Movie News – MovieMaker Magazine https://www.moviemaker.com The Art & Business of Making Movies Thu, 11 Dec 2025 18:42:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.moviemaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-MM_favicon-2-420x420.jpg Movie News – MovieMaker Magazine https://www.moviemaker.com 32 32 The 12 Greatest Superhero Movies Ever Made, Ranked https://www.moviemaker.com/superhero-movies-ranked/ Thu, 11 Dec 2025 18:33:00 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1167258 What’s the greatest superhero movie ever? For our money, it’s one of the following — presented from least great to

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What's the greatest superhero movie ever? For our money, it's one of the following — presented from least great to all-time greatest.

Disagree? That's great — let us know in the comments. But here's our list.

12. Logan (2017)

Logan
Hugh Jackman in Logan. Fox - Credit: C/O

A break-all-the-rules story of sacrifice, loss, and one loner's struggle to get through centuries on this planet doing more good than harm. Director James Mangold proved once and for all that comic book movies aren't just for kids with a metaphorical story of aging as gracefully as you can.

Mangold returned to the theme of an aging action hero, meanwhile, in the recent Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. But honestly, we prefer Logan.

11. Blade (1998)

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New Line Cinema

Blade isn't perfect, but it expanded everyone's idea of what a superhero movie could be by pulling from one of Marvel's lesser-known heroes: a vampire hunter who wears a leather jacket instead of a cape or tights. Blade opened the door to the reality that Marvel could have as much or even more success with its second-tier or forgotten characters, like Ant-Man or the Guardians of the Galaxy, than it could with heroes we had seen onscreen before.

We also love a superhero movie that managed to keep us rapt without excessive CGI that has ruined so many otherwise good superhero films, like Wonder Woman.

And of course Wesley Snipes is awesome in the lead role, and delivers the classic line, "Some mother----er's are always trying to ice skate uphill."

10. X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)

Best Superhero Movies Jennifer Lawrence X Men Days of Future Past
Fox - Credit: 20th Century Fox

A fairly faithful screen adaptation of one of Christopher Claremont's most iconic storylines from the comics, though it puts Logan (Hugh Jackman) center stage instead of Kitty Pryde and ambitiously melds the X-Men movies of the 2000s and their prequels of the 2010s.

Long before the many movie metaverses made time travel or alternate realities feel exhausting, this X-Men film had what was then a fresh and thrilling take. The 1970s set-section is astonishingly good, but it loses points for the dreary bookends set in a dismal near-future, in which the CGI is uninspiring.

9. Deadpool (2016)

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Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) in Deadpool. Fox

The most flat-out hilarious comic-book movie ever made, which made it to the screen through Ryan Reynold's stubborn insistence that one of Marvel's weirdest, least likely screen stars could be one of its greatest.

And yes, we're excited for Hugh Jackman to pull his claws out of retirement for Deadpool 3.

8. X2: X-Men United (2003)

Best Superhero Movies XMen 2
Fox

2003’s X-Men 2 far improves on the original from the first scene: It starts with Nightcrawler (Alan Cumming) operatically invading the Oval Office, and never slows.

The fight between Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) and Lady Deathstryke (Kelly Hu) feels far more grounded and high-stakes than terrible CGI fights that would ruin so many superhero movies in the years to come, and a pre-Succession Brian Cox is menacingly flawless as Col. William Stryker, a very believable nemesis to our favorite band of mutants.

7. Spider-Man 2 (2004)

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Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man and Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane Watson in Spider-Man 2. Sony

Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) learns that with great power comes not just great responsibility, but great sacrifice, as he realizes that his role as Spider-Man endangers the love of his life, Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst). Doc Ock (Alfred Molina) is one of the all-time best spider villains, and the highlight of the whole film comes in a truly marvelous sequence in which New York City saves Spidey, for a change.

And it's the most romantic of all superhero movies — except for the movie at No. 2 on our list.

6. Black Panther (2018)

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T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) and Nakia (Lupita Nyong'o) in Black Panther. Disney

The world-building is stellar and acting top-notch throughout. Michael B. Jordan plays perhaps the MCU's best villain ever, and Chadwick Boseman delivered a beautiful turn as a king torn between his people and the people of the world in this Best Picture nominee from Ryan Coogler.

It's kind of stunning that both Black Panther and Infinity War were released just months apart — the two films clearly mark the high point of the MCU.

5. Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

Disney - Credit: C/O

After an astonishing opening that promises anything could happen, Infinity War invests in character development as much as action before ending on a cliffhanger to end all cliffhangers. Its sequel, Avengers: Endgame, not only resolves that cliffhanger but also pays off more than a decade of Marvel superhero movie storylines.

4. Spider-Man: Into the Spider Verse (2018)

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The spider friends in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Sony

Gadzoinks, 2018 sure was good for super hero movies.

Breaking with every kind of staid tradition, this boldly experimental, utterly gorgeous animated film is a loving, awe-inspiring homage to decades of Spider-mythology and an optimistic look ahead at what comic book movies — and their young fans — can aspire to be.

We just wish its often-fantastic sequel, Across the Spider-Verse, hadn't ended on such a tough cliffhanger.

3. The Incredibles (2004)

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Pixar

Pixar's The Incredibles is both a great family superhero movie and a dark deconstruction of superhero tropes — note that Mr. Incredible bails out on the business because of legal threats, not because of bad guys.

The animation is groundbreaking and stellar, combining dynamic character design with Art Deco touches that harken back to the early days of Batman and Superman. It's funny, it's sweeping, it's curiously dark. The grainy black-and-white rescue segment takes it to a daring new level. It's a super movie in every way.

2. Superman (1978)

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Warner Bros

The film that started it all. Its earnestness and total reliance on practical effects — as well as stellar performances and moving love story between Lois Lane (Margot Kidder) and Supes make it feel more charming and inspiring with each passing year. Christopher Reeve will always be our Superman, and, as we mentioned, it's the most romantic superhero movie.

Also: John Williams' score is one of the best for any movie ever.

1. The Dark Knight

Warner Bros - Credit: Warner Bros.

This is the most obvious choice — Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight is a jittery, chilling, masterful morality play in which everyone does everything right, anchored by Christian Bale as the best Batman and Heath Ledger in an Oscar-winning role as one of the best-ever screen villains, a mastermind posing as a clown. The more you watch it, the more you appreciate its witty foreshadowing, hidden-in-plain sigh complexity, and sheer ambition.

One could argue this doesn't belong on a list of superhero movies, since no one has super powers... but that's part of what we love about The Dark Knight.

Main image: Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique in X-Men: Days of Future Past.

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Thu, 11 Dec 2025 10:28:55 +0000 Movie News
Is the Story of the Vietnam War’s Most Famous Photo a Lie? https://www.moviemaker.com/the-stringer-nick-ut/ Thu, 11 Dec 2025 14:34:43 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182796 The new documentary The Stringer asks if the most famous photo of the Vietnam War — credited to Associated Press photographer Nick Ut — was misattributed to him.

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On June 8, 1972, the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese Air Force dropped napalm on the village of Trang Bang, burning innocent victims who included 9-year-old Phan Thị Kim Phuc. Ever since, she has been known as the girl in the picture, and the picture has been known as The Terror of War, or more simply Napalm Girl. It was credited to young Associated Press photographer Nick Ut, who received a Pulitzer Prize for taking it.

But the new documentary The Stringer asks if Ut really took the picture — or if an AP photo editor, perhaps out of guilt, misattributed it to him. The film explains that the editor, Horst Faas, had given Ut's older brother a photo assignment that led to his death, and suggests that Faas may have hoped the photo could help their family.

The photo made Ut's career. He eventually went on to work at The Associated Press in Los Angeles, where I worked with him for three years. He was popular within the bureau and among his fellow photographers — regarded as a veteran with a key news sense, a sharp eye, and good-natured humility. If accurate, the documentary dismantles the widely accepted narrative of his life.

The Stringer gives voice to another photographer, Nguyen Thanh Nghe, who says he is the one who actually took the shot. He came forward after journalist Gary Knight, who is featured in The Stringer, began following up on allegations from former AP editor Carl Robinson that Ut was not the photo's true author.

The film, now streaming on Netflix, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this past January.

When the accusations of misattribution arose, The Associated Press spent roughly a year investigating the authorship of the photo, and concluded in May that there was "no definitive evidence" that someone other than Ut took it. World Press Photo, however, conducted another investigation and decided to suspend attribution of authorship, finding that two other photographers, Nghệ or Huỳnh Công Phúc, may have been better positioned to take the shot.

Ut said in a Facebook post in February: "I took the photo of Kim Phuc, I took the other photos from that day that show her family and the devastation the war caused. No one else has the right to claim that I did not take that specific or any other photo attributed to me because I am the creator of all the work I’ve done since day one. My career spans more than 50 years and, although I am now retired from the AP, I continue to create impacting images for the world to see."

Phuc told The AP that while she has no memories of the attack, her uncle, who was an eyewitness to the events on that day, confirmed that Ut took the photograph. She credits Ut with saving her life by rushing her to a hospital after taking the photo. She went on to become a global advocate for child victims of war.

I sent several questions about the film to Bao Nguyen, director of The Stringer, and received the following responses from him and The Stringer producer Fiona Turner. Here they are.

The Stringer Team on Nick Ut, Nguyen Thanh Nghe, and The Terror of War

Tim Molloy: I should start by disclosing that I worked for the AP for 11 years, from 1997 to 2008, including with Nick Ut in the Los Angeles office for three years. I liked him and never had any reason to question his integrity. In fact, thinking back, I never had reason to question the professional integrity of anyone at AP — they were rigorously ethical and fact-focused. So this film was sad for me. Do you find Ut and the AP sympathetic in this story? It seems like Nick Ut never asked for the photo credit, and that the current AP administration inherited this situation from a photo chief, Horst Faas, who covered Vietnam a generation ago and died in 2012.  

Fiona Turner: As with any investigation it was unclear where the story would lead. The team worked hard to listen to everybody we could find who was either on the road or, in the AP office the day the photograph was made, in order to fully explore the allegations from Carl Robinson, the former AP photo editor. Nick Ut, in 1972 was a fairly inexperienced photographer [who had] only just turned 21 years old. The film is clear that we believe Nick was "victim" in the story. 

The Stringer team was very cognizant of the fact that we were examining a media culture of fifty years ago, that none of the current AP staff nor senior management were responsible nor active in these events, and the film make no assertions as such.  

Tim Molloy: The film makes a compelling case that the photo chief, Horst Faas, gave Nick Ut the photo credit because he felt guilty about sending Nick's brother, Huynh Thanh My, on an assignment on which he was killed. Do you think he was trying to make sure their family was cared for when he gave Nick Ut the photo credit? Or was he just trying to get AP accolades? Could he have known the photo would change Nick Ut's life as it did? 

Fiona Turner: As you are probably aware, Horst Faas is a complex character. The film highlights his sometime bombastic nature and the rigorous discipline that he displayed within the AP office in the relentless pursuit of the most powerful images. At the same time, he had a sensitivity and empathy for the Vietnamese people that more than one witness will attest to. We will never know the true reasons he made the decisions he did.

Could he have known the impact this would have on Nick Ut’s life? Horst recognized immediately that photograph to be a winning image, multiple witnesses confirm this on the day, and he communicated that to his boss in NY, Hal Buell.

Tim Molloy: Do you know if Nick Ut has seen the film? I've reached out to him, as I know you did. Did you have mixed feelings about potentially dismantling a myth? 

Fiona Turner: We don’t know if Nick Ut has watched or not, just that the opportunity was given. Nick Ut’s lawyers were given access to the film around its Sundance premiere. Our attitude is that the alternative to asking the questions we do in the film, is to not ask them, which would put us in the position where we are ignoring accusations about potential wrongdoing in journalism, which we would not contemplate if the same questions were asked about the government, or the church or a corporation. Journalism cannot demand exceptionalism when it holds everyone else in society to account.

Tim Molloy: Does your work on this film shake your faith in AP's journalism in general? It's won 59 Pulitzers, covers and calls elections all over the world, and is used or cited by thousands of news operations worldwide. Having seen its inner workings, I have strong faith in its commitment to fairness and accuracy. But it's always fair to ask — if a news outlet gets one thing wrong without correcting it, what else has it gotten wrong? 

Fiona Turner: This is not a story about AP.  It does not shake our faith in their journalism  in general. AP have produced some very, very fine journalism, and continue to do so — but winning 59 Pulitzers doesn’t mean you cannot and should not be held to account, and continue to be held to high standards. It is important that journalists and news organizations are brave enough to embrace accountablity, because if they can’t do that, they can’t hold anyone else to account, or ask the public to trust their work. 

Tim Molloy: When did you come aboard this film? How far along was Gary Knight in his investigation before you joined the project? 

Bao Nguyen: Carl Robinson first contacted Gary Knight directly, and Gary began looking into the allegation soon after. At that stage, the plan was for him to pursue a written piece. As the early reporting progressed, it became clear that the material was more complex than initially anticipated, and Fiona felt the story warranted a documentary film approach. 

A few months into that initial phase, [producer] Terri [Lichstein] reached out through a mutual contact to bring me onto the project. From that point, we broadened Gary’s early reporting into a full documentary investigation, expanding the research, interviews, and archival work into a more comprehensive examination of the story. 

Tim Molloy: Nick Ut's team has threatened to sue. Has that lawsuit materialized?  

Fiona Turner: Neither the film team nor our lawyers have received any notice that a lawsuit has been filed. 

Tim Molloy: Nick Ut's lawyer, James Hornstein, told Variety that Nguyen Thanh Nghe, the titular stringer who says he took the picture, was serving as a driver for NBC and "was not there as a photographer nor am I aware of any images he claims to have taken that day or any other day close in time.” And Kim Phúc has called the film an “outrageous and false attack on Nick Ut,” whom she credits with saving her life. What's your response to their criticisms? 

Fiona Turner: Nguyen Thanh Nghe had a day job within U.S. Embassy communications. He had a long career as a military cinematographer and had been to film school. He supplemented his income by working as a cinematographer/ photographer mainly for the South Vietnamese press. He did not bring any images with him when he left with one suitcase as a refugee.

The film team have complete respect for Kim Phuc’s understanding of those events which forever changed her life. She declined to speak with us so we were never able to ask her directly about the events. We therefore had to rely on the statements she has given previously, including in her own autobiography Fire Road, in which she states, “Uncle Nick’s memories have become my own." 

Tim Molloy: In the film, we see Nghe and the people who take Nghe's side, on camera. But we don't see anyone arguing Nick Ut's side, in part because he and the AP declined to participate. You mostly give their side in a series of written messages on-screen near the end of the film. What effort did you make to look for any holes in Nghe's account? Do you think AP and Nick Ut erred by not speaking up for themselves on camera?  

Fiona Turner: We were fastidious in not making assumptions about Nghe, and we interviewed him extensively, The journalist team spent the first five months of the project researching  identifying and approaching all surviving characters who were present on the road at Trang Bang  or in the AP office, and inviting them for interview, without prejudice.  No one was able to say they saw Nick Ut take the photo.  

We did find a witness who told us he saw the moment that Nghe pressed the shutter on the advancing group of children.

Regarding AP, initially we were optimistic that they would be interested in engaging with us to explore Carl Robinson’s allegations. We believe it would have been in the spirit of responsible journalism for both AP and any/all of those who disapproved of the investigation to have been open to participating in an on the record interview.

The Stringer is now streaming on Netflix.

Main image: The Stringer. Netflix.

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Thu, 11 Dec 2025 10:42:44 +0000 Movie News
Sean Baker, Michelle Yeoh Team Up for ‘Sandiwara’; Film Will ‘Celebrate Malaysian Culture in a Big Way’ https://www.moviemaker.com/sean-baker-michelle-yeoh-sandiwara/ Mon, 08 Dec 2025 02:01:53 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182673 Oscar winners Sean Baker and Michelle Yeoh are teaming up for the new short film “Sandiwara,” Baker’s follow-up to his

The post Sean Baker, Michelle Yeoh Team Up for ‘Sandiwara’; Film Will ‘Celebrate Malaysian Culture in a Big Way’ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Oscar winners Sean Baker and Michelle Yeoh are teaming up for the new short film "Sandiwara," Baker's follow-up to his Best Picture winner Anora that will be set in the Malaysian state of Penang.

The film's logline promises: "Michelle Yeoh delivers a transformative performance, amid Penang’s vibrant cityscape. In collaboration with Academy Award-winning director Sean Baker, 'Sandiwara' delivers a bold, immersive celebration of womanhood, cultural identity, culinary heritage and the spirit of independent cinema."

"Sandiwara" is named after the Malay word meaning “drama, theatrical performance or play.” The film is an "exploration of Malaysian culture through the lens of food, music and womanhood," according to a news releases, which makes intriguing use of the singular/plural when it says it stars "Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh in the lead role/s."

More Details on the Sean Baker and Michelle Yeoh Collaboration 'Sandiwara'

Baker is making the film for the London-based fashion house self-portrait, which was founded in 2013 by designer Han Chong. Born in Penang, Malaysia, Han Chong studied Fashion Design at Central Saint Martins in London and established a five-year scholarship program with Central Saint Martins offering financial backing for five students to complete their MA degrees, as well as offering mentorship.

In 2024, self-portrait launched Residency, which promotes the brand by bringing in artists from across discliplines. Baker will make the film as part of the program.

“'Sandiwara' is an extension of my pre-existing love for independent cinema, and with the support of Han Chong, Michelle Yeoh, and the many other individuals who helped bring this vision to life, we were able to celebrate Malaysian culture in a big way,” said Baker in a statement. 

“It was incredible to get to experience Penang and to have been given the freedom to create a film that spans beyond traditional fashion and cinema integration.”

"Sandiwara" will be released in February.

Yeoh won Best Actress for her role in 2022's Everything Everywhere All at Once. Baker set a record at the 2025 Academy Awards by becoming the first person to win four Oscars for a single film. With Anora, he earned Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Film Editing.

Baker is also known for his breakout film Tangerine (2015), shot entirely on an iPhone 5S, The Florida Project (2017), which earned Willem Dafoe a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the Oscars, and 2021's Red Rocket. among other films.

The "Sandiwara" creative team also includes producer Samantha Quan, who was crucial to bringing Anora  to life. She also worked on The Florida Project and Red Rocket. Also producing is Alex Coco, who worked on Anora, The Sweet East, Red Rocket, and more.

The cinematographer on the film is Christopher Ripley, a Los Angeles–based director of photography whose work includes music videos, narrative features, and short films. He has collaborated with artists including Kendrick Lamar, Billie Eilish, Harry Styles, Megan Thee Stallion, Rosalía, A$AP Rocky, and The Rolling Stones.

Main image: Michelle Yeoh, the "Sandiwara" script, and Sean Baker. self-portrait.

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Sun, 07 Dec 2025 18:01:55 +0000 Movie News
Best Crash Gambling Sites: Top 10 Crash Casino Games (2026) https://www.moviemaker.com/crash-gambling/ Sat, 06 Dec 2025 02:13:23 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182704 Crash gambling has become one of the most exciting trends in online gaming, and 2026 is on course to be

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Crash gambling has become one of the most exciting trends in online gaming, and 2026 is on course to be the biggest year yet for crash gaming fans. Players are flocking to crash gambling sites for fast rounds, simple rules, and the heart-pounding moment when the multiplier shoots upward before the crash. In this guide, we review the best crash gambling sites (Coin Casino is our experts’ favorite) and rank the top 10 crash casino games you can play today.

10 Best Crash Gambling Sites

  1. Coin Casino – 200% up to $30,000 + 50 Super Spins
  2. Lucky Block – 200% up to $27,000 + 50 Free Spins
  3. WSM Casino – 200% up to $25,000 + spins
  4. Mega Dice – 200% up to 1 BTC + 50 Free Spins + free bet
  5. TG.Casino – 200% up to 10 ETH + 50 Free Spins
  6. Instant Casino – 200% up to $8,000
  7. Golden Panda – 200% up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins
  8. Discasino – 200% up to $10,000
  9. Samba Slots – 200% up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins
  10. Fast Slots – 200% up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins

1. Coin Casino – Top 10 Crash Casino Games (2025)

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Coin Casino delivers one of the strongest crypto crash gambling experiences we have tested. The platform makes it easy to deposit with Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other top coins, and our withdrawals cleared surprisingly fast. We tried several crash rounds, including their in-house multipliers, and the auto-cashout tool worked smoothly even during high-volatility spikes. If you enjoy crash betting games with fast pacing, Coin Casino feels built for you. It blends crypto speed, clean UI, and big-multiplier potential, making it a standout choice for players looking for the best crypto crash gambling sites real money. The welcome bonus is huge and unlocks gradually as you wager, which made testing multiple crash games simple and low-stress.

