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Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi's Film 'Silent Friend' is Tree-Loving Bliss
Hollywood

Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi’s Film ‘Silent Friend’ is Tree-Loving Bliss

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: Ildikó Enyedi’s Film ‘Silent Friend’ is Tree-Loving Bliss

by Alex Billington
September 6, 2025

Do plants have feelings? Are trees interacting with humans? Is there a way to measure or montior this? Can we talk with them – can they talk with us? Is the natural plant world just as alive as animals are? These are the kind of questions that Hungarian filmmaker is attempting to address with her spectacular, breathtaking new film titled Silent Friend. And it’s an instant favorite – this rare creation is a Film We Have Never Seen Before. Nothing like it exists, and it deserves to be appreciated and loved as one of the best films of the year. After my deeply moving, soulful experience watching this film at its world premiere at the 2025 Venice Film Festival, I can say that it’s going right on my list of all-time favorites. Seriously. Silent Friend is a majestic film featuring 3 intertwined stories centered around a big, old, majestic ginkgo tree in a university garden. It’s an ambitious cinematic exploration of the idea that plants & trees are sentient, using emotional stories to make it plausible. I’m a believer. After this film, you’ll never look at plants & trees the same way again. 🌳

Silent Friend is both written and directed by the acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi, her latest film since The Story of My Wife in 2021 (which I did not like much). She also won the Golden Bear at Berlinale in 2017 for On Body and Soul. Now she’s back with her best film yet that I will be raving about for the rest of the year (and the next few years). I wrote in my 10 Films to Watch intro that I think Silent Friend will be this year’s Perfect Days. On one hand, that is true and it is, on the other hand it’s so different that I can’t really compare them. Silent Friend is just as soulful and touching and peaceful, and that is the kind of beautiful filmmaking I really connect with these days. Enyedi’s Silent Friend follows three stories – the first one is set in 1908 following a young woman (played by Luna Wedler) accepted at the university as their first ever female student; the next one in 1972 following a woman and man who connect over an experiment with a geranium; and one in 2020 about a neuroscientist from Hong Kong (played by Tony Leung Chiu-wai) who devises his own experiment with the big ginkgo tree at the university during Covid-19 lockdowns. It was filmed at and takes place at the very real Marbug University in Marbug, Germany – where this tree really exists (in their botanical garden). No one can’t recreate this magnificent 200+ year old tree. It’s real.

Among the many brilliant aspects of Silent Friend, the intertwining of the 3 stories is amazingly impressive. Many filmmakers usually just present them linearly with each segment playing one after another. Enyedi is much more complex than that – she interweaves the storylines together, cutting back & forth between them as each one plays out over time. They are connected, but mainly thematically (along with the same location and same tree), and each builds upon the last. One of the ideas within the first story set in 1908 is that this woman is the first ever to be accepted into the university and thus paves the way for women to study there – which connects into the 1972 segment where a young woman is now also studying there and has invented a way to measure her geranium plant’s expressions. This is one of the many interconnected ideas throughout this masterful film. From the vibrant score by Gábor Keresztes & Kristóf Kelemen, to the stunningly perfect cinematography from DP Gergely Pálos, to the tender & heartfelt performances by the entire cast, to the exquisite editing & pacing from editor Károly Szalai, to the themes & ideas within that are explored, to the very question of whether trees & plants can communicate with us, THIS is cinema at its finest. I am still in awe… I am still vibrating thinking about how truly gorgeous of an experience it was to sit and watch this film unfold together with a thousand other people. We all emerged floating, high on the glory of cinema.

What is truly profound about Silent Friend is how many layers upon layers of ideas it explores through these 3 different stories. There’s a deeply resonant concept it explores showing how human connection & human relationships are also important for scientific progress. Each one of them must come to work together with someone else in order to achieve their goals. In addition, this represents the idea of how communication is difficult yet connection is still possible. The relationships depicted in the 3 stories feature people who at first struggle to connect, for various reasons, and yet they begin to understand each other more with time. This ultimately connects back to the core of the film – that we can communicate with plants & trees, we’re just still working out how… And even though they may not understand our language, and trees can’t speak to us, we’re still able to communicate & make new discoveries anyway. Especially when it comes to caring for and appreciating nature. Another idea explored in the 1908 segment is of a woman who’s exploring photography & taking photos in a way no one has ever seen before. Enyedi is doing the same – she’s a woman showing us something we have never seen before either. Most importantly, Enyedi takes on the incredibly ambitious goal of allowing cinema to show us that plants & trees really are sentient and can communicate with us, and achieves this in the most astonishing & cinematically satisfying ways. She really went there, and pulls it off.

