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Tag: Jameela Jamil

  • Jameela Jamil and Naomie Harris are set to star in a feminist comedy inspired by Andrew Tate’s rise to fame

    Jameela Jamil and Naomie Harris are set to star in a feminist comedy inspired by Andrew Tate’s rise to fame

    “From clumsy surveillance attempts to pranks that fizzle out, these well-meaning friends fumble their way through increasingly outrageous schemes. Along the way, they discover just how much chaos a tight-knit group of friends can create when harnessing their rage – and just how far they’re willing to go for one another. Between school runs, awkward encounters with neighbours, juggling everyday life and busy careers, the women learn that maybe they’re not completely unequipped for revenge after all – they just have to do it their way.”

    Hysterical cast

    Joining Naomie Harris and Jameela Jamil will be comedian Romesh Ranganathan, and creator Olivia Lee is also billed as a cast member. Ranganathan will also co-executive produce.

    Rowben Lantion/Getty Images

    We know that Naomie will play protagonist Leonora, but the rest of the cast’s roles and character information are yet to be confirmed.

    We’d love to see Jameela play a woman wreaking revenge on a misogynist icon, we won’t lie.

    Hysterical release date

    The series is still very much in development stages, so we don’t have a release date yet.

    Hysterical trailer

    There’s no trailer for Hysterical at this time, but we’ll update this article as soon as there is one!

    Charley Ross

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  • Jameela Jamil, Lucien Laviscount and More Join Cast of ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ Adaptation

    Jameela Jamil, Lucien Laviscount and More Join Cast of ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ Adaptation

    New additions to the cast of the upcoming adaptation of Emily Henry‘s bestseller have been announced.

    Netflix announced Wednesday that Sarah Catherine Hook, Jameela Jamil, Lucien Laviscount, and Lukas Gage are set to join Tom Blyth and Emily Bader in the feature adaptation of Henry’s People We Meet on Vacation.

    Their roles in the film are to be announced.

    News of the casting comes amid Blyth and Bader being announced as the romantic leads. My Lady Jane star Bader will portray Poppy while The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes star Blyth will star as Alex. The story will follow the longtime best friends who took one week of every summer vacation together. However, things changed when they stopped speaking for two years. When Poppy reaches out and convinces Alex to take one more vacation together, she sees it as her time to fix their broken relationship. But there’s one unspoken truth they have yet to confront: Are they really just friends or is there more to their relationship?

    Brett Haley is set to direct, with Yulin Kuang adapting the screenplay. Temple Hill’s Marty Bowen, Wyck Godfrey and Isaac Klausner will produce. Temple Hill’s Laura Quicksilver and Erin Siminoff are overseeing the project for 3000 Pictures.

    Hook is set to star in season three of The White Lotus as well as lead Amazon’s series remake of Cruel Intentions. Laviscount recently starred on the fourth season of Netflix’s Emily in Paris, while Gage recently starred in Prime Video’s remake of Road House. Meanwhile, Jamil’s recent credits include She-Hulk.

    People We Meet on Vacation is just one of the novels from the Henry book universe getting the adaptation treatment. Four of her novels are in development to become films —  Beach ReadPeople We Meet on Vacation, Book Lovers and Funny Story — while her novel, Happy Place is going to be a series on Netflix.

    The film is being produced under a partnership in which Sony Pictures will offer Netflix a first look at any films it intends to make for streaming.

    Hook is repped at Gersh and Luber Rocklin.

    Lexy Perez

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  • Jameela Jamil Explains Why She ‘Pulled Out’ Of ‘You’ Season 4 Audition

    Jameela Jamil Explains Why She ‘Pulled Out’ Of ‘You’ Season 4 Audition

    Jameela Jamil revealed that she turned down auditioning for Netflix’s “You” because she didn’t want to appear in any sex scenes.

    During a recent episode of the Podcrushed podcast, hosted by “You” leading man Penn Badgley, the 37-year-old actor got candid about why she now regrets not going through with the audition.

    “I don’t do sex scenes. In fact, I was supposed to audition for the most recent season of your show,” Jamil told Badgley on Tuesday’s episode, referring to the fourth season of the series, which debuted in February.

    The British actor explained that when she found out her “character was supposed to be quite sexy,” she “pulled out of the audition because I am so shy about anything sexy that I can’t.”

    She also shared that she would have followed through with the audition had she known that it was possible to enforce a “boundary” about the intimate scenes.

    “And then you fucking came out and were like, ‘Yeah, I’m not doing sex scenes anymore,’ Jamil recalled, nodding to Badgley’s viral negotiation with Sera Gamble, the creator of the series, for fewer sex scenes.

    She added: “And I was like, ‘I didn’t even know that was a boundary that we could draw.’ But then I was like, I should have gone and done the fucking show.”