Coin Casino Summary Table

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2. Lucky Block – Best Updated UI/UX for Crash Gambling

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Texas online casino Lucky Block delivers one of the cleanest and most modern interfaces in the crash gambling space. The streamlined UI makes it easy to place crash bets, track rising multipliers, and use auto-cashout without clutter. During our testing, every crash round loaded instantly, and the animations stayed smooth even with rapid bet changes. This makes Lucky Block the best crash gambling site for updated UI/UX if you want a fast, visually polished experience. 

Crypto deposits confirmed in under a minute, and our withdrawals were nearly instant. We also appreciated how quickly the lobby switches between crash games, slots, and live tables. The huge welcome bonus releases in small chunks, which helped us test more crash rounds without burning through balance too fast. Overall, Lucky Block feels built for players who want speed, clarity, and a frustration-free crash gambling flow.

Lucky Block Summary Table

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3. WSM Casino – Best Crash Gambling Site for High-Rollers

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WSM Casino is the top choice for high-rollers who want powerful crash gambling features paired with massive betting limits. During our testing, the crash games handled large wagers without hesitation, and the interface stayed responsive even when we pushed higher multipliers and aggressive auto-cashout settings. 

Crypto deposits hit the account fast, and withdrawals were approved quickly, which matters when you are moving bigger amounts. The site’s clean layout also makes it easy to manage crash bets and track your multiplier history during rapid rounds. What really sets WSM Casino apart is the high-roller-focused VIP system, offering up to 25 percent weekly cashback and priority withdrawal limits that suit serious crash bettors. If you love crash gambling with high stakes and want the flexibility to scale your bets, WSM Casino gives you a strong, stable, and premium experience.

WSM Casino Summary Table

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4. Mega Dice – Best Crash Gaming Site for Gamification

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Mega Dice delivers the strongest gamified crash gambling experience we have tested. Every crash round feels tied into a larger progression loop thanks to loyalty points, $DICE rakeback, missions, and level-up bonuses. We tried several crash games during our review, and the platform rewarded nearly everything we did, from wagering streaks to mission completions. The gameplay feels more interactive than a typical crash casino. 

The UI is responsive, bets load instantly, and the crash multipliers animate smoothly even during high activity. Crypto deposits confirmed quickly, and our withdrawals were fast, which kept the momentum going. The welcome bonus also unlocks gradually as you wager, giving plenty of room to explore different crash rounds. For players who enjoy gamified progression, Mega Dice stands out as the best crash gaming site for missions, rewards, and leveling.

Mega Dice Summary Table

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5. TG.Casino – Best Crash Gambling Casino Experience on Telegram

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TG.Casino delivers a unique crash gambling experience by running directly through Telegram, making it the most convenient platform for players who want fast crypto betting without switching apps. During our testing, we placed crash bets, tracked multipliers, and triggered auto-cashout entirely inside the Telegram interface. The setup felt smooth, fast, and ideal for quick crash rounds on mobile. Deposits in Bitcoin and other cryptos arrived almost instantly, and withdrawals cleared within minutes. 

The crash games loaded quickly, and the simple layout made it easy to adjust bet sizes or use auto features during rapid rounds. It is also a popular place for chicken road games. What stood out most is how TG.Casino turns Telegram into a full gaming hub, offering instant notifications, integrated wallets, and one-tap access to crash games. The massive welcome bonus, released in small increments, gave us plenty of room to test crash volatility without draining balance too fast. If you want a seamless mobile-first setup, TG.Casino is the best crash gambling casino for Telegram users.

TG.Casino Summary Table

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Wagering RequirementUnlocks in 10 percent batches after 6x deposit wagering
Crash Games AvailableCrash X, Aviator, Turbo Rocket Crash, Hi-Lo Crash
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat, Game Shows)
Minimum Deposit$25
Withdrawal TimeInstant
Accepts US PlayersYes

6. Instant Casino – Best Crash Gambling Site for Fast Payouts

Payout Time: Instant to a few minutes
Established: 2023
Number of Games: 3,000+
Minimum Deposit for Bonus: $20

Instant Casino lives up to its name, offering the fastest payouts we tested across all crash gambling sites. Our crypto withdrawals cleared in minutes, and deposits showed up almost instantly, letting us jump straight into crash rounds without delays. We tried several crash betting games during our review, and every round loaded quickly with smooth multiplier tracking and responsive auto-cashout.

The platform’s streamlined interface makes it easy to adjust crash bets on the fly, and switching between crypto games, slots, or live tables takes only a second. The welcome bonus releases in stages as you wager, which gave us plenty of flexibility for testing different crash volatility levels. What really sets Instant Casino apart is how consistent its payout speeds are. Even during peak hours, our test withdrawals were approved almost immediately. For players who prioritize speed, Instant Casino is the best crash gambling site for ultra-fast crypto payouts. It is also worth mentioning that it is a popular platform for Florida sports betting.

Instant Casino Summary Table

FeatureDetails
Welcome Bonus200 percent up to $8,000 equivalent
Wagering Requirement15x per 25 percent bonus unlock
Crash Games AvailableRapid Crash, Instant Rocket, Multiplier Rush Crash
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat)
Minimum Deposit$20
Withdrawal TimeInstant to a few minutes
Accepts US PlayersYes

7. Golden Panda – Best Crash Gambling Casino for 10% Cash Rebate

Payout Time: Instant to 1 hour
Established: 2023
Number of Games: 4,000+
Minimum Deposit for Bonus: $20

Golden Panda is the top choice for players who want steady value through weekly rebates. The casino offers a 10 percent real-cash rebate on net losses, and during our testing, the payout hit our account automatically every Monday with no wagering attached. This makes Golden Panda the best crash gambling casino for players who enjoy consistent cashback while playing high-volatility crash games.

We tried several crash rounds and found the interface fast, clean, and easy to navigate. Bets registered instantly, the multipliers animated smoothly, and the auto-cashout tool responded reliably even at high speeds. Deposits in major cryptos were near-instant, and our withdrawals cleared quickly, which kept the crash sessions moving without frustration.

The welcome bonus offers lots of early value, but the real highlight is the rebate system. Knowing that 10 percent comes back weekly made it easier for us to push into higher multipliers and test riskier crash strategies. Golden Panda delivers a balanced mix of speed, strong game variety, and dependable cashback returns. It’s perfect for crash gambling fans who want consistent rewards.

Golden Panda Summary Table

FeatureDetails
Welcome Bonus200 percent up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins
Wagering Requirement30x on bonus funds
Crash Games AvailableCrash X, Panda Rocket, Speed Crash
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat)
Minimum Deposit$20
Withdrawal TimeInstant to 1 hour
Accepts US PlayersYes

8. Discasino – Best Crash Gambling Site for Discord Players

Payout Time: Instant to 1 hour
Established: 2023
Number of Games: 2,000+
Minimum Deposit for Bonus: $20

Discasino delivers the strongest crash gambling experience for Discord-based players, thanks to its built-in community features and smooth integration with social gameplay. During our testing, we joined crash rounds directly through the casino’s Discord channels, where alerts, missions, and events appeared in real time. This makes Discasino perfect for players who enjoy interacting, tracking leaderboards, and sharing crash results inside an active community.

The crash games themselves loaded fast, with clean multiplier animations and reliable auto-cashout performance. Crypto deposits landed quickly, and our withdrawals were approved within the hour. The 200 percent welcome bonus unlocked steadily as we wagered, giving us time to test different crash volatility levels without rushing. The standout benefit is the weekly 10 percent cashback, which pays out automatically in real cash. This is something we found especially useful when pushing higher crash multipliers.

What truly sets Discasino apart is how naturally it blends gaming with Discord engagement. Missions, tournaments, and VIP perks all sync with the community, making it the best crash gambling site for Discord players who want a more social crash experience.

Discasino Summary Table

FeatureDetails
Welcome Bonus200 percent up to $10,000 equivalent + 10 percent weekly cashback
Wagering RequirementUnlocks in four 25 percent stages
Crash Games AvailableAviator, Crash Live, Turbo Crash, Discord Crash Mode
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat)
Minimum Deposit$20
Withdrawal TimeInstant to 1 hour
Accepts US PlayersYes

9. Samba Slots – Best Crash Betting Site with an Updated Website

Payout Time: Instant to 1 hour
Established: 2023
Number of Games: 3,000+
Minimum Deposit for Bonus: $20

Samba Slots delivers one of the most modern crash betting experiences thanks to its updated website design, smooth interface, and fast-loading game pages. When we tested multiple crash rounds, everything felt clean and responsive. Bets registered instantly, multiplier climbs were crisp, and the auto-cashout reacted perfectly even at higher speeds. The site redesign improves navigation across all devices, making it easy to switch between crash games, slots, and live tables without any lag.

Crypto deposits were nearly instant, and our withdrawals cleared quickly, which helped keep the crash betting flow moving. The welcome bonus gives plenty of early balance to try different crash volatility ranges, and the platform’s visual layout makes it ideal for new and experienced crash gamblers alike. We also tested the Drops & Wins events, and the real-time leaderboard worked smoothly on the updated interface. Overall, Samba Slots stands out as the best crash betting site with an upgraded website, offering speed, clarity, and a polished gaming experience.

Samba Slots Summary Table

FeatureDetails
Welcome Bonus200 percent up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins
Wagering Requirement30x on bonus funds
Crash Games AvailableSamba Crash, Turbo Fall Crash, Rocket Samba Crash
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat)
Minimum Deposit$20
Withdrawal TimeInstant to 1 hour
Accepts US PlayersYes

10. Fast Slots – Best Up-and-Coming Crash Gambling Site

Payout Time: Instant to 1 hour
Established: 2024
Number of Games: 4,000+
Minimum Deposit for Bonus: $20

Fast Slots is quickly becoming one of the most exciting new crash gambling sites thanks to its fast platform, clean design, and strong crypto support. When we tested several crash rounds, the gameplay felt smooth and responsive. Bets locked in instantly, multiplier climbs were steady, and the auto-cashout reacted with precision during high-speed rounds. For a newer casino, the performance is impressive and shows why Fast Slots is considered the best up-and-coming site for crash gamblers.

Deposits in major cryptocurrencies arrived within seconds, and our cash-outs processed fast, which is essential for players who switch between multiple crash sessions. The 200 percent welcome bonus gave us plenty of early balance to test different volatility levels, and the 10 percent weekly cashback made riskier crash strategies easier to explore. The overall interface is simple but optimized well, helping the casino feel more mature than its age suggests. Fast Slots blends speed, stability, and a large game catalog into a promising crash gaming platform.

Fast Slots Summary Table

FeatureDetails
Welcome Bonus200 percent up to $5,000 + 50 Free Spins
Wagering Requirement30x on bonus funds
Crash Games AvailableFast Crash, Rocket Velocity, Turbo Multiplier Crash
Live GamesYes (Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat)
Minimum Deposit$20
Withdrawal TimeInstant to 1 hour
Accepts US PlayersYes

Real Money Crash Gambling Guide

A classic crash money game works by letting you place a stake, watch the multiplier rise, and choose the moment to cash out before the crash. Because every round happens in real time, the tension and potential rewards are much higher than in most traditional casino games.

This makes crash game gambling a unique mix of strategy and timing. Instead of relying solely on luck, players can manage risk by choosing low multipliers, setting stop-loss limits, and using early-cashout tactics to protect their bankroll.

Real-money Play on Crash Games

Real-money play is straightforward, and most crash gaming real money platforms accept a wide range of payment methods, including credit cards, crypto wallets, prepaid vouchers, and instant banking options. 

When choosing crash gaming sites real money players trust, look for fast payouts, transparent multipliers, provably fair systems, and clear wagering rules. Beginners should set a fixed bankroll before each session and use small, consistent stakes to stay in control. Focusing on low-risk multipliers and early cashouts is the safest way to enjoy crash gambling real money gameplay without exposing yourself to unnecessary losses.

Beginner’s Crash Strategy Tips

Getting started with your first crash bet is easier when you follow a simple plan. 

  • Beginners should begin with small stakes and place crash bets at low-risk multipliers, usually between 1.20x and 1.50x, to understand the pacing of each round. These lower targets reduce volatility and help you build confidence before moving into higher-multiplier sessions.
  • Most new players rely on early-cashout crash betting strategies because they offer steadier results and protect your bankroll from sudden crashes.

By keeping your targets conservative and cashing out quickly, you can learn the rhythm of each game while minimising unnecessary risk.

Top Crypto Crash Variants You Can Play in 2025

Players now have access to a wide mix of fast-paced crash titles, each offering a different style of gameplay. Below is a quick look at the most popular variants available in 2025:

  • Crypto rocket game: A rapid-launch format where the multiplier climbs fast before the rocket explodes.
  • Crypto crash games: Classic crypto-powered crash rounds with rising multipliers and instant payouts.
  • Crash crypto game: A streamlined version of the standard crash experience built specifically for crypto bettors.
  • Crash casino game: A traditional casino-style crash title with steady multipliers and a stable cashout curve.
  • Crash betting games: Simple one-tap betting formats designed for players who want quick rounds and lower volatility.

Try fast-paced titles like crypto rocket game, high-multiplier crypto crash games, or simple one-tap crash betting games if you prefer shorter sessions with quick cashouts.

Crypto and Crash Gaming

The popularity of crypto-based crash titles has surged, with bitcoin crash gambling leading the way thanks to fast BTC deposits and near-instant cashouts. Modern casinos offer a wide mix of bitcoin crash games, ranging from classic low-volatility modes to high-risk BTC crash game variants that attract players chasing big multipliers. 

Some crash casinos even host competitive bitcoin casino crash tournaments where players climb leaderboards for cash prizes. Whether you prefer a traditional bitcoin crash game or a more aggressive crash bitcoin gambling format, Bitcoin remains the go-to option for fast, secure play.

Alongside BTC, many players are shifting to ethereum crash gambling, drawn by quicker block confirmations and lower transaction fees. ETH-powered crash titles tend to feel smoother and more responsive, making them ideal for anyone who wants faster rounds without sacrificing fairness or transparency.

Coin Casino and the Best Crash Gambling Sites

Players looking for the best crash casino sites will find that the best platforms combine fast payouts, transparent odds, and a wide selection of crash titles. These casinos allow you to deposit with crypto or fiat and play for real cash returns while maintaining provably fair results.

Choosing the best crash gambling sites comes down to finding crash casinos that combine fast gameplay, transparent multipliers, and reliable payouts. 

Coin Casino was chosen by experts as the leading casino out there when it comes to Crash games, but the other casinos we ranked are good too. So many crash casinos now offer crypto support, real-money options, and a wide range of crash variants. No matter which title you prefer, sticking to trusted top online casinos ensures a safer, smoother, and more rewarding crash gaming experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Are the Best Crypto Crash Games to Play in 2025?

The Best Crypto crash games are those that offer provably fair results, fast payouts, and stable multipliers. Popular choices include rocket-style titles, high-multiplier modes, and classic single-tap crash rounds.

Which Platforms are Considered the Best Bitcoin Crash Gambling Sites?

The Best Bitcoin Crash Gambling Sites are platforms with instant BTC deposits, low-fee withdrawals, and a wide selection of bitcoin crash titles, like Coin Casino. These sites also provide strong security and transparent multiplier histories.

How Do I Play Crypto Crash Games as a Beginner?

To play Crypto Crash Games, you simply place a small stake, watch the multiplier rise, and cash out before the crash. Beginners usually stick to low multipliers for safer early gameplay.

What is a Crypto Gambling Crash and How Does it Work?

A crypto gambling crash is a real-time multiplier game where the value rises quickly before suddenly dropping. Players try to cash out before the crash to secure their payout.

Is Crash Crypto Gambling Safe?

Crash crypto gambling is safe when played on licensed or provably fair crash casinos that publish transparent game results and multiplier data.

What is a Crypto Casino Crash Game?

A crypto casino crash bitcoin game is a fast-paced multiplier game offered at crypto casinos, allowing players to wager digital currencies like Bitcoin or Ethereum.

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Sun, 07 Dec 2025 18:16:32 +0000 Movie News
Tarantino Names Toy Story 3 the No. 2 Film of This Century: ‘Almost a Perfect Movie’ https://www.moviemaker.com/tarantino-toy-story-3-bret-easton-ellis/ Tue, 02 Dec 2025 14:48:20 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182551 Quentin Tarantino says Toy Story 3 is his second favorite film of the 21st Century, calling it “almost a perfect

The post Tarantino Names Toy Story 3 the No. 2 Film of This Century: ‘Almost a Perfect Movie’ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Quentin Tarantino says Toy Story 3 is his second favorite film of the 21st Century, calling it "almost a perfect movie."

"That last five minutes ripped my f---ing heart out," Tarantino says in the latest episode of The Bret Easton Ellis Podcast, where he listed his 10 favorite films of this century. "And if I try to even describe the end, I will start crying and get choked up. ... I can't even do it."

Tarantino joined Ellis for the two most recent episodes of the podcast to discuss his 20 favorite films of the 21st century, starting with numbers 20 through 11, which he shared last week.

In that episode, he discussed "laughing a lot" at the extreme violence of Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, which was No. 15 on his list.

This week's edition is one of the greatest podcast episodes you'll ever hear if you have even a glancing interest in Bret Easton Ellis, Quentin Tarantino, or modern film. We enjoy all three.

Tarantino runs through a list that includes a sublime Woody Allen film, multiple war movies, and a film made by one of his exes, building up to a very emotional discussion between the author of American Psycho and the director of Inglorious Basterds about 2010's Toy Story 3.

Quentin Tarantino and Bret Easton Ellis on the Genius of Toy Story 3

8 Pixar Movie Scenes That Went Surprisingly Dark Toy Story 3
Credit: C/O

Ellis found Toy Story 3 as moving as Tarantino did.

"I cannot believe the brilliance of the filmmakers who could get that kind of emotion out of us. It was genius," says Ellis.

Ellis shares that when he saw the movie in a theater upon its release in 2010, "the person I saw it with looked at me worried because I was crying."

Tarantino and Ellis are not outliers in their praise for Toy Story 3: The film was named one of the best of 2010 by The National Board of Review, the American Film Institute and Cahiers du Cinéma, among others, and won Oscars for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song.

But not everyone places it as high as Tarantino and Ellis: It is not, for example, on The New York Times' list of the 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century, which included several of Tarantino's films and placed Parasite at No. 1.

The Pulp Fiction director also expressed admiration for how the Pixar team managed the rare feat of producing a great third film in a series.

"They never nail the third film of a trilogy. I think the one is The Good, The Bad and the Ugly," Tarantino adds, referencing the third film in Sergio Leone's Dollars Trilogy. "To me, this is The Good, the Bad and the Ugly of animated films. This, along with The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, is the greatest end of a trilogy."

Of course, there are more than three Toy Story films — Toy Story 5 is due next year. Tarantino says he has never seen Toy Story 4 because he thinks the third Toy Story film so perfectly resolved the story.

The first three Toy Story films, of course, follow a boy named Andy who grows up with his favorite toys, including Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen).

Toy Story 3 is directed by Lee Unkrich, who wrote the story with John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton. Michael Arndt received an Oscar nomination for the screenplay, and previously won for writing Little Miss Sunshine.

In the film, Andy is ready to leave for college, and no longer plays with his toys. Most have been relegated to the attic, until a series of misunderstandings leads the toys to a new home at Sunnyside Daycare. Things at the toys' new home seem idyllic — at first.

"There is just something heartbreaking about how the toys respond emotionally to where they end up in their lives," Ellis notes. "They want love. All the toys want is love. ... I'm sorry. I am getting choked up."

Ellis and Tarantino praise the film for both comic and emotional highs — including an extremely gripping furnace sequence, one of the darkest sequences in any Pixar movie.

Both men agreed that as much as they loved the film, they never want to watch it again, because they don't think their viewing experience can be improved upon.

"It was a perfect experience," Tarantino explains.

Ellis, unlike Tarantino, has seen the 2019 sequel Toy Story 4, and found it "OK."

