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  • The Evolutions of Emma Stone

    The Evolutions of Emma Stone

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    Photo-Illustration: Lola Dupre/LOLA_DUPRE

    This article was originally published on December 22, 2023. Emma Stone has since won her second Oscar for the leading role in Poor Things and reportedly shaved her head for her fourth collaboration with director Yorgos Lanthimos, set to release in 2025.

    The quintessential Emma Stone acting choice comes near the end of Battle of the Sexes, a solid but unremarkable 2017 tennis bio-drama in which she plays Billie Jean King to Steve Carell’s Bobby Riggs. King is all nerves before their famous match; as attendants carry her down a hallway on a garish throne, preparing for a grand entrance, she is visibly fretful over the reputational damage of agreeing to this in the first place. She ducks her head as she enters the stadium — and looks up as she emerges into the light, smiling like a superstar.

    It’s a split-second reveal of the machinery behind preternatural charisma. Stone has always known how to let you in on a metamorphosis. Her best roles are those in which her character transforms and ascends: an unknown actress becomes a movie star, a newcomer to the queen’s court acquires power, a talented tennis player turns icon. She doesn’t disappear into her roles; she makes you aware of the games her characters are playing. In All About Eve terms, she’s Bette Davis and she’s Anne Baxter. With her giant eyes — which can project vulnerability or shift into unearthly confidence — and her raspy voice, Stone locates the star inside the striver and vice versa.

    More recently, though, she has expanded into roles that distort these tropes. This winter, she stars in both the Showtime series The Curse, as a deluded house flipper who yearns for basic-cable celebrity, and Yorgos Lanthimos’s film Poor Things, as a woman implanted with the brain of an infant who goes on a journey of steampunk self-discovery. In both, the actress seems to be winking at the narratives that defined her earlier work — and it’s clear that she is hitting a new, more experimental high.

    Stone, 35, made her name with a distinctly millennial kind of role: the sardonic yet earnest girl next door. For a while, her go-to interview anecdote was about how, as a teenager, she had made a PowerPoint to try to convince her parents she needed to move to L.A. to pursue acting. (As she later explained it, “I make presentations because when I feel strongly about something, I cry.”) After scattered roles in comedies like Superbad, her star-is-born moment was Will Gluck’s 2010 film Easy A, a twee teen update of The Scarlet Letter, in which her character, Olive, pretends to have sex with her gay classmate to help him convince everyone he’s straight. Then she pretends to do it with a bunch more people, too, for the social cachet and just for the hell of it. On paper, it’s an impossible role; she has to be an outcast and a smart aleck and a vlogger as well as charming enough that we believe her classmates believe she could hook up with half the school. That’s where Stone excels. When Olive decides to embrace her identity as a woman of ill repute, strutting down a walkway in Ray-Bans while she mugs and blows kisses, she’s doing an uncool person’s imitation of “cool and hot” in addition to being actually cool and hot. Stone makes Olive relatable: You get that she thinks high-school popularity is dumb and that she wants it anyway.

    With Nathan Fielder in The Curse.
    Photo: Richard Foreman Jr./SHOWTIME/Richard Foreman Jr./A24/Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

    Easy A took Stone to a new echelon. She was nominated for a Golden Globe (they love an ingénue), won an MTV Movie Award, and hosted Saturday Night Live for the first time. For a while, her career looked like an attempt to follow the path of early-’90s Julia Roberts, another star with megawatt charisma who knows how to let you in on the joke. Stone kept on doing comedies. She took a tiny role in Gluck’s next movie, Friends With Benefits. She starred opposite Ryan Gosling in Crazy, Stupid, Love. She was Gwen Stacy in the rom-comish The Amazing Spider-Man. Her role as the protagonist’s daughter in Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, from 2014, earned Stone her first Oscar nomination, but the performance, like a lot of that film, is pitched to 11, manic and attention-grabbing without being artful. Her most infamous role may be that of Allison Ng — whose father is supposed to be half-Chinese and half-Hawaiian — in Cameron Crowe’s directionless 2015 comedy, Aloha. (Stone has apologized for this informally: When Sandra Oh made a joke about it onstage at the 2019 Golden Globes, Stone shouted from her seat, “I’m sorry!”)

    After Aloha, Stone’s prospects looked uncertain. Studio comedies were on the wane. She wasn’t an obvious choice for dramas, nor was she an indie darling. But Stone picked up a part in La La Land, Damien Chazelle’s reconstructed Hollywood love-story musical. As Mia, a barista and wannabe actress, Stone portrayed the apotheosis of a striver. Mia may cloak her ambition in wry self-deprecation, especially when she flirts with Gosling’s Über-serious jazz musician, but the movie depends on the idea that she deserves to be discovered. Stone’s Oscar win for the role seemed almost inevitable from the scene in which Mia auditions for a big Hollywood film. Over the course of one song, she goes from a shrinking unknown — who cites her aunt who “used to live in Paris” as the dreamer who imparted her love of art — to a star and back, her voice gaining power as she builds through the bridge. In a long take, Chazelle brings us close to Stone as emotion overtakes her face, her eyes glimmering; the camera circles her, and when it comes back around she’s suddenly someone else. Maybe it’s a trick of eyeline: A novice looks down and away from the camera; the star, just above and beyond it.

    Stone had her Oscar, but where do you go from there? She did Battle of the Sexes and Netflix’s Maniac, a curio of a series quickly buried by algorithmic churn. But it was during her first collaboration with Lanthimos, in 2018’s The Favourite, when she uncovered a fruitful new valence for her career. She played Abigail, the new girl in the 18th-century court of Olivia Colman’s Queen Anne, who uses her natural star power to scheme her way into the queen’s affections while trying to outflank Anne’s standby, Rachel Weisz. In her most memorable gambit, Stone monologues about her plans while jerking off a young nobleman played by Joe Alwyn. Lanthimos pushes the camera toward Stone’s face, the candlelight bringing out its shadows. Abigail thinks of herself as a victim — “My life is like a maze I continually think I’ve gotten out of,” she mutters — but it’s clear she’s also seizing control of her situation and, literally, of Alwyn.

    The Favourite unlocked a darkness in Stone’s performances. While she had always made her characters self-aware, she began to lean harder into deviousness and delusion. On repeat visits to SNL, Stone explored fully unleashed defensiveness as the mother of a sensitive boy in 2016 and, in 2019, as an actress obsessed with finding the truth of her minor character in a gay porno. When she announces, as the star of 2021’s Cruella, that she was “born brilliant, born bad, and a little bit mad,” she plays it cocky, comedic, and entirely heartfelt, pointing herself in a different, possibly freeing, direction: The dreamer becomes a villain. In an interview about that film — a 101 Dalmatians prequel that barely justifies its existence outside Stone’s go-for-broke performance — she admitted that she had been “asking myself a lot of questions about that charm offensive or ingénue idea in my own life.” She was excited by “this phase of playing these women who are much less concerned with what people think about them.”

    Now when she plays a woman obsessed with likability, Stone knows she can treat it like a joke — or a trap. In The Curse, her character Whitney’s belief in her own charm is just one of her many self-deceptions. She is the daughter of slumlords who, along with her husband, Asher (Nathan Fielder), runs a house-flipping operation in New Mexico. They build “passive homes” that are obvious rip-offs of other people’s designs and that Whitney tries to fill with work by a Native artist who finds her cringe-inducing. Whitney wants her show to be called Green Queen. She is convinced that she deserves what would amount to HGTV stardom.

    It’s a self-immolating role — not least because Stone is from Arizona and played a white savior in The Help. Whitney has all the obliviousness of someone who would take that part in Aloha. In a defining scene, she and Asher stumble into a genuinely sweet moment when he tries to help her out of a sweater and it gets stuck around her head. They collapse into giggles. “This is us, Ash,” Whitney says, then adds, “I wish the network could see this.” She scurries across the room, grabs her phone, and tries to get him to re-create the scene on-camera.

    In Poor Things.
    Photo: Searchlight Pictures

    In Poor Things, Stone performs the most literal kind of becoming. She is Bella Baxter, a once-dead woman who has been zapped back to life but with the brain of a baby and must now grow into a worldly, self-actualized individual. The film has its surreal and twisted qualities as well as its obvious ones; the script and direction tend to overemphasize their points about misogyny. As Bella, though, Stone progresses through this strange personal growth without judgment in a performance that has made her an Oscar front-runner. She works with technical precision: As Bella’s brain ages inside her adult body, her gait changes from stilted lumbering to a posture of confidence and control. Her face, which she can spread open with wonder, scrambles with confusion and interest at new ideas and experiences, especially once she heads out to traipse across Europe in search of enlightenment. She’s gloriously uninhibited in the bedroom or while scarfing down her first pastel de nata. On the dance floor with Mark Ruffalo, she cavorts like a Victorian Raggedy Ann. Although Stone has always been good in close-up — and she’s especially good here, those watery irises offset by that jet-black hair — Bella’s discovery comes through her whole physical being.

    The film invites allegorical readings. You could interpret it as a comment on what it can be like to chart your own way as a woman in Hollywood or how to find some sense of self even when forced into a role. But it’s also, of all Stone’s metamorphoses, one of the simplest — and the most internal. Olive, Mia, Abigail, and even Whitney long for social acceptance. Bella’s hunger, in the end, isn’t social. What she wants from life is pleasure and knowledge, especially of her body’s forgotten history. She’s trying to become herself.


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    Jackson McHenry

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  • What to stream: Adam Sandler, John Legend, ‘Only Murders in the Building’ and Star Wars Outlaws

    What to stream: Adam Sandler, John Legend, ‘Only Murders in the Building’ and Star Wars Outlaws

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    “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” returning for its second season and Adam Sandler’s first comedy special since 2018 are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.

    Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: John Legend offers his first-ever children’s album, season four of “Only Murders in the Building” shifts to Los Angeles and DJ and dance producer Zedd is back with an album after nearly a decade.

    NEW MOVIES TO STREAM

    “The Fall Guy” is finally coming to Peacock, where it will be streaming starting Friday, Aug. 30, alongside an “extended cut” version. It might not have reached the blockbuster heights the studio dreamed about during its theatrical run, but it’s pure delight: A comedy, action, romance that soars thanks to the charisma of its stars. Based on the 1980s Lee Majors television series (he gets a cameo), the film features Ryan Gosling as a stunt man, Emily Blunt as his director and dream girl, Aaron Taylor-Johnson as an egotistical movie star and “Ted Lasso’s” Hannah Waddingham as a Diet Coke slurping producer.

    — Ishana Night Shyamalan’s thriller, “The Watchers,” in which Dakota Fanning plays an artist stranded in western Ireland where mysterious creatures lurk and stalk in the night, begins streaming on MAX on Friday, Aug. 30.

    — Emma Stone gives a performance (and interpretive dance) worth watching in “ Kinds of Kindness,” her latest collaboration with Yorgos Lanthimos fresh on the heels of her Oscar-winning turn in “Poor Things.” The film, streaming on Hulu on Friday, Aug. 30, is a triptych with a big ensemble cast including Willem Dafoe, Jesse Plemons (who won a prize for his performance at Cannes), Hong Chau, Margaret Qualley, Mamoudou Athie and Joe Alwyn. Jocelyn Noveck, in her Associated Press review, described it as “a meditation on our free will and the ways we willingly forfeit it to others — in the workplace, at home, and in religion.” Noveck wrote that the “Stone-Lanthimos pairing… is continuing to nurture an aspect of Stone’s talents that increasingly sets her apart: Her fearlessness and the obvious joy she derives from it.”

