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Tag: movies

  • Build A Spectacular British Christmas Dinner And We’ll Reveal Which Josh O’Connor Character Is Your Holiday Soulmate

    Which Josh O’Connor Would Be Your Holiday Date? Quiz

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  • ‘Buck Rogers’ star Gil Gerard dead at 82

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    Gil Gerard, best known for starring in “Buck Rogers in the 25th Century,” has died. He was 82. 

    Gerard’s manager, Tina Presley Borek, confirmed the Hollywood actor’s death to Fox News Digital. 

    He died Tuesday in hospice care as a result of a rare, aggressive form of cancer, according to The Associated Press.

    TERENCE STAMP, GENERAL ZOD IN ‘SUPERMAN’ AND ‘BILLY BUDD,’ DEAD AT 87

    Gil Gerard died Tuesday after a battle with cancer. (Walt Disney Television Photo Archives/Walt Disney Television via Getty Images)

    Following his death, Gerard’s wife, Janet, shared a message he left behind for fans on Facebook, offering a final reflection on his life and outlook.

    “Don’t waste your time on anything that doesn’t thrill you or bring you love. See you out somewhere in the cosmos,” the note said.

    In another message written before his death, Gerard reflected on his life and career.

    “My life has been an amazing journey,” he wrote. “The opportunities I’ve had, the people I’ve met and the love I have given and received have made my 82 years on the planet deeply satisfying.”

    His death marks the passing of one of late 1970s television’s most recognizable sci-fi leads.

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    Gil Gerard 2

    Gil Gerard was best known for starring in “Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.” (Herb Ball/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

    Gerard played William “Buck” Rogers from 1979 to 1981, helping turn the character into a primetime favorite. 

    The series, which ran for two seasons, followed a 20th-century NASA pilot who awakens 500 years in the future after being trapped in frozen animation when his spacecraft is struck by a meteor storm.

    TRISTAN ROGERS, LONGTIME ‘GENERAL HOSPITAL’ STAR AND SOAP OPERA VETERAN, DEAD AT 79

    The role came at a moment when space adventures were popular among audiences after “Star Wars,” and Gerard’s charismatic, clean-cut presence made him an instant TV star. Alongside him were Erin Gray as Wilma Deering and the wisecracking robot Twiki as Rogers navigated a domed, futuristic Earth filled with alien threats and the menacing Draconians.

    The series was based on Philip Francis Nowlan’s 1928 book “Armageddon 2419 A.D.” The character, originally named Anthony Rogers, later became known as Buck Rogers as the story evolved through comic strips, radio, film serials and television adaptations.

    Gerard, a Little Rock, Arkansas, native, worked steadily in television commercials before landing his breakout role. He went on to appear in numerous TV shows and movies, including starring roles in 1982’s “Hear No Evil” and the series “Sidekicks” in 1986.

    Gil Gerard 3

    The Little Rock, Ark., native worked steadily in television commercials before landing his breakout role. (Mark Sagliocco/Getty Images)

    In 1992, he hosted the reality series “Code 3,” which followed firefighters responding to emergency calls across the country. Throughout the 1990s, he made frequent guest appearances on television, including a role on “Days of Our Lives.”

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    Gerard later reunited with Gray for the 2007 TV film “Nuclear Hurricane,” and the two returned once more to the Buck Rogers universe in 2009, portraying Rogers’ parents in the pilot episode of James Cawley’s internet series “Buck Rogers Begins.”

    Gil Gerard, Connie Sellecca

    Gil Gerard had one son, actor Gilbert Vincent Gerard, with model and actress Connie Sellecca. (Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images)

    Gerard was married and divorced four times before marrying wife Janet. He had one son, actor Gilbert Vincent Gerard, with model and actress Connie Sellecca. Their divorce included a contentious custody battle over their son, born in 1981, with Sellecca ultimately granted main custody.

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    In his final message shared publicly, Gerard summed up his life with gratitude and grace.

    “My journey has taken me from Arkansas to New York to Los Angeles, and finally, to my home in North Georgia with my amazing wife, Janet, of 18 years,” he wrote. “It’s been a great ride, but inevitably one that comes to a close as mine has.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Video: The Most Notable Movies of 2025

    Across the newsroom, journalists picked their most notable movies from 2025.