You're probably wondering at this point: What is Quentin Tarantino's No. 1 movie of this century? For that — and the rest of his list — we urge you to listen to the podcast. But it's Ridley Scott's 2001 war film Black Hawk Down.

Main image: Toy Story 3. Pixar.

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Wed, 03 Dec 2025 08:06:55 +0000 Movie News
Indie Film Revival? Peace With AI? Guillermo del Toro, Richard Linklater and More Predict the Future https://www.moviemaker.com/predict-the-future-2025/ Mon, 01 Dec 2025 15:06:02 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182519 Moviemakers predict the future in our annual feature, this time featuring Guillermo del Toro, Richard Linklater, Nia DaCosta, Hikari, and more.

The post Indie Film Revival? Peace With AI? Guillermo del Toro, Richard Linklater and More Predict the Future appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Continuing an annual tradition we started last year, we asked 12 moviemakers from a range of backgrounds and experience levels — including Guillermo del Toro, Richard Linklater, Nia DaCosta, Hikari, and more — to predict the future of film of film and life in general.

Among some of their predictions, or at least hopes: a resurgence of indie films, a renewed focus on storytelling, and more reverence for human experiences no AI can simulate.

We also asked them to please focus their predictions on their expectations for what will happen within their lifetimes. Here’s what they told us.—M.M.

CELIA ANISKOVICH

Celia Aniskovich Predict the Future

Aniskovich is a New York–based documentary filmmaker and the founder and editor-in-chief of Switchboard Magazine, a digital publication that produces rich, character-driven long-form nonfiction narratives and also acquires short films. Together, these works form a diverse slate of original content designed to serve as IP for adaptation into television and film properties.

Predictions for film: I believe the future of film will be more democratized, with artists reclaiming ownership over their work and the value it creates. At Switchboard, we’ve built a 50–50 profit-share model because we want to prove that empowering creators is not only possible, but essential. I see filmmaking becoming less about top-down control from studios and more about collaborative, community-driven teams telling stories that matter to them. The tone of those stories will shift, too. From what we’ve seen at Switchboard, narratives of hope, joy, and resilience are outperforming darker ones nearly tenfold — people crave connection and optimism.

Predictions for life: If the last few years have taught us anything, it’s that certainty is fragile. But I believe that in my lifetime, what will endure — and maybe even strengthen — is our hunger for connection through story. Technology will accelerate, yes, and change how we consume and communicate, but the need to make meaning out of chaos, to understand one another through narrative, will only deepen. I suspect the future of life will be marked by more fragmentation in how we live, but also more weaving together of experiences through the way we share them. At its best, that can make us feel less alone, and remind us that endurance, resilience, and hope are not abstract ideas, but lived stories.

JESUS BELTRAN

Beltran is a Stanford-trained mechanical engineer with over 20 years in tech, including more than a decade at Apple, and holds more than 15 design patents. In parallel, he has built a filmmaking career with shorts such as “The Grass Grows Green” and “Motos,” which screened at Sundance, SXSW, Indy Shorts, and Cinequest. He is now developing his debut feature, There’s No Place, a character-driven road trip film about family, ambition and identity, set against the backdrop of Silicon Valley.

Predictions for film: AI will not be stopped, but viewers will demand clarity on how much AI was used in films, leading to the emergence of a classification system for film AI use. On one end of the spectrum will be fully AI created films (agentic content) based off a viewer’s past likes. The other end is what we now know as auteur film. Everything in between will be hybrid content where a human chooses to substitute traditional filmmaking roles with AI. More films, more junk, and more diversity in storytelling will emerge — but so will an increased appreciation for AI-free films. Purely human films will be rare and auteurs who create them will be venerated more than they are today.

Predictions for life: Three major global issues are converging and creating chaos and opportunity for humans: climate crisis, the rise of artificial intelligence and a swing back towards authoritarianism. The wholesale control of energy and data are currently in the hands of a select elite under corporate veils and the overreach and abuses that are stemming from that will be countered by independent journalists, artists, engineers, scientists and hackers using decentralized guerrilla tactics for production and distribution of goods, information and stories. It’s gonna be interesting. Three recommendations: read more; support, encourage and participate in civilized debate; and get to know your neighbors.

NIA DACOSTA

Credit: Photo by Meg Young

DaCosta is the writer-director of the feature films Little Woods, Candyman, The Marvels, and this year’s Hedda. Her latest film, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, arrives in January. Her credits also include the shorts “The Black Girl Dies Last,” and her TV credits include episodes of Top Boy. You can read more about her life and work in this story.

Predictions for film:I think one day we will get back to the mid-budget drama in theaters. I have a hope that we will have movie stars again. Robert Redford was an amazing human being and someone whom I met because of my involvement in the Sundance Institute. He was an incredible man, but he was also a movie star. I think it’s something special.  

Predictions for life:Oh my gosh. I think James Cameron will make two more Avatar films. Honestly, I think we will get through this very difficult time that we’re all in. I think the moral arc of the universe is chaos, but I do think we’ve come back from really terrible, scary times before, and I think we will again. 

GUILLERMO DEL TORO

Photo by Frank Ockenfels/Netflix © 2025.

Guillero del Toro, whose greatest prediction about the future appears in our new cover story, is the director of the new film Frankenstein and such films as Cronos, The Devil’s Backbone, Pan’s Labyrinth, Pacific Rim, and Crimson Peak. He won Oscars for Best Director and Best Motion Picture for 2017’s The Shape of Water and Best Animated Feature Film for 2022’s Pinocchio.

Predictions for film and life: The great wisdom of the yin and the yang is that they take turns, unfortunately or fortunately. Nothing is forever, not the evil, not the good. The very nature of that cycle is that it will never stay put. The fight never ends. And the reason for that is you have to be conscious forever. You never say, OK, now I can not think or feel. Feeling is very important. 

You talk to somebody in the 1860s and you tell them that it takes two hours to get from Italy to London, and they’ll go, "No, it doesn’t." It’s impossible to comprehend. Is technology a tool, or is it an evolutionary step? I don’t know. I don’t know, and I don’t pretend to know.

AVALON FAST

Moviemakers predict the future
Credit: Photo by Eily Sprungman

Avalon Fast is a filmmaker from Vancouver Island, British Columbia who makes “girl horror” — stories focused on the eerie horrors of growing up, with female influence. Her debut feature film Honeycomb premiered at Slamdance 2022 and her new feature Camp premiered at Fantastic Fest and won Best Picture in the Next Wave competition. She has acted in the trans epic Castration Movie and the witchy-themed The Serpent’s Skin.

Predictions for film: There will be, as there already is, a hard line dividing artists who are filmmakers from filmmakers who work in the industry. Where in the past it seems these worlds had a way of combining, I see this becoming less and less common, as the work in film in the industry becomes more and more doomy. 

We have this new wave of DIY filmmakers actually surpassing studio films in terms of rating and awareness: I’m talking Louise Weards’ Castration Movie being one of the top 10 highest-rated movies of the year. That’s film revolution. That movie is shot on a Hi8 camera in people’s apartments in Vancouver, for nothing.

Another thing: movie watching is becoming more and more culty. You have to be in and understanding to know what’s cool. News outlets aren’t going to tell you, the box office won’t tell you. In the years to come, filmmaking (the artist’s way) will become increasingly difficult. There will be no money for us, and this will do two things: Weed whack the artists who are unable to make what they want without funding, and bring the people who will do it regardless closer than ever. In a way I look forward to the changes, the depression of filmmaking. For me it has always been an artist’s game and I know how to do what I do for nothing at all. 

Predictions for life: We are totally doomed, but in a similar way to film, with a great potential for full-course revolution. 

COURTNEY GLAUDÉ

Moviemakers predict the future
Credit: Photo by Drea Nicole

Glaudé is a Houston-born, award-winning filmmaker known for bold, emotionally charged storytelling. He first gained attention with The Reading, starring Oscar-winner Mo’Nique, and is a trusted creative voice at Tyler Perry Studios, where he serves as Executive Creator of Scripted and Unscripted. Currently, he has directed episodes of Zatima and Ruthless and is set to helm his first feature film. His short, “Old Gray Mare,” made waves on the 2025 festival circuit, playing at the  American Black Film Festival, Martha’s Vineyard African American Film Festival and BronzeLens.

Predictions for film: Movies are getting ready to get back to storytelling. The massive budget films aren’t making the money that they once were. Now, creatives must get really creative with the story that they’re telling, because production studios aren’t willing to put up the money for the big shiny movies. And so soon, we’ll see a separation between true story tellers and clickbait movies.

Predictions for life: Truly, I don’t know. I’m enjoying this journey God has me on, and my prediction is that all things that He has planned for me, I will get. 

HIKARI

Moviemakers predict the future Hikari
Photo by James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures - Credit: James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures.

Hikari is a Japanese American writer, director, and producer. Her latest feature Rental Family, starring Oscar winner Brendan Fraser, follows her acclaimed debut, 37 Seconds, which premiered at Berlinale and was acquired by Netflix. Her TV credits include Beef and Tokyo Vice. Hikari is currently developing new projects, including an original series with Annapurna titled Made in Utah

Predictions for film: This is a very hard question so I’m going to begin with this: 20 years ago, we did not expect YouTube to be where it is now. Every minute, there are content creators who upload original videos with millions of viewers watching them for free. Younger generations and people in some parts of the world primarily use their cell phones as a device to watch films because of convenience and economic reasons.

In order to survive we must work alongside mass media and creators by offering a singular experience. It’s important for us as filmmakers to create original works with distinct voices that include “remakes” or “based-on” stories, and for the studios to support the artists’ perspectives. 

Being in a theater and watching a film with an audience is a communal experience that you just cannot get at home. If you can find a way to connect with an audience in a personal way then I think we’ll always have hope.

JONAH FEINGOLD

Jonah Feingold is a New York-based filmmaker known for modern romantic comedies and digital storytelling. A graduate of USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, he wrote, directed, and stars in the new 31 Candles. His debut feature, Dating & New York, premiered at Tribeca in 2021. He also directed At Midnight (Paramount+) and Exmas (Amazon). Under his Romantical banner, his videos have earned over 100 million views. He recently wrapped Busboys, starring David Spade and Theo Von.

Predictions for film: With the increasing democratization of content creation—where it’s never been easier to make and share films—our landscape as filmmakers is shifting dramatically. There’s going to be a lot more competition for audience attention, which means our role will increasingly be about strengthening that parasocial relationship with our viewers. It’s not just about getting people to watch what we create; it’s about making them genuinely care and engage on a deeper level.

The beauty of this shift is that it also empowers us as creators. We get to own our work more fully, control how it reaches our audience, and go directly to the people who love what we do. With so much content out there, the tools we put in place will help us reach our core audience more powerfully than ever.

GG HAWKINS

Moviemakers predict the future

GG Hawkins is a writer-director whose work explores the female experience and millennial ennui. Her debut feature, I Really Love My Husband, premiered at SXSW 2025 to critical acclaim, screened theatrically, and is now streaming. GG also hosts the No Film School podcast and writes the newsletter Making It.

Predictions for film: We’re at the start of a new golden age of indie films — movies made entirely outside the studio system. I think we’ll see a flood of microbudgets bringing in unique voices. The filmmakers who embrace their individuality, who take real risks, will endure. I think audiences will come through many new and different channels, so creators will need to constantly cultivate their community. My hope is that these changes will usher in a new era of business models in filmmaking, one that provides a livable wage for all members of the filmmaking community.

Predictions for life: I hope there will be a reckoning, a push towards empathy in a world where we so easily jump to black and white thinking. Perhaps this will lead to a great slowing down, a rejection of the way we are using technology, social media, which would be a welcome reaction to the current moment. I worry we’re still a ways off from that, but I’m optimistic. I recently had the chance to screen my film for — and lead a discussion with — some college students, and I left feeling invigorated and hopeful about the future.

STEPHANIE LAING


Stephanie Laing is an Emmy-winning director, writer, and producer (Palm RoyaleYour Friends and NeighborsFamily Squares). The Sundance alumni’s third feature film, Tow, tells the true story of Amanda Ogle (Rose Byrne), an unhoused Seattle woman who fought her way out of tow-company hell to reclaim her car and life after receiving a $21,634 towing bill. Tow also stars Octavia Spencer, Demi Lovato, Ariana DeBose, and Dominic Sessa.

Predictions for film: I think we’re seeing a resurgence of indie films and that will continue to grow. The Criterion Channel is more and more popular with younger audiences seeking inspiration and unique storytelling. Films like Sinners and Weapons will always shine through while other films like Splitsville will continue to find their people.  I think more films that have something to say about the world we live and the injustices will continue to be popular as well as uniquely told romantic comedies because at the end of the day, everyone is seeking connection.  Films can make a difference and art will save us.

Predictions for life: I hope we look for more in-person connections and that we become less dependent on doom scrolling. That as people, we seek out the truth in news stories and don’t become immune to gaslighting. I think most people want to find a common ground and that hopefully kindness prevails. Storytelling connects us as humans, especially if we have open hearts and open minds.  

RICHARD LINKLATER

Moviemakers predict the future Linklater
Photo by Hugues Lawson-Body for Netflix

Richard Linklater helped kick off an indie film explosion with 1990’s Slacker, and went on to make such classic films as Dazed and Confused, the Before trilogy, and Boyhood, a 2015 Best Picture nominee. One of the most consistent and prolific filmmakers of the last 35 years, he has also made the hit comedy School of Rock and the modern noir-romance Hit Man. He has two new films this fall, Blue Moon and Nouvelle Vague, and recently shared with us his 15 Rules for MovieMaking.

Predictions for life and film: I find comfort in knowing people have been asking these questions for millennia. We want to feel like we’re in revolutionary times, and things are changing so quickly and all that. And you know, they might be. This could be the big one, but I tend to go back to, “ehh, life’s been kind of the same.” On one level, there’s a sameness to the human mind and the world that is unchanging. But we’ve never met a match like what’s going on now. 

It’s interesting. I want to see AI as a friend, as a collaborator of some kind, but we’ll see. For 60 years of cinema, if you go back and read the reviews and film thinking, it’s always been under threat. Film’s always been such a fascinating combo of technology, art, and commerce, so it’s kind of vulnerable to disruptions, and people have always felt vulnerable to losing industries and jobs and everything, for good reason. You kind of have to have an antenna up for warnings, and there’s always plenty of those.

Maybe speaking from a place of privilege by birth: I came along at a time when the studios were a little more open. I got Dazed and Confused made at a studio, which, of course, they wouldn’t do today. If you’re getting out of Sundance now, you don’t really have those opportunities. So I acknowledge that. And, you know, I was established. I’m very lucky. 

If you work for nothing, and you can talk other people into things and have a frugal idea, and maybe it’s good, you can still kind of get things done. 

I haven’t used AI, but in film, there’s no purity. We really can’t think in terms of that. Filmmakers use visual effects, digital visual effects. Everything’s a construct and an artist will use whatever is in front of them to perfect what they’re making, and should be allowed to. I think it’s the wrong time and place for purity tests. It’s really just: Does it work artistically, and can you do it ethically? Can everybody be treated well and compensated? Those are concerns. But as far as art goes, hell yeah. Use whatever you got. I wouldn’t apologize for anything that I felt made my film better. 

MALIK HASSAN SAYEED

Credit: Photo by Emilio Madrid

Malik Hassan Sayeed is a producer and cinematographer who shot the new Luca Guadagnino film After the Hunt, about which you can read more here, and Guadagnino’s upcoming Artificial, about OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. His past credits include Clockers, Girl 6, He Got Game and Belly. He has also shot videos for Nas, 2Pac, Jay-Z, Lauryn Hil and Beyoncé.

Predictions for life and film: We just did a movie about AI and OpenAI, and everybody’s scared of AI. And I’m not necessarily scared of AI, per se, because I think I believe in humans. I think humans are the greatest creation that has ever existed. So I don’t think a computer is going to beat us, because we’re just greater. 

Actually the one thing that makes me nervous is people using AI to hide behind, which is what people do. They hide behind nation states. They hide behind corporations, and now they get to hide behind AI. So I’m more concerned about that. 

Photos provided by the filmmakers.

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Mon, 01 Dec 2025 09:54:03 +0000 Movie News
Quentin Tarantino Recalls Laughing Through The Passion of the Christ, ‘Getting Kind of Turned On by the Beating’ https://www.moviemaker.com/quentin-tarantino-passion-of-the-christ/ Fri, 28 Nov 2025 12:27:20 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182372 Quentin Tarantino was “laughing a lot” the first time he saw Mel Gibson’s 2004 The Passion of the Christ, he

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Quentin Tarantino was "laughing a lot" the first time he saw Mel Gibson's 2004 The Passion of the Christ, he says in a new podcast, in which he also praised the film as one of his favorites of this century.

Tarantino didn't laugh through the entire movie, mind you: Just the parts where Jesus gets brutalized.

"Extreme violence is just funny to me," Tarantino said in the latest episode of the Bret Easton Ellis Podcast. "And when you go so far beyond extremity, it just gets funnier and funnier, all right?"

Tarantino joined the podcast to share his list of his 20 favorite films of this century. The Passion of the Christ was No. 15. You can listen to the full podcast episode to hear the rest of the first half of Tarantino's top 20, and the second half will be released soon.

Ellis recalled that he first saw the film in a completely packed theater in which many people were weeping. Tarantino had a very different viewing experience: He watched a print of it with a girlfriend at the time, in his own theater.

"To see that movie packed to the rafters, that movie in particular, all right, would have been fascinating," Tarantino said. "But I had such a special time with my friend. We were laughing a lot during the movie, not because we were just trying to be perverse, laughing at Jesus getting f---ed up."

He explained that they "we were just groaning-laughing at how f---ed up it was," especially because they knew more violence was coming.

"It just ended up being an extremely enjoyable experience. But now that sounds like I'm just being perverse, but no, I actually, I thought he kind of did a tremendous directorial job."

He praised Gibson for capturing the ancient time period of the film, and added:

"I love the fact that he never really chose one tone and carried it through. There are scenes where you feel like you're watching the most realistic Biblical movie you've ever seen. Then all of a sudden it turns into a religious painting and gets completely avant-garde, and gets surreal. And then there's actually horror movie imagery that he invests in, big time. And then there's political s--- in there. You really see the political situation of a Pontius Pilate in a really terrific way. And all those actors just seem amazing because they're not speaking English, and it just seems so convincing."

Quentin Tarantino Describes Mel Gibson Looking at Him Like a 'Nut' for His Passion of the Christ Reaction

The Passion of the Christ. Newmarket Films

Tarantino said he found one moment in the film "incredibly memorable," and said he had once told Gibson about it in person.

"I told him about this and he looked at me like I was a f---ing nut," Tarantino said. "Of course he doesn't understand where I'm coming from on this, and I don't know if anyone else will."

The particularly memorable scene is one in which Jesus is whipped by Roman soldiers. Tarantino noted that Gibson really extends the setup for the whipping, and that the Romans act like true "motherf---ers" even before the whipping begins.

"I mean, they just look like the worst cops you've ever seen in your life. And they're testing it out, and they're passing it around — you're like, 'Oh, my God, this is gonna be f---ing terrible.' And he's stretching it out, stretching — and then it starts happening.

"And then it's like wham. And you feel it. And then it's another one, wham. And like, three, four, five times, and you feel every f---ing blow.

"By the sixth blow, I traded places," Tarantino said. "And I was now a Roman. And I started getting kind of turned on by the beating. But I'm not Jesus getting beat. ... I became the Roman, and all of a sudden the whipping — I started getting the rush of that. And I couldn't believe I was feeling that. But I was feeling it."

Ellis, the author of the very violent American Psycho, interjected that he is affected by screen violence, and that the scene was "one of the most upsetting scenes that I can remember seeing."

Tarantino continued: "I liked that it reached into a sadomasochistic aspect in me that I didn't quite know I had, and it kind of turned me on. ... I didn't know I was going to switch horses. I just did."

Tarantino's Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair, which recombines his masterful Kill Bill Vol. 1 and 2, arrives in theaters December 5, and Gibson plans a two-part sequel to The Passion of the Christ, called The Resurrection of the Christ, for release in 2026 and 2027.

Tarantino isn't the first, interestingly enough, to see a link between the kind of cinematic violence displayed in his films and the violence of Gibson's.

When Christoph Waltz, star of Tarantino's Inglorious Basterds and Django Unchained, hosted Saturday Night Live in 2013, the show re-imagined Christ's crucifixion and resurrection as a Tarantino-style revenge thriller, Djesus Uncrossed. Enjoy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqISX2o0a4A

Main image: Jim Caviezel in The Passion of the Christ. Newmarket Films.

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Fri, 28 Nov 2025 06:19:41 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Era Isn’t Aesthetic, It’s Behavior: How Cheryl Wenjing Xia Designs Period Worlds That Actually Breathe https://www.moviemaker.com/era-isnt-aesthetic-its-behavior-how-cheryl-wenjing-xia-designs-period-worlds-that-actually-breathe/ Sat, 15 Nov 2025 15:04:00 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1182306 Cheryl Wenjing Xia is a LA based Production Designer and graduate of ArtCenter College of Design. Xia approaches period design

The post Era Isn’t Aesthetic, It’s Behavior: How Cheryl Wenjing Xia Designs Period Worlds That Actually Breathe appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Cheryl Wenjing Xia is a LA based Production Designer and graduate of ArtCenter College of Design. Xia approaches period design with a discipline that borders on forensic. For her, building the past is never about “vintage style” or mood-board nostalgia. It is, in her words, about behavior — how people lived, how they moved, what they touched, what broke, what was repaired, and how these choices left marks on space. When she designs period environments, she’s not recreating an era as an aesthetic. She’s rebuilding the conditions of life inside that era.

That mindset defined her work on a recent collaboration with director Daria Maximova: the construction of a 1920s Soviet residential hallway. The assignment was not small. The hallway needed to feel specific, local, and lived-in — not generic “old Europe,” not romantic ruin, not stage fakery. It had to carry the texture of shared poverty, collective housing, and controlled space. It had to breathe like 1920, not perform like 2025 pretending to be 1920.

Xia treated the hallway like a character.

At the macro level, she worked with Maximova to define the corridor’s entire architecture: its proportions, its linear depth, how narrow the run should feel between doors, how oppressive or generous the ceiling height should sit over the viewer. The wall surfaces were negotiated just as carefully. This was not a glossy paint job. It needed that layered plaster feel — slightly uneven, rubbed down by years of hands and heat and cheap repairs. Even the degree of staining near the baseboards became part of the conversation. The floor wasn’t just “tile,” it was an argument about tile: color temperature, wear pattern, and whether the glaze should read chipped or matte under camera.

Then the focus narrowed.

Doorways became their own study. Xia and Maximova had detailed discussions not just about which doors belonged in that time and place, but how they were built: panel shape, wood tone, proportion, hardware. She did not treat a door as a door. She treated it as evidence of who could afford to replace it and who couldn’t. The placement of the peephole (if there was one), the position and age of the door handle, the style and mounting of the buzzer — none of that was left to guesswork or modern instinct. Every piece had to line up with Soviet material culture of the 1920s. Every piece had to feel like it had been there before the camera ever arrived.

As a foreign production designer working in a Soviet-era setting, Xia was acutely aware that inauthentic detail reads immediately, even subconsciously. That meant research wasn’t optional. It was the build. She spent long hours gathering photographic references, digging into historical visuals, and pulling stills from period films to identify what was plausible, what was common, and — just as importantly — what would be wrong. That process shaped not only the big choices (door frames, tile type, plaster texture) but also the micro-decisions: bells, latches, screws, finishes.

And the work did not happen from a laptop. Xia and her team went physically into prop houses, sometimes staying for hours at a time to chase down the right object, the right weight, the right patina. The process was obsessive and, by necessity, slow. The corridor couldn’t look dressed. It had to look accumulated. She also hit multiple building-material suppliers and salvage sources, not just for budget reasons but because new stock was unusable if it looked “new.” A wrong surface gives you away faster than a wrong reference.

A still from the short film "Cucumber" Directed by Daria Maximova

Her collaboration with Maximova continued into a different narrative space — a FedEx commercial built around a very particular character: a taxidermist living in a present-day New York apartment that feels psychologically anchored in the 1920s. The tone of this project was radically different. This was not strict realism. This was a world that existed somewhere between silent film era unease and contemporary isolation — strange, private, a little haunted. The creative language pulled from early cinema, German Expressionism, and something deliberately uncanny, almost museum-like.

To build that interior, Xia and Maximova did what they always do: they went looking for physical input. They walked Los Angeles’ Museum of Jurassic Technology. They visited Vulture Culture oddities spaces. They gathered textures from places that felt wrong in the right way — too quiet, too curated, too still. Those visits weren’t “inspiration trips.” They were spatial studies. The question wasn’t “what looks cool?” The question was “how does someone like this actually arrange their life?”

Together, they mapped the apartment not just as a layout but as a lived pattern. Where does the table sit in relation to the main work surface. Which window is usable light and which is just mood. Where do tools collect. What corner becomes ritual space. The blocking of objects had to match the daily motion of a solitary, meticulous person who lives with specimens.

In that same project, Xia took period thinking all the way down to the hand scale. She fabricated the key prop for the spot: a hollow, heart-shaped taxidermy specimen vessel. It wasn’t outsourced. It was built. She combined 3D printing with hand-finishing to get the exact hybrid language the story needed — part clinical, part intimate, part unsettling. She then dressed it using whatever carried the right organic truth: fallen branches and leaves collected on location, fragments of insect material, even loose strands of hair. Nothing glossy. Nothing “Halloween store.” Every added element needed to feel like it had been handled, cataloged, and kept.

Because the final spot was shot in black and white, Xia also painted the piece in grayscale under live phone camera tests, checking contrast and value instead of hue. She wasn’t painting for the human eye on set. She was painting for the lens, for the grade, for what the audience would actually see.

The result impressed the entire team — not because the prop was complicated, but because it felt disturbingly believable. It felt owned.

Taken together, these projects say something essential about Xia’s practice. She is not just collecting era-correct objects. She is reconstructing how those objects were used, at what point in their lifespan, and under what emotional conditions. She treats period not as a visual filter, but as a living system with rules.

The heart-shaped sculpture for a Fedex commercial directed by Daria Maximova

For Cheryl Wenjing Xia, “period design” is never about arranging old-looking objects and capturing a pretty nostalgic frame. Her target is stricter, and more intimate: she wants the space to be lived the way it would have been lived in that era — claimed, worn down, repaired, improvised. She’s not chasing “does it look like the past,” she’s chasing “did this past actually function like this.” That’s why she will spend the kind of time other departments would call excessive on things like the height of a doorbell in a 1920s Soviet hallway, the direction of wear on floor tile, or a single stray hair sealed inside a heart-shaped specimen prop. For her, those details decide whether an audience believes the world or doesn’t. And that’s the difference: environments she builds don’t just resemble an era, they behave like one. They breathe on camera, they carry fatigue and memory, they feel inhabited. A hallway that should exist in 1920s Soviet housing. A New York apartment that still thinks in silent-film logic. This is her signature as a production designer: era isn’t a style choice, it’s behavior — and space isn’t background, it’s narrative.

To learn more about Cheryl Wenjing Xia's work, or to collaborate, contact xia2rt@gmail.com or visit www.xia2rt.com

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Mon, 24 Nov 2025 07:18:42 +0000 Movie News
Armie Hammer Returns in Frontier Crucible Trailer to Rip Off a Tarantula’s Leg (Video) https://www.moviemaker.com/armie-hammer-frontier-crucible/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 17:55:54 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181735 Armie Hammer is not only back in the new Frontier Crucible trailer, but he’s back with a juicy role: He

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tGLFG57Z78

Armie Hammer is not only back in the new Frontier Crucible trailer, but he's back with a juicy role: He plays an ornery outlaw who rips the leg off a tarantula for "trying to run away."

The film from director Travis Mills also stars Myles Clohessy, Mary Stickley, Ryan Masson, William H. Macy and Thomas Jane. Hammer is second billed. Frontier Crucible is produced by Dallas Sonnier, who also produced Bone Tomahawk, a similarly gritty Western.

The film, from Well Go USA Entertainment, follows a wagon full of crucial medical supplies that is targeted in an Apache attack. The only man who can guide it through to its destination is Merrick Beckford, but he needs to enlist the help of a trio of dangerous outlaws. When they accidentally kill an Apache scout, the stakes are raised considerably.

The film is Hammer's most prominent role since his career collapsed amid revelations that he enjoyed cannibal-themed role play — and he faced sexual assault accusations that didn’t lead to criminal charges.

He said in a January podcast interview that he was making a quiet career comeback that included Frontier Crucible, and that the general perception of him in Hollywood is, “Man, that guy got f—ed.”

Armie Hammer Background

The poster for Frontier Crucible. Well Go USA Entertainment.

Hammer lost jobs and his representation at his agency, WME, when private messages ascribed to him went viral in early 2021. They included talk of cannibalism, drinking blood, enslavement and rape. Hammer has since contended that they were part of consensual fantasy role playing, taken way out of context.

His once-thriving career had included roles in The Social Network and The Lone Ranger, but it crumbled as police investigated sexual assault accusations by an ex-partner who identified herself as Effie.

In 2023, Los Angeles County prosecutors announced that they would not file charges against Hammer, in part because of the “complexity of the relationship” between Hammer and the woman.

In an interview with Tom Segura and Christina Pazsitzky’s Your Mom’s House Podcast released on New Year’s Day, Hammer explained that he would sometimes send sexual partners graphic, joking messages, laughing as he sent them.

He also said that his understanding of consent has evolved since that period in his life, and that he understands that some of his partners may have thought they were in a more long-term relationship than he intended, and may have felt burned by their interactions with him.

“The worm is turning. And it takes time. It’s slow,” Hammer said on the podcast. “But generally now the conversation when my name comes up with people in the industry is, ‘Man, that guy got f—ed.’ And that feels really good. It’s really encouraging.”

Main image: Armie Hammer in Frontier Crucible. Well Go USA Entertainment.

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Tue, 28 Oct 2025 10:56:15 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Edward James Olmos Says He Plays the Only Blade Runner in Blade Runner https://www.moviemaker.com/edward-james-olmos-blade-runner-gaff/ Fri, 24 Oct 2025 15:16:53 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181669 Edward James Olmos recently explained why he's the only true Blade Runner in Blade Runner.

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Does Edward James Olmos play the only Blade Runner in Blade Runner?

Olmos made an interesting case for that notion during a recent career retrospective Q&A at the Santa Fe International Film Festival, where he was honored with a lifetime achievement award.

The iconic actor, whose beloved films beside 1982's Blade Runner include 1988's Stand and Deliver and 1992's American Me, explained that he only takes roles in which he's able to play a large part in shaping his characters. He used Blade Runner as an example of how he contributes to a character's development.

In the film, Olmos played Gaff, a mysterious, blue-eyed, bow-tied LAPD investigator who steers Harrison Ford's character, Deckard, in his mission to eliminate replicants — genetically enhanced workers created by the Tyrell Corporation who appear so human that they sometimes believe themselves to be human.

In the film, those charged with hunting replicants — derisively called "skin jobs" — are known as Blade Runners.

Edward James Olmos on Gaff

Harrison Ford as Deckard and Edward James Olmos as Gaff in Blade Runner. Warner Bros.

Gaff sometimes speaks a complex language called "Cityspeak" that combines 10 languages, including French, Hungarian and German. Olmos said he took Berlitz language classes to assemble his Cityspeak lines.

Gaff also has a habit of doing origami — he uses different figures, such as a chicken and a stickman, to reflect Deckard's inner thoughts at different points in the film.

Blade Runner has famously gone through various edits and releases that change some viewers' interpretations of the film. Studio executives and Scott debated several elements that the studio felt would make the film more coherent, including a voiceover by Deckard.

But to Blade Runner director Ridley Scott — and Olmos — one detail is crucial and consistent.

Near the end of the movie, Gaff leaves an origami unicorn in Deckard's home. To many — including Scott and Olmos — this unicorn proves that Deckard is a replicant.

Under one interpretation, it's possible that the unicorn represents Deckard's desire for freedom — which Gaff understands because he knows Deckard is a replicant.

Scott underlined this interpretation in a 1992's "Director's Cut" re-release of the film that added a sequence, about 42 minutes into the story, in which Deckard dreams of a unicorn. This addition adds to the theory that Deckard is a replicant, because Gaff leaving an origami unicorn in Deckard's home suggests that he is aware of Deckard's dreams, which would make more sense if those dreams have been implanted by humans.

For years, Ford and Scott argued over whether Deckard was a replicant, though Ford finally conceded in a 2013 Esquire interview: “I always knew that I was a replicant. I just wanted to push back against it, though. I think a replicant would want to believe they’re human. At least this one did.”

Olmos referenced the unicorn in his Santa Fe Q&A, noting: "That's how we found out that Decker was a damn replicant — and I'm the only Blade Runner in the movie!"

By Olmos' logic, a replicant hunting other replicants can not be a true Blade Runner — only a human can be a Blade Runner. And since Gaff is (by all evidence) a human, that makes him the only Blade Runner in Blade Runner.

Olmos also said he made another key contribution to the film: the scene when Gaff turns and acknowledges to Deckard that his replicant lover, Sean Young's Rachael, is not long for their world.

"I created my own dialogue," said Olmos. "You know that line, 'Too bad she won't live, but then again who does?' At the very end?"

He said he hoped at the time that Scott wouldn't cut the line — "and he used it."

It's unclear who is most responsible for the line, and whether it was a complete ad-lib by Olmos, or a reinterpretation of the script. In the July 24, 1980 draft of the script by Fancher, Gaff doesn't say the line.

But in the February 23, 1981 draft, for which David Peoples did a rewrite, Gaff delivers the line, "It's too bad, she don't last, eh! ... But who does."

In Future Noir, actor M. Emmet Walsh says the dialogue "got changed during production."

May we editorialize? However the final line came about, Olmos' final version on-screen is an improvement.

The Return of Gaff

Edward James Olmos 2
Edward James Olmos at the Santa Fe International Film Festival. MovieMaker.

Olmos also recalled in Santa Fe his delight at returning to the franchise in the 2017 sequel Blade Runner 2049.

In a key scene, he appears with Ryan Gosling's character, K, in an elder care facility, and presents him with an origami sheep.

"They used me perfectly in that movie," Olmos said. "I'm a nurse. I take care of the elderly, and I make these little organic pieces. You don't see it until the very end. And it's a little sheep lamb being led to the slaughter. And they put it up there because he's looking for his father."

How Blade Runner Got Its Name

If you've gotten this far wondering how the film got its very cool but very strange name, please read on.

In the book Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, author Paul M. Sammon explains that Blade Runner director Ridley Scott didn't want Deckard to be called simply a "detective" and asked screenwriter Hampton Fancher, "couldn't we come up with a different name for his line of work?"

Fancher then went through his home library and found a little-known book by author Williams Burroughs titled Blade Runner: (a movie).

They purchased the title from Burroughs, though his book was not, of course, the basis of the 1982 Blade Runner. The film is loosely based on the Philip K. Dick novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

Which gives added resonance to the origami sheep in 2049.

Main image: Edward James Olmos as Gaff. Warner Bros.

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Fri, 24 Oct 2025 08:49:12 +0000 Movie News
One Battle After Another Already Feels ‘Very Dated,’ Says Bret Easton Ellis https://www.moviemaker.com/one-battle-after-another-bret-easton-ellis/ Wed, 08 Oct 2025 14:36:23 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181334 Many critics feel that Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another passionately captures the zeitgeist, but author Bret Easton Ellis

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Many critics feel that Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another passionately captures the zeitgeist, but author Bret Easton Ellis takes another view of its timeliness: He says the film already feels "very dated" and suspects it won't hold up.

The film, released September 26, follows Leonardo DiCaprio as Bob, a burned-out former revolutionary who emerges from hiding when the evil Col. Steven J. Lockjaw (Sean Penn) comes after Bob and his teenage daughter, Willa (Chase Infiniti).

Many critics on both the left and right see it as a rejection of Trumpism and a celebration of leftist revolutionary spirit.

The film has almost universally positive reviews. The New York Times critic Manohla Dargis, for example, wrote that while she is "still sifting through its ideas and its images," she believes One Battle After Another is "a cry from the heart that’s also a crystallizing image of resistance. It’s one for the ages, wild and thrilling, and every bit as American as the red, white and blue."

She also noted that the film critiques liberals, and not just the bullying tyrants who Bob and Willa resist. She cited one scene, for example, in which an ineffectual Bob gets stoned and watches the classic film The Battle of Algiers, which depicts Algerian fighters battling for freedom from France.

One dissenter about the quality of One Battle After Another is critic Armond White, who sees it as potentially dangerous: In a piece for the conservative National Review, he said the film "undeniably romanticizes political assassination" and called it "the year’s most irresponsible movie." His take led the highly influential Drudge Report on Tuesday and early Wednesday.

Bret Easton Ellis on One Battle After Another

El Paso One Battle After Another
Leonardo DiCaprio and Benicio del Toro in One Battle After Another. Warner Bros. - Credit: Warner Bros

And here enters Bret Easton Ellis. In addition to authoring American Psycho, Less Than Zero, and the recent The Shards, Ellis has become one of our most erudite and bluntly honest film critics. He speaks regularly on The Bret Easton Ellis Podcast about movies new and old, never holding back on often unpredictable or contrarian opinions. He was not impressed, for example, with the widely celebrated Sinners.

In the latest episode of the podcast, Ellis noted that he is a huge fan of Anderson, and believes his 2007 There May Be Blood may be the best film of this century. But he was disappointed by One Battle After Another, and the critics' praise of it.

"It's kind of shocking to see these kind of accolades for — I'm sorry, it's a not-very-good movie — because of it's political ideology. And it's so obvious that is what they're responding to, why it's considered a masterpiece, the greatest film of the decade, the greatest film ever made. Because it really aligns with this kind of leftist sensibility," Ellis told his listeners.

The author believes that very soon, the film will be seen as "a kind of musty relic of the post-Kamala Harris era — that thing that everyone gathers around and pretends is so fantastic and so great when it really isn't, just to make a point. And that's unfortunate, but that's where we are now."

Ellis noted on the podcast that he did like aspects of the movie — like Bob's attempts to get in touch with the revolutionary underground, and its gorgeous cinematography.

But he believes liberals and conservatives alike may be misreading the film, and disagreed with Dargis' review stressing how important the film is.

"No, it is not. It has really not read the room. It has not read the room at all about what's going on in America," Ellis said on the podcast.

He elaborated: "There's a liberal mustiness to this movie that already feels very dated by October 2025. Very dated. And it just doesn't read the room. You know, it reads a tiny corner of the room, but it does not read what is going on in America."

He also said be believes Anderson has made three masterpieces — the others, besides There Will Be Blood, are Boogie Nights and Magnolia — but noted that he has also made some films "that I have not responded to at all."

Ellis added later in the podcast that not liking things is OK, and not everyone has to agree on everything. He understands that his book The Shards, for example, isn't for everybody.

But Ellis' podcast does have good news for One Battle After Another: The author said that based on his talks with Hollywood friends — on the left and right, some of who liked the movie and some of whom didn't —there's an expectation that it will get many Oscar nominations.

Main image: Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another. Warner Bros.

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Wed, 08 Oct 2025 07:36:26 +0000 Movie News
With One Battle After Another, El Paso Gets Time to Shine https://www.moviemaker.com/el-paso-one-battle-after-another/ Tue, 07 Oct 2025 19:51:33 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181316 With One Battle After Another, El Paso, Texas gets a moment in the cinematic sun — and hopes to expand on it.

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El Paso, Texas has dreamy vistas, historic downtown buildings, and storied history along the border it shares with Mexico. With the acclaim for Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another, which uses the city as one of its main locations, it may also be ready to step up as a film destination.

Thanks to praise for the film and a new Texas film incentive that gives TV and film productions rebates of up to 31% of their qualified in-state spending, the sprawling, largely Latino city of about 880,000 is having a moment, and aims to seize on it.

At the recent El Paso Film Festival, which coincided with the September 26 release of One Battle After Another, local filmmakers reveled in their moment in the spotlight — and shared stories of watching Anderson and stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Benicio del Toro mixing it up with locals.

Usually film commissions across the world frantically compete to host a DiCaprio movie. So how did Drew Mayer-Oakes, El Paso's film and creative industries commissioner, lure One Battle After Another?

"They came to us," he laughs.

Anderson is no stranger to West Texas, having shot his 2007 classic There Will Be Blood in and around Marfa, about 200 miles from El Paso. In 2022, Mayer-Oakes recalled, Anderson and one of the film's producers, Sara Murphy, traveled parts of the country looking for locations and inspiration.

El Paso rooftops. Courtesy of creativElPaso.

Murphy contacted Mayer-Oakes that summer, without mentioning Anderson's name. But soon after Mayer-Oakes made clear that El Paso would welcome the production — "that's what we do," he notes — others got involved, including location manager Michael Glaser.

Mayer-Oakes, a veteran of the Texas film scene who has also led San Antonio's film commission, remembers a key phone call with Glaser: "He just confirmed what he thought was the case — 'You guys are open to filming? Can we do stuff in your downtown? It might get a little crazy.'

"And we were like, 'bring it on.'"

The craziness includes a spectacular riot and chase sequence in which DiCaprio's character, Bob, flees from authorities as he tries to find his daughter, Willa (Chase Infiniti). Bob enlists the help of del Toro's Sensei Sergio St. Carlos, as they race around downtown El Paso locations that included the sensei's dojo and El Paso's character-rich, atmospheric downtown buildings.

One of the most beautiful shots in the film comes as a band of skateboarders — played by real-life El Paso skaters — try to lead Bob across the rooftops to safety.

Mayer-Oakes notes that Anderson seemed to take inspiration from going up on those rooftops, camera in hand. Looking south from a high story in El Paso, you can see border crossings and deep into neighboring Ciudad Juarez.

"He had a specific idea of what he wanted, but he was looking at everything. And I think with filmmakers like him, the location continued to inspire him and help him focus on how he wanted to tell the story," Mayer-Oakes says.

The One Battle After Another production had a crew of about 300, mostly from out of town. but hired local production assistants and traffic control, among others. It also went to local vendors for wood, supplies, and other materials used to build three sets.

"Obviously it's important to to hire people that know the local community when you have to do things quickly," Mayer-Oakes adds.

He estimates that the local economic impact in El Paso was about $4 million over about 16 days of shooting. The film also shot in California locations including the Sacramento rail yards and the Anza-Borrego desert.

How to Get Hired on a Paul Thomas Anderson Film

Benicio del Toro as Sensei Sergio St. Carlos in One Battle After Another. Warner Bros.

Some in the El Paso film community wondered if their moviemaking dreams might be hampered by living at the far end of West Texas. But One Battle After Another gave them hope that they might be able to stay in the city they love while still getting jobs on major productions.

El Paso native Celine Dipp was attending Brown University in Rhode Island, with hopes of becoming a filmmaker, when she found out last year that Anderson was shooting in her hometown. She learned of the production when someone working on it mentioned it to her sister.

"And I was like, wait, go back: PTA is shooting in El Paso?" Dipp recalls.

She had considered quitting filmmaking, because she really wanted to live in El Paso and didn't think she could have a viable film career there. But when she came home from college in June 2024, and realized the production was shooting at the same time, she was determined to get hired.

Much of the film centers on Bob trying to remember a series of codes in order to reconnect with his team of rebels, the French 75. Dipp similarly had to solve a few mysteries to become a One Battle After Another production assistant.

She contacted filmmakers she knew in town, repeatedly expressing her interest, until the production learned of her, she says.

"And then I got a text that was like, a bunch of code words, and then, 'Can you hop on the phone tomorrow?' And then we got on the phone and it went really well," she recounts.

The code words included calling the film "the BC project," since at one point it was known as The Battle of Baktan Cross, the name of the fictional community where much of it takes place.

Even after her initial call, the production still maintained an aura of secrecy. She had a confusing follow-up call a week later with "a different sounding production," she says, called either "Desert Path or Desert Way," which was another way of keeping things on the downlow.

When she was hired as a production assistant, she laughs, "even the production office had a fake facade so you didn't even know what was inside. It was so bizarre."

One of her favorites memories of the production was bringing almonds to an actor, and entering through the wrong door — and into an apartment set where DiCaprio, as Bob, was having a meltdown.

"It was that scene where DiCaprio is on the phone getting angry because they won't give him the password in the funky apartment. So I ended up holding this packet of almonds, terrified to walk up to them, because I was totally not supposed to be there in that moment," she recalls.

A gaffer pulled her into a doorway, so it was just "me, him, one other woman, the script supervisor and PTA, sitting on a bed, looking at the monitor, and they ran the scene."

She recalls watching Anderson laughing delightedly as he watched DiCaprio work.

"It was such a massive production... but it kind of distilled into this really artistic and honest moment," Dipp recalls. "And I think getting to witness that — it just reminds you why you're there. You're witnessing the creation of cultural zeitgeist, and it was just a really cool thing to be a part of."

She's now working on four films of her own — two shorts and two features. And feels very optimistic about the El Paso film scene.

El Paso is just 45 minutes from Las Cruces, which has benefitted for years from outstanding New Mexico film incentives that have helped lure productions like the Best Picture winner Oppenheimer. Now El Pasoans have a serious Oscar contender of their own.

"I think a lot of people underestimate how dynamic this area is, because we are the middle point between New Mexico and Texas. New Mexico is such a big film hub, and West Texas is an emerging film hub, and so we're already at a really great position, but it's a newer scene.

"I mean, it's beautiful," Dipp adds. "A lot of people say it's how Austin was years ago. And so it's a really nascent scene. Everyone knows each other. And getting to work on this, and getting the exposure that we got, it was really cool to watch what we can do."

'I Love It Here'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQUPdVxZNPk

Wally Lozano, an El Paso native, spent years in Los Angeles working on productions including Dragged Across Concrete and Crank. Lozano has acted, produced, directed and much more, but his experience with precision driving got him hired on One Battle After Another.

He delighted in getting to witness crew members like Colin Anderson as work – "Colin Anderson is like the Jimi Hendrix of camera operators," notes Lozano — and he took a moment to thank the other Anderson, PTA, for shooting in El Paso.

He says the director looked at him and said, earnestly: "I love it here."

Lozano had moved back to El Paso from Los Angeles during Covid lockdowns, and decided at the time, "I'll sell insurance. My career's over."

But working on One Battle After Another inspired him, he says: "I cried tears of joy, because I left Hollywood thinking my career was over, and I got here, and my backyard was a Hollywood backlot."

Lozano hopes El Paso will draw a television series next. Just as Breaking Bad helped build up New Mexico, an El Paso-set series could provide steady work for locals.

It could, like One Battle After Another, also capture the zeitgeist: ICE raids have made it impossible for anyone in America to forget the debate over immigration and due process, or lack of it. But in El Paso, where you can see Mexico from the rooftops, living side by side with another culture has never been far from anyone's mind.

A TV show is one of Mayer-Oakes' top priority, he notes. He's seen the work and money that the Taylor Sheridan shows Landman and Lioness have brought to Fort Worth, about 600 miles east.

"One of my primary goals is to get a television show, because that's a game changer. Even if you're doing a streaming show that shoots 10 or 12 episodes a year per season, and it's a drama, even cheaper ones are $4 million per episode," he says. "Multiply that by 10."

Mayer-Oakes is also quick to explain the benefits of the new incentive, which took effect in September. When Kevin Smith attended the El Paso Film Festival, for example, Mayer-Oakes elegantly made it known that El Paso should very much be in play for his future films.

But in the meantime, El Pasoans are just enjoying their moment in the sun. At the end of an El Paso screening of One Battle After Another, on the night it premiered, the skaters in the film — including Gilberto Martinez Jr.and Luis Trejo — posed outside the theater with moviegoers who had just become fans.

This week, Trejo posted a thank you on Instagram to Anderson, DiCaprio, del Toro and casting director Cassandra Kulukundis.

"When art comes to you, don't let it go," he wrote. "Thank you @paulthomasanderson and Cassandra K. for believing in us. Thank you @leonardodicaprio and @benicio_del_toro1 for leading us through this journey. It was an honor to work with everyone on set and do what we love on the big screen."

Main image: Leonardo DiCaprio and Benicio del Toro in an El Paso-shot scene in One Battle After Another. Warner Bros.

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Tue, 07 Oct 2025 12:51:36 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Dwayne Johnson Got Willingly ‘Concussed’ for The Smashing Machine: ‘He F—ing Rocked Me So Hard’ https://www.moviemaker.com/dwayne-johnson-smashing-machine-concussed/ Fri, 03 Oct 2025 15:14:28 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181265 The Smashing Machine star Dwayne Johnson and writer-director Benny Safdie tried hard to tell the story of UFC fighter Mark

The post Dwayne Johnson Got Willingly ‘Concussed’ for The Smashing Machine: ‘He F—ing Rocked Me So Hard’ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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The Smashing Machine star Dwayne Johnson and writer-director Benny Safdie tried hard to tell the story of UFC fighter Mark Kerr truthfully — especially in the fight scenes.

The film follows Kerr, played by Johnson, as he rises in the ring but struggles with addiction outside of it as he tries to mask intense pain. Emily Blunt plays his long-suffering girlfriend, Dawn, who faces her own struggles.

The film has drawn Oscar talk for Johnson, previously best known for franchise and action films — and it's safe to say he's the only contender in this year's Best Actor race who was willingly, as he describes it, "concussed" for his art.

In our cover story on The Smashing Machine, Johnson and Safdie told us that early in the making of the film, Safdie pitched the bold idea to always keep the cameras outside of the ring, and to avoid quick cuts and editing-assisted illusions.

“Benny and I were in a meeting, and he said, ‘I have something to pitch you. Tell me I’m crazy and I’ll never bring it up again: I would love to never cut away when you’re in the ring or in the cage.’" Johnson told writer Joshua Encinias.

“I said, ‘I would love that. I will train hard, and I will come in in the best, and hopefully decent, shape,’” Johnson recalled.

The most intense result of that approach came in a fight scene that recreates a famous brawl in Japan between Kerr and Kazuyuki Fujita, who is played in the film by actor and MMA fighter Yoko Hamamura.

Dwayne Johnson on Taking a Real Shot to the Face From Yoko Hamamura for The Smashing Machine

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRpnP3LZ99g

Johnson told Hamamura, literally, not to pull his punches.

“I pulled aside Yoko Hamamura,” Johnson recounted. “I said, ‘Hey, you have to hit me in the face.’ And he thought I was kidding. He goes, ‘No, no, I can’t do that.’ I said, ‘I mean it. I’m not trying to be a tough guy. You know what happened in this fight with Kerr and Fujita, and Benny’s not cutting away.’”

Safdie agreed: “I’m not going to cut away. I’m staying right there.”

Johnson insisted to Hamamura: “Please, please rock me. We got one shot with this. … You know how to hit. If you hit me here, I think you’re going to break my jaw. If you hit me up here, you’re going to break my cheekbone. If you could somehow… we get one shot at this, so rock me.’”

Hamamura did as he was asked, with predictably painful results. The fight appears prominently in the Smashing Machine trailer, which you can watch here if you can't see it above.

“He f---ing rocked me so hard,” Johnson said. “It winds up in the trailer, where I’m up on my knees, and I’m wobbly and dazed. I was concussed and wobbly for days after that. But we didn’t cut away. And I’m glad we didn’t because that was a very pivotal fight for Mark that actually changed his life.

“Benny wouldn’t let us fake it,” Johnson added. “If Mark got rocked, I got rocked.”

Safdie and stunt coordinator Greg Rementer meticulously planned out every round and takedown, but there was no getting around the pain.

“There’s a level of respect for what these fighters go through. You can’t fake that. You have to feel it,” said Johnson.

Safdie elaborated: “Dwayne had to learn how to fight like Mark, to really make it feel believable. ... That’s the first thing that takes you out of a movie like this — if you can just tell they’re not doing this stuff.”

The Smashing Machine is in theaters today, from A24.

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Fri, 03 Oct 2025 08:14:32 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
67 Bombs to Enid Doc Profiles People Living in the Middle of the Country That Nuked Theirs https://www.moviemaker.com/67-bombs-to-enid-marshall-islands/ Fri, 26 Sep 2025 23:14:33 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181190 67 Bombs to Enid follows the bombing of the Marshall Islands and relocation of many residents to Enid, Oklahoma.

The post 67 Bombs to Enid Doc Profiles People Living in the Middle of the Country That Nuked Theirs appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Enid, Oklahoma is a mostly white community on the plains, almost dead-set in the middle of the United States, that has a curiously high number of people from the Marshall Islands, a land made up of more than 1,200 islands and islets between Hawaii and the Phillipines. Even longtime residents wonder how thousands of Marshallese ended up in Oklahoma, and the new documentary 67 Bombs to Enid has the horrifying answer.

Between 1946 and 1958, the United States detonated 67 bombs the Marshall Islands, most notably at the Bikini Atoll. Elevated cancer rates soon followed, and many Marshallese fled the islands, considering them uninhabitable due to irradiated land and food: A 2012 United Nations report said “near-irreversible environmental contamination” had led to “indefinite displacement.”

The purpose of the bombings was to test the power of nuclear weapons as the Cold War arms race with the Soviet Union accelerated. One test bombing, Castle Bravo on March 1, 1954, was 1,000 times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II.

The island's leader in 1946, King Juda, had agreed to the U.S.'s request to temporarily relocate residents of the Bikini Atoll so that atomic bomb testing could begin, under the belief that such testing was important for the good of humanity. But wind and miscalculations over a decade irradiated vast swaths of the islands.

Some of the Marshallese featured in 67 Bombs to Enid believe they were also being used as "rats" or "guinea pigs" to see what effect the bombings would have on human life. Adding fuel to that notion is a 1950s news report, featured in the film, that features Marshallese men — described by a newsman of the era as "savages" — being tested for nuclear after-affects.

The film, which played Friday at the El Paso Film Festival, profiles many Mashallese now living in the center of the country that bombed and contaminated theirs.

The documentary shows some Enid locals opening their arms wide, supporting the Marshallese, celebrating their culture, and trying to right historic wrongs. Others express fear that these outsiders are just trying to get checks from the U.S. government, apparently unaware that the U.S. government of past generations is, in fact, the source of their woes.

The Marshallese try to assimilate, in many cases joining the military. And though a compact with the U.S. government allows them to work and pay taxes in the U.S., they are not allowed to vote.

Many came to Enid after a few Marshallese missionaries visited the town for school in the late '70s, and invited friends and loved ones. 67 Bombs to Enid profiles many of them — including a man who, as a young child, watched the bombs light up the ocean sky.

The film details their medical struggles, and troubles fitting in so far from their ancestral home. But it also shows their endurance, pride, and love.

"It's a beautiful community of people, and a resilient community of people. These terrible things happened to them, but they aren't walking around like a tragic people — they're vibrant and lovely," the film's El Paso-based co-producer Zach Passero, said in a post-screening Q&A Friday.

He's one El Paso connection to the film. Another is El Paso-based Andrew Smetek, who handled the meticulous but understated sound design.

Making 67 Bombs to Enid

67 Bombs to Enid
Enid, Oklahoma as seen in 67 Bombs to Enid

Taking at the Q&A with El Paso Film Festival founder and artistic director Carlos F. Corral, 67 Bombs to Enid co-directors Kevin Ford and Ty McMahan explained that they made the film with almost no budget because they thought it was an important story to be told. Documentarian Errol Morris agreed, and signed on as an executive producer in the hopes that it would help get the word out.

It's working: The United Nations had reached out to show 67 Bombs to Enid, which is now on a festival journey with an eye toward the widest distribution possible. They hope the film will make audiences take the threat of nuclear bombs more seriously, all over the world.

"There's nuclear weapons in the headlines every single day now. And so the mission became a little bit a bit greater — really trying to shed a light on on nuclear weapons and the dangers," said McMahan, a former Wall Street Journal reporter whose past films include the documentaries The Mundo King, The Toy Cart and The 34 Project.

"Even if we're not using them in war — just all of us as different countries that have nukes — even the accidental detonation of one can wipe out whole regions and create thousands of years of radiation sickness and poisoning," added Ford, whose past films include the Richard Linklater-produced documentary The Pushback.

The El Paso Film Festival, one of MovieMaker‘s 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee and 25 Coolest Film Festvivals, continues through Saturday.

Main image: 67 Bombs to Enid.



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Fri, 26 Sep 2025 16:29:40 +0000 Film Festivals
Tatiana Maslany, Star of Disney+’s She-Hulk, Calls for Cancelling Disney+ Over Kimmel Removal https://www.moviemaker.com/tatiana-maslany-she-hulk-disney-plus/ Fri, 19 Sep 2025 14:04:12 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181097 Tatiana Maslany, star of Disney+’s Marvel show She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, was among Disney veterans who called for fans to

The post Tatiana Maslany, Star of Disney+’s She-Hulk, Calls for Cancelling Disney+ Over Kimmel Removal appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Tatiana Maslany, star of Disney+'s Marvel show She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, was among Disney veterans who called for fans to cancel their subscriptions to Disney-owned Disney+, Hulu and ESPN after Disney's ABC pulled Jimmy Kimmel from the airwaves at the behest of the Trump Administration.

“Cancel your @disneyplus @hulu @espn subscriptions!” the Canadian actress wrote on Instagram.

She joined many Hollywood insiders who stood up to the company after it "indefinitely" pulled Jimmy Kimmel Live on Wednesday over comments involving murdered conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

Damon Lindelof, who co-created ABC's hit Lost, said on Instagram he would not work with Disney unless Kimmel's show returns.

"I was shocked, saddened and infuriated by yesterday’s suspension and look forward to it being lifted soon. If it isn’t, I can’t in good conscience work for the company that imposed it," he wrote Thursday.

The protests, of course, aren't just about Kimmel, but about the principle that the government shouldn't be able to censor speech it disagrees with.

Amy Landecker, known for shows including Hulu's The Handmaid's Tale, shared an image of the cancellation page from her Disney+ account.

And the box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations shared a post that read "Protest Playbook: Save Jimmy Kimmel" that urged fans to cancel Disney+ and leave the message, “I’m canceling because Jimmy Kimmel was removed.” The company also shared an email address for Disney CEO Bob Iger.

"Bottom line: Companies like Disney only respond when there’s economic pressure + bad PR. A loud, organized, visible campaign gives them a reason to reverse course," Exhibitor Relations wrote.

Representatives for Disney did not immediately respond Friday to a request for comment on the calls for cancellations, or on whether they have noticed an uptick in cancellations.

The calls to cancel Disney+ follow objections to Kimmel's suspension by former President Obama, numerous celebrities, and the Hollywood unions SAG-AFTRA and the WGA, among others.

In his monologue Thursday night, Kimmel's fellow late-night host Stephen Colbert said Kimmel's suspension was “blatant censorship.”

Colbert himself had his CBS show cancelled — effective at the end of its current season — after he criticized Trump and Paramount, which owns CBS.

Tatiana Maslany, star of Disney+'s She-Hulk, calls on people to cancel Disney+, Hulu and ESPN over the Jimmy Kimmel suspension,

Background on Jimmy Kimmel Being Suspended

Brendan Carr, who Trump appointed as chair of the Federal Communications Commission, threatened on Wednesday that the FCC might take action against Disney-owned ABC, saying on a podcast, "These companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there’s going to be additional work for the F.C.C. ahead.”

He also called on ABC's network affiliates to say, "Listen, we are going to pre-empt, we are not going to run Kimmel anymore until you straighten this out.”

Within hours, Nexstar, which needs FCC approval for a planned $6.2 billion deal to acquire a rival, announced that it would pre-empt Kimmel's show. Additionally, Sinclair, which also owns ABC affiliate stations, said it would also stop airing Kimmel's show, and called on Kimmel to apologize and “make a meaningful personal donation” Kirk’s family and his conservtive activist group, Turning Point USA. (Sinclair later said it would air a tribute to Kirk during Kimmel's timeslot Friday.)

Late Wednesday, ABC announced that it would "indefinitely" pull Kimmel's show from the airwaves.

President Trump applauded the movie, and called on other networks to cancel their late-night hosts as well.

"Congratulations to ABC for finally having the courage to do what had to be done. Kimmel has ZERO talent, and worse ratings than even Colbert, if that’s possible. That leaves Jimmy and Seth, two total losers, on Fake News NBC. Their ratings are also horrible. Do it NBC!!! President DJT" the president wrote on Truth Social.