    — Somehow the Yorgos Lanthimos film is not the most eccentric new streaming offering this week. That title goes to “ Sasquatch Sunset,” Nathan and David Zellner’s experimental film about a family of sasquatches just living their lives. Starring an essentially unrecognizable Jesse Eisenberg and Riley Keough (in addition to Nathan Zellner), this Sundance curiosity begins streaming on Paramount+ on Monday. In his review for the AP, Mark Kennedy wrote that it is “a bewildering 90-minute, narrator-less and wordless experiment that’s as audacious as it is infuriating. It’s not clear if everyone was high making it or we should be while watching it.”

    AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr

    NEW MUSIC TO STREAM

    — DJ and dance producer Zedd is back with an album after nearly a decade, “Telos.” The first single is the appropriately titled “Out of Time” featuring Bea Miller, a dreamy tune with atmospheric strings that builds into a dancefloor banger. Zedd has revealed that he started writing “Out Of Time” way back in 2015 but was never able to finish it. That changed with Bea — “her voice added an emotional depth that completed the song. ‘Out Of Time’ really encapsulates the DNA of the Telos album, which is why I chose it to be the song that introduces this new era,” he says.

    — If you’re into a slower change of pace, check out John Legend, who releases his first children’s album, “My Favorite Dream,” on Friday, Aug. 30. It’s produced by the chamber pop polymath Sufjan Stevens and centers on universal themes like love, safety, family and dreams across nine original tracks, two covers, a solo piano track and three bonus covers of Fisher-Price songs.

    — Get ready for a blast of K-pop — on your television. Apple TV+ has the six part documentary “K-Pop Idols,” a behind-the-scenes look at the highly competitive reality of K-pop stardom, starting Friday, Aug. 30. It features Jessi, CRAVITY and BLACKSWAN as they learn choreography and pull everything together to seize the stage. Producers say the series “follows the superstars through trials and triumphs, breaking down cultural and musical barriers in K-pop with passion, creativity and determination as they chase their dreams.”

    RZA takes a sharp turn as a classical composer with the album “A Ballet Through Mud.” The composition made its debut in the form of a ballet last year, performed by the Colorado Symphony Orchestra. Composed and scored by the Wu-Tang Clan star, the piece mirrors his journey from growing up in the projects in New York City to famous artist, “weaving in tales of love, loss, exploration, Buddhist monks, and a journey ‘through mud.‘” RZA says he began the project early in the pandemic after rediscovering notebooks full of lyrics he had written as a teenager. “The inspiration for ‘A Ballet Through Mud’ comes from my earliest creative output as a teenager, but its themes are universal — love, exploration, and adventure,” he says.

    AP Entertainment Writer Mark Kennedy

    NEW SHOWS TO STREAM

    — Adam Sandler has the feels in his new Netflix special “Adam Sandler: Love You” featuring his standup and trademark comedy songs. It’s directed by Josh Safdie who — with his brother Benny — co-directed Sandler in the 2019 movie “Uncut Gems.” “Love You” is Sandler’s first comedy special since 2018. It premieres Tuesday on Netflix.

    — Charles, Oliver and Mabel (Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez) head to Los Angeles in season four of “Only Murders in the Building,” because their podcast is being turned into a film. Their Hollywood life is interrupted when another murder occurs, meaning the trio has a new case to cover. Eugene Levy, Zach Galifianakis and Eva Longoria join the cast. “Only Murders in the Building” premieres Tuesday on Hulu.

    — A new animated series in the “Terminator” universe comes to Netflix on Thursday. It follows new characters voiced by “House of the Dragon” actor Sonoya Mizuno, Timothy Olyphant, André Holland Rosario Dawson and Ann Dowd.

    — Season two of “The House of the Dragon” has aired in its entirety on HBO and if your fantasy itch still needs to be scratched, “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” returns for its second season Thursday on Prime Video. The story is set in the Second Age of Middle-earth, prior to the events of J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit” and “The Lord of the Rings.”

    Alicia Rancilio

    NEW VIDEO GAMES TO PLAY

    — Luke Skywalker may get the headlines, but the true MVPs of the Star Wars franchise are rascals like Han Solo and Lando Calrissian. Ubisoft’s Star Wars Outlaws introduces a new scoundrel: Kay Vess, a young thief who’s trying to work her way up the galaxy’s crime syndicates and make the big score. She isn’t a Jedi or a Sith, but she knows how to fire a blaster and fly a spaceship. Outlaws comes from Massive Entertainment, the developers of Tom Clancy’s The Division, and it aims to spread Ubisoft’s brand of open-world adventure across multiple planets. It launches Friday, Aug. 30, on PlayStation 5, Xbox X/S and PC.

    — Many gamers who grew up with the Super Nintendo Entertainment System remember 1993’s Secret of Mana as their introduction to a particular type of high-fantasy role-playing. It’s been 15 years since we’ve gotten a new chapter in the marquee Mana series, but Square Enix is finally delivering Visions of Mana. A youngster named Val is chosen to accompany his friend Hinna on a pilgrimage to the life-sustaining Mana Tree, and they’ll need to use magic and swordplay to fight all the monsters along the way. The lush, anime-style graphics are bound to stir memories in old-school RPG fans, starting Thursday, Aug. 29, on PlayStation 5/4, Xbox X/S and PC.

    Lou Kesten

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  • Fantasmas Takes Aim at the Ever Less Gradual Stamping Out of People Who Can’t (Or Won’t) “Prove Themselves” Digitally

    Fantasmas Takes Aim at the Ever Less Gradual Stamping Out of People Who Can’t (Or Won’t) “Prove Themselves” Digitally

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    In the opening scene of Fantasmas’ first episode, “Cookies and Spaghetti,” Julio (Julio Torres) is having a nightmare about filling out an online application that asks, among other things, what his occupation is. In response, he simply fills in his name: Julio. (It’s a whole thing later on in the episode that his job is, quite simply, “being Julio.”) The screen automatically reacts to that in red capital letters that chide, “INVALID OCCUPATION.” When Julio then tries to fill out his address as “my water tower,” the screen also spits back, “ADDRESS NOT FOUND.” When he tries to submit the form, it immediately tells him, “REJECTED.” All the while, he’s been dressed in a Pierrot-meets-jester sort of ensemble topped with what amounts to a dunce hat. Every time he fills one of the questions out, he then tries to open a window that ends up not existing behind one of the curtains he pulls back. The symbolism is instantly obvious: Julio (and those like him) is being literally boxed out of society because they can’t quite fit into any specific, “prepopulated” box.

    That symbolism continues in Julio’s waking life, when he goes to Crayola to offer his consulting services. Accordingly, he tells the three suits in front of them they need to make a crayon that is clear. One of the suits responds, “But clear isn’t a color.” Julio counters, “If it isn’t a color, then what do you call this?… The space between us.” The same suit replies, “If a crayon is a clear wax and it leaves no discernible color behind, what’s the use?” Another suit chimes in, “It cannot be done! Why are you doing this? Why do you need this?” “It’s already done.” Julio then looks to his glass of water for backup to say, “Look at this glass of water over here. It’s defiantly clear. Some things aren’t one of the normal colors or play by the rules of the rainbow.” When the meeting is over and one of the suits walks him out, he tells Julio, “If we were to move forward with clear Crayola, what would we call it?” Julio responds, “Call it Fantasmas. It means ‘ghosts.’” Even that renders the executive confused as he then asks why it would be plural instead of singular. Julio has no answer that would satisfy such a “logical” mind. Thus, he pretends to go along with “Fantasma” as the title card for the show comes up and an “S” is then added to the end of the word after a momentary pause.

    And it is a pointed title, for a large core of the show speaks to how many people in this world are forced to become “ghosts” when they either can’t or simply refuse to bend to what society demands of them. This includes, at the top of the list, having a sizable paper trail that proves both your existence and your longstanding ability to pay for things. In the U.S., the one certainly can’t exist without the other. Something that Torres has grappled with not just when he was dealing with visa-oriented paperwork after graduating from college, but also as a result of his newfound success. For, even now, Torres resents the idea that you have to have a credit card in order to build the credit that helps prove your existence. As he told Indiewire, “I do not have a credit card, and have always had trouble [renting an apartment] because of it. That’s the impetus for the whole [storyline]. Although I made the money to have the kind of apartment that I was applying for, I was rejected, even though I was willing to basically pay a year’s rent upfront. They were like, ‘No, we went with an applicant who had,’ and I quote, ‘overqualified guarantors.’ Wink, they have really rich parents.” The automatic assumption, especially in New York, that those without a credit history or a lot of money can “just” get help from their parents is also addressed in Fantasmas.

    This moment arises when, Edwin (Bernardo Velasco), a food deliverer who can’t bring Julio’s order to him in a timely fashion because every form of transportation requires proof of existence (obvious shade at the updated version of the MTA’s MetroCard, OMNY, a “tap-and-go” system that requires a debit or credit card), ends up talking to Gina (Greta Titelman), another recurring character in the series. Having recently been dumped by her sugar daddy, Gina sits on a bench sobbing. Edwin, almost as desperate as she is, decides to ask her, of all people, to explain to him what proof of existence is, and how to get it.

    She shrugs, “You just go to the app, and you put in your social and your credit score—” Edwin tells her, “I don’t have that.” “Don’t have what?” “Any of that.” Gina then brightens, “Well, can you use your parents? You know, I had to use my parents’ address after Charles dumped me.” Edwin is confused about the suggestion, wondering, “What do my parents have to do with it?” After all, unlike many white folks, it doesn’t come as an automatic given that one can turn to their parents for financial support. Thus, Gina proves herself to be the very sort of cliché that gives white women a bad name. Even so, she explains the same thing to Edwin that Julio’s been told by his manager, of sorts, Vanesja (Martine)—who is technically just supposed be a performance artist performing as his manager. Which is: sometimes, “exceptions” are made if someone is, like, “a thing” a.k.a. famous enough. Here, too, Torres makes a commentary on how fame has become the sole pursuit of many people growing up (and even after they’re theoretically “grown”), without having an actual focus in mind. In other words, they don’t care what they’re famous for, they just want to be famous (even if it’s “famous for being famous”). After all, it makes you an “exception” to every rule.

    In real life, though, Torres hasn’t found that to be entirely true, also telling Indiewire of his post-fame apartment-renting experience, “It’s not about getting the money that you’re asking for, it’s about the kind of person that you’re renting to. You’re measuring people by not only how much money they have, but how long they’ve had that money for and how equipped they are to win this race. The idea that everyone’s born with a clean slate is false. And so, I was very interested in exploring that [in Fantasmas].”

    The show version of Julio’s ongoing struggles with finding an apartment (the one he’s currently in is slated to become a “General Mills Café and Residencies”) harken back to Lily Allen singing, “It’s just the bureaucrats who won’t give me a mortgage/It’s very funny ’cause I got your fuckin’ money/And I’m never gonna get it just ’cause of my bad credit/Oh well, I guess I mustn’t grumble/I suppose it’s just the way the cookie crumbles.” This said on 2006’s “Everything’s Just Wonderful.” A phrase Julio has a harder and harder time telling himself as the walls start to more than just figuratively close in. Still, he remains defiant about not capitulating to getting his proof of existence card. No matter how “easy” it’s supposed to be. As he tells his usual cab driver, Chester (Tomas Matos), who also doesn’t have one, “I don’t have it because I don’t want it.” It’s become a matter of principle now, a way to say “fuck you” to a system that has never made it easy for him—or anyone like him—to get by.

