in 1999 before shifting duties to focus solely on the oversight of Disney Theatrical in 2002.

Launching in 1994 with the Broadway adaptation of “Beauty and the Beast,” Disney’s theatrical division — which Schumacher has run for 26 of its 31 years in existence — has produced 10 Broadway titles in total including three of the 15 longest-running shows in Broadway history (“The Lion King,” “Aladdin” and “Beauty”). The company’s stage productions have been seen by more than 240 million theatergoers worldwide, according to Disney stats, and won 20 Tony Awards. Over the years, DTG’s 30 global stagings of the 1998 Tony winner “The Lion King” have played a key role in establishing the Disney IP as the top-grossing title in any medium.

Disney Theatrical and its family-friendly productions were also integral components in Times Square’s transformation from de-facto red light district into the tourist-trafficked, all-ages nexus that it is today. Along the way, the popularity of Disney shows has helped draw an ever-increasing stream of family theatergoers to Broadway (where attendance hit 14.7 million for the 2024-25 season, up more than 60% from the 1994-95 season when “Beauty” opened). Meanwhile, the enduring revenue streams generated by Disney’s stage successes have encouraged a growing number of other Hollywood studios and IP holders to give Broadway a try.

During his time at the helm of DTG, Schumacher also won over an insular Broadway community that was initially skeptical of a corporate studio’s incursion into the theater district. He went on to serve as the chairman of the board of the Broadway League, and is currently on the League’s Tony Administration Committee.

In his memo, Bergman added that Schumacher also “has grown Disney on Ice, pioneered sensory-friendly Broadway shows, and developed an expansive program to enable schools to produce Disney musicals on their own stages. He has been a tireless supporter, advocate, and leader of the theatre community, playing a key role in turning Broadway’s lights back on during the unprecedented pandemic shutdown. It’s a truly remarkable record.”

Schumacher said in a statement, “Thirty-eight years ago when Peter Schneider at Disney Animation asked me to produce ‘The Rescuers Down Under,’ I had no idea it would lead to four decades working with some of the most exceptional creative artists in the world — both in animation and theatre. I’m proud that Disney Theatrical will be in the extraordinarily capable hands of Andrew Flatt and Anne Quart, with whom I’ve worked for over 20 years. I can’t wait to see how they lead this peerless organization forward.”

As noted in Bergman’s memo, DTG leaders Flatt and Quart will continue to report to Cathleen Taff, Disney’s president of production, franchise management and theatrical distribution.

Disney Theatrical currently counts two long-running Broadway titles — “The Lion King” and “Aladdin” — among its 21 productions now running around the world. DTG’s next major musical outing, “The Greatest Showman,” is gearing up for a world premiere in the U.K. in the spring.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming