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101-year-old man who survived coma, heart attack, fought in World War II shares 7 habits that contributed to long life
Lifestyle

101-year-old man who survived coma, heart attack, fought in World War II shares 7 habits that contributed to long life

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

American centenarian Si Liberman, 101, has shared his seven ‘longevity tips’, drawing from his remarkable life experiences, including surviving a coma, the Great Depression, a heart attack, and enemy fire over Nazi Germany in World War II. In an October 13 piece he wrote for The Washington Post, Si, shared seven hard-earned tips he picked up along the way that contributed to his long life. Also read | Nutritionist shares 5 Japanese habits Indians can adopt for long and healthy life

Si Liberman, 101, attributes his longevity partly to not smoking, a habit prevalent among his peers when he was young.

He wrote in the article titled, ‘I’m 101 years old: Here are 7 things I think are ‘longevity secrets’:

1. Focus on relationships

“I’ve been very lucky. I’ve been married for 76 years to my wife, Dorothy, 97. We have two terrific children who we’re very close to, and two grandchildren who always keep in touch,” Si said.

2. Don’t smoke

He added, “Most everyone smoked when I was young, but I didn’t. When I started dating my wife, she was smoking now and again, but I got her to quit.”

3. Exercise and eat healthy

“We’ve always tried to eat healthy. I have fruit for breakfast and eat a lot of fish. After moving to Florida 14 years ago, my routine has included walking on the beach followed by swimming in our building’s pool,” Si said.

4. Have a positive attitude

“Despite having to get through some dark days, I’ve never been down for very long. If I have a cold, I think it will be better soon. If I’m going through a rough time, I think I just have to live through it and things will look up. I think attitude is highly underrated and can’t be underestimated,” Si added.

5. Get appropriate medical care

He also said, “I’ve benefited from the scientific progress we’ve made in treating health conditions and what I would call the miracles of modern medicine. We’ve always been careful and had routine appointments with doctors.”

6. Do work you find meaningful

Si said, “When I was working, I was editor of the Asbury Park Sunday Press, a privately owned paper. It was a challenging and rewarding job as a journalist for more than 40 years. And I still do a little writing to keep busy.”

7. Be a little lucky

He concluded, “I believe I’ve been a lucky guy in a 79-year relationship with my wife. Though she’s had some memory problems since falling several times, she always remembers to exchange kisses before we go to sleep at night. Living with someone you care about, who also cares about you, really helps.”

At 101, Si Liberman reveals his top 7 longevity secrets. (Made using Grok AI)
At 101, Si Liberman reveals his top 7 longevity secrets. (Made using Grok AI)

Bryan Johnson, a tech entrepreneur-turned-longevity enthusiast, avoids three habits to stay healthy and live longer. Click here to know what those are.

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.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Farhana Bhatt And Shehbaz Badeshah's 'Chamchi Chamchi' War Goes Viral, Kunickaa Sits On Table Shouting At Housemates
Bollywood

Farhana Bhatt And Shehbaz Badeshah’s ‘Chamchi Chamchi’ War Goes Viral, Kunickaa Sits On Table Shouting At Housemates

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Get ready for high-voltage drama on Bigg Boss 19 this Monday! The latest promo promises a fiery showdown between contestants Farhana Bhatt and Shehbaz Badeshah, and it’s already creating waves online. The clash began after Shehbaz called Farhana a “chamchi” of fellow housemate Nehal Chudasama during the recent Weekend Ka Vaar episode. His comment didn’t sit well with Farhana, and in the upcoming episode, she confronts him head-on.

Farhana Bhatt

Clash Between Farhana Bhatt And Shehbaz

In the now-viral promo, Farhana is seen confronting Shehbaz over his remarks. “You were following Malti around like a tail-ender, that’s nothing!” she fires back. The heated exchange quickly grabs the attention of other housemates. Neelam Giri joins the argument, saying, “Shehbaz, my brother is in danger,” as tensions rise. She and Shehbaz begin taunting Farhana, repeatedly calling her chamchi chamchi escalating the situation further.


Shehbaaz

Also Read: Bobby Deol Unleashes Fiery Look as a Villainous Professor in New Posteroof His Upcoming Project, Fans Go Wild!

Kunicka Sadanand attempts to intervene and calm things down, but in true Bigg Boss fashion, chaos takes over. At one point, Kunicka even climbs onto a table in an attempt to defuse the tension. Farhana slams Shehbaz, saying, “You’ve fallen so low, so mean.” In response, Shehbaz lies down dramatically on the floor, prompting singer Amaal Malik to burst into laughter.

Shehbaaz

The promo ends on a wild note, with housemates shocked and amused in equal measure. The last Weekend Ka Vaar episode featured celebrity guests Jamie Lever and Ravi Gupta, who brought laughter to the house with their comic acts. However, the fun ended with the eviction of Zeeshan Qadri, who was voted out by the audience. The contestants who survived this week’s elimination in the Bigg Boss house include Praneet More, Mridul Tiwari, Neelam Giri, Ashnoor Kaur, and Baseer Ali.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Post-Civil War Assassin's Creed Game Was Canceled for Being "Too Political": Report
Music

Post-Civil War Assassin’s Creed Game Was Canceled for Being “Too Political”: Report

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Following reports last July that Ubisoft had canceled an upcoming Assassin’s Creed game, industry insider Stephen Totilo has revealed details of the shelved project.

According to his Game Files newsletter, the title was set in the post-Civil War Reconstruction era. It was reportedly scrapped due to concerns over the political climate in the United States and online backlash to a Black samurai protagonist in the upcoming Assassin’s Creed Shadows.

The canceled project, which was in development at Ubisoft Quebec, would have reportedly featured a formerly enslaved Black man recruited by the Brotherhood of Assassins after moving West “to start a new life.” His return to the South would have involved a “fight for justice in a conflict that would, among other things, see him confront the emergence of the Ku Klux Klan.”

“Too political in a country too unstable, to make it short,” one of Totilo’s sources said of the decision.

The timing of this cancellation was well before Donald Trump’s election to a second term, but it may have occurred around the time of the first assassination attempt against the sitting US president.

Related Video

For context, when Ubisoft released a trailer for Assassin’s Creed Shadows in May 2024, some fans, conservative critics, and Elon Musk himself unfairly labeled the game as “woke.” The criticism centered around the character Yasuke, who was based on a real-life African slave brought to Japan by Jesuit missionaries.

Thomas Lockley, a professor and author of African Samurai: The True Story of Yasuke, pushed back against the criticism. “There’s no piece of paper that says Yasuke was a samurai,” he told The Japan Times. “But then there’s no piece of paper that says anybody else was a samurai.”

Despite the backlash, Shadows surpassed five million players by July 2025 — just three months after its release.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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‘Everything seemed so perfect’: Hrithik Roshan reacts to War 2 for the first time since its box office underperformance
Bollywood

‘Everything seemed so perfect’: Hrithik Roshan reacts to War 2 for the first time since its box office underperformance

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Oct 03, 2025 09:48 pm IST

Hrithik Roshan has penned a note on War 2 and returning to play Kabir after the film released during Independence Day and underperformed at the box office.

Expectations were sky high for Hrithik Roshan and Jr NTR’s War 2, which was released in theatres during the Independence Day window. The action thriller opened to mostly mixed reviews and underperformed at the box office. On Friday, more than a month since the film’s release, Hrithik has opened up about playing Kabir in the action thriller, hinting at the film’s box office performance. (Also read: ₹300 crore, analysing its box office performance”>Is War 2 a hit or flop? As Hrithik Roshan, Jr NTR spy thriller crosses ₹300 crore, analysing its box office performance)

Hrithik Roshan shared new BTS stills from the shoot of War 2.

Hrithik pens a note on War 2

Sharing BTS stills of the film during the shoot, Hrithik penned a long note on the process of taking on the sequel and said in the caption, “Playing kabir was so much fun. So relaxed , knew him so well. It was going to be easy. Finally a movie I could do like so many others do, keep it simple , play the actor, do your job and come home. And it was exactly that. I was taken care of so well by my director Ayaan. It was such a pleasure to have his energy on set.”

He added, “Everything seemed so perfect. Like it’s meant to be. A sure shot. No worries , just needed to do my job right. Which Ofcourse I did. But something was lurking behind that presumptuous certainty. A voice that I kept shutting out..”This is too easy … I know this too well.” And another that said “I deserve it , every film doesn’t have to be a torture and trauma and an incessant search for the truth of the moment.””Just relax.””

About War 2

Helmed by Ayan Mukerji, the film is the sixth instalment in the YRF Spy Universe after Ek Tha Tiger, Tiger Zinda Hai, War, Pathaan, and Tiger 3. Apart from Hrithik Roshan and Jr NTR, the film also stars Ashutosh Rana and Kiara Advani in key roles. The film opened to mixed-to-negative reviews from critics, with many criticising its dull writing and poor VFX.

Sources reported that War 2 has a landing cost of ₹400 crore for Yash Raj Studios. This includes the production budget and marketing costs. The film managed to collect slightly above ₹ 235 crore in India.