    Even when he tries to eradicate himself as an actual body (in one of many acts of desperation related to not being able to find an apartment without proof of existence), Vicky (Sydnee Washington), the employee at New Solutions Incorporated, inquires with genuine shock, “How do you have an apartment? I mean, how do you take out a loan? They’re gonna be asking for it as soon as you’re on the subway.” Julio automatically tunes out these questions—so accustomed to dissociating in scenarios where he’s bombarded with stressful queries related to “getting real” and living a normie lifestyle—and focuses in on a commercial that’s playing on the TV in the background (it’s here that Denise the Toilet Dresser [Aidy Bryant] gets her moment to shine).

    The pressure that even casual strangers put on Julio to “get with it” and surrender to proof of existence (and everything that such a surrender actually entails) goes back to the aforementioned recurring dream. In it, Julio would have to leave the room (you know, the one with no windows in it) in order to get fresh air. The problem is, outside, it’s freezing cold, which is why everyone passing by is wearing an “unremarkable black puffer coat.” Julio can see that if he, too, wants to join the others in freshness, he would have to wear one of the same puffer coats. And there just so happens to be one within his grasp that literally has his name on it. All he has to do is walk out, take the jacket and put it on.

    But to put it on would mean becoming one of them. One of those “proof of existence” people. He sums up the dream by saying, “The only way I would be able to leave [the room] is by compromising somehow.” And this is the dilemma that every artistic person (or, also in Torres’ case, every U.S. immigrant) is faced with sooner or later. Often cropping up repeatedly if they never succeed in finding a way to dodge it. To become an “exception.”

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Pee-Wee’s Playhouse + The Science of Sleep + The Mighty Boosh + Problemista + Kafka = Fantasmas

    Pee-Wee’s Playhouse + The Science of Sleep + The Mighty Boosh + Problemista + Kafka = Fantasmas

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    Many people still like to tout that we’re in the Golden Age of television, forgetting perhaps that, for much of the 2000s, a new wave of innovation not seen since the 1980s was happening with said medium. Obviously, the most creative and absurd television show to come out of the Decade of Excess was Pee-Wee’s Playhouse. In fact, it’s a wonder that the show was ever greenlit and then allowed to continue for even more than a season, so “offbeat” and “weird” was it. And yet, children (and adults) immediately gravitated to the content, which was so different for the era of “normie Reaganism.” In commenting on the appeal of the show to Time in 2006, Paul Reubens stated, “At the time there weren’t many live-action people on [kids’] television. It was a time of Transformers and merchandise-driven shows that I didn’t think were creative. I believe kids liked the Playhouse because it was very fast-paced and colorful. And more than anything, it never talked down to them. I always felt like kids were real smart and should be dealt with that way.”

    In the present, it has become more and more the case that even adults are talked down to and treated rather stupidly (which is perhaps part of the reason why the U.S. has gradually transitioned into a place that’s destined to fulfill the predictions laid out in Idiocracy). Not only that, but all the programming geared toward that demographic has either become so serious or, on the other end of the spectrum, mind-numbing “reality” TV. In the early 00s, just as the latter category of television was gaining popularity, the British duo known as The Mighty Boosh (Julian Barratt and Noel Fieliding) would come together to eventually bring audiences The Mighty Boosh, a surrealist comedy that aired from 2004 to 2007. Sandwiched in between those years was the release of Michel Gondry’s The Science of Sleep in 2006, an equally as surreal offering that seemed to indicate the population’s desire to retreat into fantasy at a time dominated by the brutal, embarrassing (for Americans, anyway) realities of war in a post-9/11 world. With Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, the same phenomenon was happening in the world, where a desire to retreat into the fantastical was preferable to further exposing oneself to the brainwashing propaganda instilled on both sides by the Cold War.

    Perhaps it can be said, then, that the arrival of Julio Torres’ Fantasmas also coincides with an overall desire to retreat into fantasy. Because, despite the “hope” of Kamala Harris taking things in a new direction for the U.S., the realities of 2024 remain particularly bleak. That doesn’t just include the ongoing Palestinian genocide, but so many other horrors that are less publicized, including the civil war and famine in Sudan, the violent oppression of women in Afghanistan, the violence and political instability in Venezuela, the total lawlessness of Haiti, the high rates of femicide in Mexico (indeed, Latin America overall has one of the highest rates of femicide in the world), the climate-related disasters that have led to something as impactful as the endlessly raging wildfires in Canada. The list truly does go on and on. And with so much brutality in the world, even in “ultra-modern,” “land of the free” America, one can’t blame Torres for often retreating into the comforts of his mind, where reality can be diluted and subdued. Especially since he lives in one of the shittiest places on Earth: New York. Of course, it’s no secret that New Yorkers get off on their misery, pride themselves on being able to “take it” where other more “lily-livered” types can’t. (Or simply have the good sense and self-respect to leave.)

    Perhaps knowing that the “real” New York isn’t all that romantic, Torres opts to create an “alternate version” of it in Fantasmas. And yes, as he freely admits, there are many correlations to his directorial debut, Problemista, in terms of both setting, tone and character. As he told Indiewire, “It feels like a sequel to [Problemista], with achieving the quote-unquote ‘Dream.’” But more than that, it’s the types of magical realism details in Problemista that parallel Fantasmas. Take, for example, how Alejandro (Torres) works at a place called FreezeCorp in Problemista, where clients pay to have themselves cryogenically frozen so that they might come to life in the future (again, Idiocracy comes to mind…or Austin Powers). In reality, as Isabella Rossellini narrates, “This company provides a form of euthanasia.” In the commercial, the FreezeCorp spokeswoman admits, “Our scientists are working around the clock to one day discover how to bring our patients back.”

    The FreezeCorp-esque entity in Fantasmas, called New Solutions Incorporated, instead pivots to the notion of uploading one’s consciousness and disposing of their corporeal self altogether. As Vicky (Sydnee Washington) assures Julio, “Our incorporeal service can free you of your daily bodily ailments and discomforts.” And, considering Julio is convinced he has skin cancer, he’s only too ready to get on board with what Grimes was already advocating for back in 2018 with “We Appreciate Power” when she said, “Come on, you’re not even alive/If you’re not backed up on a drive/And if you long to never die/Baby, plug in, upload your mind.” That’s just what Julio intends to do—the only problem is, like every other minor endeavor in this hyper-bureaucratic world, the company requires him to show “Proof of Existence” in order to participate. Irritated yet again by this demand, Julio asks incredulously, “I need to prove that I exist so I can stop existing?”

    It’s enough to drive him battier than riding in the car with Chester (Tomas Matos), a former Uber driver who has decided to create his own rideshare app called, what else, Chester. It is in his car that Julio first learns about the existence of a show called Melf, playing on the TV in the back of the cab. Needless to say, it’s a sendup of ALF (an acronym for Alien Life Form), the late 80s sitcom that centered on an alien that looks more like he fled from the Planet Sesame Street. Like Alf, Melf ends up landing on the doorstep of a suburban family, but Julio takes the original concept and turns it on its ear by creating a sordid romance between Melf and Jeff (Paul Dano), the character modeled after Willie Tanner (Max Wright). Instead of making it “wholesome” family content, Julio positions Melf and Jeff as secret lovers who hide their trysts until it finally becomes too obvious to Jeff’s wife, Nancy (Sunita Mani). Despite the pain he causes his family—and the international scandal it invokes—Jeff is happy he can finally be his authentic self, free to love the, er, being he really wants to. It is little digressions like these that also make Fantasmas reminiscent of the Pee-Wee’s Playhouse style. Granted, Torres has far more “k-hole” moments, if you will, than Pee-Wee ever did. From Dodo the Elf (Bowen Yang) to Denise (Aidy Bryant) the Toilet Dresser to Becca the Customer Service Rep for Assembly Plan Insurance. It is the latter character who also ties into a scene from Problemista when Alejandro calls a banking representative after seeing that he has a negative amount in his account.

    Not understanding how he got so overdrawn, she chirpily tells him, “Every time you overdraft, the bank must impose a penalty of thirty-five dollars.” In disbelief, Julio snaps back, “So, what? Like an eight-dollar sandwich becomes a forty-five-dollar sandwich?” “Forty-three dollars,” she corrects matter-of-factly, adding, “That’s the policy, Mr. Martinez.” Julio continues to rebuff, “But that makes absolutely no sense. I distinctly recall making a cash deposit.” “And that deposit was flagged as potentially fraudulent, so it’s on hold now. For your protection.” “Right, but then that hold made me overdraw… Why would you let this happen? Why not just let my card get declined?” Unfazed, the representative says, “That’s not the way things work.” “But that is the way things should work. Otherwise, the bank is just benefitting from my misfortune. From the misfortune of people who can’t afford to make any mistakes. From people who have no margin of error.” “It’s policy. It is what it is.” Julio then launches into an even more emotional plea, concluding, “I know that there’s still a person in there, and I know that she can hear me.” For a moment, it seems like she might actually come around, only to end up shooting him in the face as she declares, “I stand with Bank of America.”

    This bank representative is so clearly the precursor for Becca in Fantasmas, who gets an ostensible orgasm over other people’s suffering as she delivers the voiceover, “God, I love insurance. And banks, and credit cards, and the military. Law and order. I pity those who do not stand behind us.” Torres’ contempt for people who are simply “following orders” (you know, like the Nazis) is a hallmark of his work. Along with his total inability, as someone with an abstract artist’s mind, to fathom how anyone could live with themselves at such a job (acting as a gatekeeper who gets off on their own small form of power). Apart from the reason of “needing money to survive”—by fucking up other people’s survival.

    In this sense, too, Torres touches on the idea that the employees of color so often working in these roles are only hurting their own kind in service of the white CEOs and other assorted power mongers at the top. The system in place, thus, continues to thrive through division and pitting people (usually the “unmonied”) against each other.

    Another noticeable similarity between Julio in Fantasmas and Alejandro is that the latter has a similar form of hypochondria, at one point texting his mother a picture of his tongue with the caption (in Spanish), “Do you see those dots? Is that something bad?” For Julio, the obsession becomes all about the birthmark that looks like a mole just underneath his ear. Rather than focusing on the crushing pressure and simultaneous banality of dealing with his ever-mounting bureaucratic affairs, Julio would rather obsess over finding the oyster-shaped earring that was the exact same shape as his birthmark so that he can place it against said birthmark in front of a doctor to prove that it’s grown, therefore needs to be biopsied.