I could go on & on for hours about the various themes and layers and ideas hidden within this masterpiece. I could discuss the aspects of trees and plants that she hints at with these stories, and how we really do need to question our relationship with them. I will be watching this film over and over again for years. There’s so much humility, so much beauty, so much tenderness in every shot, in every glance, in every breath of this film. There are a handful of cuts that are absolutely phenomenal – cutting between stories & characters that are on par with the famous match cut from Lawrence of Arabia. The vigorous score builds & builds at the right moments, hitting deep in the chest with waves of emotion and vibration, reminding us that sound can be as magnificently affecting as the visuals. It’s a beautiful tree-hugger film, however it also carefully shows us human relationships are important, too. It’s not only about loving nature and understanding nature and admiring this tree and that’s all. There’s much more to it in every sense. It’s so invigorating, and so moving, to come across such a wonderfully resonant, deeply intellectual, cinematically powerful film that makes you want to talk about it for days on end. I live for this. And now I want to visit this ginkgo tree in Marburg, too.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.9 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 6, 2025 0 comments
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“Greta Lee wore a dramatic Dior at the Venice Film Festival” links
Celebrity News

“Greta Lee wore a dramatic Dior at the Venice Film Festival” links

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Greta Lee wore a high-drama Dior in Venice. [Go Fug Yourself]
South Park continues to attack Donald Trump. [Pajiba]
Jacob Elordi’s Venice beef. [Socialite Life]
I agree with all of this about Scooter Braun & Sydney Sweeney. [LaineyGossip]
Christopher Meloni shows off his NYC home. [OMG Blog]
Rihanna is still pregnant! I hope this one is a girl. [Just Jared]
Rooney Mara in Givenchy. [RCFA]
Kelly Clarkson’s show is coming back at the end of the month. [Seriously OMG]
A breakup on Welcome to Plathville? [Starcasm]
Will we have to wait three years for the third season of Wednesday? [Hollywood Life]
A Fox News doctor defends Donald Trump. [Buzzfeed]

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'Dead Man's Wire' is a Vintage 1970s Folk Hero Story
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘Dead Man’s Wire’ is a Vintage 1970s Folk Hero Story

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘Dead Man’s Wire’ is a Vintage 1970s Folk Hero Story

by Alex Billington
September 3, 2025

This is a true story. It all really happened. Now 48 years later it’s being retold again and will find new life as a folk hero story about a man frustrated with the system who decides to try and make a difference… Even if the way he sets the record straight isn’t exactly legal or very nice, all that matters is he causes a scene and gets people to listen to his plight. Sometimes that’s what it takes, right? When the system is totally broken and there’s nothing else you can really do, you might need to break some laws and shake things up. No one was hurt! Thankfully. It’s all gravy! Dead Man’s Wire is a brand new, true story crime thriller made by acclaimed American filmmaker Gus Van Sant. It’s his first feature film in 7 years, since last making Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot back in 2018. Van Sant seems to still be into telling crime stories from America’s past, as this is yet another story about a peculiar incident. But who’s the actual criminal in this story? That’s up to you to decide. The press screening audience at the 2025 Venice Film Festival was so into this story & what happens, they cheered non-stop during the credits. This guy certainly got their attention…

Directed by successful indie filmmaker Gus Van Sant (his 18th feature film so far), from a screenplay written by Austin Kolodney, this is an actual story and it all really happened. The morning of February 8th, 1977, Anthony G. “Tony” Kiritsis (played by Bill Skarsgård), 44, entered the offices of Richard O. “Dick” Hall (Dacre Montgomery), president of the Meridian Mortgage Company, and took him hostage with a sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun wired with a “dead man’s wire” from the trigger to the Hall’s head. His plan was to get his father, played by a very grump Al Pacino, but he was on vacation so he took his son instead. Back in those days the cops were pretty careless, so Tony proceeds to take Dick out and into his car, and drive down to his apartment where he holds him hostage for days. There was no shootout or anything. Tony didn’t really want to hurt Dick – he was pissed at how the rich bastards who run Meridian Mortgage treated him. His demands to let him go involved getting his money back and Meridian issuing a public apology. Eventually he asked for immunity, too. Somehow, the cops agreed and nothing had happened to anyone. Because while this is the story of a scary hostage situation, it’s actually about all the greedy bastards who ruin other people, and a tale of one man who did whatever he could to show the world he wouldn’t stand for that BS anymore.

While I wasn’t familiar with Tony Kiritsis’ story before, he actually did become a kind of folk hero amongst regular folks who understood with his plight. He’s a bit like the Barefoot Bandit or D.B. Cooper or, dare I say, Luigi Mangione. Van Sant frames this story around a radio DJ named Fred Temple, played perfectly by Colman Domingo. Tony was a big fan of his radio show, so he kinda used Fred to get the word out and tell his story, so that regular people could hear and understand why he was kidnapping and holding him. It actually worked. Sometimes people do listen! And they do sympathize with others being screwed over. There are a few filmmaking flourishes Van Sant adds, otherwise this is a fairly straight-forward, no frills recreation of the story of Tony & Dick. There’s not enough excitement or energy in the storytelling to make it riveting and/or rewatchable. It’s somewhat entertaining, thanks to an exceptionally good wired-up lead performance by Skarsgård as Tony. But I wish there was more to engage with, I wish I felt like shouting from the rooftops once it was over. That said, the message matters the most. And it’s clear the Venice audience caught onto that cheering so loudly when it ended. They were clearly fans of Tony, too… Even though it’s obvious some will argue that he was the bad guy and what he did was wrong. But that can be said about Dick, too, can’t it?

Of course there are plenty of other films like this – most notably Dog Day Afternoon and any of the movies about D.B. Cooper and/or the Barefoot Bandit. The attention-to-detail in recreating the 1970s aesthetic (and stark difference in policing) is impressive, in order to let Tony and all his decisions that February speak for themselves. Van Sant doesn’t try to be preachy and doesn’t need to be. Even if the film is a bit rough around the edges, it’s a clever story and maybe some other viewers will be more amped up watching this than I was.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 6.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Palestine-Set 'The Voice of Hind Rajab' Is Talk of Venice
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Palestine-Set ‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ Is Talk of Venice

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Rarely does a Venice film get a standing ovation at its press conference, but in advance of its world premiere at the 82nd Venice Film Festival, “The Voice of Hind Rajab” has already received a glowing reception from filmgoers and critics on the Lido.

The latest film from Oscar-nominated Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania is a dramatization of what happened when Red Crescent volunteers attempted to speed their way through a mountain of bureaucratic obstacles in January 2024 to save six-year-old Palestinian girl Hind Rajab, who was trapped inside a car in northern Gaza with several dead relatives who had been wiped out by the Israeli Defense Force.

The Voice of Hind Rajab

Prior to the question and answer portion of the press conference, star Saja Kilani read a statement on behalf of “The Voice of Hind Rajab” cast and crew that noted: “‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ does not need our defense. This film is not an opinion or a fantasy. It is anchored in truth. Hind’s story carries the weight of an entire people. Her voice is one amongst tens of thousands of children that were killed in Gaza in the last two years alone.”

She added, “Behind every number is a story that never got to be told. Hind’s story is about a child crying out, ‘Save me.’ And the real question is, how have we let a child beg for life? No one can live in peace while even one child is forced to plead for survival.” (You can read the full statement below.)

Ben Hania, who has covered several Middle Eastern and North African conflicts in both her narrative work (“The Man Who Sold His Skin”) and her non-fiction work (“Four Daughters”) said, “When I heard the first time the voice of Hind Rajab, there was something more than her voice. It was the very voice of Gaza asking for help, and nobody could answer.” That, and a “strong desire, and the feeling of anger and helplessness gave birth to this movie.”

Producer Nadim Cheikhrouha shared that he and Ben Hania were actually getting ready to make a different film before they heard the story of Rajab. Both thought, “We can’t stay just watching what’s happening and do some other stuff. We need to do this movie, and we need to do it quickly,” said the producer. “We had this feeling of emergency.” 

Joaquin Phoenix, James Wilson, Rooney Mara, Andrea Romeio, Amer Hlehel, Clara Khoury, Nadim Cheikhrouha, Kaouther Ben Hania, Saja Kilani, Motaz Malhees and Odessa Rae attend the 'The Voice Of Hind Rajab' red carpet during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on September 03, 2025 in Venice, Italy.
Joaquin Phoenix, James Wilson, Rooney Mara, Andrea Romeio, Amer Hlehel, Clara Khoury, Nadim Cheikhrouha, Kaouther Ben Hania, Saja Kilani, Motaz Malhees and Odessa Rae attend the ‘The Voice Of Hind Rajab’ red carpet during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on September 03, 2025 in Venice, ItalyGetty Images

The pair were able to go into production with only a few partners, though the list of producers for “The Voice of Hind Rajab” now includes Brad Pitt and his company Plan B Entertainment, as well as Oscar-winning directors Jonathan Glazer and Alfonso Cuarón, and couple Joaquin Phoenix and Rooney Mara. “The fact that all those names joined the movie means something,” said Ben Hania. “I never in my life thought that could be possible. So I’m very grateful for their support.”

Listening to the stars of “The Voice of Hind Rajab” talk about the film, the prevailing sentiment was clear. “It’s not a film for us. It was really a duty to go and do this,” said Amer Hlehel. “We needed that film to express ourselves as actors and artists.” Kilani added, “Usually with a film, you create a character, you build this narrative in your head, but this film, there was no acting.”

A key choice Ben Hania made in order to capture authentic responses from her actors was to not let them listen to the real-life voice recordings of Rajab that are used in the film until they were on set shooting each scene. “It’s one thing to read the script and to know exactly what she said, and we rehearsed that, but it’s a whole different aspect when you hear her voice,” said Kilani.

“There were a lot of tears, and also the team was in tears. Everybody. We were in a very small and closed set, and everyone was engaged,” said actress Clara Khoury. “The whole film set, because of the cause, because of what’s happening in Gaza and the genocide, the ongoing genocide that is not stopping yet.”