    Elsewhere in the interview, the “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law” star also revealed that she has to “fast forward” when she watches on-screen sex scenes, including her own.

    “I can’t even watch sex scenes in films… Even on my own, I have to fast forward through sex scenes because I’ve become so shy about watching other people.”

    Badgley first shared that he asked Gamble if he could tone down the amount of “intimacy scenes” due to his marriage to singer Domino Kirke during a previous episode of “Podcrushed” in February.

    “Fidelity in every relationship, especially my marriage, is important to me,” the 36-year-old explained at the time. “It just got to a point where I don’t want to do that.”

    In March, Badgley teased that the Netflix thriller series “You,” which is based on author Caroline Kepnes’ books, may return for a final season 5.

    Netflix hasn’t announced any plans to renew the murder drama yet.

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  • She-Hulk: Attorney-at-Law Bites Back at the Incel Demographic That Would Condemn It

    She-Hulk: Attorney-at-Law Bites Back at the Incel Demographic That Would Condemn It

    While many (men) were quick to dismiss She-Hulk: Attorney-at-Law as yet another attempt on Marvel’s part to “feminize” and “ethnify” everything, anyone willing to look past their inherent prejudices would see that series creator Jessica Gao has provided a gem in what is usually a pile of meaningless and/or repetitive schlock. Aiding in the delivery of She-Hulk’s inherently political nature (for whenever a woman steps into a “man’s role,” things always get political) is Tatiana Maslany in the part of Jennifer Walters a.k.a. She-Hulk.

    And yes, one might say there is a “political” angle to Bruce Banner a.k.a. Hulk (Mark Ruffalo) “contaminating” his cousin with his Hulk blood (it feels like there’s an allegory here for when a woman gets knocked up through no choice of her own). Were it not for his careless masculinity—getting in a car crash with Jen and letting her help him out of the vehicle with an open wound—Jen might have remained a full-stop lawyer, instead of a lawyer-by-day/Hulk when the mood strikes or the situation warrants it. Just as it does at the end of the first episode, “A Normal Amount of Rage.” But before the denouement of it, we see Jennifer being held essentially against her will by Bruce so that he can now teach her the “trade” of Hulking. Of course, his fragile male ego is offended when she masters every aspect of being a “mutant” in hardly any time at all. Still, he insists that she stay and become “one of them” (read: the Avengers). If nothing else, to keep touting her theory, “Obviously, Captain America was a virgin.”

    To Bruce’s dismay, Jennifer would do no such thing. After all, she just landed a gig at a firm and she didn’t spend all those years studying law only to throw it out the window for the “gift” of being a full-time Hulk. Unfortunately, when “superpower influencer” Titania (Jameela Jamil) bursts into her courtroom at the end of the episode, she gives into her newfound clout by “turning”—albeit at the urging of her best friend and paralegal, Nikki Ramos (Ginger Gonzaga). Much to Jennifer’s chagrin in the second episode, “Superhuman Law,” word spreads fast about her supernatural exploits in the courtroom as opposed to her intellectual ones.

    Thus, reports featuring a man describing what happened are reduced to, “This chick turned into a chick-Hulk.” “A She-Hulk?” the newscaster offers. And so, a new identity is coined. That Jennifer didn’t get to come up with it herself is, naturally, one of the running jokes of the series in that, as a woman, she still has no agency whatsoever in this universe (or any other)—even when it comes to something as rightfully hers as getting to choose her own moniker.

    Even so, Jennifer embraces her She-Hulk alter ego, setting up an account on a dating app to meet men in that guise. At least, after her corporate headshot does little to attract much “buzz.” Obviously, it’s Nikki who urges her to “use what she’s got” to lure them in—which is: being a green woman who looks like a hotter version of Shrek’s Fiona when she’s in ogre form.

    At first, Jen is reluctant to do so, already irritated that she has to “play” She-Hulk all day at the new law firm she works at, Goodman, Lieber, Kurtzberg & Holliway, in their superhuman law division. And yet, when Nikki remarks, “Oof hetero life is grim,” as she looks through the “Matcher” app, it seems Jen is sold on the “marketing technique” of “putting herself out there” as She-Hulk. But hetero life turns out to be especially grim when you’re a She-Hulk who now apparently only appeals to fetishists who never really want to see the real Jen. Which is exactly what happens when she has what she feels is a great night with a “hot doctor” who only leaves her in the morning when Jen is no longer in She-Hulk form.

