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The Long Walk Oscars Submissions, Supporting Actor
TV & Streaming

The Long Walk Oscars Submissions, Supporting Actor

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Lionsgate is going with a smart awards strategy in hopes of becoming a dark horse Oscar contender.

Francis Lawrence’s “The Long Walk” will campaign its entire principal cast of boys — including Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson — in the supporting acting categories across all major awards bodies, Variety has learned exclusively.

The Lionsgate dystopian drama, adapted by JT Mollner from Stephen King’s early novel, hinges on the emotional dynamics among a group of teenage competitors forced to walk until only one remains. The filmmakers believe the film’s power lies not in traditional leads but in the collective experience — a choice they think is best reflected by submitting the ensemble together.

Though Hoffman’s Raymond Garraty (No. 47) and Jonsson’s Peter McVries (No. 23) may appear to anchor the narrative, the film will place all nine boys in supporting categories across the Oscars, Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild Awards, BAFTA and the Independent Spirit Awards. Judy Greer, who plays a pivotal adult figure in the story, will also be campaigned in supporting actress races.

Submitting the entire cast together highlights the filmmakers’ confidence in casting director Rich Delia, whose work stitching together a cohesive ensemble of emerging talent is expected to be a focal point of the campaign. The young actors deliver varied responses to the story’s brutal marathon.

With its ensemble-driven structure and bold category placements, “The Long Walk” joins the growing trend of awards hopefuls challenging traditional definitions of lead and supporting roles.

Along with the ensemble campaign, “The Long Walk” will compete in all major craft and above-the-line categories, including:

Best Picture: Roy Lee, Steven Schneider, Francis Lawrence, Cameron MacConomy

Best Director: Francis Lawrence

Adapted Screenplay: Screenplay by JT Mollner

Supporting Actor: Cooper Hoffman, David Jonsson, Garrett Wareing, Tut Nyuot, Charlie Plummer, Ben Wang

Supporting Actress: Judy Greer

Best Casting: Rich Delia

Cinematography: Jo Willems

Costume Design: Heather Neale

Film Editing: Mark Yoshikawa

Makeup and Hairstyling: Doug Morrow, Zinka Tuminski

Production Design: Nicolas Lepage; Set Decoration by Scott Rossell

Sound: Supervising sound editors Jeremy Perison, Thomas Jones; production sound mixer Jeffrey Murias; re-recording mixers Jeremy Perison, Carlos Sanches

Original Score: Jeremiah Fraites

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Chadwick Boseman Receives Posthumous Star On Hollywood Walk Of Fame
Music

Chadwick Boseman Receives Posthumous Star On Hollywood Walk Of Fame

by jummy84 November 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The late Chadwick Boseman — revered for his transformative performances and cultural impact — will be posthumously honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

The ceremony, which will take place on November 20, will immortalize his legacy among Hollywood’s most influential figures.

The ceremony, which will be emceed by Steve Nissen, president and CEO of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, will take place at 6904 Hollywood Blvd., in front of the Hollywood Experience.

Fans unable to attend in person can view the livestream at WalkOfFame.com.

Chadwick Boseman attends the European Premiere of Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther” at the Eventim Apollo, Hammersmith on February 8, 2018 in London, England.

Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for Disney

Boseman’s widow, Simone Ledward-Boseman, will accept the award on his behalf, while filmmaker Ryan Coogler and Oscar-winning actor Viola Davis are set to speak at the event — both of whom shared powerful professional and personal bonds with Boseman.

Coogler directed Boseman in Black Panther (2018), the Marvel blockbuster that became a cultural phenomenon and earned more than $1.3 billion worldwide.

Davis co-starred alongside him in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (2020), his final film performance, for which he received posthumous Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations.

Chadwick

Chadwick Boseman poses in the press room during the 2019 American Music Awards at Microsoft Theater on November 24, 2019 in Los Angeles, California.

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for dcp

“The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce is deeply honored to celebrate Chadwick Boseman’s extraordinary legacy with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,” said Ana Martinez, producer of the Walk of Fame.

“His powerful performances and enduring impact both on and off screen continue to inspire generations around the world.”

Boseman, who tragically passed away on August 28, 2020, at just 43 after a private battle with colon cancer, left an indelible mark on film and culture.

Chadwick Boseman

Actor Chadwick Boseman attends the 2018 MTV Movie And TV Awards at Barker Hangar on June 16, 2018 in Santa Monica, California.

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Known for embodying real-life icons such as Jackie Robinson in 42, James Brown in Get On Up, and Thurgood Marshall in Marshall, his work consistently celebrated Black excellence, resilience, and history.

His portrayal of King T’Challa in Black Panther turned him into a global symbol of heroism, pride, and representation — a legacy that continues to inspire millions.

As Hollywood gathers to unveil his star, the ceremony serves as both a tribute and a reminder that Boseman’s light — much like his art — remains eternal.

Chadwick Boseman

Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture for Black Panther Chadwick Boseman poses with his award in the press room during the 50th NAACP Image awards at the Dolby theatre on March 30, 2019 in Los Angeles.