Actor Motaz Malhees, who plays the Red Crescent volunteer who is the first to speak to Rajab, shared that he felt a deeply personal connection to her story, having lived in the West Bank as a child. “It wasn’t easy. I felt like I died a thousand times hearing Hind’s voice. From the first moment, it just sent me back to my childhood. So it wasn’t a new thing for me. It’s a life I lived,” he said. “There were two times where I couldn’t keep filming. I had a panic attack, and I had the support from everyone also. It was hard, but it’s a responsibility for me.”

'The Voice of Hind Rajab'
‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’

Anticipating certain criticisms of the film, which dramatizes a true story, Ben Hania said, “When you amplify the voice of Palestinians, you are always personally accused of being exploitative, and it’s another way to silence you.” But her hope is that “things should change. We’ve seen that the narrative all around the world that those dying in Gaza are collateral damage in media. And I think this is so dehumanizing, and that’s why cinema art and every kind of expression is very important to give those people a voice and a face.”

“The Voice of Hind Rajab” has already been chosen as Tunisia’s submission for Best International Feature, and has been pegged as the new frontrunner for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival. Should it find an even bigger platform, its actors might be recognized in the awards fray as well, with Malhees, Kilani, Hlehel, and Khoury being campaigned for Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress, respectively, and Ben Hania to be recognized in various categories, as she also wrote the film.

Read the full statement from “The Voice of Hind Rajab” cast and crew below:

“On behalf of all of us actors, and in the name of the entire team, we ask, isn’t it enough? Enough of the mass killing, the starvation, the dehumanization, the destruction, the ongoing occupation. ‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ does not need our defense. This film is not an opinion or a fantasy. It is anchored in truth. Hind’s story carries the weight of an entire people. Her voice is one amongst 10s of 1000s of children that were killed in Gaza in the last two years alone. It is the voice of every daughter and every son with the right to live, to dream, to exist in dignity, yet all of it was stolen in front of unblinking eyes, and these are only the voices we know. Behind every number is a story that never got to be told. Hind’s story is about a child crying out, ‘Save me.’ And the real question is, how have we let a child beg for life? No one can live in peace while even one child is forced to plead for survival. Let Hind Rajab’s voice echo around the world. Let it remind you of the silence that has been built around Gaza. Let it name the genocide that silence protects and let it pierce the word enough, not tomorrow, not someday, now. For justice, for the sake of humanity, for the future of every child. Enough.”

“The Voice of Hind Rajab” premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'Kim Novak's Vertigo' Reexamines the Actress' Legacy
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘Kim Novak’s Vertigo’ Reexamines the Actress’ Legacy

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘Kim Novak’s Vertigo’ Reexamines the Actress’ Legacy

by Alex Billington
September 2, 2025

This is the story of a beloved Hollywood actress and her life off screen outside of her movies. Kim Novak is the award-winning star of Hitchcock’s all-timer mystery thriller classic Vertigo, and tons of other classic movies like Pushover, Picnic, The Man with the Golden Arm, Pal Joey, Jeanne Eagels, Strangers When We Meet, Kiss Me Stupid, and many others. She’s now 92 years old and still going strong. Kim Novak’s Vertigo is a brand new documentary featuring Kim Novak reflecting back on her life in Hollywood before she left the film business for good in the 1970s. She got tired of being treated as simply a pretty woman. It’s the latest creation from Swiss doc filmmaker Alexandre O. Philippe, known for his many acclaimed doc films about cinema history – including 78/52 (about Hitchcock’s Psycho), Memory: The Origins of Alien, Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on the Exorcist, Lynch/Oz, and this year’s Chain Reactions. Alexandre was lucky enough to befriend Kim – she literally talks about how she feels connected to him when he sits down to interview her in her home. This fascinating film is about identity and how Hollywood steals it. And about how she was able to discover herself in roles, even if she ended up getting tired of acting after decades of acclaimed work.

Novak’s original name was Marilyn Pauline Novak (her parents were of Czech descent); she took the name “Kim Novak” as a stage name when she entered Hollywood in 1954 after signing with Columbia Pictures. The film comes in at a brisk 77 minutes, and starts out with a fairly quick biopic look at her early days and life before arriving at Vertigo. Alexandre O. Philippe is not known for making linear, straight-forward docs and this is no exception. His narrative bounces around from Kim telling stories and leaving voice messages for him in modern times, to her work on Vertigo which was the first film Alexandre fell in love with while growing up, to her early days in Hollywood and acting legacy. Not much time is spent outside her film career – it never really explains what she has been doing since she left Hollywood in the 1970s. The real focus of Alexandre’s film is on her identity, which is especially unique because it’s also related to the three different characters she plays in Vertigo: Carlotta, Madeleine, and Judy. Novak reveals that she actually does not like being looked at and hated being the beautiful blonde of cinema, but of course did her best to play the roles anyway. She also discusses how she felt like more of a “reactor” than an actor. Alexandre is best at working in hundreds of film clips that perfectly depict whatever she is explaining about herself or her performances.