News / Entertainment / Bollywood / ‘Everything seemed so perfect’: Hrithik Roshan reacts to War 2 for the first time since its box office underperformance

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Kantara Chapter 1 advance booking touches ₹5 crore three days before release; Rishab Shetty film outpaces OG, War 2, KGF
Bollywood

Kantara Chapter 1 advance booking touches ₹5 crore three days before release; Rishab Shetty film outpaces OG, War 2, KGF

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

₹5 crore three days before release; Rishab Shetty film outpaces OG, War 2, KGF”>

₹5 crore three days before release; Rishab Shetty film outpaces OG, War 2, KGF”>

Updated on: Sept 29, 2025 04:29 pm IST

Kantara Chapter 1 advance booking is going at a breakneck pace, indicating a bumper opening for the Rishab Shetty-starrer prequel.

Rishab Shetty’s heavily anticipated film, Kantara Chapter 1, is releasing in theatres this Thursday (October 2) on the occasion of Dussehra. The film is a prequel to Kantara, the 2021 blockbuster, and hence, carries a lot of buzz. The original film was a huge hit not just in Karnataka, but in north India as well. And the prequel seems to be going even bigger.

Rishab Shetty plays the lead in and directs Kantara Chapter 1, a prequel to the 2022 film Kantara.

Kantara Chapter 1 advance booking

The advance booking for Kantara Chapter 1 opened on Sunday, four days before the film’s release. In a little over 24 hours, the pre-sales for day 1 have touched ₹5.7 crore gross, selling 1.7 lakh tickets already. This breakneck pace of ticket sales has already ensured that Kantara Chapter 1 will have a bigger opening than Kantara, which opened at just ₹2 crore in India back in 2022.

It’s still three days to go for the release of Kantara: Chapter 1, and the film is already outpacing the advance booking collections of recent big releases like Pawan Kalyan’s OG and Hrithik Roshan and Jr NTR’s War 2. Neither of these films had touched ₹5 crore in advance bookings three days before the release. Kantara: Chapter 1 is also outperforming Yash’s KGF: Chapter 1 in pre-sales. The 2019 film was the highest-grossing Kannada film for three years, and the first from the language to cross ₹250 crore worldwide gross.

Kantara Chapter 1 should look to not just surpass but comfortably beat the ₹400-crore gross of the first Kantara, given its hype and scale. And it has taken a good start in that direction with healthy advance bookings. So far, the bulk of the sales have been in Kannada, but as more screens open up in the Hindi belt over Monday and Tuesday, the numbers should pick up. As of now, Kantara Chapter 1 has earned ₹36 lakh in advance bookings in Hindi, and just over ₹5 lakh in Telugu, Tamil, and Malayalam combined. The rest of the collections have come in the original Kannada version.

All about Kantara Chapter 1

Written and directed by Rishab Shetty, Kantara Chapter 1 explores the origins of the mythology and story told in Kantara. Set ten centuries before the original film, Chapter 1 stars Rishab Shetty, but in a different role this time. Joining him in the cast are Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, and Gulshan Devaiah. The film releases across India on 2 October.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Evil Na'vi Origins Revealed, War on Sully
TV & Streaming

Evil Na’vi Origins Revealed, War on Sully

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

20th Century Studios has released a new trailer for “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” the third film in James Cameron‘s “Avatar” series, which is set to release on Dec. 19. The trailer shows the return of Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his family, this time at war with an enemy Na’vi tribe on Pandora.

Alongside Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang, Kate Winslet, Bailey Bass, Britain Dalton, Trinity Bliss, Jack Champion and Edie Falco are among the returning cast members. Meanwhile, Michelle Yeoh, Oona Chaplin and David Thewlis will make their debut in the series as new characters.

The first “Avatar” released in 2009 and became the highest grossing film of all time at the worldwide box office. It still holds that record, with a lifetime gross of over $2.9 billion. It’s sequel, “Avatar: The Way of the Water,” came out over a decade later in 2022 and grossed $2.3 billion at the box office, surpassing Cameron’s own “Titanic” as the third highest grossing film of all time. The two “Avatar” titles’ performances are only split by “Avengers: Endgame,” which grossed $2.7 billion in 2019.

Documentaries aside, the “Avatar” movies have been Cameron’s only directorial features of the 21st century. Cameron began developing “Avatar” in the 1990s, but it took over a decade for technology to catch up with the concept. The films’ special effects are handled by Weta Workshop and showcase pioneering filmmaking technology in motion capture and CGI.

A fourth “Avatar” movie is already expected to release in 2029, and a fifth in 2031.

Watch the trailer below.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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alia bhatt reveals ranbir kapoor and vicky kaushal were her dream cast
Bollywood

Alia Bhatt Reveals Her Bollywood Dream Cast For Zendaya’s Challengers Will Be Hubby Ranbir Kapoor, Love & War Co-Star Vicky Kaushal

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s upcoming epic saga Love & War is undoubtedly one of the most anticipated films. Bringing together three immensely talented superstars, Ranbir Kapoor, Vicky Kaushal, and Alia Bhatt, for the first time, it promises to be a one-of-a-kind cinematic spectacle. While excitement for the film is at its peak, Alia Bhatt was recently seen revealing Ranbir Kapoor and Vicky Kaushal as her dream cast.

