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Tag: Jason Schwartzman

  • NYCC 2025: New Look at AMC’s Talamasca: The Secret Order

    While the main draw in AMC’s Anne Rice Universe is still Interview With the Vampire—which forges into its third season, retitled The Vampire Lestat, in 2026Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order is also gearing up to establish the supernatural secret organization’s role in all of it.

    At New York Comic Con 2025, the panel and footage gave more of a glimpse at the totally not Agents of SHIELD  supernatural spy police series. Talamasca follows Guy (Nicholas Denton), a new recruit whose special abilities make him a candidate to join the group’s shadowy ranks. The organization, led by the mysterious Helen (Elizabeth McGovern), keeps tabs on all matters pertaining to the vampires, witches, and other monsterkind to protect humanity… allegedly.

    Here’s the latest look at the show and how it sows the seeds of potential of interconnectedness with the rest of AMC’s Anne Rice Universe, including Mayfair Witches and Interview With the Vampire.

    Jason Schwartzman and Interview With the Vampire fave Eric Bogosian are guest stars in a cast that also includes William Fichtner.

    The Talamasca’s members might seem like they’re trying to keep the boundaries between the living and undead—but there might be, of course, some corruption calling from inside the house. We can guess that as those secrets unravel, Guy will realize he might be in too deep with a group that might be hiding as much as the very creatures they claim are the danger.

    Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order will premiere with its first two episodes October 26 on both AMC and AMC+. It will run six episodes in total.

    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.

    Sabina Graves

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

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

    The Venice Film Festival has begun—get ready for 11 days of some of the best red carpet fashion of the year. WireImage

    While last year’s Venice Film Festival was a quieter, more subdued occasion than usual due to the SAG-AFTRA and WAG strikes, the 2024 iteration is expected to bring the usual array of A-list filmmakers and celebrities to the Palazzo del Cinema on the Lido for a week and a half of premieres, screenings and parties.

    Isabelle Huppert is the 2024 jury president, and this year’s cinematic line-up is packed with some of the most anticipated movies of the year. Todd PhillipsJoker: Folie à Deux, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival, as is Luca Guadagnino’s Queer (with Daniel Craig and Jason Schwartzman), Pablo Larrain’s Maria (starring Angelina Jolie) and Halina Reijn’s Babygirl (Nicole Kidman), among many others. Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, screened out of competition, will open the festival.

    Along with plenty of must-see films, the stars also bring their sartorial best for the glamorous film festival in Venice, Italy, strutting down the red carpet in fashionable designs—this is, after all, the very event that brought us couture moments like Florence Pugh’s dazzling black glitter Valentino ensemble at the Don’t Worry Darling premiere, along with Zendaya’s custom leather Balmain dress in 2021 and Dakota Johnson in bejeweled Gucci.

    The 81st annual Venice International Film Festival kicks off on August 28 and runs through September 7, which means a whole lot of high-fashion moments are headed for Lido. Below, see the best red carpet fashion from the 2024 Venice Film Festival.

    81th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 202481th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 2024
    Sienna Miller. WireImage

    Sienna Miller

    in Chloe 

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Schiaparelli

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Abbey Lee. Getty Images

    Abbey Lee

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga 

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Fuhrman. WireImage

    Isabelle Fuhrman

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. WireImage

    Zhang Ziyi

    "M - The Son Of The Century" (M - Il Figlio Del Secolo) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"M - The Son Of The Century" (M - Il Figlio Del Secolo) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Haley Bennett. WireImage

    Haley Bennett

    "Iddu" (Sicilian Letters) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Iddu" (Sicilian Letters) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Brunello Cucinelli

     

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lady Gaga. WireImage

    Lady Gaga

    in Christian Dior 

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Joaquin Phoenix. Getty Images

    Joaquin Phoenix

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rain Phoenix. WireImage

    Rain Phoenix

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. Getty Images

    Isabelle Huppert

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. Getty Images

    Zhang Ziyi

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Iris Law. Getty Images

    Iris Law

    in Burberry 

    "Jouer Avec Le Feu" (The Quiet Son) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Jouer Avec Le Feu" (The Quiet Son) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Adjoa Andoh. Getty Images

    Adjoa Andoh

    "Diva E Donna" Prize Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Diva E Donna" Prize Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Georgina Rodriguez. WireImage

    Georgina Rodrigue

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz. Getty Images

    Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz

    Craig in Loewe, Weisz in Versace

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lesley Manville. Getty Images

    Lesley Manville

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Drew Starkey. WireImage

    Drew Starkey

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sara Cavazza Facchini. WireImage

    Sara Cavazza Facchini

    in Genny

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Omar Apollo. WireImage

    Omar Apollo

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jason Schwartzman. WireImage

    Jason Schwartzman

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu. Getty Images

    Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu

    in Erdem 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. WireImage

    Tilda Swinton

    in Alaia 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Armani Privé

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Maria Borges. WireImage

    Maria Borges

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rose Bertram. Getty Images

    Rose Bertram

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Natalia Paragoni. WireImage

    Natalia Paragoni

    "Harvest" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Harvest" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rosy McEwen. WireImage