Many actresses, especially from this era, have talked about how much they despised the “beautiful starlet” status they were assigned as Hollywood actors controlled by studios. And ultimately this is what she got so tired of & why she left, which she repeats often. She also repeats over & over how much she had to fight to stay true to herself, and be herself, and stick to her own values & identity. The only problem is that for all this film gets into, she never actually explains what those values are and what “being herself” really means. Other than the fact that she is a huge animal lover – at one point she had a pet goat, and also a pet bluebird and dogs. Nonetheless, Kim Novak’s Vertigo is a heartfelt, touching, wholesome film featuring Novak being wonderfully honest about her life and her choices and her performances. There is obviously plenty of time spent on Vertigo, analyzing everything about her character & costumes. And most importantly, she explains how making this film with Alexandre allowed her to finally appreciate who she is all of these years later. it’s rather beautiful to see. This doc may only be enjoyed by die-hard film geeks and Kim Novak fans, but there’s still something endearing about watching her open up & speak freely about being a movie star. She seems so creative & charming. And I hope her life’s choices will inspire more woman to stay true to who they are, too.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Anne Hathaway
Bollywood

Dwayne Johnson Gets Emotional During 15-minute Standing Ovation at Venice Film Festival

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson recently experienced an emotional moment at Venice Film Festival, when his movie The Smashing Machine received a 15-minute standing ovation. The actor, who portrays UFC legend Mark Kerr in the movie, suddenly became overwhelmed with emotions and broke down in front of the crowd. The clips and glimpses from the theatre show Dwayne wiping away his tears and the crowd offers thunderous applause.

Dwayne Johnson cries during the 15-minute standing ovation for his new movie ‘THE SMASHING MACHINE’ pic.twitter.com/Z5i42al7Ji


— Cinematic Visuals (@P0eticVisuals) September 2, 2025



The actor attended the screening with his co-star Emily Blunt, director Benny Safdie and Mark Kerr himself. Many have compared the moment with the standing ovation Brendan Fraser received for The Whale, four years ago. Fraser later went on to win an Academy Award for the movie.

In one of his social media posts from Venice, Johnson acknowledged the greatness of the film festival. He noted, “Act like you’ve been there. Trying to stay cool and absorb every second of every moment. #venice.”

The movie is slated to release in the theatres on October 3, 2025. The reactions in Venice confirm that Dwayne Johnson is on his way to give a career-defining performance. Fans on social media have been discussing about his dedication to the project. Interestingly, Johnson also went through a dramatic physical transformation to channel Kerr. He stepped away from his usual action avatar and embraced a leaner frame.

At a press conference, he opened up about working on The Smashing Machine. Dwayne noted that he wanted to explore more of acting after receiving the opportunity to star in the movie. “I looked around a few years ago and I started to think, you know, am I living my dream or am I living other people’s dreams? I’ve been scared to go deep and intense and raw until now, until I had this opportunity,” he added.

ALSO READ: EXCLUSIVE: Red One’s Chris Evans & Dwayne Johnson – Unhinged & Unfiltered

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: Kathryn Bigelow's 'A House of Dynamite' is Staggering
Hollywood

Venice 2025: Kathryn Bigelow’s ‘A House of Dynamite’ is Staggering

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: Kathryn Bigelow’s ‘A House of Dynamite’ is Staggering

by Alex Billington
September 2, 2025

Whoa. Kathryn Bigelow just made a surprise sequel to Oppenheimer. This is one of the most intensely thrilling movies of the year. Goodness gracious. My palms are still sweaty writing about it now hours after the screening. A House of Dynamite, which should’ve kept the original title as stated in the dialogue, A House Filled with Dynamite, is the first feature film made by Kathryn Bigelow since making Detroit in 2017. She’s back with a fury, with a vengeance, with a story that is going to stir things up and get people talking. But of course – that’s the point. The whole movie is designed to get people to start discussing, well, everything about the state of the world right now. It’s not really a sequel to Oppenheimer but it actually kind of fits because it’s the most vivid continuation of the second half of that masterpiece movie. Nuclear fears are back and more powerful than ever in the real world. And this movie wonders: what would we do in only 20 minutes if there was a single nuclear missile fired towards a major American city? How would the US respond? What would happen? Would the President “push the button” and retaliate with more nukes? It doesn’t actually give any answers but it does get us thinking about the actual answers to all these questions.

Directed by gritty military thriller mastermind filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow, A House of Dynamite features a screenplay written by former NBC News president Noah Oppenheim (also writer of the scripts for Jackie & “Zero Day”). The concise setup: When a single, unattributed missile is launched at the United States, a race begins to determine who is responsible & how to respond. The film also features a Rashomon narrative concept – three different storylines presented as a triptych. In each, we follow a group of people in various American government / military positions figuring out what to do and how to respond within the 20 minute ticking clock countdown after discovering the missile, verifying it, and tracking it as it flies on towards the continental US. A House of Dynamite is actually very specifically not political, it’s rather neutral, telling a mechanical “how would a government realistically respond” procedural thriller story. It’s all a fantasy, with Idris Elba as the current US President. It is not commenting on real world politics, nor is it commenting on America or its imperialism or jingoism or anything like that. It’s ultimately a story about how any nation would be on edge, how the entire world would be completely fucked, if anyone sends a missile towards any other nation. It’s meant to get us thinking but not comment on America’s issues aside from stockpiling our own nukes. The only thing it does want to remind us: we cannot fuck this up if this ever does really happen.