What Jimmy Kimmel Said About Charlie Kirk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2siPf99ED4M&list=RDNS2siPf99ED4M&start_radio=1

Kimmel is a longtime Trump critic who has often mocked the Republican, including while hosting the 2024 Oscars.

In his opening monologue on Monday night, Kimmel argued that Tyler Robinson, the suspect in Kirk's murder last week, was affiliated with the pro-Trump MAGA movement.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said.

Kimmel's comment begins at the 1:30 mark in the video above, which you can also see here.

The Daily Mail has reported that Robinson's grandmother said "most of my family members are Republican." But CNN reports that prosecutors said Robinson's mother has “explained that over the last year or so, Robinson had become more political and had started to lean more to the left – becoming more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.”

Late-Night Cancel Culture

In July, Paramount paid $16 million to settle a Trump lawsuit. Because the payment came as Paramount sought to seal a $1.5 billion sale — and hoped to avoid federal intervention — Colbert called it “a big fat bribe.”

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert was cancelled days later.

Trump subsequently said on Truth Social that he was not to blame for Colbert’s cancellation.

“Everybody is saying that I was solely responsible for the firing of Stephen Colbert from CBS, Late Night,” Trump wrote. “That is not true! The reason he was fired was a pure lack of TALENT, and the fact that this deficiency was costing CBS $50 Million Dollars a year in losses — And it was only going to get WORSE!”

Main image: Tatiana Maslany in a promotional image from She Hulk. Disney+.

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Fri, 19 Sep 2025 07:04:27 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Barack Obama, Ben Stiller, Rosie O’Donnell, Wanda Sykes and More Defend Jimmy Kimmel: ‘This Isn’t Right’ https://www.moviemaker.com/jimmy-kimmel/ Thu, 18 Sep 2025 16:24:34 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181076 Former President Barack Obama, Ben Stiller, Rosie O’Donnell and Wanda Sykes were among those who defended Jimmy Kimmel after his

The post Barack Obama, Ben Stiller, Rosie O’Donnell, Wanda Sykes and More Defend Jimmy Kimmel: ‘This Isn’t Right’ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Former President Barack Obama, Ben Stiller, Rosie O'Donnell and Wanda Sykes were among those who defended Jimmy Kimmel after his show was abruptly pulled from the air at the urging of the Trump Administration.

"This isn't right," Stiller posted on X.

Sykes, who had been scheduled to appear on Jimmy Kimmel Live on Wednesday, before ABC suspended the show indefinitely, said on Instagram that Trump had "didn’t end the Ukraine war or solve Gaza within his first week. But he did end freedom of speech within his first year."

She added: "Hey, for those of you who pray, now’s the time to do it. Love you, Jimmy."

Former President Obama posted on Threads: “After years of complaining about cancel culture, the current administration has taken it to a new and dangerous level by routinely threatening regulatory action against media companies unless they muzzle or fire reporters and commentators it doesn’t like. This is precisely the kind of government coercion that the First Amendment was designed to prevent — and media companies need to start standing up rather than capitulating to it.”

Two prominent Hollywood unions — SAG-AFTRA, which represents actors, and the Writers Guild of America — also spoke out for Kimmel.

"Democracy thrives when diverse points of view are expressed," SAG-AFTRA said in a statement. "The decision to suspend airing Jimmy Kimmel Live! is the type of suppression and retaliation that endangers everyone’s freedoms. 

"As a Guild, we stand united in opposition to anyone who uses their power and influence to silence the voices of writers, or anyone who speaks in dissent," said the WGA statement. "If free speech applied only to ideas we like, we needn't have bothered to write it into the Constitution. What we have signed on to – painful as it may be at times – is the freeing agreement to disagree. Shame on those in government who forget this founding truth. As for our employers, our words have made you rich. Silencing us impoverishes the whole world."

O'Donnell lamented on Instagram: "this is unacceptable - f--- this fascist administration and corrupt corporate executives - bowing to the orange monster - america is no more 🥲."

Comedian and director Mike Birbiglia wrote on Instagram: "If you're a comedian + don't call out the insanity of pulling Kimmel off the air — don't bother spouting off about free speech anymore."

He was alluding to many pro-Trump comedians who loudly and frequently complained about cancel culture — before the Trump Administration had a comedian cancelled.

How the Trump Administration Fought Jimmy Kimmel

Brendan Carr, who Trump appointed as chair of the Federal Communications Commission, made threats Wednesday that the FCC might take action against Disney-owned ABC, saying on a podcast, "These companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there’s going to be additional work for the F.C.C. ahead.”

He also called on network affiliates to say, "Listen, we are going to pre-empt, we are not going to run Kimmel anymore until you straighten this out.”

Within hours, Nexstar, which needs FCC approval for a planned $6.2 billion deal to acquire a rival, announced that it would pre-empt Kimmel's show. Additionally, Sinclair, which also owns ABC affiliate stations, said it would also stop airing Kimmel's show, and called on Kimmel to apologize and “make a meaningful personal donation” Kirk’s family and his conservtive activist group, Turning Point USA. (Sinclair later said it would air a tribute to Kirk during Kimmel's timeslot Friday.)

Late Wednesday, ABC announced that it would "indefinitely" pull Kimmel's show from the airwaves.

President Trump applauded the movie, and called on other networks to cancel their late-night hosts as well.

"Congratulations to ABC for finally having the courage to do what had to be done. Kimmel has ZERO talent, and worse ratings than even Colbert, if that’s possible. That leaves Jimmy and Seth, two total losers, on Fake News NBC. Their ratings are also horrible. Do it NBC!!! President DJT" the president wrote on Truth Social.

What Jimmy Kimmel Said About Charlie Kirk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2siPf99ED4M&list=RDNS2siPf99ED4M&start_radio=1

Kimmel is a longtime Trump critic who has often mocked the Republican, including while hosting the 2024 Oscars.

In his opening monologue on Monday night, Kimmel argued that Tyler Robinson, the suspect in Kirk's murder last week, was affiliated with the pro-Trump MAGA movement.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said.

Kimmel's comment begins at the 1:30 mark in the video above, which you can also see here.

The Daily Mail has reported that Robinson's grandmother said "most of my family members are Republican." But CNN reports that prosecutors said Robinson's mother has “explained that over the last year or so, Robinson had become more political and had started to lean more to the left – becoming more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.”

Main image: Jimmy Kimmel on Jimmy Kimmel Live Monday. ABC.

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Fri, 19 Sep 2025 06:46:54 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
In Anaconda, Paul Rudd and Jack Black Remake… Anaconda https://www.moviemaker.com/anaconda-jack-black-paul-rudd/ Wed, 17 Sep 2025 13:28:50 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181050 Anaconda is the story of two middle-aged guys played by Paul Rudd and Jack Black who finally decide to fulfill

The post In Anaconda, Paul Rudd and Jack Black Remake… Anaconda appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=az8M5Mai0X4

Anaconda is the story of two middle-aged guys played by Paul Rudd and Jack Black who finally decide to fulfill a lifelong dream: remaking the '90s horror film Anaconda.

When their hired anaconda dies, they go into the jungle in search of new snakes, and encounter a giant anaconda like the one in the movie Anaconda.

We already love this movie. (If you can't see the trailer above, treat yourself to watching it here.)

The film — which carries the tagline, "it's the movie they're dying to remake — comes from writer-director Tom Gormican, who previously did this sort of meta bring-the-movies-to-life thing with the very funny 2022 Nicolas Cage adventure The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent, which featured Cage playing himself and getting caught up in an adventure-filled faceoff with Pedro Pascal.

Anaconda also recalls the meta concept of another film in which Jack Black starred, Ben Stiller's Tropic Thunder, in which a cadre of pretentious actors go to the jungle to film a war movie and quickly find themselves in the midst of very real violence.

Background on Anaconda

The new Anaconda arrives on Christmas Day — why not? — and also stars ​Steve Zahn, ​Thandiwe Newton, ​Daniela Melchior and ​Selton Mello.

In a delightful nod to Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" — featuring the line "my anaconda don't want none unless you got buns, hon" — the new Anaconda trailer features the opening riff of the song slowed down and played over and over again, like John Williams' theme for Stephen Spielberg's Jaws.

May we again editorialize? Brilliant.

Intriguingly, the film has not yet been rated. So you can bet there are some interesting internal debates going on about just how graphic its snake attacks should be.

The original Anaconda,  released in 1997, was directed by Luis Llosa and starred Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, Jon Voight, Eric Stoltz, Jonathan Hyde, and Owen Wilson. It also had a meta aspect: It was the story of a documentary film crew seeking a giant, legendary snake which they of course eventually find.

It received so-so reviews but did well enough at the box office to become a cult classic and inspire several sequels. And many in the cast went on to become A-listers.

It also holds a proud place on our esteemed list of 12 Killer Animal Movies That Used Real Animals. Kudos, everyone.

The new film is co-written by Kevin Etten, who also co-wrote Ghosted and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent, among other projects, and executive produced by Samson Mücke. It is produced by Gormican, Etten, Brad Fuller ​​​​​and Andrew Form.

Anaconda arrives in theaters December 25 from Sony Pictures Entertainment.

Main image: Paul Rudd and Jack Black in, you know, Anaconda.

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Wed, 17 Sep 2025 06:31:20 +0000 Movie News ANACONDA – Official Trailer (HD) nonadult
Sundance Remembers Founder Robert Redford and His ‘Rebellious Spirit’ https://www.moviemaker.com/sundance-robert-redford/ Tue, 16 Sep 2025 16:27:32 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181037 The Sundance Film Festival remembers Robert Redford, the Sundance Kid

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Robert Redford, who passed today at 89, made countless contributions to cinema. But one of the most obvious comes to life with each new edition of the Sundance film festival, which he was instrumental in founding and popularizing.

"We are deeply saddened by the loss of our founder and friend Robert Redford," the Sundance Institute said in a statement Tuesday.

"Bob’s vision of a space and a platform for independent voices launched a movement that, over four decades later, has inspired generations of artists and redefined cinema in the U.S. and around the world.

"Beyond his enormous contributions to culture at large, we will miss his generosity, clarity of purpose, curiosity, rebellious spirit, and his love for the creative process. We are humbled to be among the stewards of his remarkable legacy, which will continue to guide the Institute in perpetuity."

In addition to his role in founding the festival, Redford also served as the Sundance Institute's president.

Background on Robert Redford and Sundance

Sundance started in 1978, near the end of a decade in which Redford ruled the screen with films including All the President's Men, The Candidate and The Way We Were.

Originally called the Utah/US Film Festival, it aimed to bring more film to Utah, and was founded by Sterling Van Wagenen, head of Redford's Wildwood Enterprises Inc., as well as the Utah Film Commission. The first edition included films like Midnight Cowboy, The Sweet Smell of Success, and Mean Streets.

In 1981, the festival moved to Park City, Utah, and shifted its dates from September to January, the month in which the festival has taken place since.  It was renamed the Sundance Film Festival in 1991, in honor of one of Redford's most famous films, 1969's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

Sundance has become one of the most prestigious of all festivals, known for breaking indie filmmakers into the mainstream and giving the world its first glimpse at major awards contenders, usually long before they arrive in theaters.

Last year, it announced that it will most to Boulder, Colorado, beginning in 2027.

“I founded the Sundance Institute with a commitment to discovering and developing independent artists, with the Sundance Film Festival serving as the platform for stories to help expand audiences and broaden the landscape,” Redford said at the time.

“That mission remains even more critical today and will continue to be our core principle. Words cannot express the sincere gratitude I have for Park City, the state of Utah, and all those in the Utah community that have helped to build the organization.”

Main image: Robert Redford as the Sundance Kid and Paul Newman as Butch Cassidy in a promotional image for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. 20th Century Fox.

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Tue, 16 Sep 2025 09:27:38 +0000 Movie News
Lilly Wachowski Calls Charlie Kirk ‘White Nationalist, Transphobe’; Defends Writer Who Mocked His Shooting https://www.moviemaker.com/lilly-wachowski-charlie-kirk-matrix-gretchen/ Tue, 16 Sep 2025 13:54:01 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1181025 The Matrix co-director Lilly Wachowski criticized DC Comics for parting ways with author Gretchen Felker-Martin, whose comic book was dropped

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The Matrix co-director Lilly Wachowski criticized DC Comics for parting ways with author Gretchen Felker-Martin, whose comic book was dropped by the publisher after Felker-Martin posted “thoughts and prayers you Nazi b—-,” in response to conservative activist Charlie Kirk being shot.

Felker-Martin also responded to Kirk's death by writing, “Hope the bullet’s okay after touching Charlie Kirk.” Felker-Martin, who is trans, previously wrote a 2022 novel, Manhunt, in which the Harry Potter author, who has made many anti-trans statements, is burned to death.

Following Felker-Martin statements about Kirk, DC immediately cancelled the run of her new comic series, a Batman spinoff called Red Hood.

DC said in a statement: “At DC Comics, we place the highest value on our creators and community and affirm the right to peaceful, individual expression of personal viewpoints. Posts or public comments that can be viewed as promoting hostility or violence are inconsistent with DC’s standards of conduct.”

Felker-Martin has not responded to MovieMaker's requests for comment.

Wachowksi, who like Felker-Martin is trans, expressed support for the fired author and criticized DC for not backing Felker-Martin.

"DC comics planting their flag on the moral high ground on the side of a white nationalist, transphobe while dutifully carrying on his rotten work in the firing of Gretchen Felker-Martin. The characters of the DC universe would find this despicable," Wachowski wrote on Bluesky.

DC cancelled Red Hook after one issue had been released, explaining in a statement to retailers: “DC Comics cancels existing orders for Red Hood #2 and Red Hood #3, and any orders for future issues of the series. DC Comics will credit retailers for all invoiced copies of Red Hood #1, inclusive of copies that may have already been sold.”

But Wachowski called on retailers to keep selling the first issue, stating "the cool comic shops will carry the #1 of Red Hood even though they were told to stop selling them. Support them too if you can!"

Wachowski also added a link to Felker-Martin's Patreon "to help Gretchen and the lost revenue from losing her book."

Lilly Wachowski has long objected to right wingers using memes from The Matrix. In 2020, when Tesla founder Elon Musk tweeted “Take the red pill” and Ivanka Trump replied, “Taken!,” Wachowski succinctly responded, “F— both of you.”

Background on Lilly Wachowski, Gretchen Felker-Martin and Firings Over Charlie Kirk Comments

Lilly Wachowski The Matrix
A scene from the 1999 classic The Matrix, directed by Lilly and Lana Wachowski. Warner Bros.

Police have arrested 22-year-old Tyler Robinson in Kirk's shooting.

Most people from across the political spectrum have publicly denounced Kirk's murder last week as he spoke at Utah Valley University. Former President Barack Obama, for example, quickly issued a statement saying that ” this kind of despicable violence has no place in our democracy.”

But some reactions to the shooting led to quick firings, including that of Felker-Martin. Another prominent dismissal was MSNBC's firing of commentator Matthew Dowd, who opined soon after Kirk was shot that Kirk was "constantly sort of pushing this sort of hate speech or sort of aimed at certain groups. And I always go back to, hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions." He later accused MSNBC of giving in to a "right wing mob."

Also last week,The Washington Post fired writer and editor Karen Attiah, who later wrote on Instagram, "My offense? Calling out America’s acceptance of hatred and political violence, gun deaths, especially when the violence is carried out by white men. For this, the Washington Post accused me of 'gross misconduct,' putting its staff in danger , and fired me without a conversation or review. I wholeheartedly reject these charges."

In her firing letter, obtained by Status, the Post objected to Attiah's messages on Bluesky in which she wrote, "Refusing to tear my clothes and smear ashes on my face in performative mourning for a white man that espoused violence is…. not the same as violence,” and “Part of what keeps America so violent is the insistence that people perform care, empty goodness and absolution for white men who espouse hatred and violence.”

Many in Hollywood have taken care not to say anything that could be construed as disrespectful of Kirk. Kirk's name went unmentioned at the Emmys, for example. And Stephen King quickly apologized for a tweet saying that Kirk "advocated stoning gays to death," explaining that in fact Kirk had been demonstrating "how some people cherry-pick Biblical passages.”

King's tweet came days before the opening of The Long Walk, the latest of many adaptations of his work.

On Monday, Vice President JD Vance pledged a crackdown on "radical left lunatics" he blames for encouraging Kirk's death. He said the Trump Administration would “go after the NGO network that foments, facilitates and engages in violence.”

The conservative-leaning Drudge Report shared a headline Tuesday that declared, "Cancel culture -- now run by conservatives!"

Main image: Red Hood. DC Comics.

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Tue, 16 Sep 2025 07:51:58 +0000 Movie News
In Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere’ Trailer, Jeremy Allen White Is ‘Trying to Find Something Real’ https://www.moviemaker.com/springsteen-deliver-me-from-nowhere-trailer/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 01:50:31 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180997 In the new Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere trailer, The Bear star Jeremy Allen White transforms into the Boss at

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuRX3n2LTlc

In the new Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere trailer, The Bear star Jeremy Allen White transforms into the Boss at a crucial stage in his career: during the making of Nebraska.

The film isn't a biopic, exactly, but rather a look at a short but crucial period in Springsteen's life as an artist. In 1982, as his label seeks a top ten hit, Springsteen opted instead to record quiet, dark, introspective and largely acoustic songs, including "Atlantic City," the eerie story of mob violence that plays throughout the Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere' trailer.

He recorded them largely on a four-track in his New Jersey bedroom.

“This film takes a couple years out of my life and looks at them very closely, a time when I made Nebraska and went through some personal difficulties,” Springsteen said in a statement released Sunday. “I’m so appreciative of Jeremy Allen White and the entire cast for their wonderful and moving performances — and Scott Cooper, one of the most generous collaborators I’ve ever worked with.”

In addition to a striking physical resemblance, White uncannily imitates the Boss' spoken vocal cadences as he explains himself in the trailer for the film: "I'm tryin' to find something real."

What he found included deeply personal songs, as well as songs inspired by Terrence Malick's film Badlands.

You can watch the trailer here if you don't see it above.

Background on Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere, Starring Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen

Based on Warren Zanes’ book of the same name, Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is directed by Cooper (Hostiles), and also stars Jeremy Strong as Springsteen’s long-time confidant and manager, Jon Landau; Paul Walter Hauser as guitar tech Mike Batlan; Odessa Young as Faye; Stephen Graham as Springsteen’s father, Doug; Gaby Hoffman as Springsteen’s mother, Adele; and David Krumholtz as Columbia executive, Al Teller.

Nebraska is where Bruce chose truth over expectation — a choice that still reverberates through everything he’s written since. At that crossroads, he could have chased the bright lights and the roar of arenas, but instead he turned inward, armed only with silence, a four-track recorder, and the courage to confront himself. For him to trust me with telling that story—the most vulnerable chapter of his life—is the greatest honor I’ve ever had as a filmmaker,” Cooper said in a statement.

Screenshot - Credit: 20th Century Studios

The trailer debuted during Sunday night's Emmys, a ceremony where The Bear has been known to clean up.

After debuting this month at the Telluride Film Festival, the film currently holds a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. 

It is produced by Cooper, Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Eric Robinson and Scott Stuber. Tracey Landon, Jon F. Vein and Zanes executive produce. The film includes an original score by composer Jeremiah Fraites, cinematography by Masanobu Takayanagi, production design by Stefania Cella, costume design by Kasia Walicka-Maimone, and is edited by Pamela Martin.

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere arrives in theaters October 24 from 20th Century Studios.

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Sun, 14 Sep 2025 18:52:20 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Hacks Emmy Winner Hannah Einbender in Speech: ‘F— ICE, Free Palestine’ https://www.moviemaker.com/hannah-einbinder-ice-free-palestine/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 01:10:39 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180993 Hannah Einbinder declared "fuck ICE, free Palestine" as she accepted her Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

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Hacks star Hannah Einbinder dashed any chance of an apolitical Emmys as she accepted her award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series by declaring, "F--- ICE, free Palestine."

This year’s Emmys were held under unusually tight security because of the fatal shooting last week of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. And many celebrities chose their words very carefully, in light of recent firings over public reactions to Kirk's death that were deemed distasteful.

But Einbinder didn't censor herself on two particularly divisive subjects — though the CBS broadcast did censor her language.

"I just want to say, finally, Go Birds, f--- ICE and free Palestine," she said from the stage. The Emmys audience roared.