    Rosy McEwen

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Julianne Moore. FilmMagic

    Julianne Moore

    in Bottega Veneta 

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stella Maxwell. FilmMagic

    Stella Maxwell

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. FilmMagic

    Taylor Russell

    in Alaia 

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. FilmMagic

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Janine Gutierrez. WireImage

    Janine Gutierrez

    in Vania Romoff

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Josephine Skriver. Corbis via Getty Images

    Josephine Skriver

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. FilmMagic

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Barbara Paz. WireImage

    Barbara Paz

    in Lenny Niemeyer 

    "Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sveva Alviti. WireImage

    Sveva Alviti

    in Fendi

    "Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sofia Resing. Corbis via Getty Images

    Sofia Resing

    "Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival
    Brad Pitt. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Brad Pitt

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Amal Clooney and George Clooney. WireImage

    Amal Clooney and George Clooney

    Amal Clooney in Versace

    "Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival
    Amy Ryan. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Amy Ryan

    in Alexis Mabille 

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva. FilmMagic

    Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Vittoria Puccini. FilmMagic

    Vittoria Puccini

    in Armani Privé

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Annabelle Belmondo. Getty Images

    Annabelle Belmondo

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Louis Vuitton

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ludovica Francesconi. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Ludovica Francesconi

    "I'm Still Here" (Ainda Estou Aqui) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"I'm Still Here" (Ainda Estou Aqui) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Hannah Stocking. Getty Images

    Hannah Stocking

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stacy Martin. WireImage

    Stacy Martin

    in Louis Vuitton

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Raffey Cassidy. WireImage

    Raffey Cassidy

    in Chanel

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Joe Alwyn. WireImage

    Joe Alwyn

    in Gucci

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Felicity Jones. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Felicity Jones

    in Prada 

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Laird. Getty Images

    Emma Laird

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Ratajkowski. Corbis via Getty Images

    Emily Ratajkowski

    in Gucci

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stella Maxwell. Corbis via Getty Images

    Stella Maxwell

    in Iris van Herpen 

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Nicholas Hoult. Corbis via Getty Images

    Nicholas Hoult

    in Ralph Lauren 

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jurnee Smollett. WireImage

    Jurnee Smollett

    in Louis Vuitton

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jude Law. WireImage

    Jude Law

    in Brioni 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Toni Garrn. Corbis via Getty Images

    Toni Garrn

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Green. Corbis via Getty Images

    Eva Green

    in Armani Privé

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jasmine Tookes. Corbis via Getty Images

    Jasmine Tookes

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Madisin Rian. Corbis via Getty Images

    Madisin Rian

    in Armani Privé

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lucien Laviscount. WireImage

    Lucien Laviscount

    in Burberry

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Nicole Kidman. WireImage

    Nicole Kidman

    in Schiaparelli

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sophie Wilde. Getty Images

    Sophie Wilde

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Green. WireImage

    Eva Green

    in Armani Privé

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kaya Scodelario. WireImage

    Kaya Scodelario

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. Getty Images

    Zhang Ziyi

    in Chanel

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Harris Dickinson. WireImage

    Harris Dickinson

    in Bottega Veneta

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Antonio Banderas and Nicole Kimpel. WireImage

    Antonio Banderas and Nicole Kimpel

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Halina Reijn. WireImage

    Halina Reijn

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Chase Stokes. WireImage

    Chase Stokes

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ella Purnell. Getty Images

    Ella Purnell

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lili Reinhart. Getty Images

    Lili Reinhart

    in Armani Privé

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Camila Mendes. Getty Images

    Camila Mendes

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Madisin Rian. Getty Images

    Madisin Rian

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ncuti Gatwa. Getty Images

    Ncuti Gatwa

    in Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Valentina Ferragni. WireImage

    Valentina Ferragni

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Martina Strazzer. WireImage

    Martina Strazzer

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Leonie Hanne. Getty Images

    Leonie Hanne

    in Milla Nova 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sveva Alviti. WireImage

    Sveva Alviti

    in Versace 

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Louis Partridge. Getty Images

    Louis Partridge

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kodi Smit-McPhee. Getty Images

    Kodi Smit-McPhee

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Hoyeon Jung. Getty Images

    Hoyeon Jung

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Angelina Jolie. Getty Images

    Angelina Jolie

    in Tamara Ralph

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Loewe 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Bianca Brandolini. Corbis via Getty Images

    Bianca Brandolini

    in Schiaparelli

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. Corbis via Getty Images

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Herzigova. Getty Images

    Eva Herzigova

    in Etro 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Miriam Leone. WireImage

    Miriam Leone

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Patti Smith. Getty Images

    Patti Smith

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Greta Bellamacina. WireImage

    Greta Bellamacina

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Giusy Buscemi. WireImage

    Giusy Buscemi

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Valentina Cervi. Corbis via Getty Images