LISA O’CONNOR/AFP via Getty Images

November 14, 2025 0 comments
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Late Actor Chadwick Boseman To Be Honored w/ A Star On The Hollywood Walk of Fame
Celebrity News

Late Actor Chadwick Boseman To Be Honored w/ A Star On The Hollywood Walk of Fame

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Late Actor Chadwick Boseman To Be Honored w/ A Star On The Hollywood Walk of Fame

Here’s some good news for your timeline…

#ChadwickBoseman will be awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce on November 20 at 11:30 a.m. PT., Variety reports. Boseman, who passed away in August 2020 at the age of 43, d!ed following a private four-year battle with colon cancer. His de@th shocked fans and colleagues alike, as the actor had continued to work through his illness, completing several major films without publicly revealing his diagnosis.

Throughout his career, #Boseman became known for portraying iconic figures and complex heroes, from Jackie Robinson in 42 and James Brown in Get On Up, to Thurgood Marshall in Marshall. He is perhaps best remembered for his role as King T’Challa in Marvel’s #BlackPanther, which cemented his place in history as a symbol of strength, pride, and representation. His posthumous Walk of Fame star serves as a lasting tribute to his artistry, courage, and the cultural mark he left behind.


November 13, 2025 0 comments
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"Walk and Deal with Consequences Later"
Music

Walk and Deal with Consequences Later

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard frontman Stu Mackenzie has opened up about the band’s decision to leave Spotify over CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in AI military tech. In a recent interview with The Guardian, he said that the Aussie rockers weren’t intent on “start[ing] a movement,” but just doing what fit with their principles.

“We have done a lot of different things over the years, but sometimes you just forget that you have free will — you can do whatever you want in these spaces,” Mackenzie said. “I don’t particularly want to try to start a movement or something like that — I’m happy if other people join. But for us, it was a decision about our music and a decision about what we think is right and what we think is not right.”

Get King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard Tickets Here

He continued, “[We decided] we’re just gonna walk and deal with consequences later. Of which there have not been many… nobody seems to really care too much.”

Mackenzie explained their decision was inspired by Leah Senior, a fellow Melbourne musician who is a close collaborator with King Gizzard. “When Leah left, she and I had this one conversation about it — I told her I was really proud of her and I thought it was an awesome thing,” he recalled. “It’s kind of a beautiful thing — you look at people leaving and think ‘That’s really admirable.’ I admire the courage to do the thing that is different and also right.”

Related Video

After leaving Spotify, King Gizzard made their entire catalog available on Bandcamp under a “name your price” model. The initiative was a massive success, leading to their discography taking up the entire Top 25 of the platform’s best-selling albums section.

According to Mackenzie, this “didn’t really feel like a big move” because Bandcamp was already one of their larger platforms. “Bandcamp is actually quite a cool place, and it would be nice if we can lure some people over there [so they can] discover some other amazing music,” he said. “It’s been a really big part of King Gizzard’s story from the very beginning, and I’m happy for people who listen to our music to spend some more time there.”

Several other artists have pulled their catalogs from Spotify after Ek was revealed to be an investor in Helsing, a German company specializing in AI military tech, including Massive Attack, Deerhoof, and Xiu Xiu.

Helsing has since clarified that its technology is being used for defense purposes. “Currently we see misinformation spreading that Helsing’s technology is deployed in war zones other than Ukraine,” a statement reads. “This is not correct. Our technology is deployed to European countries for deterrence and for defence against the Russian aggression in Ukraine only.”

King Gizzard are currently gearing up to close out 2025 with a combination of orchestral shows and “rave sets” in the UK, Europe, and Australia, with their tour resuming on Halloween. Tickets can be purchased here.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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A Pedophile and a Camboy Walk Into an Airbnb...
TV & Streaming

A Pedophile and a Camboy Walk Into an Airbnb…

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Few contemporary films about unresolved childhood abuse — which is always unresolved, in the end, anyway — cut as narrowly close to the bone as Elliot Tuttle’s two-hander masked as provocation, “Blue Film.”

Rejected by mainstream film festivals before it premiered in Edinburgh this summer and NewFest in New York in October, this taboo-busting study of a masculine camboy confronted by the pedophile teacher who many years ago desired him holds back little and offers even less that’s palatable to swallow. Its limitations as a stagelike piece aside, the movie wrings emotional complexity from a fraught, ever-shifting dialogue between a convicted child abuser and the student, now a late twenties sex worker, he spared.

'My Father's Shadow'
A statue of the Oscar during rehearsals for the 2016 Academy Awards at the Kodak Theatre on February 27, 2016.

“Blue Film,” which takes place entirely in a rented Hancock Park Airbnb in Los Angeles with only two actors, dares to go places I have not seen an American movie travel to in a while. There was an Israeli movie called “Princess” at Sundance in 2014, directed by Tali Shalom Ezer, which freaked a lot of people out. It was about a 12-year-old girl’s “close relationship” with her mother’s boyfriend. There was the 2011 Austrian movie “Michael,” directed by Michael Haneke protégé Markus Schleinzer, about an insurance salesman sexually abusing the 10-year-old boy locked up in his basement. These were shocking. Neither were American.