Alia Bhatt Reveals Her Dream Cast Will Be Ranbir Kapoor, Vicky Kaushal

When asked about her dream cast for Challengers, Alia replied, “Ranbir Kapoor and Vicky Kaushal because we are doing Love & War already.” This indeed speaks volumes about the chemistry we can expect to witness in the film, something that is already being cherished among the actors.

The anticipation builds for SLB’s next LOVE & WAR. It’s thrilling to look forward to the monumental collaboration of Sanjay Leela Bhansali and the talented trio of Ranbir Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, and Vicky Kaushal on the big screen in the film. The film will be released on March 20, 2026.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Alia Bhatt Celebrates Bestie Akansha Ranjan Kapoor’s Birthday Bash In Alibaug; Poolside Fun Goes VIRAL- See Pics

Akankshya Mukherjee

Akankshya Mukherjee is a dynamic and ambitious individual poised to make waves in the realm of Media and Communication. With a passion for creativity and a drive to contribute to forward-thinking organizations, Akankshya embodies adaptability and a hunger for learning. Having already garnered experience through involvement in various organizations, she has honed the skill of quickly adapting to new environments and challenges. She sees each opportunity as a chance for personal and professional growth, eagerly embracing roles in communications and content writing.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Agnostic Front Announce New Album Echoes in Eternity, Unleash Single "Way of War"
Music

Agnostic Front Announce New Album Echoes in Eternity, Unleash Single “Way of War”

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

New York hardcore legends Agnostic Front have announced their 13th studio album, Echoes in Eternity, arriving November 7th via Reigning Phoenix Music. The band also served up the single “Way of War,” a two-minute beatdown of crossover thrash.

This is Agnostic Front at their most metallic — more thrash than punk — with the band dishing out galloping riffs and breakneck grooves to compliment the barks of frontman Roger Miret. His grim lyrics are presented without obfuscation.

Get Agnostic Front Tickets Here

“The track is very much a sign of the times!” declared the band in a press release. “How the corrupt politicians greed pulls us and many other nations into senseless wars. These actions unfortunately, come with casualties that civilians never call for. It’s the way of war.”

Related Video

Echoes in Eternity marks Agnostic Front’s first new album in six years, and the NYHC vets are set to support its release with an extensive US tour that runs through the end of 2025. The first leg of dates kicks off October 15th in Denver, and you can get tickets here.

Pre-order Echoes in Eternity via Reigning Phoenix Music. Below you can stream “Way of War” and see the album art and tracklist.

Echoes in Eternity Artwork:

Echoes in Eternity Tracklist:
01. Way Of War
02. You Say
03. Matter Of Life & Death
04. Tears For Everyone
05. Divided
06. Sunday Matinee
07. I Can’t Win
08. Turn Up The Volume
09. Art Of Silence
10. Shots Fired
11. Hell To Pay
12. Evolution Of Madness
13. Skip The Trial
14. Obey
15. Eyes Open Wide

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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'Chief of War' Finale Battle Scene Explained by Cinematographer
TV & Streaming

‘Chief of War’ Finale Battle Scene Explained by Cinematographer

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Chief of War” finale, Episode 9 on the Apple TV+ series, is called “The Black Desert.” And director Jason Momoa does not hold back when it comes to just how “black” and “desert”-like that setting is for the show’s climactic, 30-plus-minute battle between the forces of Hawaii and Maui.

The clash sees Cliff Curtis’ spurned chieftain Keōua, now high on his own supply as the chosen of the volcano Gods, on the one side; then, Kaina Makua’s reluctant, good-hearted king Kamehameha, and Jason Momoa’s vengeful chief of war Ka’iana on the other. The massive armies square up on a desolate lava field, which is not exactly the kind of place you’d want to fight with very sharp spears and minimal padding. 

Protestors outside 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' following ABC's indefinite suspension of the program at Hollywood Blvd on September 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

It’s also not necessarily the kind of place you’d want to drag a film crew for eight days of shooting intense crowd and stunt sequences. But series cinematographer Matthew Chuang told IndieWire the location the “Chief of War” team found was simply undeniable as the place for the battle where the Kingdom of Hawaii truly came into being. 

“We were scouting possible locations for this, and we came across this lava field — this huge lava field on a cliff by the side of the water. I don’t know if you’ve ever been on a lava field before, but it’s like walking on the moon,” Chuang said. “It’s so jagged, and the ground has these peaks and cracks, and it’s really sharp. If you put your hand on the lava, you could cut yourself.” 