The first segment of A House of Dynamite focuses on White House staffers in the situation room, featuring Rebecca Ferguson, as well as military men at a base in Alaska (featuring Anthony Ramos) that are the first to notice the missile and then fire off the preventative countermeasures meant to intercept and stop the missile. It’s the most intense of the segments because it sets up the story. By the time the 20 minutes runs out you’ll be shaking with fear, trembling with trepidation realizing how realistic of a “holy shit” situation this really would be. The second segment follows the Secretary of Defense and higher up military, providing a more hard-edged POV showing them realizing that they think the only right way to respond to this is to fire off preemptive response nukes before this one hits. It’s just as thrilling but in a much different way. The third segment, pulling everything together, focuses on the President himself & his POV as he’s the one who, at the end of the 20 minute countdown, must decided how to respond and what to do. Let’s just be honest – if there really was a missile fired and we couldn’t stop it and it was about to strike a city, there’s no way any evacuation would work and nothing could be done. We’d (meaning the military & gov) have to respond after no matter what. But do you wait & find out? This is what makes this story such an intense examination of modern nuclear fears. This ain’t the days of the atomic bomb anymore, these are massive, scary, fast nukes.

Just as with The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty before this, the filmmaking is exceptionally realistic. This is what Bigelow is extraordinary at thanks to years of understanding real government & military inner workings. So many Hollywood movies are cheesy, making everything from the situation room to the missile buttons look fake, but in this movie everything is specifically accurate. Almost too real. It’s about a realistic response (give or take what is currently happening with the fascist takeover in the actual US government in the real world) to this possibility. Including the idea that 20 minutes is an extremely limited amount of time and Hollywood loves to make 20 minutes look like 2 hours when that’s just not the case. There’s a line of dialogue where within minutes of the missile striking, the US President says “give me a minute” and it cuts the clock and the audience let out a very cathartic, loud chuckle because it very seriously is “holy shit we don’t have a minute, Mr. President.” I deeply appreciate this portrayal of realism because it’s exactly what made got my heart racing. I haven’t been this wrecked watching a movie in a while. One of the big questions on my mind: will this be just as thrilling to watch knowing how it all plays out? Once people have figured it out, will they be sitting at home watching it and still feeling the intense thrill of the story? Or not? I’m lucky I had a chance to watch this film on the big screen without knowing anything before it began – because that experience was unforgettably breathtaking. I was literally wiping away sweat on my brow for nearly 2 hours.

The other remarkably clever trick in this is Bigelow’s cast. There’s a huge ensemble of so many recognizable actors. One of my favorite meta tricks is that she casts actors playing the very same character they’ve played in other series or films already. Idris Elba just played the UK Prime Minister in the streaming movie Heads of State. Actor Gabriel Basso plays a secret agent at the White House who gets involved in a conspiracy when an attack happens in the very successful series The Night Agent on Netflix. In here he is also playing almost the same character – a person working in a top secret role at the White House. Whether or not she made all of these casting choices consciously, I’m not sure, though I have to believe she did. But the point is that they ultimately connect to the bigger idea of what she’s trying to do with A House of Dynamite. The film is making us rationalize and realize the scariness of modern, real world nuclear fears, and using these actors playing similar roles forces viewers to pull themselves out of the fantasy of these other stories and, for two hours, seriously think about real world implications of us vs them. Oppenheimer ends with the exact same message. The great fear of nukes in this current day & age is that, if anyone ever actually fires one, the world will be changed forever. There’s no going back then. But if that happens, we (meaning whomever is actually pushing buttons) must carefully decide how to respond without obliterating the rest of the planet. Will they?

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

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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'The Testament of Ann Lee' is a Cinematic Revelation
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is a Cinematic Revelation

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is a Cinematic Revelation

by Alex Billington
September 1, 2025

The exhilaration of majestic cinema once again at the Venice Film Festival. Following last year’s masterful The Brutalist (here is my 10/10 review), filmmakers Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold are back again at Venice this year with their latest work. The Testament of Ann Lee is the third feature film directed by Norwegian filmmaker and actress Mona Fastvold, who is married to Brady Corbet. They co-wrote both of these films together and this one is also shot on film just like The Brutalist, and they both worked with the truly one-of-a-kind composer Daniel Blumberg to create the scores for both of these films. Other than that, these films couldn’t be more different. The Testament of Ann Lee is actually a musical, featuring a few truly transcendent, mystical musical sequences of dancing through the forest and around their land. It’s the story of a religious leader and the creation of the religion she believed in, known as the Shakers, but it’s also the story of emancipation and escape and freedom from oppression. Unquestionably of the best films of the year – it’s extraordinary in every single way that cinema can be extraordinary. I need this soundtrack to listen to.