Tuttle, an American filmmaker himself who received support on the project from Mark Duplass of all possible collaborators, is willing to take you to those same dark places, ones that remind you of European directors who want to shake you with their frank psychosexual provocations. It’s impressive where Tuttle, this second-time feature filmmaker, goes with his surprisingly humanistic and empathetic approach to material about abuse. One where a pedophile teacher’s sexual fantasy about his former student’s talent show performance emerges as oddly wistful.

“Blue Film” stars rising actor Kieron Moore as dom camboy Aaron Eagle (whose real name is Alex McConnell) opposite Reed Birney as his estranged middle school teacher, who reconnect over one night filled with conversations about desire, shame, and guilt. I’m not surprised festivals, allegedly such as Sundance and SXSW, looked away from it. Mainstream audiences will be alienated by this unapologetic exploration of quote-unquote aberrant sexuality, but those looking for a challenge in the vein of ‘90s films from Todd Solondz or Gregg Araki will feel seen in Tuttle’s exploration of how abuse warps memory, and memory warps accounts of abuse.

In asking you to feel sorry for a pedophile while making a gay man his scene partner, “Blue Film” dances on the tricky line from early abuse to later-in-life sexual behavior. When the movie begins, we see Aaron (Moore), sweaty and hairy in white briefs and tattooed top-to-toe, putting on a live stream for his submissive followers. One of his anonymous fans offers $50,000 for an in-person meet-and-greet. Financially desperate, he agrees to spend the night with the client, who greets him sheathed in a balaclava with the promise of even more money and perhaps pizza if Aaron is willing to open up about himself.

Blue Film
‘Blue Film’Submarine

That client, it turns out, is Mr. Grant, aka Hank, Aaron’s long-ago teacher, and one who took a special interest in Aaron as a child. Some time while Aaron was in school, Hank was intercepted sexually assaulting a child on campus, was fired from his job, and received a prison sentence. With the mask off and Aaron stripped down yet again, their walls start to come down. Hank, he reveals, has now turned to religion as an atonement for his own torment, but his search for meaning has not been without other attempts at or contemplations of assaulting kids, as he tells Aaron.

Tuttle’s script and camera pass no judgment on the characters, like when Aaron shares a bone-chilling story of childhood abuse while naked in a bathtub that may or may not be true, or when Hank also offers a sickening recounting of molestation he endured at the hands of a relative. The actors are as game as any you could imagine, working from a script that you can imagine a lot of people said “hell no” to.

Birney, 71, and best known for work in television and theater (“The Humans”), invites you to feel all his hurt, even as his world is a morally disturbed one we are made to live inside for the movie’s running time. As Aaron, Moore, meanwhile, conceals deep wounds of his own, while also high on the power imbalance this situation has tipped his way, where Hank wants to know if he “still loves” Aaron. Another wrinkle is that the camera certainly wants us to also desire Moore, who is often next to naked, placing us at least adjacent to Hank’s gaze.

Hank is also curious about whether he can still be attracted to adult whom he once desired as a child. He shaves Aaron head to toe to make him look more physically childlike in one of the film’s queasier implications. What these two actors take on is undeniably brave, even as the movie tilts toward becoming suffocating, which is intentional. “Blue Film” is confined to a single environment, after all.

Cinematographer Ryan Jackson-Healy also shot the equally controversy-starting, Birney-led film “Mass,” about the ramifications of a school shooting for the parents affected. The DP knows his way around a tight room with just a few people, and the visual beauty of this movie (indeed, often cloaked in literal blues as night turns to dawn) helps alleviate the agonies on display.

Tuttle wisely avoids flashbacks or out-of-this-room context. We are stuck with these two people and our discomfort with them, even though we might also feel tenderness toward them. “Blue Film” nudges at a lot of tricky issues, like the question of whether being gay in the present day is somehow the result of inflictions of the past. And the parallel to that question is whether abuse can also beget more abuse, i.e. make you into a pedophile or sex offender. Hank says he knew who he was once his sexual fantasies in middle school, about his fellow same-age classmates, remained the same into adulthood. What Tuttle wants to attack here is this terrible fork-in-the-road notion that pedophilia and homosexuality stem from the same root.

Still, “Blue Film” does the rare work of listening with compassion to a pedophile such as Hank, and as an audience, you can either be curious about that or just let it make you uncomfortable. Hank is tormented by who he is, as is Aaron, but they are not the same person, and they did not come from the same place. “Blue Film” leaves you feeling a little bit ill, and very uneasy about how you’re supposed to feel. But when most films either wouldn’t dare go here at all, or would tell you how to feel about the material, that’s rare and welcome.

Grade: B+

“Blue Film” premiered at the Edinburgh Film Festival and NewFest. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Must Read: Angel Reese to Walk in 2025 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, Halfdays Raises $10 Million in Series A Funding
Fashion

Must Read: Angel Reese to Walk in 2025 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, Halfdays Raises $10 Million in Series A Funding

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84


These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Thursday. WNBA all-star Angel Reese will walk in the 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show on Oct. 15. Reese will be the first-ever professional athlete model to walk in the brand’s show. The 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show will also …

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Cult fit founder shares 4 exercises to do for strong knees if your parents are struggling to walk now
Lifestyle

Cult fit founder shares 4 exercises to do for strong knees if your parents are struggling to walk now

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

As our parents or grandparents grow older, their ability to perform certain daily activities also depletes. For women, their bones grow weak, especially if they don’t work out regularly or do strength training. According to Mayo Clinic, loss of estrogen in women due to menopause and lower testosterone levels in men increases bone loss and can also lead to the development of osteoporosis.