    Valentina Cervi

    in Max Mara

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tim Cook. WireImage

    Tim Cook

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jung Ho-yeon. WireImage

    Hoyeon Jung

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sacha Baron Cohen. Getty Images

    Sacha Baron Cohen

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Leila George D’Onofrio. Getty Images

    Leila George D’Onofrio

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kodi Smit-McPhee. WireImage

    Kodi Smit-McPhee

    in Versace 

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Louis Partridge. WireImage

    Louis Partridge

    in Prada 

    "Maria" Photocall - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Photocall - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Angelina Jolie. Corbis via Getty Images

    Angelina Jolie

    in Saint Laurent

    "Disclaimer" Photocall - Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Photocall - Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Cate Blanchett

    in Moschino

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sigourney Weaver. Getty Images

    Sigourney Weaver

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jenna Ortega. Getty Images

    Jenna Ortega

    in Dior 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Winona Ryder. WireImage

    Winona Ryder

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Catherine O’Hara. Getty Images

    Catherine O’Hara

    in Oscar de la Renta

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Justin Theroux. Getty Images

    Justin Theroux

    in Zegna

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Arthur Conti. WireImage

    Arthur Conti

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci. Getty Images

    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci

    Bellucci in Vivienne Westwood 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Willem Dafoe and Giada Colagrande. Getty Images

    Willem Dafoe and Giada Colagrande

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
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    Taylor Russell

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. WireImage

    Zhang Ziyi

    in Armani Privé

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
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    Patti Smith

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    Amy Jackson

    in Alberta Ferretti 

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    Izabel Goulart. WireImage

    Izabel Goulart

    in Ermanno Scervino 

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    Poppy Delevingne

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
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    Paola Turani

    in The Andamane

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
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    Barbara Paz

    in Dolce & Gabbana 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
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    Sveva Alviti

    in Armani Privé

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

    Morgan Halberg

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  • Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis Might Have Some Sci-Fi Among Its Many, Many Elements

    Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis Might Have Some Sci-Fi Among Its Many, Many Elements

    In his vast career, Francis Ford Coppola has made masterpieces (Apocalypse Now, The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, The Conversation), cult classics (Bram Stoker’s Dracula, The Outsiders), and curious whatsits (The Godfather Part III, Peggy Sue Got Married). Which will Megalopolis be? While the world waits to see the movie he’s had on his mind for decades, the writer-director is giving fans a few crumbs to go on.

    In a statement provided to Vanity Fair, along with a first-look image you can see in the magazine’s X post below, Coppola—who invested $120 million of his own money in the project, and just turned 85—gave some hope to sci-fi fans by noting Adam Driver’s character has the “power to stop time.” That’s Driver, who plays an “idealistic architect and artist planning to rebuild a city that has fallen to ruins” and Game of Thrones’ Nathalie Emmanuel, who plays the daughter of the city’s corrupt mayor (Giancarlo Esposito) and who falls in love with Driver’s character, in the photo.

    So we have a dystopian city, and a character who can “stop time” (literally or metaphorically?), as well as a cast that also includes Aubrey Plaza, Shia LaBeouf, Dustin Hoffman, Jon Voight, Laurence Fishburne, Jason Schwartzman, and others. In his statement to Vanity Fair, Coppola outlined the influences he drew on in the 40-something years he was dreaming of making Megalopolis, including 1936 sci-fi classic Things to Come, adapted by H.G. Wells himself from his book The Shape of Things to Come. “[It’s about building the world of tomorrow, and has always been with me, first as the ‘boy scientist’ I was and later as a filmmaker,” Coppola told the magazine.

    He also refers to his movie as “a Roman epic set in modern America,” tying in both ancient history and more recent New York City moments, as wide-ranging as September 11 and “the antics of Studio 54.” He did that “so that everything in my story would be true and did happen either in modern New York or in ancient Rome. To that I added everything I had ever read or learned about.”

    While we wonder what Megalopolis will be, here’s what Coppola said he hopes audiences will take away from it: “It’s my dream that Megalopolis will become a New Year’s Eve perennial favorite, with audiences discussing afterwards not their new diets or resolutions not to smoke, but rather this simple question: ‘Is the society in which we live the only one available to us?’”

    Megalopolis will debut at the Cannes Film Festival next month; hopefully it’ll then make its way stateside for theaters and streaming.


    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.

    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Jason Schwartzman and Gael García Bernal on the Many Masks of Acting

    Jason Schwartzman and Gael García Bernal on the Many Masks of Acting

    In Reunited, Awards Insider hosts a conversation between two Oscar contenders who have collaborated on a previous project. Today, we speak with Jason Schwartzman, who stars in Asteroid City, and Gael García Bernal, who stars in Cassandro. They previously worked together on Mozart in the Jungle, which starred García Bernal and was produced and cocreated by Schwartzman.