It took the location scouting team about 30 minutes to walk into the spot around Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park where they would eventually film, in fact, because the ground was so sharp. But Momoa especially pushed for them to find solutions to work and get power to the location safely, so that the show could visually underscore the importance of the battle in Hawaiian history. “He wanted to shoot that on Hawaiian land, you know?” Chuang said. “So they got geologists to come in and looked [at the location], with production, at how we could get our gear in there, and they kind of made it possible.”  

Te Ao o Hinepehinga getting ready to throw a stone with the ocean behind her in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

With geological information about the safest places to film and how to get gear in and out, though, Chuang and Momoa still had to test a lot of camera and, especially, lighting equipment to ensure that they could withstand the marathon, all-day, and into-night battle sequence. Chuang made the correct story decision for the show to embrace a naturalistic style overall, building frames that continually envelop the characters within the landscape or set them starkly against it. But it meant that during the battle shoot, the production had to really divide and conquer in order to get the coverage they needed. 

“We had five units going at the same time. Jason brought in [the other ‘Chief of War’ directors] Brian Mendoza and Justin Chon to help him direct certain sequences. We sectioned off the lava field for different areas to have the forces stand off, then colliding, then a section for certain characters to use, and we split it off that way,” Chuang said. “It was a huge undertaking.” 

Momoa, who leads Kamehameha’s forces from the front, had to balance spearing and pummelling his way through Keōua’s army on camera with coordinating other units following other characters through the bloody scrum. You’d expect this to require a huge amount of planning and communication between the camera and stunt teams, and it did. But, reflecting on the experience, Chuang was struck by how getting the scale of the battle right took a full-court press from the entire “Chief of War” crew. 

Jason Momoa throwing a spear in a line of spear and musketmen in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

“It was all planned out, but at the same time, incredibly crazy. Everyone on the crew, from costumes to makeup to stunts, were all happening all along the same time. All the PAs and transport — everyone needed to come together to make this possible.  Sometimes, we would start at 3 in the morning and prep at night. Then, as the sun was coming up, we’d start shooting all those sequences.” 

The brutality of the black desert is a big part of what makes the sequence feel so visually distinct; it sharpens as the light changes, then grows dark and fiery and almost infernal as night falls, and as the combatants have to wail at each other by the glow of lava coming forth from the Earth. Chuang said that when it comes to the lava-work, visual texture allows the camera and the action to breathe a bit — to not need the kind of shaky-cam or quick movement that forces a sense of intensity. Instead, it comes from the environment and the actors onscreen. 

It’s a visual approach Momoa responded to even before Chuang got the job. “The key [to shooting the lava] is to have fog and smoke and atmosphere to light. One of my biggest influences in general is this photographer, Todd Hido. His stuff is this quiet, moody, memory-based work. When I was talking to Jason about coming to shoot the show, we’d just met for the first time over Zoom, and I mentioned Todd. He was like, ‘Oh, I love Todd! He’s a friend.’” Chuang said. 

Cliff Curtis standing, arms outstretched, on the edge of an active volcano, like one does, in 'Chief of War'
‘Chief of War’ Apple TV+

Todd Hido was not the only friend of the show on “Chief of War.” Just as the Apple TV+ series was gearing up to shoot the Episode 9 battle sequences, Mokuʻāweoweo, the summit caldera of Mauna Loa, erupted for the first time since 1984. The production needed to halt for a day to make sure the air quality was safe and it would be safe to film. 

“We went out there and started scouting anyway, and it was actually a really great prep day because everyone could get there and settle. But yeah, that volcano hadn’t exploded in like 40 or 50 years, and then the day that we finished [shooting], it stopped erupting,” Chuang said. “Jason and the Hawaiians thought it was a sign from the Gods, like a blessing, you know? So that was really amazing.” 

“Chief of War” is available to stream on Apple TV+

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jason Momoa Goes Inside ‘Chief of War’ Finale, Epic Ending
TV & Streaming

Jason Momoa Goes Inside ‘Chief of War’ Finale, Epic Ending

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from the season one finale of Chief of War, “The Black Desert.”]

Come hell or high water, Jason Momoa was going to do everything in his power to execute his ambitious creative vision for the season finale of Chief of War, which he considers to be the apex of his three-decade action career.

“At first, no one really thought it was going to be possible. And when we were at the very end of it, people that I really, really respect were like, ‘I’ve never seen anything like that in my life,’” Momoa, who co-wrote and directed the finale, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “But I knew we only had a certain amount of time, and the only way to pull off something of this magnitude was to shoot it a certain way.”