Backstage, she elaborated on her statement, saying she has friends who are working as frontline medical workers in Gaza. She said she feels that "it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the state of Israel. Because our religion and our culture is such an important and long-standing institution that is really separate to this sort of ethnonationalist state."

Until Einbinder's declaration, the Emmys had been fairly apolitical. The host, Nate Bargatze, has long been known for working clean and avoiding politics, and Sunday's show was no exception.

He started the show with a funny sketch about Philo T. Farnsworth, the inventor of television, and used the time that normally might have gone to a monologue to a funny routine in which he explained that he would be donating $100,000 to the Boys & Girls Clubs of America and adding or subtracting money based on whether winners went over or under a 45-second time limit for their speeches. It became a running gag throughout the night.

Einbinder went over her time, but pledged to pay the Boys & Girls Clubs for the difference.

(And if you're wondering about the "Go Birds" declaration: Einbinder is a longtime Philadelphia Eagles fan because her father is from the Philadelphia area.)

Hannah Einbinder, The Emmys and Politics

The other big political moment of the Emmys was unspoken: Stephen Colbert took the stage to hand out the night's first big award, and ask the audience, "Is anyone hiring?"

It worked as a joke about his show's recent cancellation, but also as a moment of defiance, given its context.

This year's Emmys are airing on CBS, owned by Paramount. In July, Paramount paid $16 million to settle a Trump lawsuit. Because the payment came as Paramount sought to seal a $1.5 billion sale — and hoped to avoid federal intervention from the Trump Administration — Colbert called it “a big fat bribe.”

Days later, his series, The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, was cancelled.

Trump subsequently said on Truth Social that he was not to blame for Colbert’s cancellation.

“Everybody is saying that I was solely responsible for the firing of Stephen Colbert from CBS, Late Night,” Trump wrote. “That is not true! The reason he was fired was a pure lack of TALENT, and the fact that this deficiency was costing CBS $50 Million Dollars a year in losses — And it was only going to get WORSE!”

Another political moment came later in the show, when Televison Academy chair Cris Abrego called on the industry not to regress, but to keep fighting for inclusion and societal uplift. He cited the long history of groundbreaking television shows, from All in the Family to South Park.

The latter show has spent much of its current 27th season mocking Trump Administration policies. It has also mocked Paramount, which owns Comedy Central, the network that airs South Park, for paying to settle the Trump lawsuit.

Main image: Hannah Einbinder backstage at the Emmys with fellow Hacks star and Emmy winner Jean Smart. CBS.

Editor's Note: Corrects spelling of Hannah Einbinder.

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Sun, 14 Sep 2025 20:13:33 +0000 Movie News
Stephen Colbert Wins Best Talk Series, Gets Two Emmys Standing Ovations, Asks: ‘Is Anyone Hiring?’ https://www.moviemaker.com/stephen-colbert-emmy-anyone-hiring/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 00:14:33 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180984 Stephen Colbert got a standing ovation at the Emmys as he handed out the first award of the night, and asked the audience: "Is anyone hiring?"

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Stephen Colbert got a standing ovation at the Emmys as he handed out the first award of the night, and asked the audience: "Is anyone hiring?" Later he won the Emmy for Outstanding Talk Series and received another standing ovation.

"Sometimes you only know how much you love something when you get a sense you might be losing it," he said in his acceptance speech. He added that he has never loved America more, and quoted Prince's hit song "Let's Go Crazy."

Colbert may have been fearing for his country's future, but he was certainly acknowledging the loss of his show: In July, CBS, which aired this year's Emmys, cancelled The Late Show With Stephen Colbert just days after Colbert criticized Paramount, which owns CBS, and the Trump Administration.

This year's Emmys took place under heavy security because of the murder last week of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. And many onstage watched their words very carefully, because of several people who have been fired for comments deemed insensitive in the days after Kirk's killing.

But not everyone self-censored: Hacks actress Hannah Eisbender was notably blunt as she accepted her Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series and declared: "f--- ICE, free Palestine."

Background on Stephen Colbert and CBS at the Emmys

No one commented on the decision to have Colbert be the first person to directly address the Emmys audience Sunday night, and no one needed to: His placement near the top of the show was a statement in itself.

After asking if anyone was hiring, Colbert referred to himself and his staff: "I've got 200 very qualified candidates with me here tonight who will be available in June," his said, referencing when his late-night show will end.

He also jokingly shared an outdated headshot, and asked Harrison Ford, sitting in the audience, to share it with Steven Spielberg.

In July, Paramount paid $16 million to settle a Trump lawsuit. Because the payment came as Paramount sought to seal a $1.5 billion sale — and hoped to avoid federal intervention — Colbert called it "a big fat bribe.”

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert was cancelled days later.

Trump subsequently said on Truth Social that he was not to blame for Colbert's cancellation.

“Everybody is saying that I was solely responsible for the firing of Stephen Colbert from CBS, Late Night," Trump wrote. “That is not true! The reason he was fired was a pure lack of TALENT, and the fact that this deficiency was costing CBS $50 Million Dollars a year in losses — And it was only going to get WORSE!”

Nate Bargatze Offers Apolitical Emmys Jokes

Early in the show, it seemed like it might be an apolitical night.

Host Nate Bargatze, known for working clean and avoiding politics, eschewed a traditional monologue in favor of a funny live skit about Philo T. Farnsworth, inventor of television.

It recalled "Washington's Dream," a skit he performed while hosting Saturday Night Live, in which George Washington riffs on a futuristic system of weights and measures — the one we still use today.

The Emmy night skit featured guest appearances by SNL's Mikey Day, Bowen Yang and James Austin Johnson, who asked questions as Bargatze's Farnsworth, decades ago, imagined the future of TV.

"One day there will be a channel for every interest," he predicted. "The Travel Channel for travel. The Food Channel for food. And the History Channel..."

"For history?" Mikey Day's character interjected.

"No," said Bargatze's Farnsworth. "Aliens."

He also predicted that there would one day be a network called BET for Black audiences.

"Will there be a network for white people?" he was asked.

"Why CBS, of course," Bargatze replied.

Then Colbert — now an 11-time Emmy winner — took the stage, to quip about losing his job and present the first award of the night. It went to Seth Rogen, who won best lead actor in a comedy series for his role as Matt Remnick, the head of Continental Studios on Apple TV+'s much praised The Studio.

Bargatze then returned to the stage to explain, in lieu of a monologue, that he would be donating $100,000 to the Boys & Girls Clubs of America and adding or subtracting money based on whether winners went over or under a 45-second time limit for their speeches. It became a running gag throughout the night.

Later, Televison Academy chair Cris Abrego called on the industry not to regress, but to keep fighting for inclusion and societal uplift, citing the long history of groundbreaking television shows, from All in the Family to South Park. (Throughout its current 27th season, South Park has notably mocked both the Trump Administration and Paramount, which owns Comedy Central, the network that airs South Park.)

In the end, the Emmy winners collectively went far over their scheduled speech time. But nonetheless, Bargatze pledged $250,000 to the Boys & Girls Clubs, and CBS added another $100,000.

Main image: Nate Bargatze on the Emmys Red Carpet.

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Sun, 14 Sep 2025 20:08:19 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
Gamers Say Charlie Kirk Shooter May Have Carved Helldivers Code Into Bullet Casing https://www.moviemaker.com/charlie-kirk-helldivers/ Fri, 12 Sep 2025 15:59:54 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180964 Fans of the Helldivers video game offered a theory about Charlie Kirk shooting suspect Tyler Robinson after Utah Gov. Spencer

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Fans of the Helldivers video game offered a theory about Charlie Kirk shooting suspect Tyler Robinson after Utah Gov. Spencer Cox noted that one of the bullets in the rifle believed to have been used in the shooting was inscribed with an "up arrow symbol, right arrow symbol and three down arrow symbols.”

"He f-ing inscribed Helldivers commands on his bullets," tweeted Mark Kern, a gaming CEO and designer who has worked on World of Warcraft, Diablo 2, Starcraft, Firefall and other hit games.

In Helldivers, a popular shooter game developed by Arrowhead Game Studios and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment, the combination of arrows represents a 500kg bomb, which in the game obliterates almost any target close to impact.

The companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment Friday.

Helldivers Fans Repulsed by Connection With Charlie Kirk Shooting Suspect Tyler Robinson

Cox said in a news conference that several unfired bullets were found in a bolt-action rifle that was wrapped in a towel and left in the woods near the scene of Kirk's murder Wednesday at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah.

“Inscriptions on the three unfired casings read ‘Hey, fascist! Catch!” he said, adding there was an “‘Up arrow symbol, right arrow symbol and three down arrow symbols.’”

He did not make any connection with the Helldivers game, which has earned favorable reviews both for its action and narrative: The game and its sequel, Helldivers 2, take place in a dystopian future in which humanity is ruled by a "managed democracy" that gives the illusion of freedom.

Both Helldivers and Helldivers 2, like the 1997 film Starship Troopers, ironically use fascist imagery to depict the horrors of fascism.

Many fans of the game noted that they were disgusted by any connection between the suspect and the game.

"Screw that guy, he does *not* represent the HD community," noted a fan of the game on X.

"Helldivers do not claim that sick f---," wrote another.

And while some critics, going back to the Columbine school killings in 1999, have sought to blame video games for shootings, the Entertainment Software Association has long argued that there is no connection, and that blaming games "distracts from discussions around real solutions to America’s larger gun violence issue."

It's also worth noting that it's antiquated to think of video games as some fringe form of entertainment — the gaming industry is bigger than the film and music industries combined, as MarketWatch has noted.

Tyler Robinson's mugshot

Other bullet casings found in the rifle believed to have been fired at Kirk reportedly included the Italian song “Bella ciao” an Italian song adopted by anti-fascists who resisted dictator Benito Mussolini.

Little is known about Robinson, 22, whose father is a Utah law enforcement officer. But Cox said Robinson's roommate showed investigators messages on Discord in which Robinson talked about retrieving a rifle.

Cox also said Robinson had recently spoken with a family member about Kirk at a family dinner, noting that Kirk was coming to UVU.

"They talked about why they didn’t like him and the viewpoints that he had,” Cox said.

Robinson opined at the dinner that “Kirk was full of hate and spreading hate,” according to the relative, per Cox.

On Thursday, The Wall Street Journal cited sources who said “investigators found ammunition engraved with expressions of transgender and antifascist ideology inside the rifle that authorities believe was used in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk.”

But The New York Times subsequently reported that a “senior law-enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation” advised caution about the engraving report. And the engravings detailed in Cox's news conference made no mention of "transgender" ideology.

Tyler Robinson is being held in Utah County Jail on several initial charges, including aggravated murder, according to CNN. President Trump and others have called for the shooter to be given the death penalty.

Main image: Helldivers merch from Fangamer.

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Fri, 12 Sep 2025 10:40:23 +0000 Movie News
Stephen King Apologizes for Saying Charlie Kirk ‘Advocated Stoning Gays to Death’ https://www.moviemaker.com/stephen-king-charlie-kirk-stoning-gays/ Fri, 12 Sep 2025 14:34:02 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180958 Horror icon Stephen King apologized after saying that the late Charlie Kirk “advocated stoning gays to death,” saying that he

The post Stephen King Apologizes for Saying Charlie Kirk ‘Advocated Stoning Gays to Death’ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Horror icon Stephen King apologized after saying that the late Charlie Kirk "advocated stoning gays to death," saying that he had misrepresented the conservative activist's words.

"I apologize for saying Charlie Kirk advocated stoning gays," King wrote on X. "What he actually demonstrated was how some people cherry-pick Biblical passages."

King made the statement about Kirk and stoning gay people in response to Fox News' Jesse Watters' tweeting that Kirk was not a “controversial” or “polarizing” figure.

King echoed claims that Kirk was for stoning based on this clip:

https://twitter.com/danielsogay/status/1965887308454101427

In the clip, Kirk is seen responding to children's entertainer Ms. Rachel using a Biblical verse from Leviticus — a call to love your neighbor — to ask for tolerance.

Kirk notes that another Leviticus verse, often cited by anti-gay groups, condemns men laying with other men.

Stephen King and Others Criticized for Speaking About the Death of Free Speech Advocate Charlie Kirk

King was criticized by many of Kirk's friends and supporters, included Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, who called him a “horrible, evil, twisted liar.”

King took time to respond to many of his critics, including Cruz, and note that he had apologized.

"The horrible, evil, twisted liar apologizes," King said in a response to Cruz. "This is what I get for reading something on Twitter w/o fact-checking. Won't happen again." 

King, whose many novels have inspired classic films from Carrie to The Shining to Mercy to The Shawshank Redemption, is one of the most read and influential writers of our time, known for merging nuanced portrayals of small-town, typical American life with the most horrific of scenarios.

In recent years, he has also emerged as one of the most outspoken critics of conservative policies, and especially the Trump administration.

While the overwhelming response to Kirk's death has been condemnation of the violence by Democrats and Republicans alike, a handful of people have been fired or lost jobs because of celebrations of Kirk's death, or questions and criticisms deemed impertinent. The Associated Press has catalogued several incidents of people being fired or otherwise penalized.

On Thursday, Republican Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana went on X to demand that "big tech" ban "from ALL PLATFORMS FOREVER" anyone who "ran their mouth with their smarta-- hatred celebrating the heinous murder of that beautiful young man who dedicated his whole life to delivering respectful conservative truth into the hearts of liberal enclave universities, armed only with a Bible and a microphone and a Constitution."

Higgins also threatened "going after their business licenses and permitting" and called for "their businesses [to] be blacklisted aggressively," adding that they should be "kicked from every school, and [that] their drivers licenses should be revoked."

He added: "I’m basically going to cancel with extreme prejudice these evil, sick animals who celebrated Charlie Kirk’s assassination. I’m starting that today."

Many people of all political beliefs called Higgins' tweet a case of government threatening to censor speech in exactly the sort of manner that Kirk, an outspoken free-speech advocate, opposed.

Several people also highlighted an old tweet in which Higgins made fun of a 2022 hammer attack on Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi's husband, Paul Pelosi, in their San Francisco home.

Even before Higgins' tweet, several media platforms took steps to avoid any appearance of insensitivity.

Comedy Central, for example, pulled an episode of South Park from re-run rotation in which the show's cantankerous Eric Cartman becomes a "master debator" in the vein of Charlie Kirk to debate with college students.

Kirk, weeks before his death, took the joke in stride, saying it was a "badge of honor" to be mocked by a cartoon he had grown up watching.

Main image: Stephen King.

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Fri, 12 Sep 2025 08:01:32 +0000 Movie News
DC Cancels Comic After Writer Gretchen Felker-Martin Mocks Charlie Kirk: ‘You Nazi B—-‘ https://www.moviemaker.com/gretchen-felker-martin-charlie-kirk-red-hood/ Thu, 11 Sep 2025 14:41:19 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180933 DC Comics abruptly cancelled a new Batman spinoff series, Red Hood, after a social account by its writer, Gretchen Felker-Martin,

The post DC Cancels Comic After Writer Gretchen Felker-Martin Mocks Charlie Kirk: ‘You Nazi B—-‘ appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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DC Comics abruptly cancelled a new Batman spinoff series, Red Hood, after a social account by its writer, Gretchen Felker-Martin, responded to his shooting by posting, "thoughts and prayers you Nazi b----," and further jesting, "Hope the bullet's okay after touching Charlie Kirk."

DC immediately cancelled the run of the new comic series, and said in a message to retailers, confirmed by MovieMaker: "DC Comics cancels existing orders for Red Hood #2 and Red Hood #3, and any orders for future issues of the series. DC Comics will credit retailers for all invoiced copies of Red Hood #1, inclusive of copies that may have already been sold."

DC said in a statement to MovieMaker: "At DC Comics, we place the highest value on our creators and community and affirm the right to peaceful, individual expression of personal viewpoints. Posts or public comments that can be viewed as promoting hostility or violence are inconsistent with DC’s standards of conduct."

Felker-Martin did not immediately respond Thursday to MovieMaker's request for comment.

The comments were extremely out of step with statements condemning the shooting from across the political spectrum. Former President Barack Obama, for example, quickly issued a statement saying that " this kind of despicable violence has no place in our democracy,"

Media companies took care to address the shooting with caution: Comedy Central, for example, quickly removed an episode of South Park in which the show's cantankerous Eric Cartman begins hosting a Charlie Kirk-style debate show. (Kirk had taken the joke in stride, saying it was a "badge of honor.")

MSNBC, meanwhile, reportedly fired commentator Matthew Dowd for opining of Kirk after the shooting that he was "constantly sort of pushing this sort of hate speech or sort of aimed at certain groups. And I always go back to, hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions. And I think that is the environment we are in. You can’t stop with these sort of awful thoughts you have and then saying these awful words and not expect awful actions to take place. And that’s the unfortunate environment we are in.”

The bad publicity generated by the Felker-Martin remarks, widely circulated on BlueSky, comes at an especially crucial time for the DC brand. DC Films co-chief James Gunn just injected new life into DC's cinematic universe with Superman, one of the year's biggest hits.

Background on Gretchen Felker-Martin, the Red Hood Writer Who Joked About Charlie Kirk Being Shot

Felker-Martin, who is trans, was previously the subject of criticism for writing a 2022 novel, Manhunt, in which Harry Potter author JK Rowling is burned alive in her home.

The New York Post reports that the book features two trans women “attempting to survive in a world ravaged by a plague which transforms anyone with enough testosterone in their system into a shrieking monstrosity.”

They find themselves doing battle with a group called "the Knights of J.K. Rowling."

Kirk was speaking at an event at Utah Valley University when he was fatally shot. He was answering a question involving trans people and mass shootings when the shot was fired.

The Wall Street Journal reports that an audience member had just asked him, "Do you know how many transgender Americans have been mass shooters over the last 10 years?” to which Kirk replied, “Too many.”

The audience member said that there have been five, and continued, “Do you know how many mass shooters there have been in America over the last 10 years?”

Kirk replied, “counting or not counting gang violence?”

Those were his last words.

More on the Charlie Kirk Shooting

The Wall Street Journal also reported Thursday that "Investigators found ammunition engraved with expressions of transgender and antifascist ideology inside the rifle that authorities believe was used in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk."

But The New York Times subsequently reported that a "senior law-enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation" advised caution about the engraving report, saying that it had not been verified by analysts from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and did not match other summaries of the evidence. The Times' source also said the information could turn out to have been misunderstood.

If confirmed, the engraving of ammunition would recall the shooting of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, who was killed in December with bullets bearing the words "delay," "deny" and "depose." Critics of the insurance industry say they refer to tactics insurance companies use to avoid paying for customers' treatments.

Luigi Mangione has been charged with murder and other crimes in Thompson's killing, and has pleaded not guilty.

As of this writng, no one has been arrested in the Charlie Kirk shooting.

Red Hood was to have followed Jason Todd, a former Robin who worked alongside Batman, striking out in Louisiana, where he finds more violence.

Main image: Red Hood. DC Comics.

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Thu, 11 Sep 2025 11:00:22 +0000 Movie News
Comedy Central Pulls Charlie Kirk South Park Episode After His Murder https://www.moviemaker.com/south-park-charlie-kirk/ Thu, 11 Sep 2025 13:44:22 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180928 Comedy Central has pulled an episode satirizing Charlie Kirk after the conservative activist was fatally shot during an event at

The post Comedy Central Pulls Charlie Kirk South Park Episode After His Murder appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Comedy Central has pulled an episode satirizing Charlie Kirk after the conservative activist was fatally shot during an event at a Utah university.

The second epispde of the current South Park season — Season 27 — was called "Got a Nut" and featured the cartoon's Eric Cartman imitating Kirk with a call-in show in which he debates callers.

That was a nod to Kirk's routine of debating all comers, but especially liberal college students, to advance his pro-Trump agenda.

Kirk took the episode in stride. He said in a Fox News interview that he considered it a "badge of honor" to be parodied on a show he had grown up watching. He also sad on X that he was changing his profile picture to an image of Cartman imitating him.

In the days before the episode first aired, Kirk said in an interview on Fox News he considered the parody on a show he said he grew up watching a "badge of honor." He posted on X that he was changing his profile picture to the black T-shirt wearing Cartman parody of him.

The episode found Cartman calling himself the "master debator" (say it fast) as he takes on hapless young people by quoting Bible verses. At one point his mother tells him to get out of the bathroom and he responds, "I can't mom. I'm master debating with these young college girls." Here it is:

South Park has been airing past episodes of Season 27 during breaks in new episodes, but "Got a Nut" is now out of the rotation.