Training your knees isn’t just for the gym—it’s for everyday life. This is how you move better, without pain holding you back.

Also Read | Have you been flossing your teeth wrong all this time? Dentist reveals the correct way to do it: Watch

Diving straight into strength training may not be a plausible route for many. In a September 22 Instagram video, Rishabh Telang, co-founder of Cult Fit, shared 4 exercises that he makes his 63-year-old mother do to build stronger knees. So, even if you are going to the gym or just starting out, these exercises could help you move better.

4 exercises for stronger knees

Sharing the videos featuring the 4 exercises, the Cult Fit founder wrote, “You shouldn’t have to think twice before taking the stairs, kneeling on the floor, or walking longer distances. Training your knees isn’t just for the gym—it’s for everyday life. This is how you move better, without pain holding you back.”

1. Hip thrusts

In this assisted form of hip thrust exercise, lie down on the floor near an elevated surface like a sofa, and keep your heels on the edge of the sofa. Now, with your palms resting on the floor, lift your hips off the floor and thrust them up in the air. Repeat this motion to do the exercise.

2. Leg raises

This is another form of assisted exercise, where you can ask your parents to sit on the edge of the sofa or a chair, with a straight spine, thighs parallel to the ground, and feet firmly placed. Now, raise your legs in the air, parallel to the ground, and repeat the motion for each leg.

3. Calf raises

To do this exercise, stand in front of an armchair, and using it for balance, do the calf raises by lifting your heel off the ground and balancing your body on your toes. You feel the pull in your calves. Keep your spine straight for the routine.

4. Feet raises

Sit on a chair or a sofa. Now, while keeping your spine straight, raise your toes off the ground with your heels placed on the floor.

Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.

This report is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | Donald Trump’s ‘presidential walk of fame’ traded a Biden photo for a pic of the autopen
Celebrity News

bitchy | Donald Trump’s ‘presidential walk of fame’ traded a Biden photo for a pic of the autopen

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Things that genuinely happened this week: Donald Trump could not pronounce “acetaminophen,” the drug he was making wildly false claims about in a White House press conference; Trump’s teleprompter malfunctioned in the middle of his United Nations speech, so he ranted incoherently and told other countries that they’re all going to hell; Trump lied about ending seven wars and he furiously lied about the Trump recession, which is already here; he threatened to deport highly-skilled immigrants working legally in the US on H-1B visas; he threw a tantrum when the UN escalator was turned off and he had to walk up one flight of stairs; he had a statue of himself and Jeffrey Epstein removed from outside the White House; he threw an unhinged tantrum about Jimmy Kimmel’s lifted suspension and openly threatened Kimmel and Disney. And I’m not even mentioning like twenty other ridiculous, demented and catastrophic things connected to Trump just this week.

Well, most normal people would look at a list like that and say “this man is profoundly unwell, we need to put him in some kind of nursing home where he can rant at the television all day.” Trump’s staffers never feel that way though, they continue to humor this despicable and ancient felon. Speaking of, White House staffer (“Special Assistant to the President”) Margo Martin tweeted this video on Wednesday, of the White House’s newly installed Presidential Walk of Fame. It’s an outdoor (???) photo exhibit of past presidents. Instead of including a photo of Joe Biden, Trump and his people used a photo of the autopen.

The Presidential Walk of Fame has arrived on the West Wing Colonnade

Wait for it… 🖊️👀 pic.twitter.com/ApWfdxfFQa

— Margo Martin (@MargoMartin47) September 24, 2025

Again, Donald Trump panic-filled his diaper because he had to walk up a flight of stairs just 24 hours before this video was posted. He ranted about a broken teleprompter and an escalator which was turned off by someone on his own staff. That’s the guy mocking Joe Biden’s presidential capabilities.

👀 https://t.co/jE2Vm7UdjL pic.twitter.com/CJ3yQBtPGQ

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) September 24, 2025

Photos courtesy of Backgrid.

New York, NY U.S. President Donald J. Trump delivered a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, addressing global leaders on key international issues.

Pictured: Donald Trump

BACKGRID USA 23 SEPTEMBER 2025

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New York, NY U.S. President Donald J. Trump delivered a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, addressing global leaders on key international issues.

Pictured: Donald Trump

BACKGRID USA 23 SEPTEMBER 2025

BYLINE MUST READ: MediaPunch / BACKGRID

USA: +1 310 798 9111 / [email protected]

UK: +44 208 344 2007 / [email protected]

*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
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Washington, DC Views of a statue of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein holding hands seen at The National Mall in Washington, D.C.. The statue appeared early Tuesday morning in honor of Friendship Month and will be displayed until Saturday as per a spokesperson for The Secret Handshake.

Pictured: Donald Trump, Jeffrey Epstein

BACKGRID USA 23 SEPTEMBER 2025

BYLINE MUST READ: MediaPunch / BACKGRID

USA: +1 310 798 9111 / [email protected]

UK: +44 208 344 2007 / [email protected]

*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
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Washington, WA United States President Donald J Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk across the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, after landing aboard Marine One on 23 September 2025. President Trump is returning to the White House after attending the United Nations General Assembly in New York, New York.