    The minute Jason Schwartzman hops on the Zoom call with Gael García Bernal for this Reunited conversation, he tells García Bernal that he watched Cassandro—in which Bernal stars as a barrier-breaking gay Mexican wrestler—twice in one day. “What a character that you play,” he says. “He smiles so much. And he’s rarely sulking, which is almost more intense for me.”

    In his 2023 film, Wes Anderson’s Asteroid City, Schwartzman’s character, Augie, does sulk a bit. A recently widowed war photojournalist, the character couldn’t seem more different from García Bernal’s. But as the pair of former collaborators soon learn, the work they put into exploring each of these characters will turn out to be surprisingly similar. Both stories play with the idea of performance within a performance, and both required the use of masks (of some sort, anyway)—a theme that weaves its way through acting in many ways for both of them.

    García Bernal and Schwartzman first worked together on Amazon’s TV series Mozart in the Jungle, in which García Bernal played an eccentric music conductor and Schwartzman served as a cocreator, writer, and executive producer. The charming series, which lasted for four seasons, left a strong impression on both of them, as Schwartzman’s first experience in a major creator role and García Bernal’s first major lead role on an American TV series. Now, the pair reunite to look back on the joy of playing an uncensored genius on TV, and dive-deep into the tools and tricks they used to explore their characters in Asteroid City and Cassandro.

    Vanity Fair: What do you remember about the first time you met?

    Gael García Bernal: Maybe we had talked on the phone, but I think my first impression was you in a room with many, many people and you always with your smile and just charisma, I don’t know, you came up to me and you were the first one I said hello to in Mozart in the Jungle. I always had a feeling that we were from the same kind of postal code, even though we definitely didn’t grow up in the same cities or anything, but there was something that we have – when you look at someone performing and you see through the character, you see that person and you see that vitality and that losing of control as well, which is wonderful. And watching you, I was like, we could be friends. We could talk the same language.

    Jason Schwartzman: I have the same feeling really. I just remember seeing you and feeling so honored that we were going to do this together. And I think also just excited because you are going to be the captain of this ship that we were going to be going out on. And your smile and who you were, I just felt like this is going to be a wonderful trip if this is who’s guiding us.

    But not to make you uncomfortable, but there’s one time that we didn’t really meet before, but we were near each other. At the Toronto Film Festival, I was there with this movie called I Heart Huckabees and I don’t know what you were there with, but I was having dinner with David O. Russell and this group of people. You came in with, I forget who, and sat down across the table and started talking. And I remember thinking, I know you shouldn’t look at your career like this, but I was thinking this is a good sign for my career. Now, if he’s coming to the table and sitting with us, I’m on some kind of right track.

    Rebecca Ford

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  • How ‘Asteroid City’ Became Wes Anderson’s Most Visually Ambitious Movie Yet

    How ‘Asteroid City’ Became Wes Anderson’s Most Visually Ambitious Movie Yet

    Yeoman: It’s very difficult to try to blend comedy and grief in the same scene. Jason was able to portray both things within the scene. We shot it during the middle part of the day in a harsh sunlight. Jason’s angle actually is a little bit backlit at that point, but if you look at the other, the shots of the kids from the side, the side angles, they’re very kind of harshly lit, front-lit, a lot of harsh midday sun. In a movie that Wes isn’t directing, I would be inclined to throw a giant silk up and just try to soften the whole thing out. But Wes wanted to have that feeling. Before we started shooting, we looked at movies, The Bad Day at Black Rock and Paris, Texas, and how they use the sun in those movies to become really a character. They weren’t afraid of shooting at midday, and they weren’t afraid of harsh sun, which is typically, for most cinematographers, something you prefer not to do.

    In all honesty, I was a little skeptical about that approach at the beginning, but as I saw more and more of our dailies, I grew to really embrace it and realized that we were creating a world. You’re out in the desert in the middle part of the day. During the digital intermediate in post, we took a little contrast out, and it kind of took a little bit of the edge off that hard light, I think. But again, it was all natural light. I would’ve shot it way later in the day if I was scheduling it, but we kind of wanted to embrace that feeling.

    Anderson: I don’t think it’s such harsh sunlight, this scene. I don’t love to have everything be backlit with, I guess, what I look for, is some simplicity in it in terms of the lighting. But to me, Jason’s character and role is the center of the whole movie, and this scene is a crucial one, and so for me, it was just, on the set, I’m just an audience member. Jason was so good playing this scene and so surprising. He’s just so interesting, and so for me, this scene is one of the crucial ones along with the other one with him and Margot Robbie. Those two scenes are the tentpoles of the movie.

    David Canfield

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  • ‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’ Review: Jennifer Lawrence Is Sorely Missed in Dour Prequel Short on Excitement

    ‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’ Review: Jennifer Lawrence Is Sorely Missed in Dour Prequel Short on Excitement

    It’s hard to build much intrigue into whether a love-struck teen with a seemingly gentle heart and firm moral compass will betray those who trust him and cross over to the dark side when his name is Coriolanus Snow and we know from four previous films that he will grow up to be an evil overlord played with chilling authority by Donald Sutherland. Even less so once he joins the fascistic “Peacekeeper” ranks and trades his floppy blond locks for a Hitler Youth buzz cut.