    Stephanie Goodman, Kyle Buchanan, Joe Coscarelli, Reggie Ugwu, Amanda Webster, Edward Vega and Laura Salaberry

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  • The Eyes Wide Shut Conspiracy

    Photo-Illustration: Dewey Saunders; source photos: Warner Bros. Pictures; Getty Images.

    When Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut was released in the summer of 1999, the world shrugged. Critics didn’t know what to do with it, treating it less like the final statement of a master filmmaker and more like a bootlegged work print — understandable, given that Kubrick, who typically fussed over his movies until the last possible second, had died that March, just days after delivering a semi-finished cut to Warner Bros. The studio and his estate made the remaining tweaks. Meanwhile, audiences had been primed by the marketing to expect an explicit, boundary-pushing erotic thriller featuring an extended orgy sequence that almost triggered an NC-17 rating. What they got instead was much tamer: a slow-motion marital drama about a Manhattan doctor (Tom Cruise), rattled by his wife’s (Nicole Kidman) confession of an adulterous fantasy, who drifts through a series of lustful but unconsummated encounters before crashing a masked sex party thrown by an elite secret society in a Long Island mansion. The film’s dreamlike atmosphere veered toward the surreal, with Cruise and Kidman doing the weirdest acting of their lives and the orgygoers’ portrayal — the masks, the password, the choreography — striking many viewers as more goofy than sexy or sinister.

    But Kubrick’s movies have a habit of aging into new meanings, like monoliths that take time for us apes to figure out, and Eyes Wide Shut eventually came to be seen in a different light. Beyond the orgy, there are subtler, more disturbing moments — including a scene in which a costume-shop owner appears to offer his underage daughter to Cruise’s character — that hint at a world where sex, power, and predation blur. With hindsight, those undertones seemed to foreshadow real-world horrors to come. In the 2010s, Pizzagate and QAnon dragged rumors of elite sex-trafficking rings from the fringes into the mainstream of American paranoia. Then came Jeffrey Epstein’s arrest and death, and suddenly an underappreciated film from two decades earlier started to look like an uncanny premonition.

    After a while, some began to wonder if perhaps Eyes Wide Shut hadn’t been a little too prescient. Kubrick was a notorious perfectionist who spent years on each of his films and demanded dozens, sometimes hundreds, of takes per scene. So, the thinking went, every costume, prop, and line reading is there for a reason, infinite symbolism scattered across the frame for anyone determined enough to decipher it. This was the logic that led some to believe that he’d helped NASA fake the moon landing and then confessed to it by putting Danny Torrance in an Apollo 11 sweater in The Shining. That idea, along with a handful of even farther-fetched ones, was presented without comment in Rodney Ascher’s 2012 documentary, Room 237, a film presumably meant to mock such readings that may have only encouraged them. And Kubrick didn’t exactly tamp down the mythmaking. In the final years of his life, he rarely left his estate north of London and all but stopped giving interviews, allowing his work to speak for itself — and, in the absence of explanation, to be interpreted however anyone pleased. So when Eyes Wide Shut seemed to anticipate a scandal that wouldn’t come fully into view until decades later, it raised a question: What if Kubrick knew?

    Soon, in exactly the parts of the internet you’d expect, a conspiracy theory took shape: Kubrick had made Eyes Wide Shut as a warning, an exposé of an actual pedophile cult hiding in plain sight among the global elite. The masked orgy wasn’t just a metaphor — for the sexual hypocrisies of the upper class, or the transactional nature of intimacy, or the secret compromises of monogamy, or whatever — it was a re-enactment of what really happened behind mansion doors. And once the wrong people caught wind of it, they had Kubrick killed so that the movie could be reedited to scrub the most incriminating details. Some claim an entire 24 minutes were cut. And yet, the theory goes, Kubrick had so masterfully embedded his clues in the film that some of them survived the posthumous meddling.

    There are multiple strains of this theory, each with its own twist on which real cabal Kubrick was supposedly exposing. Some point to the usual suspects — the Illuminati, Bohemian Grove, garden-variety Satanists. Others zoom in on the Rothschild family, noting that it once owned the 19th-century mansion used for some of the movie’s orgy exteriors. Others go a few steps further, claiming that Eyes Wide Shut was not just predictive of Epstein’s crimes; it was literally about him. (The evidence? Well, for starters, in a party scene near the beginning of the movie, a couple idling behind Kidman is said to look like Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, or at least the man has gray hair.)