Pictured: Donald Trump and Melania Trump

BACKGRID USA 23 SEPTEMBER 2025

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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'The Long Walk' Ending and More Explained: JT Mollner Unpacks Movie
TV & Streaming

‘The Long Walk’ Ending and More Explained: JT Mollner Unpacks Movie

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

I’ve been pursuing an interview with JT Mollner ever since “Strange Darling” became one of my favorite movies last year — but it took the divisive screenwriter’s history-making adaptation of “The Long Walk” for Lionsgate to finally get him on Zoom. 

“You requested a ‘Strange Darling‘ conversation, and I didn’t do it. I’ve always felt bad for not doing it. But it was because at the time, there were so many things I didn’t want to explain to people, and you were going to ask me about exactly those things,” Mollner said.

Also known for 2016’s “Angels and Outlaws,” Mollner became a major name in suspense thanks to Magenta Light Studio’s demonic date night starring Willa Fitzgerald and Kyle Gallner. With Giovanni Ribisi as his cinematographer, Mollner’s jaw-dropping psychological horror movie was buzzy out of its 2023 premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas — but it hit controversy going wide the next year. (Spoiler alert for that movie, too: “Strange Darling” got a bad reputation among some female genre fans thanks to its venomous antagonist, an emotionally war-torn woman drunk on her own trauma, who most controversially implies a false rape allegation to get away with murder.)

LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 20: Mike Figgis attends the premiere of his new film 'Megadoc,' the fly-on-the-wall documentary about the making of Francis Ford Coppola's Megalopolis, at Regent Street Cinema on March 20, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images for TANK Magazine)

“I was exhausted at the time with people misinterpreting what I was doing, and I didn’t want to get caught up in the minutiae of being defensive or over-explaining it,” said Mollner. “I made a decision to just step away.” He went on to describe a Q&A in 2018 for an unnamed film that disillusioned him with the idea of directors dissecting their own work. As a filmmaker himself, but not steering the ship here, Mollner made a special effort to support the vision of “The Long Walk” director Francis Lawrence.

“I had to get really zen about this,” Mollner said. “I knew that I was a piece of this puzzle, and I knew I was just a part of the tapestry, and that I was going to be able to contribute the source material for him to go but then watch him do his thing.” 

Now in theaters, the critically acclaimed film has been widely praised for its script, which sees Mollner adapt the supposedly “unadaptable” early novel written by Stephen King when he was just 19. The story — about a government-facilitated endurance test that sends innocent boys marching to their deaths —was published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman in 1979, more than a decade after King conceived it. As an adaptation, “The Long Walk” has only been toyed with until now.

“When I found out that George Romero and Frank Darabont had both attempted to make this movie, two of my very favorite directors, and I don’t think anybody’s ever been as good as Frank Darabont at adapting Stephen King, I was like, if neither one of these heroes of mine were able to get this done, what makes me think we can?” said Mollner. 

A mass casualty event set in a dystopian America seems like it should be more controversial than a cat-and-mouse game starring one of the most complex sadomasochists ever written, which is “Strange Darling.” But when Mollner and I finally spoke, the “Strange Darling” director brought up the earlier backlash he faced before I did. I’ve never had a problem with the gender politics of “Strange Darling”, and I didn’t waste anyone’s time asking about that nightmare here. Still, my overdue chat with Mollner explains why some writers — and King fans — understand each other better than others. 

The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Tut Nyuot as Baker, Ben Wang as Olson, Jordan Gonzalez as Harkness, Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Joshua Odjick as Parker, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close
‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

IndieWire: Let’s start with your history with Stephen King and the Richard Bachman novels. What’s your experience with him as an author? 

JT Mollner: The first novel I ever read was a Stephen King book. It’s hard to believe, but I was 7 years old and it was “Carrie.” I was aware of Stephen King, even as a little kid, because I remember at five or six seeing a copy of “Cujo” on my mom’s dresser, and asking her about it. The cover was very striking to me, and I was always fascinated by scary things. I did not read “Cujo.” I was too young. I couldn’t really read at that point, but I was fascinated by it, and I’ll never forget seeing it.

Then, when I went on a trip to L.A. when I was a kid — we’d been living in Vegas — and we went to this bookstore called Bart’s Books in Ojai, and I saw a copy of “Carrie.” I was in second grade, and I was with my aunt. We bought it for a buck, and I took it to school, and I started reading through. I didn’t understand a lot of it. “Carrie” has a lot of very, very adult themes, but I eventually made it through the book.

I’ll never forget, I got sent to the principal’s office because I had this obscenity on my desk, this Stephen King novel, which was for adults. My mom had to come to school, and I remember her telling the principal, “I don’t let my kid watch rated-R movies or anything like that, but I’m never going to tell him not to read.” 

From that point on, I just remember being a constant Stephen King reader. I am to this day. He is so prolific every year in September, usually, because his birthday is September 21. But I share a birthday with him … I don’t know if that has something to do with why I was so drawn to him — or shared some of that artistic DNA? Almost every year, for the last 20 years or so, every September, I usually have a pre-order of one of his books, and it’s a yearly tradition.