The synopsis of the final episode — which co-creators Momoa and Thomas Pa’a Sibbett confirm to THR is meant to function as a season, rather than a series, finale — may sound relatively simple. After Kamehameha finally comes around to the idea of using Ka’iana’s “red-mouthed weapons” — the firearms that Ka’iana had acquired during his travels abroad — in battle, the two chiefs and their small but mighty army go head-to-head with the forces behind power-hungry kings Keōua (Cliff Curtis) and Kahekili (Temuera Morrison) on the volcanic terrain known as Hawaii’s “Black Desert.” The brutal battle is a decisive victory for Ka’iana and his allies, thanks in large part to their formidable fighting skills and their use of those devastating weapons.

But anyone who has watched the finale knows that summary just barely scratches the surface of the this cinematic ending. “When people are talking about episode nine, that conversation really needs to include Jason as a director,” Sibbett says. Shooting in Hawai’i — much less over the real-life lava fields of Kalapana in the middle of the night — was actively “discouraged,” but Apple TV+ executives eventually signed on to the idea at the insistence of Momoa, who pulls quintuple duty on the series as star, co-creator, co-writer, executive producer and now director.

“Keeping it in Hawaii allows the inhabitants of that area, other people from across the island, to participate,” Sibbett adds. “They get to be the wearers of the feather capes. They get to be the warriors that hold the spears. The impact that has on a people, the impact that has on a culture that has never been shown at this level — I think that sets [Momoa] apart in this conversation.”

Early on in the writing process, Momoa had a clear idea of how he wanted to helm the finale. “I’ve directed quite a few times before this, and I’ve always wanted to shoot in really good light,” says Momoa, whose prior directorial experience included the 2014 indie film Road to Paloma and his recent HBO Max docuseries On the Roam. “Not being able to have money or have the crew that could pull off maybe what some larger [productions] could, I’d always have to really scout it, dial it in, and shoot in the right light.”

Momoa knew he wanted the battle to end with Ka’iana holding Keōua at gunpoint, just before Keōua was killed in a rush of lava. “I wanted to have that moment where I’m staring [Keōua] down be right at the last bit of that blue light with the lava going off and the ash coming down,” he says. Since he wanted the battle to start in the early afternoon and spill into the late evening, the production had to work backwards and shoot the entire sequence in reverse.

With the help of the same stunt team that he has worked with for decades, Momoa meticulously planned out every scene of the battle long before cameras started rolling. “I would shoot four to five units at the same time,” the director reveals. “I had to pick the storylines that I wanted to shoot within each of the other three to four units, so that I was getting what was going on with me, what was going on with Kamehameha, what was going on with my brothers and my wife. I had to make sure I blocked out correctly all those moments.”

“Don’t be fooled by his abs and physique. He’s got a great frontal cortex going on,” jokes Curtis. “I’ve worked with brilliant people, so I know what it looks like and smells like. James Cameron’s got a similar facility — perhaps on a different scale — to understanding the complexity of how to manage multiple units, and Jason’s definitely got that facility. It’s very, very impressive to see him map it all out in his mind before it happened.”

A lot of people, however, were not convinced that Momoa would be able to pull off what would typically be a weeks-long shoot on another production in just eight days.

“The producers were very scared, but I was like, ‘We’re going to shoot early, and we’re going to end not too far after noon and get some of the daylight.’ We got up at 3 a.m., started at 4 a.m., and we’d probably end at 2 or 3 p.m., and then I’d stay and prep for the next [night],” Momoa says. “You could have shot this in a Walmart parking lot, and you could probably put green screens up, like we normally do on other things, and just put down black and use it as lava fields. But you’re going to feel that we were there when the volcano went on.”

Momoa enlisted the rest of his producing and filmmaking team to oversee each of the units, and he would always be running between scenes, if not acting in them. “I had just done this LeBron James Nike commercial, so I had these lavender trainers on with my Malo, and my ass was just running from one side to the other,” Momoa recalls with a laugh, evoking quite a striking visual. “And it’s a lava field, so you fall. I think I’m the one that got messed up the most, but thank God we had no accidents. But I was just running, because I had it all in my head. This is how I like to direct. Most people don’t know that, but I’ve been doing it for a long time.”

As Momoa puts it, the Hawaiian gods seemed to be on his side during the grueling shoot. A few hours before they were set to begin their first late-night shoot of the finale, Mauna Loa, the nearby volcano, erupted for the first time in 38 years. After pausing production for a day to review the air quality, the cast and crew resumed production. The next day, another mountain, Kīlauea, became active, but the smoke blew away from the set. “Obviously, many volcanoes did create the Hawaiian Islands, but in our written history, it has never been documented that they both went off at the same time. That happened as we started,” Momoa says.

After a little bit of rain on the first day, the weather was clear for eight days in a row. But the day they wrapped, it started pouring rain and Mauna Loa stopped erupting, recalls Momoa. “It was the biggest, most beautiful omen. We stirred up so much [energy], and it just felt like we were doing the right thing. It’s powerful, man. There’s footage of us there dancing in the rain with all the extras [after] fighting on lava. Nothing will ever come close to that, ever.”