    Across these variants, one detail is usually cited as the smoking gun. In the movie’s last scene, Bill and Alice Harford (Cruise and Kidman) are walking through a toy store with their young daughter, Helena (Madison Eginton). Just before credits roll, Helena is shown standing near two adult male extras — who, believers claim, also appear at the party that opens the film — and then following them as they head toward another aisle. This half-second beat, according to breathless video essays and blog posts stitched together from freeze-frames, is Kubrick’s final, chilling reveal: The Harfords have handed their daughter over to the cult.

    This theory has become surprisingly popular. Versions of it circulate constantly on Reddit, YouTube, and TikTok, where today Kubrick may be remembered less as a filmmaker than as a whistleblower who died for telling the truth about high-society pedophiles. And if it once lived mainly in the sewers of social media, it broke into the daylight in December of last year, when Roger Avary, the co-writer of Pulp Fiction and the director of The Rules of Attraction, laid out his own variation of the conspiracy on The Joe Rogan Experience.

    On the podcast, Avary told Rogan that he’d recently reread his copy of the Eyes Wide Shut shooting script, and it had gotten him thinking about all the ways the movie might’ve been different if Kubrick had lived. “It’s definitely missing third-person narration,” he said, arguing that, in particular, the scene where Cruise visits a morgue seems designed for voice-over. Avary also discussed the toy-store theory: “You see those two guys walking off with the daughter. They’re taking her away. They’ve given their daughter to the pedo cult.” Then he relayed a story he’d heard — secondhand, he admitted — about an early screening of the movie for studio executives. According to Avary, “There were people who were outside of the theater who could hear inside of the theater Kubrick yelling at all the executives and saying, ‘It’s my movie! You can’t cut it! You can’t fucking cut my film!’ Big argument going on and then he dies like four days later.”

    I should probably unmask myself here as a skeptic of this alleged conspiracy, which strains credulity not just for interpretive reasons but also for extremely basic logistical ones. If someone had truly uncovered an elite sex-trafficking operation and wanted to alert the public, why on earth would he spend years of his life and a studio’s $65 million making a coded allegory about it rather than, say, telling the police or a reporter? And even if you grant that premise, why would a panicked sex cult — powerful enough to murder an internationally beloved director — then allow the film to play, even in sanitized form, on thousands of screens around the world? 

    These theories may have once been a fun way to overread a slippery movie, but lately they seem to be on the verge of overtaking it. And with a new Criterion Collection 4K remaster of the film available, the hunt for “hidden clues” seems likely to intensify as every Christmas light and billiard ball can now be scrutinized in even higher resolution.

    That would be a shame. Eyes Wide Shut is a movie I love and one I think ranks among Kubrick’s best. For all its controlled craft, it’s looser, stranger, and more dramatically flammable than anything else he ever made. It’s also unclassifiable, never bothering to explain what exactly it is. That ambiguity is part of its power, but it’s also the void into which conspiracists pour their fantasies. Before those fantasies become the movie’s legacy, I wondered if a few calls and emails to people who worked on the film might bring some clarity.

    Many were happy to help. “I can assure you that all of these speculations are total nonsense,” says Jan Harlan, a producer of five Kubrick movies as well as the director’s brother-in-law. “Stanley would’ve found these people amusing,” says Anthony Frewin, Kubrick’s longtime assistant and archivist. “This is spurious and unfounded, just another fine example of the irrelevant rubbish that followed Kubrick throughout his career,” says Nigel Galt, Eyes Wide Shut’s editor. “It’s ludicrous to think that, at that time, Kubrick would’ve been aware of Jeffrey Epstein,” says Denise Chamian, one of the film’s casting directors. “I don’t think Stanley gave a flying fuck about warning the world about anything,” says Kubrick’s co-writer, Frederic Raphael. (Cruise and Kidman declined through representatives to participate in this story.)

    It’s not just that it’s doubtful or unprovable that Kubrick made Eyes Wide Shut to disrupt a secret clan of wealthy pedophiles, say his collaborators. It’s that the theory is untethered from everything we know about the movie’s origins. Eyes Wide Shut is based on Arthur Schnitzler’s 1926 novella, Traumnovelle, which Kubrick was already discussing in 1968 as a potential follow-up to 2001: A Space Odyssey. He bought the rights in 1970 — when Jeffrey Epstein was still a teenager — and at one point considered adapting it as a comedy, possibly with Steve Martin in the lead. He returned to the material on and off over the years but focused on other projects for nearly three decades. If he was really on a mission to thwart real-world sex trafficking, he wasn’t in much of a hurry.