    There to occasionally try to make him see reason is his “manager.” Or rather a performance artist playing his manager, but who has been doing it for so long that she’s really just his manager now. Alas, not even Vanesja (played by real-life performance artist Martine) or Julio’s “assistant,” a robot named Bibo (Joe Rumrill), can distract him from his quest to be distracted. And in the world of Fantasmas, there are many shiny people and objects to be distracted by—as there should be in any narrative worth its weight in magical realism.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Kinds of Kindness Is More Than Kind of Fucked Up (In All the Best Possible Ways)

    Kinds of Kindness Is More Than Kind of Fucked Up (In All the Best Possible Ways)

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    For those who only just got acquainted with Yorgos Lanthimos because of his star turn at the Academy Awards this year for Poor Things, it would come as no surprise that viewers hoping for “more of the same” might be disappointed by his quick follow-up, Kinds of Kindness. While, sure, both movies are in keeping with Lanthimos’ penchant for “quirky” (a reductive term if ever there was one in terms of describing anything that is “weird”—also usually a reductive term) narratives starring Emma Stone, Kinds of Kindness is distinctly begat of the auteur’s mind. This being in contrast to Poor Things, which was an adaptation of someone else’s work—specifically, Alasdair Gray’s 1992 novel of the same name. Presented even more overtly as “a Frankenstein story” in Lanthimos’ hands (though, as some pointed out, it was more like the plot of Frankenhooker, released in 1990), audiences were more easily charmed by this kind of “quirk,” paired with Stone’s rendering of Bella Baxter. Put it this way: Poor Things is the most “Tim Burton” Lanthimos has ever allowed himself to get.

    In truth, Lanthimos’ “return to himself” with Kinds of Kindness seems in part designed to remind people not to get too used to the linear, “easy-to-pinpoint message” of Poor Things. So it is that the film commences with the first story in the “triptych,” where we’re introduced to the unifying thread of each story: R.M.F. (indeed, that was one of the original titles of the movie, apart from the more abstract And). A man who is never given a clear backstory, yet whose shirt and initials will serve as a consistent talisman. In fact, it is R.M.F. (Yorgos Stefanakos) who we first see enter the scene via car while blasting the Eurythmics’ signature 1983 track, “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)” (a song that will also serve as another consistent thread in each story). So begins “Vignette #1,” if you will, titled “The Death of R.M.F.” When R.M.F. knocks on the door of the lavish house he’s arrived at, Vivian (Margaret Qualley) answers the door in a silk robe that’s cut as short as it can be without her ass showing (and, in truth, if Qualley had an ass, it would definitely peek out of a robe like that). She takes one look at the shirt he’s wearing, with his initials monogrammed on the breast pocket and tells her husband, Raymond (Willem Dafoe), over the phone exactly what R.M.F. is wearing, including the assurance that his shirt doesn’t look wrinkled. Even so, she still sends a picture of the shirt to prove it (an initial glimpse into Raymond’s fastidious nature).

    R.M.F., we’ll soon find, is the man that Raymond’s emotional whipping boy, Robert (Jesse Plemons), has been tasked with crashing his car into. And why? Simply because Raymond wants him to. Indeed, this particular segment comes across as an allegory for the average employer-employee relationship, with the employer demanding to have total and unbridled control over the person they “own.” For the past ten years, Robert has been only too willing to do whatever Raymond has asked of him—from marrying Sarah (Hong Chau), the woman Raymond “picked out” at the Cheval Bar (where they’re regulars) to lacing her coffee with mifepristone because Raymond doesn’t want Robert to have children (that could be very distracting from work, after all). Thus, the toxicity masquerading as “love” (mainly for all the material things that Raymond provides him with in exchange for Robert’s total lack of autonomy) shines through at its most unignorable when Raymond makes this request. The request for Robert to crash into R.M.F. Of course, Robert has no idea who R.M.F. is, he’s merely told that the man is willing to die (if the crash should happen to be too impactful) for this bizarre exercise in fealty.

    One might say that the entire running motif of Kinds of Kindness is, in fact, fealty. And the lengths that people are willing to go in order to prove it to a toxic “alpha” in the situation. This much is also true in the next “vignette,” “R.M.F. Is Flying” (perhaps an allusion to his limbo state after finally being run over multiple times by Robert in response to Raymond cutting him off cold turkey from his “love”). In this setup, Plemons is now Daniel, a police officer reeling over the recent disappearance of his wife, Liz (Stone), who is some kind of marine biologist lost at sea. Her miraculous return with her fellow researcher, Jonathan (Ja’Quan Monroe-Henderson), is met with joy and relief by their friends, Neil (Mamoudou Athie) and Martha (Qualley), and Liz’s father, George (Dafoe). However, it is less comforting to Daniel when he starts to suspect that the woman who has returned is not his wife at all. Mainly because it’s “little details” about her that aren’t tracking with the “original” Liz. For a start, this Liz is perfectly okay to eat chocolate, a sweet she hated before, and, secondly, because her feet are suddenly slightly too big for all her shoes. When Daniel tells his theory to Sharon (Chau), Jonathan’s wife, she can only stare back at him in disbelief.

    Despite no one believing him, Daniel’s conviction that his wife isn’t really his wife only intensifies, causing him to have an “episode” on the job that leads to his suspension from the force. Still convinced that Liz is someone else, he proceeds to test how devoted she is to him, demanding that she cook her own thumb for him to prove her love (side note: he’s been on a hunger strike against anything she makes for him). When she actually does, he not only says her thumb is disgusting and he would never eat it, but he also then ups the ante by requesting that she cook her own liver for him (talk about a Hannibal Lecter-esque sweet fantasy, or “sweet dream,” to be more Eurythmics-centric). At the end of this petite histoire, the real Liz does show up once Fake Liz ends up killing herself with a self-extraction of the liver to prove her love. What’s the additional message here? Perhaps that “real” love isn’t always that selfless. Otherwise it can get pretty tainted pretty fast.

    And, speaking of “tainted,” that’s what the final “vignette,” “R.M.F. Eats A Sandwich,” is all about. Namely with regard to (sex) cult leaders Omi (Dafoe) and Aka (Chau) insisting on their subjects’ “purity” if they are to be accepted into the, er, fold for fucking. Whenever Omi or Aka hears that one of their “subjects” has broken the bonds of “loyalty” to the cult (which is somewhat ironic considering they’re all fucking multiple people…but hey, so long as it’s within the cult, it’s fine), they have their ways of testing for compromised “purity” (a.k.a. STDs).

    Emily (Stone), a recent convert to the “cause,” seems overly eager to prove herself and her, again, fealty, to Omi and Aka by seeking out a healer that can supposedly reanimate the dead. Which is why the story begins with measuring and weighing the latest “potential” healer, Anna (Hunter Schafer), like she’s a piece of meat. Joining Emily in that task is Andrew (Plemons), a fellow cult member that’s been “assigned” to Emily, as it were, by Omi and Aka. When they try to get Anna to deliver on the final (and most important) test—reviving the dead—she fails…much to Emily’s (in particular) dismay.

    After the disappointment, Andrew and Emily get into her vibrant purple Dodge Challenger and continue on their way, talking to Aka over the phone about whether or not they have enough water for the journey. This rather precise question sets up one of the cruxes of the storyline, which is that, in order to be “pure,” the cult members must only drink water that has been “crafted” out of Omi and Aka’s tears. Ergo, they’re given thermoses filled with this “special” kind of water (a kind of kindness, duh) whenever they hit the road on one of their quests to find the healer. Of course, they’re not flying totally blind. There are certain known criteria about the healer they’re looking for: she’s a woman, she’s a twin, she’s a twin whose other twin died and she has a specific age, height and weight.

    As for Emily’s “former” life before becoming a cultist, she was a mother and a wife to Joseph, portrayed by Joe Alwyn, who takes the chance on playing a role where he “has to” rape in a climate that already has him in “villain mode” thanks to his breakup with Taylor Swift (who, yes, will probably uncomfortably watch this movie and scene since Emma Stone is in her “squad,” as is Jack Antonoff’s wife, Margaret Qualley). Occasionally pulled back to that “old life” of hers out of a sense of, let’s say, wifely and maternal duty, Joseph ends up getting her cast out of the cult when he date rapes her, and Omi, Aka and Andrew immediately find out when they catch her coming out of the house the following morning.

    In the wake of her “affront” to their “cause” (like all cult leaders, that cause is ultimately self-aggrandizement), they drag her to their outdoor “steam room.” A “hot box” is more like it—and one that looks like something out of Midsommar. Cranking the heat up as high as possible to “purify” her, when she is taken out of the box and placed on a perch for Aka to lick sweat off her stomach and see if she’s still “contaminated,” the result is not in Emily’s favor. Shunned from the cult, Emily determines to prove her commitment by finding the healer, once and for all. A quest that, predictably, results in catastrophic circumstances.

    As Kind of Kindness concludes with a mid-credits scene where we finally do see R.M.F. eating that sandwich, the viewer is left to reconcile the idea that maybe blind loyalty is more pathetic than it is noble (see: Republicans and Trump). Something that shouldn’t have to be spelled out for people at this juncture, but, sadly, still needs to be. As a matter of fact, many will likely not get that message because Kinds of Kindness doesn’t spell it out enough for the average feeble mind. And, maybe, in his own meta way, Lanthimos is actually testing the loyalty of his “true” devotees with this film.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Emma Stone is back to super dark brunette

    Emma Stone is back to super dark brunette

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    Emma Stone is embracing her dark side once more. When we last saw the star at the Cannes Film Festival, her hair was a warm auburn shade—a colour the Oscar winner returns to again and again. However, it appears that she’s taken a cue from Bella Baxter and gone back to a darker tone for the New York premiere of her new movie Kinds of Kindness.

    While Stone’s hair still has a slight reddish sheen to it, it’s definitely more brunette than red these days. The colour is a combo of espresso brunette with a red undertone, which brings out Stone’s light green eyes. It’s as though her Cannes colour was bumped up a few levels to bring the drama; Stone’s go-to colourist and hairstylist Mara Roszak called her look “vamp goddess,” which definitely tracks with the dark hair and black gown with sheer polka dot and net panels. Roszak styled Stone’s hair simply, tucking it behind her ears and and adding a hint of bend and product for a damp look. Makeup-wise, Stone kept it equally simple with a pretty peach blush and pink lips.

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    Emma Stone poses at a premiere in a black dress. Her hair is a dark brown with red undertones.

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    Emma Stone is one of the biggest colour chameleons in Hollywood. She’s a natural blonde and occasionally goes back to her roots, but seems to love red shades the most. Stone often swaps colours for specific roles; for example, she was platinum blonde for her role as Gwen Stacy in the Spider-Man movies and a redhead in La La Land, though Stone returned to her natural blonde shade in spring 2023, when she debuted a bright, sunny blonde bob. It’s been awhile since she’s been super dark brunette, but we’d be remiss not to mention her Poor Things character Bella; Stone wore nearly four feet of jet-black hair extensions and zero makeup for the performance, which won her her second Best Actress Oscar. Is this fresh darker colour for a role or is Stone just flipping the script on the whole “going blonde for summer” thing? That’s a TBD for now!


    This article originally appeared on Allure.

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    Kara Nesvig

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  • All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Cannes Film Festival

    All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Cannes Film Festival

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    Eva Green. Getty Images

    It’s time for one of the most glamorous events of the year—the Cannes Film Festival. Every May, filmmakers, producers, directors, actors and other A-listers make their way to the French Riviera for 12 days of movie screenings, parties and, of course, plenty of glitzy red carpets and exciting fashion moments on La Croisette.