    That’s just one of the limitations of The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, a lumbering prequel to the blockbuster battle royale series based on Suzanne Collins’ YA novels, the global grosses for which are nearing $3 billion.

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes

    The Bottom Line

    A grinding dystopian dirge set to Appalachian folk tunes.

    Release date: Friday, Nov. 17
    Cast: Tom Blyth, Rachel Zegler, Peter Dinklage, Jason Schwartzman, Hunter Schafer, Josh Andrés Rivera, Viola Davis, Fionnula Flanagan
    Director: Francis Lawrence
    Screenwriters: Michael Lesslie, Michael Arndt, based on the novel by Suzanne Collins

    Rated PG-13,
    2 hours 37 minutes

    Beyond the fact that Collins penned a 2020 follow-up set 64 years before the events of the original book trilogy, and of course the market reality that Hollywood never met a dystopian cash cow it couldn’t milk to death, there are few compelling reasons for the new installment to exist.

    Certainly not the grisly but unimaginative death-match arena action in which dutifully diverse but thinly drawn characters identifiable chiefly by their disabilities or degrees of brutality meet their makers in front of a live TV audience. And definitely not Viola Davis devouring the coldly futuristic scenery as a malevolent doctor with a fright wig, one piercing ice-blue eye and Drag Race-strength makeup, cooking up increasingly cruel torments to unleash on the games’ hapless contestants. As an archvillain, she’s too campy to be disturbing but not sufficiently so to be fun.

    The main takeaway from The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes is the realization that a critical element of what made the four previous Hunger Games films enjoyable — even the concluding entry, unrewardingly stretched over two parts — was the natural pluck and charisma of Jennifer Lawrence. Her Katniss Everdeen was someone to root for, not to mention something of a rarity at the time in terms of resourceful female action heroes whose battle smarts never crush their humanity.

    An underdog from District 12, the impoverished coal-mining sector of fictional North American autocracy Panem, Katniss brought formidable archery skills honed while hunting to put food on the family table. But she became just as notable for her compassion, conveyed in the first film by her alliance with Amandla Stenberg’s preteen Rue and her grief over the latter’s death. There’s arguably been no more affecting moment in the series than Katniss showing her love and respect by spreading flowers over the dead girl’s body. If only this bloated prequel had a scene or two with even a fraction of that emotional power.

    As Lucy Gray Baird, Katniss’ District 12 counterpart in the 10th annual Hunger Games, West Side Story discovery Rachel Zegler is feisty and appealing, pointedly summoning echoes of Katniss with a defiant curtsy at The Reaping, the ceremony during which two involuntary “Tributes” are chosen from each district to compete in the games by the oppressive Capitol that rules Panem.

    Her chewy Appalachian accent can be distracting, but the stirring folk songs and foot-stomping jigs she performs — Lucy Gray is a member of the Covey, a community of itinerant musicians forcibly assigned to a district by the regime — at least lend the character vitality and help make her more than a rote reprint struck from the Katniss template. But unlike Katniss, who was very much the beating heart of the earlier films, Lucy Gray has to compete for narrative primacy with the young Coriolanus (Tom Blyth). And the longer the movie trudges on, the more she loses.

    Like other students from well-heeled families in the Capitol, Coriolanus is required to mentor a Tribute through the training and promotion period and then the contest itself, where viewer sponsorship determines the amount of survival provisions that can be sent via drones to the mentees.

    But unlike most of his mentor colleagues, Coriolanus has a lot at stake. His once elevated family has fallen on hard times since the death of his father in the long war sparked by the uprising of the districts against the Capitol. As the sole remaining breadwinner, he needs the Plinth Prize cash awarded to the winning mentor in order to keep his Grandma’am (Fionnula Flanagan) and his cousin, the future Hunger Games stylist Tigris (Hunter Schafer), above the poverty line.

    The 10th games are also a turning point in the gladiatorial event overseen by the heartless Dr. Volumnia Gaul (Davis). Audience interest has been waning, so Dr. Gaul has figured out ways to up the stakes and increase involvement, including the use of mutant creatures bred in her lab, notably a massive canister of venomous iridescent snakes. The parallels between this sci-fi version of sensationalized entertainment and contemporary ratings battles are emphasized in Michael Lesslie and Michael Arndt’s adapted screenplay.

    A more ambiguous figure than the cruel doctor is the Capitol University’s Dean Highbottom (Peter Dinklage); his morphine addiction is gradually revealed to be the result of his guilt over setting the original games in motion, which is also the root of his hostility toward the young Snow.

    Then there’s Lucky Flickerman (Jason Schwartzman), a family forebear of Stanley Tucci’s Caesar Flickerman from the previous entries, tasked with hard-selling the gruesome event to home viewers — and injecting some strained comedy into the mostly humorless film. That includes coming up with catchy nicknames as the most vicious frontrunners emerge — Cunning Coral (Mackenzie Lansing), Merciless Mizzan (Cooper Dillon), Treacherous Treech (Hiroki Berrecloth) — much like Trump mocking political opponents at a rally.