Cooper Hoffman as Garraty and David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close
‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

He’s informed so much of my writing, my writing style, my desire to be a writer. I’m really big on original stories, and I have too many original ideas to ever make them. I’m not really obsessed with finding IP to adapt. It’s not like something I need to do. But I always knew that I wanted to adapt Stephen King. So, when [producer] Roy Lee called me and asked me if I wanted to adapt “The Long Walk” for Francis Lawrence, I was all about it, and I fought really hard to get the job.

Were you already familiar with “The Long Walk” and Richard Bachman? People have talked about this being unadaptable. You had a hell of a challenge. 

I’d read the book as a teenager. I read “Carrie,” and then after that I read “The Shining,” and I read “The Stand,” “The Dark Tower” series. Then, I was probably 16, so the age of the walkers in the book when I read “The Long Walk,” and it always stuck with me. 

Over the years, I wasn’t keeping up with the trades or anything, back when a lot of these other directors were trying to make the movie. So I wasn’t aware then. That was all very daunting at first, and it is challenging material to adapt. But I think Romero or Darabont could have probably done it. 

There was another script that was supposed to get made by somebody else shortly before I did, and I think there was a timing thing going on with that as well. It was a challenge to make “The Long Walk,” but also all the elements have to come together for a movie to come together, and the studio has to be ready to green-light it. With our situation, it was just very, very fast. The only thing that slowed us down was the writers’ strike, but once the writers’ strike was over, it never stopped. We were just right into production.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 08: (L-R) Roy Lee and J.T. Mollner attend “The Long Walk” Special Screening at American Cinematheque's Beyond Fest at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on September 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for Lionsgate)
Roy Lee and JT Mollner attend ‘The Long Walk’ special screening in Los AngelesGetty Images for Lionsgate

People will make the thematic connection and say Francis is a perfect fit because of “The Hunger Games,” but you make it a digestible, directable challenge for him. How did you approach simplifying the story as a filmmaker yourself?

I am a director, and directors are control freaks. Not all directors maybe, but the type of director I am — I’m a control freak. I love to collaborate with department heads and actors, but I also have a very, very strong point of view as a director. When I was writing this, I started envisioning things a certain way, and then I had to get really zen about it. 

Because I thought, “Francis Lawrence is such an accomplished director. He’s made so many great movies. He’s a very different director than I am, so this isn’t going to be my movie. It’s going to be his movie.” I knew he was going to make a good movie, but I wasn’t sure if it would be my kind of movie.

Director Francis Lawrence, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, and David Jonsson as McVries in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Director Francis Lawrence and stars Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson on set for ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

I had ideas as I was writing the script, and I was fully expecting Francis to shoot things down or be like, “This is how I want this. This is how I want that.” But the beautiful thing about working with Francis was that he was very open-minded and he had no problem telling me if there was something I wanted to do that he didn’t like. That happened a couple times, and I was fine with it because once again, it’s a Francis Lawrence movie. But there were other times when I would come up with some crazy new idea, and I was like, “I wonder what Francis is going to think.” And he really got on board. 

Talk to me about some of the changes you made to adapt the book.

It was daunting because there were a hundred walkers, and there are so many things going on in the book that are so interesting for a 400-plus page novel. A lot of people mistakenly say this is a novella, or they remember it as a short story, but it’s a full-on novel. In the book, I think that Garraty [Cooper Hoffman] and McVries [David Jonsson] become the focus, but it spends a lot of time on all the characters. To make this palatable, digestible, and also cinematic in a way that would work in the under two-hour format, we had to figure out something else because I couldn’t include everything.

We reduced the character count to 50. Stephen King and Francis were really cool with that. Then, I just thought, “I want to really get into all these characters, but we’re going to have to eliminate some, and we’re going to have to amalgamate some.” Most stories are interesting to me, and I’ve never really written anything for the screen that hasn’t been a love story. So I thought, “What’s the love story here?” I decided to really focus on the relationship [between] McVries and Garraty. So it turns out to be their love story. These two guys who really are drawn to each other, who really inspire each other, and who bring out the best in each other.

With the change to the ending, that’s consistent with the DNA of King’s story. I hate the word “message,” but it’s true to his observations about the world. It was also the best way for me to articulate this love between these two characters, and thank God that Francis and Stephen King both were up for that.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 08: (L-R) Chris Lemaire, J.T. Mollner, Roy Lee, Charlie Plummer, Garrett Wareing, Ben Wang, Judy Greer, David Jonsson, Cooper Hoffman, and Mark Hamill speak onstage during “The Long Walk” Special Screening at American Cinematheque's Beyond Fest at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on September 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for Lionsgate)
The premiere of ‘The Long Walk’ for LionsgateGetty Images for Lionsgate

You have an incredible partnership with Francis, but you also collaborated with Stephen King as a writer, on a project where you’re suggesting massive alterations to Stephen King’s work — to him. How did you meet him, and how did you not crack under the pressure?

You meet so many people when you start working in this business. With some people, you get starstruck and weird — and I respect a lot of people, but I’m not impressed or intimidated by a lot of people. He’s one of the people I’m impressed and intimidated by. [Laughs] So I’ve been terrified to meet him. Stephen King is one of those living iconic legends, so I was very nervous about what he would think. I really wanted to honor Stephen King, and I wanted to make sure that he was OK with everything. 