Momoa was also not afraid to take some creative liberties with the historical facts. Before they officially started attacking each other, the two sides would first engage in a kind of spiritual battle. Their respective kahunas would do their chants, the volcanoes would go off, and then the two sides would engage in a kind of rap battle in Ōlelo Hawaii, where they would taunt each other. In this case, ‘Ōpūnui spoke for Keōua, while Ka’iana spoke for Kamehameha.

“When we came up with this [scene], I was like, ‘What’s the most disrespectful thing [Ka’iana] could do? He’s on his enemy’s side, he’s on their land — and he’s going to speak English,’” Momoa says. “I said, ‘Listen, if I look to Kamehameha and I ask for permission, and he gives me the nod, I’m going to say this shit [in Engish], and our audience will be able to understand me, my team will understand me, and Keōua won’t. That will infuriate him. Being able to have that moment in English, the audience understands that it raises the bar.’”

Momoa knows that he may catch a little flack for deviating from the historical record in that scene. But what he ultimately wanted to accomplish from a storytelling perspective was to piss Keōua off so much that his troops would try to attack the other side with spears — only for them to be wiped out one-by-one by the red-mouthed weapons that Ka’iana and his allies had hidden in their capes. “It wasn’t necessarily what happened, but that idea came out of a place of me just as an actor going, ‘What would I do? How do I get him to charge me?’”

That wasn’t the only choice that Momoa made from his character’s perspective. As an inside joke, Keōua’s kahuna, whose tongue Ka’iana rips out of his mouth in front of Keōua during the hectic battle, is played by Kahoʻokahi Kanuha, Momoa’s ʻŌlelo Hawai’i coach.

“That’s the guy who lived with me and taught me the Hawaiian language. So he obviously can do these amazing chants, and he can speak the language, but he knows my frustration with it,” says Momoa, who learned the critically endangered language specifically for the role. “I’m like, ‘I’m going to rip your tongue out, and I’m going to eat it, dude.’ So [that scene’s] just two buddies just being silly. But it was something that would’ve happened; it’s something I would’ve done.”

Momoa was also keen to give each of the other core group of characters their own moment in the spotlight. For most of the first season, Ka’iana and his wife, Kupuohi (Te Ao o Hinepehinga), have largely been unable to see eye-to-eye. He has been permanently changed by all of the pain and suffering he has seen abroad, and she believes he is no longer the man she fell in love with. “Kupuohi’s put in positions where she should blow her top, snap, and just lose her mind so many times, and she doesn’t. Every time she goes, ‘No, I’ll stay strong. I’ll stand beside my man. I will not break. I will not cry,’” O’Hinepehinga explains.

But Momoa always wanted to give Kupuohi a moment of catharsis. One day while shooting the finale, he came running up to O’Hinepehinga with a giddy look on his face. “He’s like, ‘We’re going to stab you right here,’ and he grabs my waist,” she recalls of shooting the moment that Kupuohi gets stabbed during the battle. “And I’m like, ‘I’m sorry. What? You didn’t say I died?’ And he’s like, ‘No, no, no. He’s just going to stab you really lightly.’ And he comes in, and I’m shish-kabobed! He’s like, ‘We talked about it, remember? There would be a moment. This is the moment — [this] scream is a release of every single moment you have wanted to scream ever.’

“I don’t know if you’ve ever experienced this, but when I’m overwhelmed with situations or emotions or just work in general, I don’t have a chance to express it. So it all just bubbles to the surface until eventually it blows — and it’s in the aftermath of the blow where I find clarity in all the things that I’m confused [about],” O’Hinepehinga continues. “I wanted that for Kupuohi. Yes, she’s emotionally intelligent and strong, but a person can only take so much.”

Kupuohi ultimately survives being stabbed. But immediately following the conclusion of the battle, Kupuohi watches from afar as Ka’ahumanu (Luciane Buchanan) — the wife of Kamehameha who has clearly been harboring feelings for Ka’iana — rushes to Ka’iana’s side to make sure that he survived being knocked unconscious. O’Hinepehinga sees Kupuohi’s final look at Ka’iana and Ka’ahumanu as not one of “pain” or “jealousy,” but of “clarity.”

When Kupuohi sees her husband embracing another woman after the battle, “she’s able to see clarity not only in her future, but her relationships with the people around her. It’s terrifying, but I think there’s liberation in having a complete understanding of where you are in this world and who you are in this world,” O’Hinepehinga says. “I don’t know what that looks like in the future, but a woman liberated is a terrifying thing, I’ll say that much.”