    On the unequivocally good side is Sejanus Plinth (Josh Andrés Rivera), idealistic scion of one of the Capitol’s wealthiest families and a classmate who views Coriolanus as an ally. When Dr. Gaul insists on forging ahead after a rebel “terrorist” bombing on the eve of the games kills a handful of contestants and all but destroys the arena, Sejanus’ loyalty to the Capitol is tested. His stomach for the barbarous games is also challenged when he finds himself mentoring a former school friend, Marcus (Jerome Lance).

    Divided into three chapters — “The Mentor,” “The Prize,” “The Peacekeeper” — Lesslie and Arndt’s script is less interested in the gladiatorial action than in the moral formation, or disassembly, of Coriolanus. Will he act in solidarity with the principled Sejanus? Will he ramp up his efforts on Lucy Gray’s behalf to make her not just a survivor but a winner? And will he remain true to her once love blooms out of their shared experience in the Hunger Games spotlight?

    Given that Snow’s persona in the earlier films leaves little doubt about the answer to those questions, a lot is riding on Blyth’s performance to keep us engaged as the young Coriolanus weighs personal loyalties against his instinct for self-preservation and ambitious advancement.

    Blyth, who played the title character in the Epix/MGM+ series Billy the Kid, balances sensitivity with growing steeliness effectively enough. But Coriolanus is no substitute for Katniss as a protagonist and his inevitable betrayal of Lucy Gray is too clumsily mapped to be anything but preordained script mechanics. There’s no poignancy because we’re never terribly invested in their romance in the first place. I mean, the dude has the word “anus” in his name, for God’s sake.

    Francis Lawrence, who has directed all but the 2012 feature that kicked off the series, handles the arena action with the required energy, putting DP Jo Willems’ cameras through their paces with lots of frenetic movement. But the games prove less suspenseful and visually interesting in their confined bunker-like setting than under the sprawling biodome of the chapters that come later in the chronology. More than that, the contestants just lack dimension. And Lawrence’s journeyman handling of the more character-driven drama provides sputtering momentum at best.

    The film’s design elements are polished, including atmospheric physical settings by Uli Hanisch — his imposing recreations of Weimar Germany were a key element of Tom Tykwer’s neo-noir series Babylon Berlin — convincingly blended with CG; and stylish, character-enhancing costumes by Trish Summerville. The burgundy unisex Capitol student uniforms, with pleated skirts over trousers, look like something Thom Browne whipped up for the Starship Enterprise crew.

    The orchestral thunder of James Newton Howard’s score marries well with Lucy Gray’s songs, in which executive music producer Dave Cobb crafts rousing tunes around Collins’ lyrics, adding fire to the heroine’s rebel spirit.

    If only there were something truly new and innovative about this chapter to fully justify resurrecting the Hunger Games franchise eight years after Mockingjay — Part 2. The intention to illuminate the political machinations of the Capitol and the importance of the games in maintaining the divide between the ruling class and the powerless plebs yields little beyond turgid gloom.

    The points about savagery as one of humanity’s base instincts are hammered by Snow in emphatic dialogue that leaves no subtext unstated: “The whole world is an arena and we need the Hunger Games every year to remind us who we truly are.” Gory sacrifices, in this equation, are simply “the price people are willing to pay for a good show.” If only.

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  • Asteroid City: Wes Anderson’s “Sci-Fi” Movie Is About A Collective and Resigned Sense of Doom More Than It Is 50s Americana

    Asteroid City: Wes Anderson’s “Sci-Fi” Movie Is About A Collective and Resigned Sense of Doom More Than It Is 50s Americana

    A palpable shift has occurred in Wes Anderson’s style and tone since the release of 2021’s The French Dispatch. One doesn’t want to use a cliché like “mature” to describe what’s been happening since that perceptible tonal pivot in his filmography, so perhaps the better way to “define” what’s happening to Anderson and his storytelling is that it’s gotten, as Cher Horowitz would note, “Way existential.” Not to say there wasn’t that element to some degree in previous films, but now, it’s amplified—ratcheted up to a maximum that was never there before. Some might proffer it’s because Anderson has transitioned to a new era of his life, therefore possesses a greater concern with mortality; others could posit that our world and society has become so fragile in the years since 2020, that even privileged white men have been rattled by it enough to let it color their work. Whatever the case, the increased focus on mortality and “the meaning of life” in Anderson’s oeuvre is no surprise considering one of his greatest directorial influences is Woody Allen. Yes, he might be cancelled, but that doesn’t change the effect he’s had on Anderson.