The Testament of Ann Lee, also known as simply Ann Lee, is the story of a real woman named Ann Lee – starring Amanda Seyfried in the lead role as this woman. Born in Manchester, England in 1736 during a time of the Evangelical revival in England, she married young and became pregnant. After 4 pregnancies, all of her children died before they turned 1 year old and this destroyed her. After this experience she turned to religion, helping create what is now known as the the Shaker Movement, preaching about the second coming of Christ as a woman – she came to be called Mother Ann. They were initially known as “Shaking Quakers” because of their ecstatic behavior during worship services. After being attacked by the English church at the time, her followers packed up and got on a ship and headed to the new colonies – America. There they settle in and establish a new home on a plot of land they find by taking a boat up the Hudson River. Of course it is a story about someone creating a religion out of completely made up beliefs (let’s be honest), however it’s also about a woman breaking free from the the shackles of the dominant religion and creating a new series of rules & ideas to live by – some of which were quite utopian & beautiful, including a love for the land and equality among all people of all kinds. It shares her life’s story in such a uniquely magical, transcendent way.

Ultimately this film isn’t really about religion or cults or how to get people to believe in nonsense. The story presented includes these things happening, but that’s not really the deeper meaning of this film. As someone who usually despises films about religion, I was delightfully lost in how much this is anything but. There are even moments where it seems Mother Ann herself (or at least Amanda Seyfried as Mother Ann) knows she’s spouting complete bullshit, but it doesn’t matter, because her whole point is staying true to the dogma of her Shaker religion – namely rejecting marriage and sex and so on. For obvious reasons – considering her early life at the time. At first, Ann Lee’s divine decision to create this religion is more of an of-the-times-she’s-in example of fabricating something to allow her to escape the patriarchal, misogynistic hell (of being forced to pop out babies) she was living in England at time. This was right around when a group of people fled to a new land to create what is now America to escape English religious persecution, so it makes sense she would try this, too. Eventually it also becomes a tale of how America is a rotten place as well. Aside from all of the slavery and racism and violence, she soon learns how much Americans (even in the late 1700s) actually hate others and don’t really want anyone else to be able to practice their own religion(s). Especially one that goes against their own views and is as blasphemous as the Shakers with their belief that marriage and sex is bad.

All of these layers of commentary, even more beyond just these two aspects, are beautifully worked into this magnificent piece of art. And it’s so mesmerizing and enchanting to get totally lost in and swept away by all the magic (and music and singing) of this film. Right from the start with a haunting musical opening with women dancing through the forest, all the way across the Atlantic Ocean, right up to the final days of Ann Lee as her colony in Niskayuna grows and her religion spreads, this is an bewitching film that showcases all of what makes cinema so special. It’s fun and clever and cinematically exciting. It’s about more than what it seems to be about. It’s carefully crafted, enhanced by the storytelling choices. As with The Brutalist, you can tell every single person involved in making this is fully in sync with the vision & the artistry of the filmmaker and everyone gave it their all to make this so magical. Best of all, Amanda Seyfried is absolutely outstanding leading the film preaching a best-of-her-career performance. Her complete devotion to this character, to the performance, to delivering emotion from the depths of her soul to make it believable, is astonishing and she absolutely deserves all the awards & accolades coming her way. She’s matched by supporting turns from Lewis Pullman, Thomasin McKenzie, David Cale (my favorite character), and Christopher Abbott.

Aside from the enchanting cinematography (shot by DP William Rexer on film) and wonderfully accurate period costumes & sets and all of the riveting performances, the music in this also swept me off my feet. All of the songs are incredible. Which I was not expecting, especially based on this story. And that score, THAT SCORE my goodness, Daniel Blumberg is quickly becoming one of my favorite composers up there with Göransson and Zimmer and Desplat. I cant wait to get a copy of this soundtrack. Of course all of the musical numbers are inspired by real Shaker hymns and chants, infused with modern composition. It’s a musical that doesn’t really feel like a musical, which is not an easy thing to accomplish. The musical numbers are integrated right into each scene as if this what the Shakers would be doing at this moment anyway right in the middle of their work day, dancing as part of their daily chores & religious activities. This film absolutely deserves its place in cinema history alongside The Brutalist. These films are two defining modern cinematic experiences and I believe we’ll still be talking about both of them, and both filmmakers, for decades to come.

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

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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Colman Domingo and Jude Law Lead amfAR’s Venice Gala to a $3.4 Million Haul
Fashion

Colman Domingo and Jude Law Lead amfAR’s Venice Gala to a $3.4 Million Haul

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

The glitz and glam of the 82nd Venice Film Festival reached a crescendo on Sunday evening, as Hollywood’s elite flocked to the amfAR Venezia Gala, an opulent benefit dinner supporting HIV/AIDS research and prevention. From Jude Law and Colman Domingo to Halsey and Jesse Williams, stars joined philanthropists, researchers, and high-profile international patrons to raise over $3.4 million.