    To add insult to injury, she’s served with court documents stating Jen has been “misusing” Titania’s so-called trademark: She-Hulk. Because, silly Jen, in all her contempt toward the name, she never thought to actually trademark it. “But that’s my name,” Jen says aloud in front of the server. He condescends, “Not if she trademarked it first.” “Oh is that how it works, Your Honor?” she jibes sarcastically as she closes the door, this just being one of countless belittling microaggressions she endures with men on a day-to-day basis.

    But that doesn’t mean women can’t be her foes, too. Just like Titania in the following episode, “Mean, Green and Straight Poured Into These Jeans.” As is the signature of the series, a meta allusion (often including the breaking of the fourth wall) is made to Titania owning the trademark via the title card to the episode reading, “She-Hulk by Titania.” This, incidentally, being what she decides to call the line of beauty products she’s selling on the back of She-Hulk’s fame.

    To combat this “frivolous lawsuit,” She-Hulk’s boss enlists the best (non-superhuman) lawyer at the firm, Mallory Book (Renée Elise Goldsberry), to represent Jen. And the first thing she asks her about is why she didn’t trademark her name. Jen has no good answer, saying she just didn’t think about it and, “Did Dr. Strange have to trademark his name? Did Thor?” Rather than “allowing” Jen to make this a “sexist thing,” she points out that, in those instances, that was actually the name of each man. But the inevitable sexism of what Jen has to go through rears its ugly (male) head in the courtroom, when she allows Mallory to sift back through all the dates she had on the Matcher app as She-Hulk to establish that Jen was using the name well before Titania trademarked it. With these men as witnesses, Jen is forced to sit through their testimonies of how they were specifically interested in her solely because she had advertised as She-Hulk.

    This becomes a running theme of the nine-episode series: Jen constantly feeling as though “Just Jen” (the name of episode six) is never enough—where the hell is Mark Darcy when you need him?

    Yet she’s still disappointed that she can’t appear as She-Hulk at an old “friend’s” wedding. For that would upstage Lulu’s (Patti Harrison) limelight. Thus, Jen must dim herself and settle for the comfort of drinking, never imagining that she could attract someone at the reception who might actually like her just for herself. The dude in question is plainly-named Josh Miller (Trevor Salter). A little too plainly, it turns out. For no one could be that “mild-mannered” without hiding an ulterior motive. Which is exactly what Josh does as he bides his time until Jen finally lets her guard down long enough to sleep with him, whereupon he extracts her blood and flees the scene.

    Once again, Jen is ghosted. And because her self-esteem is so shot, it never even occurs to her that Josh might have done something shady as she stresses over her unanswered texts. Ending up at Emil Blonsky’s (Tim Roth) newly-founded retreat center for reforming villains, she finds herself confessing in group, “You know in high school, that friend you have that’s, like, way cooler than you are? Like more attractive and athletic, they get all the attention from everyone?” She then points to herself in her She-Hulk form and says, “Hello?” continuing, “You think, ‘Life would be so much easier if I were that person.’ And I can turn into that person anytime I want to. And everyone pays attention when I’m this… But it feels like cheating. Because would they like me if I didn’t have all of this?” It’s a question that Jen persists in grappling with as we learn that, as it happens, Josh is part of the 4chan-esque Intelligencia website, led by a man who has the gall to wield the user name HulkKing.

    This setup in the penultimate episode leads to a finale rife with all the irreverent meta flavor the series paraded thus far. For example, meeting with the Marvel overlord called K.E.V.I.N. (a nod to Kevin Feige) to discuss the ostensibly undesirable conclusion to the series, Jen takes him to task with her legal prowess/knack for arguing. Advocating for a better ending than the one She-Hulk seems to be getting, Jen says that adding a bunch of “plot and flash” at the end, as MCU is known for, is not what Jen, nor her audience, wants. Something she explains to K.E.V.I.N. when she tells him, “It distracts from the story. Which is that my life fell apart. Right when I was learning to be both Jen and She-Hulk. Those are my stakes.”

    When he demands what ending she would propose, at the top of the list is not having Bruce come down to save the day. Because, in case one needs it spelled out yet again, such a “convenient” plot point is completely sexist and degrading to Jen and her alter ego.

    Despite how well the season (and series) wraps itself up, review sites would seem to indicate otherwise. Unsurprisingly, before She-Hulk had even aired more than one episode, it was review-bombed to the point where it presently has four or five stars out of ten on most websites. Needless to say, it’s evident that She-Hulk struck far too much of a cord with the anti-female, “Make Marvel Great Again” viewers that would seek to bury it so that MCU never does something like this again.

    The recent fate of Warner Bros. kiboshing Batgirl is also telling on this front. So maybe that’s why it feels even more poetic that the crux of the final scene of She-Hulk speaks to taking accountability for one’s actions. Particularly their innately sexist ones that would inhibit the simple admission that a show is fly just because its focus is no longer on a man.

    Genna Rivieccio

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