    Also, what many now interpret as Kubrick’s exposé of elite perverts was, in fact, mostly Schnitzler’s doing. Eyes Wide Shut is an extremely faithful adaptation of Traumnovelle. “Of course you can see where it varies,” says Raphael, who was hired to help with the screenplay in 1994, “but the basis of the movie is still the Schnitzler story, and Stanley always insisted that we preserve its beats.” The novella includes all of the film’s major characters and story elements — including the doctor, his wife’s fantasy, the sex worker whose services he declines, the piano player who sneaks him the orgy password, and the mysterious woman who sacrifices herself to save him — except it’s set in early-20th-century Vienna instead of 1990s New York and its protagonist is named Fridolin instead of Bill. It was even adapted into an Austrian TV movie in 1969, and that version’s plot is largely the same as Kubrick’s.

    The people I spoke to also say they doubt Kubrick had any special knowledge of real-world sex cults, and the one in Eyes Wide Shut was something he was still trying to conceptualize as he made the film. In Raphael’s 1999 memoir, Eyes Wide Open, he recalls that Kubrick wasn’t entirely sure what might motivate such a group. At one point, he asked Raphael to help fill in the blanks, so the writer drafted a backstory in the form of a fake FBI dossier, an imagined history of a clandestine network of powerful hedonists called “the Free” who murdered anyone who leaked their secrets. He faxed it to Kubrick, who promptly called, worried that Raphael had somehow hacked into an FBI computer. When the writer explained he’d made the whole thing up, Kubrick was relieved. “Okay. As long as we’re not,” he said, “on potentially dangerous ground here.” As Raphael tells me, “If Stanley had known about anything like that in real life, I’m sure he would’ve been much too apprehensive to get anywhere near it.”

    For help imagining Eyes Wide Shut’s orgy sequence, Kubrick sought the expertise of two unconventional scholars: Gershon Legman, an erotic folklorist who provided historical context on the sexual customs of Schnitzler-era Vienna, and Dr. C.J. Scheiner, a New York emergency-room physician with a Ph.D. in erotology, who, over a series of long phone calls, gave him a crash course in 4,000 years of group sex. As production neared, Kubrick asked Scheiner about his personal knowledge of modern orgies. “I had, as a nonparticipating observer, researched this part of the social scene since the 1960s and had extensive first- and secondhand knowledge of American and European organized group sexual activity, from home parties to elegant weekend orgies in a château outside of Paris,” Scheiner tells me. Nothing in their conversations, he says, suggested the film was inspired by any real sex cult. And, “based on the questions he asked,” Scheiner adds, “my impression is that Kubrick had no — or very little — firsthand experience with orgies himself.”

    Much of the conspiracy talk around Eyes Wide Shut centers on another of the film’s advisors: Larry Celona, a longtime New York Post reporter who’s credited as a “media consultant” — for one scene, Kubrick had him write a mock Post article about the death of Mandy, the woman who spares Cruise’s character from the cult’s punishment by offering herself in his place. In 2019, Celona happened to break the news of Epstein’s death, a coincidence some found too eerie to ignore. But, as Celona tells me, he’s a crime reporter for New York’s biggest tabloid, “so it’s not a far reach that I’d be the first to know” about a famous death in the city. (He was also the first to report JFK Jr.’s fatal plane crash, which occurred, in another uncanny coincidence, on July 16, 1999, the same day Eyes Wide Shut opened in theaters. In certain corners of the internet, this alignment of dates is treated like the Rosetta stone; in QAnon lore, JFK Jr. didn’t die at all but supposedly went into hiding to join a generations-long war against elite pedophiles.) Later, some theorists’ heads nearly exploded when they thought they saw “Celona” listed in Epstein’s private-jet logs, but it turned out to be sloppy handwriting; the name was actually “Celina,” which might have been Celina Midelfart, a known Epstein associate. “I obviously was never on Epstein’s plane — I’ve never met him,” Celona says. He did speak to Kubrick by phone a couple of times, but they never discussed Epstein. “Kubrick was born in the Bronx,” Celona says, “so he wanted to talk about the Yankees.”

    Even the fake Post story Celona wrote for Kubrick has been overscrutinized. Some viewers noticed that a line in the second paragraph is repeated twice — a “mistake” that, to them, suggests hidden meaning. Celona noticed it, too, but never found out why it was left in. He suggests I ask Frewin, Kubrick’s former assistant, about it, and when I do, Frewin sounds surprised: “I never noticed that, and I was the one who had it typeset. Oh well, it adds to the authenticity.”