Dressed in a bright-green custom Valentino jacket, Domingo served as the evening’s emcee. The prolific actor kicked off the blowout bash at Venice’s historic Arsenale complex, welcoming guests with a toast and stressing the urgency of continued support for HIV/AIDS research. “To this day, every minute, one person dies of AIDS-related causes,” he said. “And every single minute, two people join the 40 million people worldwide living with HIV.”

amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, is the world’s leading nonprofit dedicated to ending the global AIDS epidemic. Founded by Elizabeth Taylor in 1985, amfAR has awarded more than 3,800 grants to research teams worldwide. Thanks to this funding, advances in HIV research have led to new prevention options and have informed new treatments for cancer, as well as improved therapies for people with autoimmune disorders. amfAR’s extravagant, star-studded galas have become a cornerstone of its fundraising, with black-tie events and high-octane auctions throughout the year in Cannes, New York, Las Vegas, and Palm Beach.

At last night’s Venezia Gala, the most sought-after lot was a painting from acclaimed filmmaker and artist Julian Schnabel. The Oscar-nominated director spontaneously offered to paint a portrait of the evening’s highest bidder, setting off a rapturous bidding war. Halsey—the Grammy-nominated singer of “Closer” and “Without Me”—competed with an anonymous phone bidder. Following a heated contest, Schnabel agreed to create two portraits for €500,000 each (about $585,000), one for the anonymous bidder and one for Halsey, who was recently diagnosed with the autoimmune disease lupus.

Schnabel also received amfAR’s Award of Inspiration in recognition of his longstanding commitment to the fight against AIDS. The painter-director, who will screen his latest film In the Hand of Dante at the festival later this week, accepted the honor from Law.

After impeccably dressed attendees enjoyed Italian spritzes, Negronis, Champagne, and a multi-course Venetian dinner featuring umbrina, Ava Max electrified the party with a medley of chart-topping hits, including “Sweet but Psycho” and “Kings & Queens.” Guests like Paris Jackson, Sofia Carson, and Joan Smalls shimmied on the dance floor along the venue’s waterfront and sang along.

“Every death from HIV/AIDS is a tragedy, and we can stop them all with a cure,” Domingo said in closing. “If you take anything with you tonight, let it not be the sobering statistics. Let it be this: We can cure HIV, and we will!”

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Kaia Gerber Hard-Launches Fall Polka Dots at the Venice Film Festival
Fashion

Kaia Gerber Hard-Launches Fall Polka Dots at the Venice Film Festival

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Yes, yes, Kaia Gerber is dating Lewis Pullman—but can we talk about what she wore before all that PDA at the Venice Film Festival?

On August 31, the 23-year-old model-turned-actor was seen with her previously rumored boyfriend ahead of the premiere of her upcoming film, The Testament Of Ann Lee. And just like Amal Clooney a few days before her, she proved your favorite summer trends aren’t going anywhere this fall with a bit of thoughtful styling.

Obviously, we have to start with polka dots, a massive summer trend Gerber embraced much earlier this summer with a flouncy red and white halter dress, which brings us right to our second trend. In Venice, Gerber combined the popular silhouette and pattern yet again, opting for a plunging butter yellow top by With Jéan that ties together at the back to create a nearly backless appearance.

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman in Venice, Italy on August 31, 2025.

Claudio Lavenia/Getty Images

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman in Venice Italy on August 31 2025.

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman in Venice, Italy on August 31, 2025.

Ernesto Ruscio/Getty Images

Of course, the color of the top checks off our third summer trend on the list, though it’s been dominating runways and catwalks since the top of 2024. While the color is airy enough to feel like summer—especially when paired with a dainty chiffon skirt like on the With Jéan website—the muted tone looks soft and luxe as a fall-winter knit.

So how did Kaia Gerber make this otherwise summery top feel like a fall look? By matching the yellow halter tops’ black polka dots to a knee-length black skirt, giving the piece a more refined touch that’s not quite office appropriate, but is definitely a winning weekend look during the awkward transition from summer to fall. Now, imagine a similar top with the capri trousers fashion editors and trendsetters can’t stop raving about. Do you see the vision?

With Jéan – Rendezvous Top

Cider Halter Neck Polka Dot Pleated Crop Top

Kaia Gerber often gravitates towards ’50s aesthetics with a flirty twist, as proven by the tea-length Givenchy gown with a sheer lace bodice. Pairing the vintage-inspired dress with kitten heels and chic black sunglasses, Gerber looked every bit an Old Hollywood starlet as she arrived at her red carpet premiere hand-in-hand with 32-year-old Top Gun star Lewis Pullman.

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman on September 01 2025.

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman on September 01, 2025.

Jacopo Raule

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman on September 01 2025.

Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman on September 01, 2025.

Alessandra Benedetti – Corbis/Getty Images

Later that night, the pair continued their romantic Italian getaway, with Gerber switching into a black halter mididress with a plunging neckline and backless design. Clearly, she’s not looking to let go of these summer trends—or her summer romance–any time soon, nor should she have to.


September 1, 2025 0 comments
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