I had not directly interacted with him until about a month ago. During the entire writing process, even though he was a big part of the collaboration, there was never direct contact. It’s not that he doesn’t allow it or something. It just wasn’t that way. I have this feeling that he wants approval over everything because he really cares, but once he approves certain people, he also knows what it’s like to direct a movie. He directed “Maximum Overdrive.” He knows what it’s like to work on a movie. He’s acted in movies. He seems very respectful of [directors going] through an artistic process — the writer’s process. He could be totally precious and totally micromanaging, but he chooses not to be. 

Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Garrett Wareing as Stebbins, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries, Tut Nyuot as Baker, and Joshua Odjick as Parker in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
A scene from ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

We wanted to make sure he approved of big things, like that major, narrative, tectonic change in the ending. But we did not ask him to approve other, more peripheral things, like us eliminating a character or amalgamating a character into another. We didn’t ask about that. I would just write it. Then, we’d send him a draft and he’d either give a thumbs up or a thumbs down.

I thought we were going to wait a long time for him to read it, but I remember sending in the draft to the studio and them saying they wanted to do it, and then on Friday they sent it to Stephen King, and then they heard back on Sunday that he liked it — which is really weird and unheard of. But I think he read it over the course of a day and a half and said he liked it.

Charlie Plummer as Barkovitch, Garrett Wareing as Stebbins, Cooper Hoffman as Garraty, David Jonsson as McVries, Ben Wang as Olson, Tut Nyuot as Baker, and Joshua Odjick as Parker in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
A scene from ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

In changing “The Long Walk,” people are going to come to it with their own interpretation as to why you made the choice you did. Do you pitch an explanation to Stephen King? Do you care about what that explanation is?

I wonder if I’ll be able to stick to this throughout my career, but especially as a director, I mean as a writer, I don’t feel like I have the right to explain during a Q&A or anything what it’s supposed to mean. That’s up to Francis.

I won’t say who the filmmaker was, but I remember one of my favorite movies of 2018 — a very controversial movie, one of my favorite directors — was open to so much interpretation. There was so much metaphor in the movie. It was so crazy, and it was a wild film, and all these people were interpreting it differently. I remember going to a screening, and the director was doing a Q&A, and I was so excited. He proceeded to spend 40 minutes explaining to the audience exactly what each thing meant and what each metaphor was, and it just ruined the movie for me, even though I had guessed most of his intentions.

STRANGE DARLING, Willa Fitzgerald, 2023. ph: Allyson Riggs / © Magenta Light Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection
Willa Fitzgerald as The Lady in ‘Strange Darling’ (2024)Courtesy Everett Collection

I remember someone saying to David Lynch once, something like, “What’s it mean? What’s the ending mean? I don’t understand.” And he was like, “The movie’s not meant to be understood. It’s meant to be felt.” I love it that people get different things from that. Everybody interprets things differently, and I think that’s what art is. Experiencing a movie or a painting or a book or poetry … should come down to, “What do they see in it?” But there are always intentions.

Here, I see [“The Long Walk”] as a tragedy because I believe a lot of the things that Pete’s saying during his monologues as he’s walking. I don’t think that violence is ever the answer. Violence begets more violence, and it’s a real tragedy if people succumb to their base instincts. The initial idea in this, all the sequence of events that happen in the last five minutes of the movie, was to have this mixture around that relationship, that central love story.

You get to see what people are willing to do for each other. We get to articulate loyalty and sacrifice and love. Then you see how sometimes love can drive you to the darkest places, even though the intention is good. It is really tragic to go to those dark places sometimes, and there’s a lot of that. It’s what I’m interested in exploring, and I explored it in “Strange Darling,” and I explored it in “Outlaws and Angels,” my first film. I don’t like this idea of vengeance being romanticized. There’s a real darkness surrounding that and a real tragedy surrounding that.

I would say there’s a clear message about authoritarianism in this book — and these ideologies have many, many faces and the people who are representing them. It doesn’t kill the ideology to go after those people. 

There’s something much bigger at play here, especially with The Major character [played by Mark Hamill]. We wanted him to represent something. He’s more of a construct, even though Mark Hamill does a great job fleshing him out, and there’s even dark comedic moments with him. He’s the least nuanced character in the movie and the book because he represents something. But we really wanted to know that group of walkers. We didn’t want there to be white hats and black hats, and good guys and bad guys, even though it seems like there are in the beginning. We wanted everybody to realize at some point that the enemy is on the outside.

Mark Hamil as The Major in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Mark Hamill as The Major in ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

King has described this as his bleakest novel, and he’s often talked about Bachman being this much angrier younger version of himself. I talked to Judy Greer about this, but there is a real hopeful core to the change that you’ve made to the ending. This ending is, in many ways, more true to the Stephen King we know now.

With this movie, I’ve read a few of the reviews. I used to tell myself I wouldn’t do that, but people have sent me some. There’s a few that are like, “This is so bleak and horrific,” and I just feel like everything’s relative. I feel like the movie’s very sentimental, and more so than I’m usually comfortable with. It’s weird. I really felt like I was drawn to this, even though there’s people getting killed all through it, and it couldn’t be much worse in the world than it is in this book.