    The Cannes Film Festival is surely one of the most exciting red carpets of the season; it’s a solid 12 days of fashionable celebrities bringing their sartorial best to the resort town in the South of France, and attendees never fail to go all out with their ensembles. The Cannes red carpet has already given the world some truly iconic fashion moments, from Princess Diana’s baby blue Catherine Walker gown and Jane Birkin’s sequins and wicker basket ensemble to Madonna’s Jean Paul Gaultier cone bra and Anne Hathaway’s white Armani Privé frock, and the 2024 iteration of the film festival is sure to add even more to the list.

    The 77th annual Cannes Film Festival is already sure to be an especially star-filled extravaganza; Greta Gerwig is serving as the jury president for the main competition, and the three Honorary Palme d’Or awards will be given to Meryl Streep, Studio Ghibli and George Lucas. The star-studded film line-up of highly anticipated movies includes Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis (starring Adam Driver), Yorgos LanthimosKinds of Kindness (with Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe), Paul Schrader’s Oh, Canada (with Richard Gere, Uma Thurman, Michael Imperioli and Jacob Elordi), Andrea Arnold’s Bird (with Barry Keoghan) and so many more.

    The 2024 Cannes Film Festival runs from May 14 to May 25, and we’re keeping you updated on all the best red carpet moments throughout the entire spectacle. Below, see the best-dressed looks from the Cannes Film Festival red carpet.

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Meryl Streep. WireImage

    Meryl Streep

    in Dior 

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Eva Green. Getty Images

    Eva Green

    in Armani Privé

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Greta Gerwig. WireImage

    Greta Gerwig

    in Saint Laurent

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Léa Seydoux. WireImage

    Léa Seydoux

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Taylor Hill. WireImage

    Taylor Hill

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Helena Christensen. WireImage

    Helena Christensen

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Heidi Klum. WireImage

    Heidi Klum

    in Saiid Kobeisy

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Lily Gladstone. WireImage

    Lily Gladstone

    in Gucci

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Romee Strijd. Corbis via Getty Images

    Romee Strijd

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Jane Fonda. Getty Images

    Jane Fonda

    in Elie Saab

    "Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival"Le Deuxième Acte" ("The Second Act") Screening & Opening Ceremony Red Carpet - The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival
    Juliette Binoche. WireImage

    Juliette Binoche

    All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Cannes Film Festival

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • Emma Stone Wants You To Call Her “Emily”

    Emma Stone Wants You To Call Her “Emily”

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    Emma Stone has two Oscars, two Golden Globes, and countless iconic roles. She just wants one more thing: for people to call her by her actual, birth name.

    Born Emily Jean Stone in 1988, the actor said in 2017 that she was compelled to choose a different moniker as a teen. “My real name is Emily Stone, but when I started acting, that name was already taken by another actress, so I had to come up with a different one.” (Actors’ union SAG-AFTRA requires each member to have a unique working name.)

    “For a 16-year-old, picking a new name is an interesting prospect.”

    But “Emma” wasn’t her first choice. A look at Stone’s IMDB page shows that her early aughts credits, for appearances on shows such as Medium, were under the name “Riley Stone.” That lasted about six months, she said in an interview with W. “I did a guest spot on Malcolm in the Middle, and one day they were like, ‘Riley! Riley!’ and I had no idea who they were talking to.”

    “So then I changed it to ‘Emma’, because it’s closer to Emily.”

    That said, she had the option of Emily J. Stone at the time, but didn’t take it, saying “I don’t think I can pull off the ‘J’.” Another possible factor in the decision was a fondness for the Spice Girls, particularly Emma “Baby Spice” Bunton. In an interview with Jimmy Fallon from 2018, Stone said that “Growing up, I was super blonde … I wanted to be called Emma because of Baby Spice.

    “And guess what? Now I am,” Stone said. It’s unclear if in the years since that interview, she’s grown less into the Spice Girls or more into her “J” era, but her desire to reclaim “Emily” seems to be ever-growing. Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter in a conversation published this week, she was again outed as an Emily by her co-interviewee and The Curse co-star Nathan Fiedler.

    “I’d like to say something,” Fielder said as the interview kicked into gear. “Her name’s Emily, but she goes by Emma professionally. So when there’s people that don’t know her, I end up saying Emma. But I’m going to just say Emily from here on.”

    “I freaked out a couple of years ago,” Stone said in response. “For some reason, I was like, ‘I can’t do it anymore. Just call me Emily.’”

    That freakout has abated a bit, Stone said, to the point where she’s taken a “You can say Emma. You can say anything,” attitude. But still, she has a yearning for the name of her birth. If a fan addressed her as “Emily,” “That would be so nice,” Stone said. “I would like to be Emily.”

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  • Ari Aster’s Working On His Next (Hopefully Bizarre) Film

    Ari Aster’s Working On His Next (Hopefully Bizarre) Film

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    Ari Aster’s at it again! The acclaimed director of Beau is Afraid, Midsommar, and Hereditary is working on his next film for A24—and it has a star-studded cast.

    Here’s everything we know about Eddington, Aster’s latest outing!

    Eddington plot

    As of this writing, plot details about Eddington haven’t been publicly released. However, we know that Eddington will be a western film about an ambitious sheriff in New Mexico.

    With a plot description like that, Eddington sounds pretty mundane. However, this is Ari Aster we’re talking about, so it’s likely that this film will be a pretty wild ride.

    After all, Aster doesn’t need a complicated story in order to spin a wild tale. Take Beau is Afraid, for example. Aster’s 2023 horror film starring Joaquin Phoenix is about an anxious middle-aged man who tries to go home after his mother’s sudden death. However, on the way, Beau (Phoenix) gets sucked into a surrealist odyssey filled with mayhem and chaos. Beau gets locked out of his apartment, hit by a car, picked up by a cheerful (yet sinister!) suburban family, and taken in by a troupe of forest actors before finally making it home to his mom’s house, where he receives an earth-shattering revelation.

    Will Eddington have the same dreamlike quality and dark humor as Aster’s other films? Here’s hoping.

    Eddington cast

    A full cast list hasn’t been released yet, but what we know so far is exciting.

    Joaquin Phoenix will be reuniting with Aster for Eddington. Will he play Eddington himself? Is Eddington even the sheriff’s name? Maybe Eddington is the name of a town or something. We don’t know yet. But I, personally, am down to watch Phoenix get weird in an Ari Aster film again.

    Emma Stone will also be starring in the new film. Stone has her own share of experience in weird roles, having just won an Oscar for her portrayal of Bella in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things.

    Pedro Pascal is also in the film. Grizzled cowboy, maybe? Now I’m just making stuff up.

    Austin Butler also plays an undisclosed role in the film. You can catch Butler in theaters right now, playing the murderous Feyd-Rautha in Dune: Part Two.

    Finally, Luke Grimes, Deirdre O’Connell, Micheal Ward and Clifton Collins Jr. will also appear in the film.

    Eddington release date

    So when is Eddington coming out? The movie just started filming, so there’s no release date yet. A release in late 2025 seems feasible, but that’s pure speculation. Stay tuned for more details!

    (featured image:

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Julia Glassman

    Julia Glassman (she/her) holds an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and has been covering feminism and media since 2007. As a staff writer for The Mary Sue, Julia covers Marvel movies, folk horror, sci fi and fantasy, film and TV, comics, and all things witchy. Under the pen name Asa West, she’s the author of the popular zine ‘Five Principles of Green Witchcraft’ (Gods & Radicals Press). You can check out more of her writing at <a href=”https://juliaglassman.carrd.co/”>https://juliaglassman.carrd.co/.</a>

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  • Emma Stone Wore 21 Charlotte Tilbury Products to The Oscars & They’re All 20% Off

    Emma Stone Wore 21 Charlotte Tilbury Products to The Oscars & They’re All 20% Off

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    All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, StyleCaster may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

    ICYMI, Emma Stone won the 2024 Oscar for Best Actress wearing a full face of Charlotte Tilbury. Her fresh, dewy beat was an all-hands-on-deck effort by her makeup artist, Rachel Goodwin, and 20 fabulous makeup and skincare products from the ongoing Charlotte Tilbury Oscars Sale.

    I’m about to do you a solid and link every single product that graced the Oscar winner’s face, but first, super important sale details. Take 20 percent off of orders worth $60 or more from March 9 through March 14 at 4:59 a.m. EST. Just be sure to enter code REDCARPET at checkout to secure this discount, and note this code doesn’t work with already marked down products and can’t be stacked with other codes.

    Best Charlotte Tilbury Oscars Sale Deals at a Glance:

    But back to the Poor Things star’s makeup look. Goodwin used everything from Charlotte Tilbury body products to the iconic blush wand to fan-fave lippies. She also applied an unreleased must-have, the Pillow Talk Big Lip Plumpgasm, which launches on April 4. The actress is completely decked out in CT, and boy, does she look gorgeous (and so ready for spring!). 

    Below, find all 20 products Stone stunned in on the Oscars red carpet, including each one’s discounted price during the Oscars sale.

    Charlotte Tilbury Complexion

    Charlotte Tilbury Magic Water Cream
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Magic Serum Crystal Elixir
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Magic Hydrator Mist
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Skin

    Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Flawless Filter Sephora
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Beautiful Skin Radiant Concealer
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Beautiful Skin Foundation
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Contour Wand
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Glowgasm Beauty Light Wand
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Airbrush Flawless Finish Powder
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Airbrush Flawless Setting Spray
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Body

    Charlotte Tilbury Magic Body Cream
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Supermodel Body
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Brows

    Charlotte Tilbury Brow Lift
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Eyes

    Charlotte Tilbury The Super Nudes Makeup Look
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Eyes to Mesmerize in Champagne shade
    Charlotte Tilbury.
    Charlotte Tilbury Pillow Talk Push Up Lashes Mascara
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Cheeks

    Charlotte Tilbury Matte Beauty Blush Wand in shade Pillow Talk Pink Pop
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Highlighter

    Charlotte Tilbury Glowgasm Beauty Light Wand in shade Spotlight
    Charlotte Tilbury.

    Charlotte Tilbury Lips

    Charlotte Tilbury Lip Cheat in 90s Pink
    Charlotte Tilbury.

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    Katie Decker-Jacoby

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  • Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone,

    Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone,

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    Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, “Oppenheimer” and more 2024 Oscars highlights – CBS News


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    “Oppenheimer” won best picture during the 2024 Academy Awards Sunday, dominating seven categories throughout the night. Emma Stone, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Ryan Gosling and Jimmy Kimmel also shined bright during this year’s ceremony. Nigel Smith, a senior movies editor at People, joins CBS News with a look at the highlights.

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  • Where to watch this year’s Oscar-winning films online

    Where to watch this year’s Oscar-winning films online

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    The Oscars are over and the winners are now on the books, but you’re still behind on watching?

    No worries. Here’s a guide on where to watch Sunday’s triumphant, though nominees that missed out on a statuette are worthy, too. Think “Killers of the Flower Moon,” “Maestro,” “Rustin,” “Past Lives,” “Nyad” and more.

    Also look for some of the short films that took home statuettes, including Wes Anderson’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar.” It streams on Netflix and is widely available for digital purchase or rental. The documentary short winner, “The Last Repair Shop” streams on Disney+.

    “OPPENHEIMER”

    13 nominations, 7 wins. Streams on Peacock.