    Eyes Wide Shut had a reputation for opacity even before the internet got involved. It was an unusually secretive project. Working mostly in London’s Pinewood Studios, Kubrick employed only a small crew, kept the set tightly controlled, and filmed for a long time. Production began in November 1996 and lasted for more than 15 months, a Guinness World Record for the longest continuous shoot in history. So he must have filmed much more than what ended up in the movie, right?

    There were outtakes — “snippets which did not make it into the film,” says producer Jan Harlan — but nothing that would’ve gotten Kubrick in hot water with any real sex cults, say his collaborators. By most accounts, the director spent the bulk of the shoot filming take after take of the scenes that do appear in the movie. One story that’s passed into legend has the director forcing Cruise to walk through a doorway 95 times before deeming the performance believable. (Cruise, who now regularly flings himself off cliffs for fun, reportedly developed an ulcer during production.)

    Madison Eick (née Eginton), who played Helena, the Harfords’ daughter, and turned 8 during the production, hasn’t given many interviews about Eyes Wide Shut since its original release. Only in retrospect did she realize how unique the shooting process was. “I never saw a full script,” she says. “In the majority of my scenes, the dialogue was improvised. Stanley would tell us the premise of the scene and then we would rehearse and rehearse and just talk naturally. There’s a scene where I talk about wanting a dog for Christmas, and all of that was improvised.” She recalls that Kubrick applied his obsessive precision to even small moments, including one brief scene that takes place in front of the Harfords’ bathroom mirror. “Stanley had me brush my teeth for — I’m not kidding — two weeks,” she says. “He was like, ‘Why aren’t you spitting while you’re brushing your teeth?’ And I was like, ‘I just spit at the end.’ And he wanted me to spit and then keep going back to brushing.” Eick is now 36 and retired from film acting. “My dentist just told me my gums are starting to recede, and I wonder if that’s why,” she joked.

    When I ask Eick about the talk around the toy-store scene — the cornerstone of the entire conspiracy theory, in which some viewers claim her character is being handed off to cult members — she tells me it’s news to her. “There wasn’t ever any secret meaning about that scene that was communicated to me,” she says. “There was definitely never any suggestion from Stanley that I should go and stand by or walk off with two men.” Were those men the same background actors who also appear at the party scene at the beginning of the movie? Harlan admits that “they were from the same pool of extras” — but even if they were the same performers, it was “not deliberate. There is no ‘meaning’” to it, he says.

    Some of the more baroque readings of the scene assign symbolic weight to the toys Helena picks up as she moves through the store, including a stuffed tiger (supposedly a callback to a similar toy seen earlier in the film in a sex worker’s bedroom) and a Barbie (a stand-in for sexualized innocence). Eick waves this off too. “I remember that I was improvising,” she says, “and the toys I picked up were just the ones I wanted, not because anyone told me to.”

    After the shoot wrapped, Kubrick and the editor Galt spent the next 15 months shaping Eyes Wide Shut into more or less the exact movie you now know, says the latter. According to Galt, the last version Kubrick touched was “pretty much identical” to the one released in theaters. “After we showed Warner Bros. a cut,” he says, “Stanley and I discussed the things that remained outstanding. This was mostly about changing or adding a couple of establishing shots. The main titles had been set. The orgy scene is exactly the same length now as it was at the time of Stanley’s passing, and not a frame of that has ever changed” — aside from a few strategically placed computer-generated cloaked figures, added after Kubrick’s death to obscure the most explicit action and secure an R rating. Galt says that throughout the long postproduction process, to the best of his memory, Kubrick never once hinted at any real-life cults. “I sat next to Stanley in the edit room for 15 months, and the news that held his attention at the time was the war in Kosovo and the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal.”

    The edit was nearly complete, the finishing touches underway. Then, on March 7, 1999, Kubrick died. It probably wasn’t foul play. “He had a bad heart and died in his bedroom,” says Harlan. “He was 70 years old and looked about 120,” says Raphael. “He was very stressed, and producing that movie was enough to kill him. Nobody needed to hire anyone to do it.”