    Of course, Anderson has managed to take the puerility of Allen’s lead characters and render them “quirky,” “oddball” and “postmodern” instead. What’s more, Anderson has the “marketing sense” not to make his characters come across as “too Jewy,” lest it “scandalize” the often white bread audiences he tends to attract. Some might argue that Asteroid City is his whitest offering yet—which is really saying something. And yes, like Allen, Anderson has begun to favor the “screenwriting technique” of setting his movies in the past, so as not to have to deal with the “vexing” and “unpleasant” complications of trying to address post-woke culture in his casting and narrative decisions. Defenders of Anderson would bite back by remarking that the director creates alternate worlds in general, and should be left to do his own thing without being subjected to the “moral” and “ethical” issues presented by “modern filmmaking requirements.” For the most part, that’s remained the case, even as occasional hemming-and-hawing about his “movies so white” shtick crops up when he releases a new film. But to those who will follow Anderson anywhere, the trip to Asteroid City does prove to be worth it. If for no other reason than to show us the evolution of an auteur when he’s left alone, permitted to be creative without letting the outside voices and noise fuck with his head.

    In many regards, the “town” (or rather, desert patch with a population of eighty-seven) is a representation of the same bubble Anderson exists in whenever he writes and directs something. To the point of writing, Anderson returns to the meta exploration of what it means to create on the page (as he did for The French Dispatch), anchored by the playwright Conrad Earp (Edward Norton). Although he’s not one of the more heavily featured characters, without him, none of the characters we’re seeing perform a televised production of Asteroid City would exist. If that sounds too meta already, it probably is. With the host (Bryan Cranston) of an anthology TV series serving as our guide, the movie commences in black and white as he stares into the camera and proceeds to do his best impersonation of Rod Serling at the beginning of The Twilight Zone. Indeed, it’s clear Anderson wants to allude to these types of TV anthology series that were so popular in the post-war Golden Age of Television. And even on the radio, as Orson Welles showcased in 1938, with his adaptation of The War of the Worlds. A broadcast that caused many listeners to panic about an alien invasion, unaware that it wasn’t real. In fact, Cranston as the host is sure to forewarn his viewers, “Asteroid City does not exist. It is an imaginary drama created expressly for this broadcast.” That warning comes with good reason, for people in the 50s were easily susceptible to being bamboozled by whatever was presented to them on the then-new medium of TV. Because, “If it’s on TV, it must be true.” And the last thing anyone wanted to believe—then as much as now—is that there could be life on other planets. Sure, it sounds “neato” in theory, but, in reality, Earthlings are major narcissists who want to remain the lone “stars” of the interplanetary show.

    Set in September of 1955, Asteroid City centers its narrative on a Junior Stargazer convention, where five students will be honored for their excellence in astronomy and astronomy-related innovations. Among those five are Woodrow (Jake Ryan), Shelly (Sophia Lillis), Ricky (Ethan Josh Lee), Dinah (Grace Edwards) and Clifford (Aristou Meehan). It’s Woodrow who arrives to town first, courtesy of his war photographer father, Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman). Although they’ve arrived to their destination, Augie still has to take the broken-down car to the mechanic (Matt Dillon). After much fanfare and tinkering, The Mechanic concludes that the car is kaput. Augie decides to phone his father-in-law, Stanley Zak (Tom Hanks), to come pick up Woodrow and Augie’s three daughters, Andromeda (Ella Faris), Pandora (Gracie Faris) and Cassiopeia (Willan Faris). Stanley doesn’t immediately agree, instead opting to remind Augie that he was never good enough for his daughter (played briefly, in a way, by Margot Robbie) and that he ought to tell his children that their mother died. Three weeks ago, to be exact. But withholding this information is just one of many ways in which Augie parades his emotional stuntedness. Something that ultimately enchants Hollywood actress Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson), who also happens to be the mother of another Junior Stargazer, Dinah.

    All the while, the vibrant, almost fake-looking set seems there solely to reiterate that all vibrancy is belied by something darker beneath it. That was never truer than in postwar America. And talking of vibrant cinematography and explosions, if Barbie’s color palette had a baby with Oppenheimer’s explosive content, you’d get Asteroid City (which, again, features Margot “Barbie” Robbie herself). With regard to explosions, it bears noting that the intro to the movie includes a train plugging along, bound for Asteroid City carrying all manner of bounty: avocados, pecans and, oh yes, a ten-megaton nuclear warhead with the disclaimer: “Caution: DO NOT DETONATE without Presidential Approval.” So much about that wide array of “transported goods” speaks to the very dichotomy of American culture. Priding itself on being a land of plenty while also doing everything in its power to self-destruct all that natural wealth. What’s more, the presence of hazardous material on trains is only too relevant considering the recent tragedy that befell East Palestine, Ohio. And yet, these are the sorts of environmentally-damaging behaviors that were set in motion in the postwar economic boom of America. Complete with the “miracle” of Teflon.