    Christopher Nolan’s atomic opus “Oppenheimer” received widespread critical acclaim and broke box office records. It’s half the Barbenheimer phenom with “Barbie” from last July. The three-hour film, which is semi-trippy and flashback heavy, chronicles the trials and tribulations of the secret Manhattan Project’s J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy). Available for pay at YouTube, Apple TV, Prime Video, Vudu, iTunes, Google Play and elsewhere.

    “POOR THINGS”

    11 nominations, 4 wins. Streams on Hulu.

    Think Frankenstein story, and his bride. Director Yorgos Lanthimos owes a debt to Emma Stone, his childlike and highly randy Bella, in “Poor Things.” The comedy is dark and the vibe Victorian fantasy. And did we mention the sex? How Bella handles that activity has been the talk of film circles. No spoilers here but rest assured her consciousness is raised. Also stars Willem Dafoe and Mark Ruffalo. Available for purchase only on Prime Video, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “BARBIE”

    8 nominations, 1 win. Streams on Max.

    Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie,” in the billion-dollar club at the box office, is a live-action musical comedy focused on the 64-year-old plastic doll in a range of iterations. It also took the globe by storm, culturally speaking. The film stars Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling (as Just Ken). Robbie plays Stereotypical Barbie, who experiences an existential crisis but lands on the road to self-discovery. Available for pay at iTunes, Apple TV, Google Play, YouTube, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “AMERICAN FICTION”

    5 nominations, 1 win. Streams on MGM+

    Cord Jefferson’s directorial debut “American Fiction” is what satire should be: funny while succinctly pointing at truths. Jeffrey Wright plays a frustrated academic up against the wall of what Black books must be to sell. He takes action. The film is also about families and the weight of their struggles. Wright is joined by a great supporting cast in Leslie Uggams, Erika Alexander, Issa Rae, Sterling K. Brown and Tracee Ellis Ross. Available for pay at Prime Video, Apple TV+, Google Play, YouTube, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “ANATOMY OF A FALL”

    5 nominations, 1 win. Digital purchase or rental.

    Justine Triet’s “Anatomy of a Fall” took the Palme d’Or at the 76th Cannes Film Festival. It stars Sandra Hüller as a writer, Sandra, trying to prove her innocence in court in her husband’s death at their chalet in the French Alps. The verdict? We won’t tell. Did she or didn’t she? Triet wrote the film with her husband, Arthur Harari, and they shared in the film’s adapted screenplay win Sunday. Available for pay at iTunes, Prime Video, Google Play, Vudu, YouTube and elsewhere.

    “THE HOLDOVERS”

    5 nominations, 1 win. Streams on Peacock.

    The Alexander Payne offering “The Holdovers” is set at Christmastime, but its themes of loneliness and belonging resonate well beyond the holiday, wrapped in a comedic package. Set in 1970 over the holiday break at a boarding school, there’s plenty of nostalgia in the details. It stars Paul Giamatti in curmudgeonly glory as the teacher stuck minding Angus (Dominic Sessa) and other students with no place to go. Da’Vine Joy Randolph delivers a standout — and Osar-winning — performance as a grieving school worker who spends the holidays at the school. Available for pay at iTunes, Prime Video, Google Play, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “THE ZONE OF INTEREST”

    5 nominations, 2 wins. In theaters. Digital purchase.

    There’s another meaty role for Hüller in the Holocaust story “The Zone of Interest,” directed by Jonathan Glazer. She plays Hedwig, the wife of Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel), the real-life, bloodthirsty commandant of Auschwitz. The action largely has Rudolf and Hedwig living their everyday family lives just a few steps from the ovens and trains that were instruments in the slaughter of millions of Jews. A story worth telling, considering their status as monsters? You decide. Available for pay on Prime Video, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “20 DAYS IN MARIUPOL”

    1 nomination, 1 win. Digital purchase or rental. In North America it’s streamable on the Frontline page at pbs.org, the PBS app and at Frontline on YouTube.

    A joint production by The Associated Press and PBS “Frontline,” the documentary “20 Days in Mariupol” has been met with critical acclaim and an audience award at the Sundance Film Festival. AP journalist Mstyslav Chernov directed the movie from 30 hours of footage shot in Mariupol in the opening days of the Ukraine war. Chernov and AP colleagues Evgeniy Maloletka, a photographer, and producer Vasilisa Stepanenko were the last international journalists in the city before escaping. Available for pay at Prime Video, Google Play, Vudu and elsewhere.

    “THE BOY AND THE HERON”

    1 nomination. 1 win. Digital purchase or rental.

    Dreamy and enthralling, director Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli do it again. Well. The beautifully animated Japanese fantasy “The Boy and the Heron” has young Mahito late in World War II mourning the death of his mother and encountering a talking and ornery gray heron he can’t get rid of. And there’s a very important tower. Available for pay on Apple TV.

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2024 Oscars, visit https://apnews.com/hub/academy-awards

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    Leanne Italie, Associated Press

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  • The biggest winners and key moments of the 2024 Oscars

    The biggest winners and key moments of the 2024 Oscars

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    The biggest winners and key moments of the 2024 Oscars – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    At the 96th Academy Awards, “Oppenheimer” led the charge with 13 nominations and seven wins, including best picture, while “Barbie” snagged a single award. Emma Stone’s win for best actress and Cillian Murphy’s in the best actor category highlighted the night.

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  • Scottsdale native Emma Stone wins second Best Actress Oscar

    Scottsdale native Emma Stone wins second Best Actress Oscar

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    At the 96th annual Academy Awards held Sunday night, Emma Stone took home her second Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance in “Poor Things” as Bella Baxter, a young woman who goes on a journey of self-discovery after being brought back to life by an eccentric scientist.

    And it all started in the Valley.

    “Yorgos, thank you for the gift of a lifetime in Bella Baxter,” Stone said in her acceptance speech, speaking to “Poor Things” director Yorgos Lanthimos. “I am forever thankful for you.”

    She was born Emily Stone in Scottsdale on Nov. 6, 1988. She began her acting career at local company Valley Youth Theatre, where her first role was in “The Wind in the Willows” at the age of 10.

    VYT artistic director Bobb Cooper told Teen Vogue in 2017, “I knew from a very young age that Emma had the innate ability to bring any character to life. She gives everything to each character she plays and brings truth to the story. Emma knows how to make moments magical.”

    Stone thanked Cooper in her acceptance speech for Best Actress when she won it in 2017 for “La La Land.”

    Though Stone won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical this year, industry experts and oddsmakers favored Lily Gladstone to win the Oscar for “Killers of the Flower Moon,” which would have made her the first Indigenous woman to win the Best Actress award. Indeed, Stone looked shocked when her name was announced.

    Stone referenced her fellow nominees — Sandra Huller, Annette Bening, Carey Mulligan and Gladstone — in her acceptance speech.

    “And the women in this category, Sandra, Annette, Carey, Lily, I share this with you, I am in awe of you. It has been such an honor to do all this together and I hope we keep doing more together,” she said.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkN0sPQ76E0

    Stone now becomes one of 12 women who have won the Best Actress Academy Award twice. (Frances McDormand has won it three times, and Katharine Hepburn has a record four statuettes in that category.)

    Stone also thanked the cast and crew of “Poor Things,” which took home Oscars in the categories of Production Design, Costume Design and Makeup & Hairstyling.

    “Yorgos said to me, ‘Please take yourself out of it,’ and he was right, because it’s not about me. It’s about a team that came together to make something greater than the sum of its parts and that is the best part about making movies: It’s all of us, together. And I am so deeply honored to share this with every cast member, with every crew member, with every single person who poured their love and their care and their brilliance into the making of this film.”

    Lastly, Stone thanked her family, including her husband, Dave McCary, and their daughter, Louise.

    She said, “I know I have to wrap up, but I really just want to thank my family: my mom; my brother, Spencer; my dad; my husband, Dave, I love you so much. And most importantly, my daughter; who’s gonna be 3 in three days and has turned our lives Technicolor. I love you bigger than the whole sky, my girl. Thank you so much.”

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    Jennifer Goldberg

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  • Here Are All the 2024 Oscar Winners

    Here Are All the 2024 Oscar Winners

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    Poor Things
    Image: Searchlight

    After enduring the pandemic and a pair of industry-stopping strikes, Hollywood seemed extra jazzed about celebrating itself at this year’s Oscars. While there weren’t a ton of genre movies on the ballot—truly, last year’s Everything Everywhere All at Once sweep still feels rather validating—a few did find their way to the podium.

    Most notably it was Poor Things leading the charge for genre, including a Best Lead Actress win for Emma Stone for her portrayal of Bella Baxter—arguably only rivalled by Oppenheimer, which took home the trio of big wins in Best Lead Actor, Best Director, and Best Picture. Barbie, amid a sea of discourse after nominees were initially announced earlier this year about perceived snubs, home only one win for original song out of its slate of nominations. Here are all the winners (plus their fellow nominees) from the 2024 Academy Awards. And may we just say, if Best Visual Effects winner Godzilla Minus One does get a sequel, we hope it makes it into more categories than its Best Picture-worthy predecessor.

    Best Supporting Actor

    • Sterling K. Brown (American Fiction)
    • Robert De Niro (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Winner: Robert Downey Jr. (Oppenheimer)
    • Ryan Gosling (Barbie)
    • Mark Ruffalo (Poor Things)

    Best Supporting Actress

    • Emily Blunt (Oppenheimer)
    • Danielle Brooks (The Color Purple)
    • America Ferrera (Barbie)
    • Jodie Foster (Nyad)
    • Winner: Da’vine Joy Randolph (The Holdovers)

    Best Animated Feature Film

    • Winner: The Boy and the Heron
    • Elemental
    • Nimona
    • Robot Dreams
    • Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    Best Animated Short Film

    • “Letter to a Pig”
    • “Ninety-Five Senses”
    • “Our Uniform”
    • “Pachyderme”
    • Winner: “War Is Over! Inspired by the Music of John and Yoko”

    Best Costume Design

    • Barbie (Jacqueline Durran)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Jacqueline West)
    • Napoleon (David Crossman & Janty Yates)
    • Oppenheimer (Ellen Mirojnick)
    • Winner: Poor Things (Holly Waddington)

    Best Live-Action Short

    • “The After”
    • “Invincible”
    • “Knight of Fortune”
    • “Red, White and Blue”
    • Winner: “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar”

    Best Makeup and Hairstyling

    • Golda
    • Maestro
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: Poor Things
    • Society of the Snow

    Best Original Score

    • American Fiction (Laura Karpman)
    • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (John Williams)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Robbie Robertson)
    • Winner: Oppenheimer (Ludwig Göransson)
    • Poor Things (Jerskin Fendrix)

    Best Sound

    • The Creator
    • Maestro
    • Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: The Zone of Interest

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    • Winner: American Fiction (Cord Jefferson)
    • Barbie (Noah Baumbach & Greta Gerwig)
    • Oppenheimer (Christopher Nolan)
    • Poor Things (Tony McNamara)
    • The Zone of Interest (Jonathan Glazer)

    Best Original Screenplay

    • Winner: Anatomy of a Fall (Arthur Harari & Justine Triet)
    • The Holdovers (David Hemingson)
    • Maestro (Bradley Cooper & Josh Singer)
    • May December (Samy Burch & Alex Mechanik)
    • Past Lives (Celine Song)

    Best Cinematography

    • El Conde (Edward Lachman)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Rodrigo Prieto)
    • Maestro (Matthew Libatique)
    • Winner: Oppenheimer (Hoyte van Hoytema)
    • Poor Things (Robbie Ryan)