You could work all your life to get all this money, and on one level, the Scrooge story comes to mind when I think of the themes in “The Long Walk,” because if you get to the end and you win and you get the prize and you get all the money, it’s getting to the end of life and focusing only on that and not having any relationships. It’s the relationships that mattered. That’s very universal and very accessible.

I don’t think Stephen King needed this to feel true to his alter ego sensibility, and I wasn’t really thinking about that. I feel like the Bachman thing now is just, it had a different meeting back then than it does now, and we really wanted it to feel like Stephen King country.

Judy Greer as Ginny Garraty in The Long Walk. Photo Credit: Murray Close/Lionsgate
Judy Greer as Ginnie Garraty in ‘The Long Walk’Murray Close/Lionsgate

You gave Ray’s mom a name, and she doesn’t have one in the novel. Ginnie is your mom’s name, right?

It’s funny. In the initial draft, her name was just Mrs. Garraty, and she appears here and there, and she is literally called “Mrs. Garraty” in the script. Then Judy Greer got the role, which I was really excited about, and I hadn’t met Judy yet, but Francis called me during their first meeting. And she said, “Can you give me a name? I need to have a name.” That’s something actors ask for a lot, and I should have anticipated that here because she’s a very pivotal character, even though she’s not in a lot of the movie.

So he said, “Of course, she can have a name.” And Francis has this really cool style where he lets his actors know what the character is, and then he says, “Go and pick your wardrobe,” or “Go and pick this and this.” There is a world in which Francis may have said to an actor, using that directorial style, “What name do you think you should have?” But he didn’t. He came to me, and I was like, “Oh, I can do that!” I ran away before we could talk much more about it. I knew what I wanted to do.

My mom’s name is spelled G-I-N-N-I-E, which is not common. People always mistake her. They always say “Jenny” or “Jeanie.” They always get her name wrong, and she has to explain it. So that ended up in there. There’s a scene in the movie where he has to explain how his mom’s name is spelled, and I got to sit in the premiere with my mom next to me as she was watching that scene. It was a surprise, and it was really cool. I’m very close with my mom and my dad.

Well, she was defending you for reading Stephen King in class! 

Yes, exactly.

“The Long Walk” is now in theaters.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Fitness coach says 'walk like your life depends on it’, shares 10 rules to melt belly fat and get lean by New Year
Lifestyle

Fitness coach says ‘walk like your life depends on it’, shares 10 rules to melt belly fat and get lean by New Year

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

From late-night snacking to lack of exercise, belly fat builds up faster than we realise. If you’ve been struggling to tone your midsection, fitness coach Dan Go shares in his September 14 Instagram post 10 simple yet powerful tips to help you get back in shape by the New Year.

Check out 10 simple tips to reduce belly fat and improve health by year-end. (Freepik)

If you want to get rid of your belly fat by the end of the year, ‘copy this,’ wrote Dan.

Here are his 10 recommendations to help you get there:

1. Stop drinking alcohol

Alcohol disrupts hormones that regulate appetite, hunger, and stress. It’s also packed with empty calories, which makes it easier to gain belly fat. Want a slimmer waistline? Cut out alcohol.

2. Match carbs to your activity level

Carbohydrates are your body’s fuel. If you’re mostly sedentary, eat fewer carbs. If you’re active, eat more. Think of carbs as energy tools, use them to fit your lifestyle.

3. Follow the Lean Body Water System

Drink water when you wake up. Drink water before and after meals, but not while eating. Replace snacks with water between meals. Staying hydrated helps you feel fuller and prevents overeating.

4. Eat a protein-rich, nutrient-dense diet

Aim for 0.8–1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. Get 90% of your calories from whole, unprocessed foods. Protein keeps you full, while fibre-rich foods help control appetite.

5. Build muscle in the gym

Cardio burns fewer calories than most people think. Weight training builds muscle, boosts metabolism, and helps you burn fat even at rest. Want lasting fat loss? Prioritise strength training.

6. Manage stress

High stress increases cortisol, which drives appetite and belly fat storage. Beat stress by walking, practising mindfulness, or spending time in nature. Remember: recovery matters.

7. Prioritise quality sleep

Poor sleep increases appetite, lowers energy, and spikes hunger. Research shows sleeping less than 5.5 hours can lead to eating 385+ extra calories daily. For a slimmer belly, sleep better.

8. Do sprints or HIIT once a week

Sprinting and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) fire up metabolism, boost fat burning, and keep calories burning long after your workout. They’re especially effective for abdominal fat.

9. Avoid trans fats

Trans fats fuel inflammation, insulin resistance, and belly fat gain. They’re often hidden in margarine, chips, and fried foods. Always read labels and cut them out.

10. Walk like your life depends on it

Brisk walking burns calories, improves insulin sensitivity, lowers stress, and promotes steady fat loss. It’s simple, low-impact, and one of the best long-term habits for shrinking belly fat.

“Having too much belly fat is ugly, messes with our hormones, shrinks the brain, and can lead to decreased lifespan. Follow these 10 rules and watch that belly fat disappear,” concludes Dan.

Note to readers: This report is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.

This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice.

September 15, 2025 0 comments
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