The Charlie Kirk South Park Episode Also Took on ICE

Kirk took the South Park jokes in better humor than other Trump supporters, or the White House.

Over three decades, South Park has earned a reputation as one of the few entertainment outlets known for going after people of all political stripes, and this season it went hard on the Trump team.

In the show's season premiere, Trump was portrayed frolicking with no clothes on, bedding down with Satan, and worrying about the size of his member. The season premiere also referenced the Epstein list, an alleged list of documents naming names of people connected with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes. (Trump has called on the press and his followers to stop worrying about Epstein and to move on.)

In later episodes, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem was portrayed with a melting face — a shot at her image makeover prior to joining the Trump Administration.

Later, the show released a short scene in which Noem shoots up a pet store — a reference to the time, which she described in her memoir, No Going Back, that she shot and killed an "untrainable" dog named Cricket because he was misbehaving and killing a local family's chickens.

"I hated that dog," she wrote, adding that killing Cricket "was not a pleasant job, but it had to be done." She uses her killing of the dog as an example of her willingness to do unpleasant tasks.

Appearing on Glenn Beck's podcast, Noem responded to South Park's portrayal of her face melting: “It’s so lazy to just constantly make fun of women for how they look. ... If they wanted to criticize my job, go ahead and do that. But clearly they can’t — they just pick something petty like that.”

White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers, meanwhile, said in a statement that the show "hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention."

The creators of the show, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, have let the episodes do the talking. Asked about the furor at San Diego’s Comic-Con International, Parker replied simply, “We’re terribly sorry” — then held a long, deadpan stare.

Main image: Cartman as Charlie Kirk on South Park. Comedy Central.

The show has focused largely on the Trump Administration this season.

What 'South Park' episode had Charlie Kirk?

The episode featuring Eric Cartman as Charlie Kirk is Season 27, Episode 2 titled "Got A Nut."

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Thu, 11 Sep 2025 06:50:13 +0000 Movie News
‘Eat the Rich’: Canines Devour Hollywood Hills Elites in Coyotes Trailer https://www.moviemaker.com/coyotes-trailer-eat-the-rich/ Wed, 10 Sep 2025 16:59:29 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180901 Hollywood couple Justin Long and Kate Bosworth play a Hollywood couple besieged by coyotes in the snarling new trailer for

The post ‘Eat the Rich’: Canines Devour Hollywood Hills Elites in Coyotes Trailer appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_BHhomHJE0

Hollywood couple Justin Long and Kate Bosworth play a Hollywood couple besieged by coyotes in the snarling new trailer for the horror film Coyotes.

There's an undercurrent of social satire and good old fashioned resentment of the beautiful people in the latest from Colin Minihan (Grave Encounters). And this is a creature feature we we aren't necessarily supposed to root for the humans.

"Eat the Rich" is the tagline of the film's poster. (You can watch the trailer here if you don't see it above.)

Coyotes trailer

Residents and casual visitors to the Hollywood Hills know that coyotes are indeed an issue. Dog walkers in Runyon Canyon know that they may need to scoop up smaller pups at the sound of coyote shrieks that often arrives with the twilight.

Hungry coyotes have been known to make eerie appearances in dense urban areas, when L.A. is at its most quiet and dark.

And, as the film notes, even pet owners on residential streets, at perfectly normal hours, need to be on the lookout for coyotes.

But like another new comedy about the haves, Aziz Ansari's guardian-angel, trading-places tale Good Fortune, the Hollywood Hills serve as a metaphorical shorthand for people who seem to be above it all.

In Coyotes, Long and Bosworth think they they're safe in their chic home on a hill, but the coyotes want what's been taken from them, back in the days when only they stalked the land.

"They want your shelter, your food, your water, your sanity," someone explains.

But the scariest line in the trailer comes from another character, who observes of the coyotes: "They can... open doors?"

We already love this silly movie.

Coyotes will premiere at Fantastic Fest on September 20, 2025, and arrives in theaters on October 3 via AURA Entertainment.

Main image: A coyote in Coyotes. AURA Entertainment.

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Wed, 10 Sep 2025 09:59:32 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
5 David Corenswet Roles to Catch After Superman https://www.moviemaker.com/5-david-corenswet-roles-before-superman/ Wed, 10 Sep 2025 16:40:00 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1163596 Before David Corenswet plays Superman in James Gunn's Superman, here are five roles to get familiar with his acting chops

The post 5 David Corenswet Roles to Catch After Superman appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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The new Superman stars David Corenswet as a new, vulnerable, dog-loving Man of Steel.

He brings a fresh energy and perspective to the role, but he didn't just fly out of the sky — he had a very impressive acting resume prior to his role in the James Gunn blockbuster.

Here are five other roles in which David Corenswet stood out.

The Projectionist in Pearl

Mia Goth and David Corenswet in Pearl - Credit: C/O

David Corenswet played a smarmy projectionist in Pearl who plays a key role in the budding serial killer's awakening.

The Ti West horror masterpiece — part of his X trilogy — feels like a dark twist on the Technicolor charmers of the past.

Corenswet not only shows Pearl (Mia Goth) her first banned movie, but speaks perhaps the most memorable line in the film: "You're scaring me, Pearl."

River Barkley in The Politician

David Corenswet Superman
David Corenswet as River Barkley in The Politician - Credit: C/O

In Netflix's Ryan Murphy co-created comedy-drama series The Politician, Corenswet has an 11-episode arc across both seasons as River Barkley, a student at Saint Sebastian High School who has, at different times, romantic relationships with Payton Hobart (Ben Platt) and Astrid Sloan (Lucy Boynton).

River is a popular boy at school, but he feels empty inside.

We won't spoil anything more here.

David McDougal in We Own This City

David Corenswet and Larry Mitchell in We Own This City - Credit: C/O

In this six-episode HBO crime drama, Corenswet played Investigator David McDougall of the Harford County Narcotics Task Force.

The show follows Jon Bernthal as Sgt. Wayne Jenkins of the Baltimore Police Department's Gun Trace Task Force, which is being investigated for corruption.

We Own This City covers true events, and is based on the nonfiction book of the same name by Baltimore Sun journalist Justin Fenton.

Reed in House of Cards

Corenswet and Willa Fitzgerald in House of Cards - Credit: C/O

Though he only appears in one episode of House of Cards, it's worth mentioning here because it's the penultimate episode of the entire series — and it has a lot to do with the past of Madame President Claire Underwood (Robin Wright).

In a flashback, Corenswet plays Reed, Claire's former boyfriend when she was 20 years old.

Though Reed urged her to turn down a proposal from Frank Underwood (Kevin Spacey), Claire turns him down and marries Frank in the hopes that he will open doors for her.

For better or worse, he does.

Jake in Look Both Ways

Corenswet and Lili Reinhart in Look Both Ways courtesy of Felicia Graham/Netflix - Credit: C/O

In this recent Netflix romantic comedy, Corenswet appears opposite Lili Reinhart's Natalie as Jake, the guy she could have been with if she had moved to Los Angeles to pursue her dreams instead of getting pregnant by her good friend Gabe (Danny Ramirez).

The movie looks at both ways Natalie's life could have turned out if that one life-changing moment had gone differently.

If you liked this list, you may also look back at this list involving another Superman actor: 5 Roles Christopher Reeve turned down after playing Superman.

And we'd love for you to follow us for more stories like this.

Main image: David Corenswet in The Politician. Netflix.

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Wed, 10 Sep 2025 09:31:07 +0000 Acting Archives Moviemaking
Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson Get Animalistic in Lynne Ramsay’s Die My Love Teaser https://www.moviemaker.com/die-my-love-teaser-jennifer-lawrence-pattinson/ Fri, 05 Sep 2025 16:36:50 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180839 The frenetic teaser for Lynne Ramsay’s Die My Love finds Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattison prowling like lions, gibbering like

The post Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson Get Animalistic in Lynne Ramsay’s Die My Love Teaser appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Z5Gnnddss4

The frenetic teaser for Lynne Ramsay's Die My Love finds Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattison prowling like lions, gibbering like apes, and fighting like humans.

To the tune of Shirley Ellis' "The Clapping Song," we see a once-strong chemistry collapse into rage, as the scenes on screen neatly sync with the lyrics until we come to the most disturbing — "The line broke/the monkey got choked"/And they all went to heaven in a little row-boat" — as Pattinson wraps his arm around Lawrence's neck in a fit of passion.

No dialogue is spoken in the Die My Love teaser — unless you count Lawrence's impassioned primate noises. But several plot points are laid very bare, as we see Lawrence writhing on a dance floor, licking glass, and staring at Pattinson with disdain. A knife offers a warning of bad things to come. (If you can't see it above, you can watch the Die My Love teaser here.)

The film, which premiered at Cannes, has earned the Oscar-winning Lawrence some of the strongest reviews of her career. It is based on the novel Die My Love by Ariana Harwicz, a story of a woman struggling with post-partem depression.

Martin Scorsese, who produces the film, sent the film to Lawrence's production company, Excellent Cadaver, because he envisioned her in the lead role.

That led to Lawrence agreeing to star in the film, and Ramsay — the Scottish director whose films include You Were Never Really Here and We Need to Talk About Kevin — signing on as director.

The film also stars Nick Nolte, LaKeith Stanfield and Sissy Spacek.

Die, My Love arrives in theaters November 7 from MUBI.

Editor's Note: Corrects spelling of Ramsay.

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Fri, 05 Sep 2025 19:17:30 +0000 Movie News Movie News Archives - MovieMaker Magazine nonadult
In ‘The Breakthrough Group,’ an Addiction Recovery Program Asks for Nothing But Total Commitment https://www.moviemaker.com/breakthrough-group-other-side-academy/ Thu, 04 Sep 2025 14:11:10 +0000 https://www.moviemaker.com/?p=1180788 "The Breakthrough Group" profiles The Other Side Academy, an addiction treatment program in which participants commit to a 30-month stay and work to pay for the help the program provides.

The post In ‘The Breakthrough Group,’ an Addiction Recovery Program Asks for Nothing But Total Commitment appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.

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Addiction is so pernicious that even expensive rehab clinics have high relapse rates. But “The Breakthrough Group,” a new documentary short from director Ben Rekhi, looks at a Salt Lake City program that boasts a higher-than-average success rate — and where participants pay with work and commitment, not cash.

The film looks at a few days at The Other Side Academy, where executive director Dave Durocher — who himself got sober after spending 27 years in and out of prison — guides participants with ironclad principles that stress honesty and accountability. 

The program isn’t a short-term rehab, but rather a therapeutic community where participants make at least a 30-month commitment to live on-site and make what the community calls a “commitment to a deeply rigorous process of personal change.”

Strikingly, the program works without accepting any money from the government, insurance companies, participants, or their families. Instead, they pay their way through jobs that include a moving business and thrift boutique. There are no medical professionals on-site: The progress is led by other people in recovery.

The film, which premiered in July at the Indy Shorts Film Festival, gives an up-close look at participants' struggles — and successes. It provides a gritty, fly-on-the-wall approach to the minute-by-minute mechanics of the program, but also shows the work paying off, by bringing stability and peace to the people who take part.

Rekhi is an award-winning filmmaker who, after working in the camera department of the Coen Brothers’ O Brother, Where Art Thou, was hired by one of the film’s stars, George Clooney, to shoot behind-the-scenes footage for Clooney’s directorial debut, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. Rekhi went on to produce the Independent Spirit Award-nominated Bomb the System and direct the SXSW Audience Award winner Waterborne, then spent five years at film finance company IM Global.

He returned to directing with The Ashram, a spiritual thriller starring Academy Award Winner Melissa Leo, Kal Penn, and Radhika Apte. His latest film, The Reunited States, a documentary executive produced by Van Jones and Meghan McCain, focused on healing American divisions and premiered on PBS in 2022. He is now in post-production on Last Man In Tower, based on Aravind Adiga’s book. 

We talked with Rekhi, Durocher and Joseph Grenny, an author of bestselling business books who co-founded The Other Side Academy after striking up a friendship with a Utah County Jail inmate who had read one of his books and was determined to turn his life around.

Grenny’s own family had dealt with the horror of addiction, so he brought firsthand knowledge of how hard it is to escape. 

Ben Rekhi, Joseph Grenny and Dave Burocher on The Other Side Academy and 'The Breakthrough Group'

"Breakthrough Group" director Ben Rekhi, center, with The Other Side Academy founder Joseph Grenny, left, and executive director Dave Durocher. - Credit: Courtesy of "The Breakthrough Group"

MovieMaker: Ben, how did you become a filmmaker? What led you to this story?

Ben Rekhi: As a kid of the 90s, I started out making adventure and sci-fi films with my friends in our backyards. But after going to film school in New York, I came out producing and directing primarily indie dramas. I shifted into documentaries after 2016, to use cinema as a way to bridge divides across our divisions. A journalist I met along the way had written about the Other Side Academy, this powerful community that uses these intense interventions to give hope to  people who had all but given up on themselves. Their bold approach was producing real results. 

As someone who had struggled with addiction and depression myself, I reached out to Joseph and Dave and said “Hey, I think what you’re doing here can really help other people who are struggling.”  

MovieMaker: Joseph and Dave, how did you come to found a therapeutic community? What makes it different from a rehab clinic? 

Joseph Grenny: I felt it important to start The Other Side Academy because the current rehab system is deeply flawed. There is zero accountability for outcomes, no transparency, and frankly, a system that destroys hope by producing so many failures. There are good people in it, but it is a bad system. Then it hit close to home for me. 

First one, then another of our boys became addicted to drugs and began cycling through the criminal justice system. We got a closer view of how those who are arrested once almost inevitably get arrested again and again. It’s a perfect system for creating criminals. At the time, our boys had no interest in help from mom and dad. We decided if we couldn’t fight the battle we wanted, we’d get into the war. The Other Side Academy is the war.

Dave Durocher: I had spent 27 years in and out of prison for hardcore drug addiction, drug-dealing and gun-running. After a high-speed chase with the police ended that whole lifestyle for me, I wrote a letter to another therapeutic community,  Delancey Street in San Francisco, and they accepted me. 

So instead of doing another 22 year prison sentence, I stayed eight and a half years in a program that ended up being one of the best decisions I ever made. I was asked to manage it for the last five years I was there. 

Meanwhile Joseph had researched Delancey street for a book he was writing, and became fascinated at how effective it was at reducing recidivism. So when he decided he wanted to start something similar in Utah, he called and asked if I’d be interested in running it with him. Hence the birth of the Other Side Academy. 

MovieMaker: What makes it different than a rehab clinic?

Dave Durocher: Number one, we don't take any money from the government, city, county, state, federal government, insurance, parents, nothing. Which is really important because in most treatment facilities, you have to leave the day the funding runs out. 30 day programs and have only a 3% success rate. At the Other Side Academy, we're a minimum 30 months long, but you can stay longer. And the reason why you can stay longer is there's no funding source attached to it. The longer you're in treatment, the better your odds of success. You can stay until you've actually recalibrated your moral compass.

Screenshot

MovieMaker: What kind of person attends?

Joseph Grenny: Our average participant has been arrested 25 times and has had decades of drug abuse and criminal behavior. 

Dave Durocher: It's the long-term drug addict, coupled with a criminal piece, so we know that's a difficult population to help. Do we have people here that have never been incarcerated? Yes, but very few. The vast majority of people who come to us have been situationally homeless. In some cases, chronically homeless, long-term substance abuse issues and criminal behavior. That's the profile of a student.

MovieMaker: With a documentary like this, you're always balancing showing the benefits of a program like this with respecting the privacy of the patients. The last thing you want is for the added pressure of a film crew to contribute to a relapse. How did you make sure everyone was always comfortable on camera, and with the project as a whole?

Ben Rekhi: This was actually the most delicate aspect of making this film. We were interacting with people at very sensitive stages of recovery, and we’d never want our presence to have any adverse effects on their journey. Initially, that meant identifying people who were a little bit further into their stay, who had pushed through some of the hard times already and had more growth under their belt. 

Then, while filming with them, we were constantly asking “Is this OK?” or “Do you feel comfortable?” so that people had off-ramps if needed. To their credit, the students understood that the more honest and vulnerable they were, the more it would help and inspire other people. In a way, participating in the film became a way of giving back. Our guiding principle was always to portray stories of transformation in order to give hope to other people who are suffering. 

MovieMaker: What was the biggest challenge in making this film and how did you overcome it?

Ben Rekhi: The two major challenges were building trust for the shoot and staying honest in the edit. There’s a great deal of trust that has to be earned between filmmaker and subject, so in the initial stages, I took a couple of trips to the Academy by myself without a camera or crew. I ate meals with everyone. I went along with people to work. I slept at the facility. 

It was important to me that Joseph, Dave, and the students could spend uninterrupted time with me to understand my intentions. By the time we came back for the shoot, everyone felt very natural and didn’t really notice the camera or crew. As with any documentary, things would just happen and we’d have to be flexible enough to just start following the story as it unfolded. 

The edit is always a challenge because there’s the ideas you have in your head before you shoot, and there’s the situations you actually ended up filming, and those are often very different. We knew we wanted to portray the beauty and hope of the Academy, but we also knew we couldn’t sugarcoat just how difficult the recovery process is. 

Rehabilitation is seldom a straight line, and not everyone gets better. It became really important to portray the challenges of this reality, so as to earn trust of the viewer too.  

MovieMaker: Joseph and Dave, what's the biggest challenge of running a therapeutic community and how do you overcome it? How do you measure success?

Joseph Grenny: We measure success very simply — what percentage of our students achieve being DCE: drug-free, crime-free and employed long-term. Those should be the measures that any self-respecting organization holds itself up against. 

Are we perfect? Absolutely not. But we aim at that North star every day and we're transparent with the public about our successes and failures. The biggest challenge of running a therapeutic community is developing leadership that comes from within that is willing to live at the high moral level required for deep change.

Dave Durocher: Agreed, the biggest challenge is finding the leadership, because academics can't run a facility like this. We don't have doctors or counselors here. We are run exclusively by people with lived experience. People who have been through the same situations the students are going through. Finding and building those people into leaders is really difficult. 

We started as a diversion program right when we opened in 2015. We talked to the judges and the courts, and still to this day, we take people pre-sentence in lieu of a lengthy county, state, or a prison sentence. The longer you are in treatment, the better your odds of success.

MovieMaker: Can you explain how people pay for the program?

Joseph Grenny: The Other Side Academy is free and self-sustaining. Our social enterprises generate enough to sustain our 250 students which allows them to stay not just as long as funding allows, but as long as they need to.

Dave Durocher: We generate all of our own revenue through our businesses that we own and operate. The moving company, the storage facility, the thrift boutique, and the construction company. The students work at these enterprises from day one, and that gives them the runway to stay as long as they need to.

MovieMaker: What do you all hope this film will accomplish?

Ben Rekhi: There are so many people struggling with addiction, depression, or negative thoughts and behaviors in our society. If not you directly, probably a family member or friend is. Our hope is that the film can help us all feel less alone and to realize change is possible. 

We’re also exploring if the film can be a conversation starter around rehabilitation, recidivism, and mental health more broadly. It’s a snapshot of a facility that’s trying new solutions to some of society’s greatest ills, and with extraordinary results. 

The national recidivism rate (or the return-to-prison rate) is close to 70%, but for graduates of the Other Side Academy, it’s under 20%. That kind of change doesn’t happen overnight, but it is possible. It just takes community, accountability, and a lot of hard work. 

Joseph Grenny: We always hope for two things: Number one that more people make it to our bench who would benefit from The Other Side Academy, and number two, that our challenge for greater accountability and transparency, helps improve the entire system.

Dave Durocher: I hope the film informs people that there is a place you can go to get help that is long-term and doesn’t cost any money. People are going in and out of 30-day rehabs without making any lasting progress, and it’s costing either them or the system a fortune. We have facilities in Salt Lake and Denver, and are exploring bringing the model to a lot of other cities. 

"The Breakthrough Group" plays the Nuart Theater in Los Angeles September 19-26th.

Main image: The Other Side Academy participants Nick Hendrickson and Tavita Moala in a scene from "The Breakthrough Group." Courtesy of the filmmaker.


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Thu, 04 Sep 2025 10:45:04 +0000 Movie News