    Best Documentary Feature Film

    • Bobi Wine: The People’s President
    • The Eternal Memory
    • Four Daughters
    • To Kill a Tiger
    • Winner: 20 Days in Mariupol

    Best Documentary Short Film

    • The ABCs of Book Banning
    • The Barber of Little Rock
    • Island in Between
    • Winner: The Last Repair Shop
    • Nai Nai & Wài Pó

    Best Film Editing

    • Anatomy of a Fall
    • The Holdovers
    • Killers of the Flower Moon
    • Winner: Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things

    Best International Feature Film

    • Io Capitano
    • Perfect Days
    • Society of the Snow
    • The Teacher’s Lounge
    • Winner: The Zone of Interest

    Best Original Song

    • “The Fire Inside” (Flamin’ Hot)
    • “I’m Just Ken” (Barbie)
    • “It Never Went Away” (American Symphony)
    • “Wahzhazhe (A Song For My People)” (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Winner: “What Was I Made For” (Barbie)

    Best Production Design

    • Barbie
    • Killers of the Flower Moon
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: Poor Things

    Best Visual Effects

    • The Creator
    • Winner: Godzilla Minus One
    • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
    • Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning, Part One
    • Napoleon

    Best Lead Actor

    • Bradley Cooper (Maestro)
    • Colman Domingo (Rustin)
    • Paul Giamatti (The Holdovers)
    • Winner: Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer)
    • Jeffrey Wright (American Fiction)

    Best Lead Actress

    • Annette Bening (Nyad)
    • Lily Gladstone (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Sandra Hüller (Anatomy of a Fall)
    • Carey Mulligan (Maestro)
    • Emma Stone (Poor Things)

    Best Director

    • Justine Triet (Anatomy of a Fall)
    • Martin Scorcese (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Winner: Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer)
    • Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things)
    • Johanathan Glazer (Zone of Interest)

    Best Picture

    • American Fiction
    • Anatomy of a Fall
    • Barbie
    • The Holdovers
    • Killers of the Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Winner: Oppenheimer
    • Past Lives
    • Poor Things
    • The Zone of Interest

    What did you think of this year’s winners? Any favorite moments from the ceremony? Share in the comments below!


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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  • Emma Stone Blamed Ryan Gosling For Her Wardrobe Malfunction Right Before Her Oscars Win

    Emma Stone Blamed Ryan Gosling For Her Wardrobe Malfunction Right Before Her Oscars Win

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    Blame it on Ken. Emma Stone had a wardrobe malfunction before her Oscars 2024 win, and she blamed it on Ryan Gosling. Stone won the Academy Award on Sunday, March 10, for Best Actress for her role as Bella Baxter in Poor Things. The award is Stone’s second Oscar for Best Actress after her win for La La Land in 2018.

    Right before her Oscars win, however, Stone suffered a wardrobe malfunction when the zipper of her dress broke, which she joked happened after Ryan Gosling, who co-starred with her in La La Land, danced with her during his performance of “I’m Just Ken” from the Barbie movie, which was nominate for Best Original Song. “My dress is broken. I think it happened “I’m Just Ken,” Stone said. She also referenced her wardrobe malfunction as she was leaving stage after her speech, telling the audience, “Don’t look at the back of my dress.”

    After Stone’s Oscars wardrobe malfunction, many users took to Twitter to comment on her dress. “So what if Emma Stone’s dress was gaping a bit? She still rocked it. Also glad to know things like that which would happen (have happened) to regular old me also happen to the fabulous and beautiful. #Oscar,” a user wrote. Another tweeted, “@Emma Stone, girl, can you get out of that @LouisVuitton contract, do you need the money, it is consistently ugly and the zipper doesn’t even work.” One more user wrote, A”bsolute disaster! Who was the designer of #EmmaStone’s dress? Bow your head in shame. A busted Zipper or zipper seam is an absolute no-no for a dress for a high profile event like this. #Oscar2024.”

    During her Oscars speech, Stone ended her speech by shouting out her daughter, Louise, whom she shares with husband, Dave McCary. “I know I have to wrap up, but I really want to just thank my family, my mom, my brother Spencer, my dad, my husband Dave, I love you so much,” she said. “And most importantly, my daughter, who’s going to be 3 in three days and has turned out lives technicolor. I love you bigger than the whole sky, my girl.”

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    Jason Pham

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  • ‘Poor Things’ wins 2 Oscars for makeup and hairstyling, production design; film up for 11 Oscars

    ‘Poor Things’ wins 2 Oscars for makeup and hairstyling, production design; film up for 11 Oscars

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    March 10 is Oscar Sunday! Watch the 2024 Oscars live on ABC.

    Red carpet coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET 10 a.m. PT with “Countdown to Oscars: On The Red Carpet Live.” At 4 p.m. ET 1 p.m. PT, live coverage continues with “On The Red Carpet at the Oscars,” hosted by George Pennacchio with Roshumba Williams, Leslie Lopez and Rachel Brown.

    Watch all the action on the red carpet live on ABC, streaming live on OnTheRedCarpet.com and on the On the Red Carpet Facebook and YouTube pages.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years.

    The Oscars are followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

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  • Oscar predictions for 2024 Academy Awards from entertainment industry experts

    Oscar predictions for 2024 Academy Awards from entertainment industry experts

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    The 96th annual Academy Awards on Sunday will bring together nominees that include box office record-breakers, Hollywood veterans, newcomers and more than one epic drama as big players and even bigger films contend for prestigious recognition. The 2024 Oscar ballot promises to make for an interesting night. So, ahead of the show, entertainment industry experts shared their predictions for the outcomes of some of the top categories.

    Who will win the Oscar for best picture?

    “Oppenheimer” is the clear frontrunner to win the Oscar for best picture. Christopher Nolan’s epic historical drama about the nuclear physicist known as “the father of the atomic bomb” leads nominations at the Academy Awards this year, with 13 nods.

    It has also already taken home every precursor prize at earlier awards shows this season — including in equivalent categories at the Critics Choice and Golden Globe Awards, as well from the Screen Actors Guild, Directors Guild, Producers Guild and British Academy — giving big hints as to how it will fare in Sunday’s best picture race. 

    “I think there would be a crazy upset if ‘Oppenheimer’ did not win, simply because it has swept,” said Lilliana Vazquez, a television presenter and lifestyle expert who previously hosted E! News. “That’s always a really big indicator, if all of the individual guilds can come together and anoint a clear winner, then I think you really have to watch out for that specific film, in whatever category, or that particular actor or actress.”

    Films rarely earn such broad industry-wide support, and those that have typically go on to receive the Oscars’ top accolade, like “Argo” and “Slumdog Millionaire” in recent decades.

    “I’m not sure if we’ve had an overwhelming favorite like ‘Oppenheimer’ in a while, but ‘Oppehnheimer’ really is the favorite to win best picture,” said Erik Davis, the managing editor at Fandango, who praised the film for its achievements on multiple fronts, including its narrative, cast performances, cinematography, editing and score.


    Director-writer Christopher Nolan on latest masterpiece “Oppenheimer,” Hollywood strike

    08:37

    “All of the parts of ‘Oppenheimer,’ when it’s assembled, help push it over the line for best picture, because it’s more than just an entertaining film,” Davis added. “Across the board, I think this film achieves at an Oscar-winning level.”

    Vazquez echoed that sentiment.

    “‘Oppenheimer,’ for me, is a lock,” she said. “I think it hits on so many different levels. That style of film, the script, the acting, is so good. Sometimes, you get these indie darling films and people are like, ‘I don’t understand it.’ This is a topic that everyone can connect to.”

    “Oppenheimer” will contend for best picture alongside nine other films: “American Fiction,” “Anatomy of a Fall,” “Barbie,” “The Holdovers,” “Killers of the Flower Moon,” “Maestro,” “Past Lives,” “Poor Things” and “The Zone of Interest.”

    Experts doubt any of those titles will manage to beat out Nolan’s movie, and they note that a loss for “Oppenheimer” in this category would probably be the shock of the night.

    “I think it’s one of those versatile films that reached everyone. And, you know, we always gravitate towards historical dramas,” said Aramide Tinubu, a TV critic at Variety who is also betting on “Oppenheimer” to win. “As interesting as ‘The Holdovers’ was, and though it is kind of historically set, it’s a much quieter film. We love a good blockbuster here in America.”

    But potential underdogs for the best picture prize could still include “The Holdovers,” Alexander Payne’s nostalgic crowd-pleaser, Justine Triet’s multilingual court drama “Anatomy of a Fall” or Yorgos Lanthimos’ offbeat sci-fi comedy “Poor Things,” which follows “Oppenheimer” with 11 Oscar nominations.

    “The thing that’s most interesting about the race this year is, you can’t even tell what’s going to be runner-up,” said Joyce Eng, an entertainment journalist and senior editor at Gold Derby, an industry blog site that focuses on Hollywood awards predictions. Alongside Christopher Rosen, the site’s digital director, Eng co-hosts the podcast “Gold Derby Show,” where the two discuss and forecast awards season.

    Oppenheimer-Cillian Murphy
    This image released by Universal Pictures shows actor Cillian Murphy in a scene from “Oppenheimer.” 

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures via AP


    Rosen pointed out that the projected triumph by “Oppenheimer” in the best picture race is not only due to the fact that it has steamrolled through the awards circuit up to this point, but because it has all the makings of a winner. In addition to being a historical biopic, it was a critical hit and theatrical success, and both Eng and Rosen said the film’s early start as a supposed dark horse probably helped its popularity, too.

    “I think it ran second a lot, at least over the summer, to ‘Barbie’ in terms of its box office and coverage. So, it had the sheen of an underdog even though it obviously wasn’t,” said Rosen, calling “Oppenheimer” a “perfect consensus movie on top of being the steamroller.”

    “There’s been no fatigue with it being a frontrunner, either,” said Eng. “I think that’s key.”

    Who will win the Oscar for best actor?

    Similar to the race for best picture, experts are, for the most part, in agreement on the outcome of the best actor competition. Cillian Murphy, who starred as the namesake scientist in “Oppenheimer,” is favored to win this award, they said, owing to the huge success of the movie as well as Murphy’s previous wins at the SAG Awards and the BAFTAs — indicating strong support from industry members who overlap with the Oscars voting pool.

    “It’s really hard to go against him [Murphy] with him having these two really important awards,” said Eng. “The only thing Cillian has lost in terms of televised award shows was the Critics Choice to Paul Giamatti, so I think that gave the impression that this race is closer than it might actually be.”


    Cillian Murphy on preparing for “Oppenheimer,” potential “Peaky Blinders” film

    07:18

    Eight out of the last 13 best actor prizes at the Academy Awards have gone to someone playing a real-life figure, Vazquez noted, adding that “people love a story that is rooted in reality.”

    “Usually playing a real-life person is always a leg up, it seems, for best actor especially,” said Rosen. “And just the fact that ‘Oppenheimer’ is the best picture frontrunner … there’s really no reason why Cillian Murphy would ever have not won this. And the fact that he’s won the precursor awards really bears that out. So, I think it would be pretty surprising if he lost on Oscar night. Not unprecedented, obviously, but certainly surprising.”