    Accordingly, it’s no coincidence that as the “progress” associated with modern life accelerated at a rate not seen since the first Industrial Revolution, some were concerned about the potential fallout of such “development.” After all, with technological advancement could arise as many inconveniences as conveniences (see also: AI). For those who came of age after the so-called war to end all wars, a natural skepticism vis-à-vis “advancement” was also to be expected. Perhaps the fear of modern existence, with all the implications of war and invasion being “leveled up” due to “better” technology (i.e., the atomic bomb), planted the seed of suddenly seeing flying saucers all the time starting in the 40s and 50s. A phenomenon that many government officials were keen to write off as being somehow related to atomic testing (this being why the Atomic Age is so wrapped up in the alien sightings craze of the 50s). The sudden collective sightings might also have been a manifestation of the inherent fear of what all this “progress” could do. Especially when it came to increasing the potential for interplanetary contact. For it was also in the 50s that the great “space race” began—spurred by nothing more than the competitive, dick-swinging nature of the Cold War between the U.S. and USSR. That was all it took to propel a “they’re among us” and “hiding in plain sight” mentality, one that was frequently preyed upon by the U.S. government via the Red Scare. Such intense fear- and paranoia-mongering does fuck with the mind, you know. Enough to make it see things that may or may not really be there (literally and figuratively). The term “alien,” therefore, meaning “foreigner” or “other” as much as extraterrestrial as the 50s wore on.

    So it was that Americans did what they always do best with fear: monetize it! To be sure, Asteroid City itself only exists to commodify the terror of an asteroid hitting Earth and leaving such a great impact thousands of years ago. Then, when news of an alien infiltrating the Junior Stargazer convention leaks, a fun fair materializes to sell merch (“Alien Gifts Sold Here”) related to commemorating the “event.” As such, the train that goes to Asteroid City suddenly becomes the “Alien Special” and there’s now “Alien Parking,” as well as signs declaring, “Asteroid City U.F.O.” and “Spacecraft Sighting.” With this American zeal for exploitation in mind, plus the alien element, there’s even a certain Nope vibe at play throughout Asteroid City as well. And a dash of Don’t Worry Darling, to boot. Mainly because of the unexplained sonic booms that go on in the background while the housewives are trying to kiki.

    Anderson extracts the paranoia element that might have been present in films of the day (like Flying Saucers Attack!) and instead relates the discovery of an alien life form to the added feeling of being insignificant as a human in this universe. To highlight that point, J.J. Kellogg (Liev Schreiber), father to Junior Stargazer Clifford, demands of his son’s escalating antics related to performing unasked dares, “Why do you always have to dare something?” He replies meekly, “I don’t know. Maybe it’s because I’m afraid otherwise nobody’ll notice my existence in the universe.” To be sure, the reason most people behave obnoxiously is to get the kind of attention that will convince themselves they matter. They mean something in this grand abyss.

    Even Midge, a movie star, feels mostly unseen. So when Augie takes her picture in such an intimate way, she can’t help but feel allured by him. Seen by him. That, in the end, is what everyone wants. In the spirit of alluding to 50s Americana, Midge herself seems to be a loose representation of Marilyn Monroe, also prone to pills and alcohol, and constantly referred to as a brilliant comedienne despite flying under the radar as such. Then there’s another six degrees of Marilyn separation when Willem Dafoe appears as Saltzburg Keitel, an overt homage to Elia Kazan and his Actors Studio—a version of which we see when Earp shows up to a class to try to get insight on how to convey a certain scene. And yes, the concern with whether or not the acting in the play is being done “right” keeps coming up, reaching a crest as a metaphor for what Asteroid City is all about: what is anyone’s place in the universe? Does any of it mean anything? So yeah, again with the Woody Allen influence.

    Toward the end of the play/movie, Jones Hall, the actor playing Augie, asks Schubert Green (Adrien Brody), the director, “Do I just keep doing it?” He could be asking about his performance as much as his very existence itself. Schubert assures, “Yes.” Jones continues, “Without knowing anything? Isn’t there supposed to be some kind of answer out there in the cosmic wilderness?” When Jones then admits, “I still don’t understand the play,” that phrase “the play” doubles just as easily for “life.” Schubert insists, “Doesn’t matter. Just keep telling the story.” In other words, just keep rolling the dice and living as though any of it means anything at all.

    And maybe nihilism, for some people, is part of compartmentalizing that meaninglessness. This much appears to be the case for Midge, who tells Augie stoically, “I think I know now what I realize we are… Two catastrophically wounded people who don’t express the depths of their pain because…we don’t want to. That’s our connection.” But a connection is a connection—and that’s all anyone on Earth is really looking—starving—for…no matter how many decades fly by and how many according “advancements” are made. It’s likely the convention-interrupting alien could sense and see that desperation among the humans during his brief landing.

    So it is that Augie tells Midge afterward, “I don’t like the way that guy looked at us, the alien.” Midge inquires, “How did he look?”  “Like we’re doomed.” Midge shrugs, “Maybe we are.” “Maybe” being a polite euphemism for “definitely.” But even though we are, maybe the art will make sense of it all in the end. Even if only to “just keep telling the story.” For posterity. For whoever—or whatever—might come across the ruins and relics in the future. Hopefully, they’ll learn from the mistakes that we ourselves didn’t.

    Genna Rivieccio

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