That love triangle could very well play into future seasons of the show. Momoa notes that, historically, Ka’iana was accused of having an affair with Ka’ahumanu, with whom he shared a similar pessimistic worldview. To complicate matters further, by the end of the first season, Ka’ahumanu has officially joined her husband’s council. “But when she can’t have his kid, there’s a lot of stuff that happens coming up in the future, and I think things shift,” he says.

“You have to understand our system is completely different from what the modern system is right now. So if a woman wanted to upgrade and make her bloodline stronger, she could leave and go and be with the chief with more stature,” he adds. “Kamehameha had many aikāne [or same-sex relationships]. Kahekili had endless aikāne. They had men and women, so it’s something that we can’t wrap our heads around. We kept it smaller the first season. But it’s a very complex and beautiful system that happened in Hawaii, so I’m sure that did happen.”

The other character who has a real moment of catharsis during the battle is Kupuohi’s sister, Heke (Mainei Kinimaka), who lost the love of her life, Ka’iana’s brother, Nahi (Siua Ikale’o), in the penultimate episode. In the finale, Heke brutally slashes, gouges, poisons and then stomps ‘Ōpūnui — the man who presumably sexually assaulted her after Nahi’s killing — to death.

At the end of the finale, after learning that Ka’iana and Kamehameha obliterated Keōua’s troops, the more sinister Kahekili declares war on Hawai’i. “I’m building something that’s even more crazy. So not to give away a spoiler, but I’m going to have a super monster soon,” Momoa teases of what that ending means going forward. “I’m setting up things, which I like to do. Whether we get greenlit or not, my intentions are there. So there’s a lot of foreshadowing; there’s a lot of things that I want to happen in the future.”

For those who are familiar with English literature, Sibbett likens the story of Ka’iana and Kamehameha to that of King Arthur and Lancelot. “They needed to come together by the end of episode eight. It needed to be understood that they are not the same person,” he says. “They have a completely different way of thinking and how they view the world, but bringing them together creates the strongest force possible, and we were able to accomplish at least the friendship in episode eight, and by episode nine, it’s showing why it works, how it works, and that they are better off together.”

So much of the first season was about trying to unite the two men “so that we can now really dive into the building of Camelot,” Sibbett explains. Looking ahead, “if you’re thinking of it in terms of King Arthur and Lancelot, I want to expose the world to Camelot. I want to expose them to the world now as we’ve built it, as we’ve seen it, and to really get an idea that Camelot’s not the only kingdom.”

Whereas the first season largely centered around Ka’iana and consisted of “seeing the world through his eyes,” the second season would “be about really looking at Hawai’i a little bit more from that bird’s eye view, and really starting to see how these kingdoms interact with each other,” Sibbett teases. “I want us to expand the world, if we get a season two, so we can really get an idea of the functionality and how everything works.”

While the co-creators are feeling positive about a renewal — especially after the overwhelmingly positive responses they have received from critics and the people of Hawai’i and Aotearoa — Momoa and Sibbett insist that “it’s still too early” for them to pitch a second season. But that does not mean that they have not been tracking the response to the show on social media.

“People are really being drawn into not just our big storylines, but even some of these smaller ones. These are actually areas that we would like to build and go deeper into. It’s just a matter of [considering], what’s the public’s taste, and what are they eager for?” says Sibbett, who has noticed that some viewers have gravitated toward the prophetess Taula (Roimata Fox) and Prince Kupule (Brandon Finn), the son of Kahekili, in particular. “Of course, we can tell Ka’iana, Kamehameha and Ka’ahumanu all day. But to see that people are enjoying all these little sub-stories as well is really enjoyable, because we can definitely build more and more.”

Regardless of what happens, the cast and crew — most of whom identify as Polynesian — have been forever changed by the experience of retelling a key part of Hawai’i’s history. “Chief of War is such an emotionally liberating story for a lot of us here in Polynesia for so many different reasons, whether it be [speaking] Olelo Hawai’i, or just representation, or the fact that we get to be at the forefront of telling our own stories,” O’Hinepehinga says.

During her final day (or night) of shooting the chaotic finale, O’Hinepehinga turned a corner and saw and heard “this sea of brown people chanting” Kamehameha’s name. “We had 500 to 800 Polynesians standing there chanting that statement for the scene, and most of our crew, they were all Kanaka or they had been living on Hawai’i, so they were very committed to living the authentic Hawaiian experience,” she recalls. “I turned and I saw one of our cameramen with tears rolling down his face. He was like, ‘This is the moment.’ And in that moment, we went, ‘I don’t care if it succeeds or fails or wins every award out there — this is what it’s about, this is what it’s for.’ You could just feel it, this sense of pride and achievement.”

***

The full first season of Chief of War is now streaming on Apple TV+.

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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