    Giamatti is nominated alongside Murphy in this category for his leading performance as an embittered boarding school teacher in “The Holdovers,” which has also won praise. Both veterans are first-time Oscar nominees for best actor, and, for Giamatti, the recognition came almost 20 years after what is remembered as an infamous snub in this category for his work in Payne’s 2004 comedy-drama “Sideways.”


    Paul Giamatti, 2024 Oscars nominee for “The Holdovers”

    09:48

    That has led some to suggest that a best actor win by Giamatti is overdue, not to mention plausible, since he and Murphy won counterpart awards for comedic and dramatic acting at the Globes before arguably becoming each others’ greatest competition throughout the rest of awards season.

    “Both men have won this award at various awards shows, so I think it’s definitely a two-man’s race in this category,” said Davis. “Cillian Murphy has come out on top a little bit more than Paul Giamatti, and I think that’s due to the fact that ‘Oppenheimer’ is a major frontrunner and due to all that it’s achieved this year.”

    Also in the running for the Oscar for best actor are Bradley Cooper, for “Maestro;” Colman Domingo, for “Rustin;” and Jeffrey Wright, for “American Fiction.”

    Who will win the Oscar for best actress?

    How the best actress race will play out on Sunday has shaped up to be perhaps the most debated Oscar competition this year, with Lily Gladstone and Emma Stone pacing neck-and-neck for their respective performances in “Killers of the Flower Moon” and “Poor Things,” each of which was heralded as the gem of those movies.

    “Similar to the actor category, both of these performances are very different from one another,” said Davis. “Emma Stone’s is a more physical performance, a more physical transformation, very out-there, very animated … whereas Lily Gladstone’s performance is much quieter. It’s much more internal.”

    Both women took home best actress awards at the Golden Globes, in separate categories for comedy and drama, before Stone went on to win at the Critics Choice Awards and the BAFTAs. Gladstone took the prize at the SAG Awards in a historic win, becoming the first indigenous actor to receive the award. She would also be the first Native American actor to receive the Oscar in this category if she wins.

    Lily Gladstone poses with the Golden Globe Award
    Lily Gladstone poses with her Golden Globe award for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama, for “Killers of the Flower Moon,” on Jan. 7, 2024.

    ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images


    “I’m torn. I can’t call it between Lily Gladstone and Emma Stone,” said Tinubu. “I thought Lily would take it for a long time, but things have ramped up for Emma as well. I loved ‘Poor Things,’ that’s my film of the year, but I do think both women are very deserving. So that, to me, is a toss-up still.”

    “Poor Things” was also Vazquez’s favorite film of 2023. She described Stone’s performance in it as “flawless” but still believes Gladstone will take the best actress prize.

    “Would I love to see Emma Stone win another Oscar? One hundred percent,” said Vazquez. “Does she deserve another Oscar for this role? Yes, because the physicality of the role, matched with the emotion and also with the dialogue that she gives in the film is just insane. From that point of view, I would love to see her win it, if Lily Gladstone was not in this race.

    “As a woman of color, seeing her be the first indigenous actress winner is incredible, for not just her community but for us as a country,” Vazquez continued. “And I think for her to shine the way that she did when she’s in a Scorsese film, and she’s sharing the screen with Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, that is power. That transcends.”

    Overall, the competition is fierce in this category, as Gladstone and Stone contend for the title against Annette Bening, who’s nominated for “Nyad” along with Sandra Hüller, for “Anatomy of a Fall” and Carey Mulligan, for “Maestro.”

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  • Mark Ruffalo in a pimple ad? Emma Stone in a rock band? Oscar nominees before they were stars

    Mark Ruffalo in a pimple ad? Emma Stone in a rock band? Oscar nominees before they were stars

    [ad_1]

    Years before walking the red carpet on Oscar Sunday, Academy Award nominees all started from humble beginnings in the entertainment industry.

    MORE | Oscars 2024: Acting nominees represent hometowns across the country

    As long as there have been movies, people have come from all over, hoping to make it in Hollywood. This year’s Oscar nominees are representing hometowns from coast to coast.

    MARK RUFFALO

    Mark Ruffalo, nominated for best actor in a supporting role, got his start in a 1989 commercial for Clearasil — long before he was a four-time Oscar nominee.

    Mark Ruffalo arrives at the Governors Awards on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, at the Dolby Ballroom in Los Angeles.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    EMMA STONE

    Ruffalo’s “Poor Things” co-star Emma Stone made her screen debut as a teenage contestant on the VH1 competition series, “In Search of the Partridge Family.”

    Stone won the part of Laurie Partridge in a Partridge Family reboot that lasted just one episode.

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo in a scene from Poor Things.

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo in a scene from “Poor Things.”

    Atsushi Nishijima/Searchlight Pictures via AP

    PAUL GIAMATTI

    Paul Giamatti has credited the Howard Stern movie, “Private Parts” with making him a star.

    Another memorable early role for Giamatti was the villain in “Big Fat Liar” – where he was dyed blue by Frankie Munoz and Amanda Bynes.

    This image released by Focus Features shows Dominic Sessa, from left, Paul Giamatti and Da

    This image released by Focus Features shows Dominic Sessa, from left, Paul Giamatti and Da’Vine Joy Randolph in a scene from “The Holdovers.”

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features via AP

    AMERICA FERRERA

    Before “Barbie” or “Ugly Betty,” America Ferrera was a Disney Channel star growing up.

    She played Yolanda in the 2002 movie “Gotta Kick it Up!”

    America Ferrera arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    America Ferrera arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

    RYAN GOSLING

    Ryan Gosling was also a Disney Channel start.

    Gosling co-starred with Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears in “The All New Mickey Mouse Club!”

    Ryan Gosling arrives at the premiere of Barbie on Sunday, July 9, 2023, at The Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

    Ryan Gosling arrives at the premiere of “Barbie” on Sunday, July 9, 2023, at The Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    BRADLEY COOPER

    Bradley Cooper’s screen debut came in “Sex and the City.”

    He shared a passionate makeout scene with Sarah Jessica Parker after meeting her character, Carrie in a bar.

    Cooper also starred in the ABC TV show “Alias” with Jennifer Gardner in the early 2000s.

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from Maestro.

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from “Maestro.”

    Jason McDonald/Netflix via AP

    JEFFREY WRIGHT

    Jeffrey Wright’s first starring role was playing artistJean-Michel Basquiat in the 1996 bio-pic, “Basquiat.”

    Nearly 30 years later, he’s a first time Oscar nominee.

    This image released by MGM shows Jeffrey Wright in a scene from American Fiction.

    This image released by MGM shows Jeffrey Wright in a scene from “American Fiction.”

    Claire Folger/MGM-Orion via AP

    March 10 is Oscar Sunday! Watch the 2024 Oscars live on ABC.

    Red carpet coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET 10 a.m. PT with “Countdown to Oscars: On The Red Carpet Live.” At 4 p.m. ET 1 p.m. PT, live coverage continues with “On The Red Carpet at the Oscars,” hosted by George Pennacchio with Roshumba Williams, Leslie Lopez and Rachel Brown.

    Watch all the action on the red carpet live on ABC, streaming live on OnTheRedCarpet.com and on the On the Red Carpet Facebook and YouTube pages.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years.

    The Oscars are followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

    Copyright © 2024 OnTheRedCarpet.com. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Mark Ruffalo in a pimple ad? Emma Stone in a rock band? Oscar nominees before they were stars

    Mark Ruffalo in a pimple ad? Emma Stone in a rock band? Oscar nominees before they were stars

    [ad_1]

    Years before walking the red carpet on Oscar Sunday, Academy Award nominees all started from humble beginnings in the entertainment industry.

    MORE | Oscars 2024: Acting nominees represent hometowns across the country

    As long as there have been movies, people have come from all over, hoping to make it in Hollywood. This year’s Oscar nominees are representing hometowns from coast to coast.

    MARK RUFFALO

    Mark Ruffalo, nominated for best actor in a supporting role, got his start in a 1989 commercial for Clearasil — long before he was a four-time Oscar nominee.

    Mark Ruffalo arrives at the Governors Awards on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, at the Dolby Ballroom in Los Angeles.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    EMMA STONE

    Ruffalo’s “Poor Things” co-star Emma Stone made her screen debut as a teenage contestant on the VH1 competition series, “In Search of the Partridge Family.”

    Stone won the part of Laurie Partridge in a Partridge Family reboot that lasted just one episode.

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo in a scene from Poor Things.

    This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Emma Stone, left, and Mark Ruffalo in a scene from “Poor Things.”

    Atsushi Nishijima/Searchlight Pictures via AP

    PAUL GIAMATTI

    Paul Giamatti has credited the Howard Stern movie, “Private Parts” with making him a star.

    Another memorable early role for Giamatti was the villain in “Big Fat Liar” – where he was dyed blue by Frankie Munoz and Amanda Bynes.

    This image released by Focus Features shows Dominic Sessa, from left, Paul Giamatti and Da

    This image released by Focus Features shows Dominic Sessa, from left, Paul Giamatti and Da’Vine Joy Randolph in a scene from “The Holdovers.”

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features via AP

    AMERICA FERRERA

    Before “Barbie” or “Ugly Betty,” America Ferrera was a Disney Channel star growing up.

    She played Yolanda in the 2002 movie “Gotta Kick it Up!”

    America Ferrera arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    America Ferrera arrives at the 96th Academy Awards Oscar nominees luncheon on Monday, Feb. 12, 2024, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

    RYAN GOSLING

    Ryan Gosling was also a Disney Channel start.

    Gosling co-starred with Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears in “The All New Mickey Mouse Club!”

    Ryan Gosling arrives at the premiere of Barbie on Sunday, July 9, 2023, at The Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

    Ryan Gosling arrives at the premiere of “Barbie” on Sunday, July 9, 2023, at The Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    BRADLEY COOPER

    Bradley Cooper’s screen debut came in “Sex and the City.”

    He shared a passionate makeout scene with Sarah Jessica Parker after meeting her character, Carrie in a bar.

    Cooper also starred in the ABC TV show “Alias” with Jennifer Gardner in the early 2000s.

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from Maestro.

    This image released by Netflix shows Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in a scene from “Maestro.”

    Jason McDonald/Netflix via AP

    JEFFREY WRIGHT

    Jeffrey Wright’s first starring role was playing artistJean-Michel Basquiat in the 1996 bio-pic, “Basquiat.”

    Nearly 30 years later, he’s a first time Oscar nominee.

    This image released by MGM shows Jeffrey Wright in a scene from American Fiction.

    This image released by MGM shows Jeffrey Wright in a scene from “American Fiction.”

    Claire Folger/MGM-Orion via AP

    March 10 is Oscar Sunday! Watch the 2024 Oscars live on ABC.

    Red carpet coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET 10 a.m. PT with “Countdown to Oscars: On The Red Carpet Live.” At 4 p.m. ET 1 p.m. PT, live coverage continues with “On The Red Carpet at the Oscars,” hosted by George Pennacchio with Roshumba Williams, Leslie Lopez and Rachel Brown.

    Watch all the action on the red carpet live on ABC, streaming live on OnTheRedCarpet.com and on the On the Red Carpet Facebook and YouTube pages.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years.

    The Oscars are followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

    Copyright © 2024 OnTheRedCarpet.com. All Rights Reserved.

    [ad_2]

    OTRC

    Source link