    Of course, it’s always possible that everyone I spoke to was either in on a cover-up or too afraid of being murdered by a sex cult themselves to tell me the truth. Perhaps they coordinated their stories and lied. But if so, they didn’t coordinate very well. On some points, they directly contradicted each other. For example, Raphael insists that Sydney Pollack — who plays Victor Ziegler in Eyes Wide Shut and is an Oscar-winning director himself — did some editing work on the film’s billiards scene after Kubrick’s death. Galt calls this “utter nonsense.”

    But one thing nearly everyone seems to agree on is that they’re dubious of what Roger Avary told Joe Rogan. Frewin says it’s “very unlikely” that Avary ever got his hands on a real shooting script for Eyes Wide Shut. Nobody I spoke to believed the film was missing any narration, either. A couple of Raphael’s early drafts included voice-over, but that idea was abandoned before postproduction. “Stanley never discussed the possibility of using narration during the edit,” says Galt.

    And that explosive screening Avary claims to have heard about, the one where Kubrick supposedly got into a shouting match with studio execs? It never happened, according to Kubrick’s collaborators, who tell me Eyes Wide Shut had only three screenings while its director was still alive and there were no arguments at any of them. On March 2, 1999, Galt flew a print to New York and showed it first to Warner Bros. bosses Terry Semel and Bob Daly, then later that day to Cruise and Kidman, while Kubrick stayed home in England awaiting their reactions, which were reportedly positive. On March 5, two days before Kubrick’s death, Cruise’s then-publicist, Pat Kingsley, watched it alone in the director’s home. “I didn’t see Stanley that day because he had a cold and stayed upstairs,” Kingsley tells me. “But we talked afterward by phone. I told him I was mesmerized by the movie.”

    Still, maybe Avary knows something I don’t. He’s an Oscar winner and presumably knows more Illuminati than I do, so who am I to doubt him? I sent him an email. He initially agreed to talk, then disappeared for months, then finally replied to questions from a New York fact-checker.

    Avary says he heard the anecdote about the post-screening fight from “a William Morris agent who claimed to have been outside the screening room of the studio in England.” He says it “should be taken with a grain of salt” and that he mentioned it on Rogan only because the agent in question is now deceased. As for his copy of the screenplay, he says that it’s dated August 4, 1996, and that it was given to him by a key member of the filmmaking team. It does include narration, notably during the morgue scene.

    Asked about the toy-store sequence, Avary suggests Kubrick may not have shared the scene’s alleged subtext with Madison Eick. “I’ve worked with child actresses myself, and you never tell them everything,” he says. “In fact, you never tell any actor everything that’s happening. Too much information, especially for a child, creates a false artifice.” He also notes that his version of the script mentions, at several points, two anonymous men — like the ones who supposedly kidnap Helena — who seem to be trailing Cruise’s character.

    The script Avary describes appears to match the purported early draft of Eyes Wide Shut that has circulated online for years. (Avary says his “was not downloaded from the internet and looks completely different.”) Neither Frewin or Galt or Harlan say they can confirm the legitimacy of that version, though some of its elements do correspond with fragments that are apparently preserved in the Kubrick archives. In any case, in this supposed draft, there is no suggestion that Helena is kidnapped. There’s no toy-store scene at all.

    None of this, however, is likely to put a stop to any theorizing. Kubrick made movies in a time when ambiguity was better tolerated, a pact with the audience now seems outdated. Today’s viewers, trained by prestige TV, true-crime podcasts, and algorithmically optimized streaming movies—where characters routinely announce who they are, what they want, and what everything means—demand legibility. When a film refuses answers, or defies a single, authoritative meaning, it can feel less ambiguous than deliberately redacted. It’s not lost on me that, in undertaking this reporting, I was chasing a definitive answer, too.

    “Kubrick’s films are riddled with knowledge of secret societies,” Avary says. “And Eyes Wide Shut feels like his most direct shot at it. It’s explicitly about a hidden elite cult wielding sex, death, and influence as tools of control. Eyes Wide Shut ends up feeling like a final chess move against power.” But, he adds, “it’s not that I endorse these conspiracy theories. It’s just cinema speculation, which for a suspicious guy like me and as a fan of Kubrick is fun to posit.”

    Lane Brown

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  • Rob Reiner and wife murdered: Timeline shows argument with son night before deaths

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    Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner were found dead inside their Brentwood home on Sunday.

    As of Monday, Reiner’s son Nick remained behind bars as authorities continued investigating the stabbing of the acclaimed Hollywood director and his wife.

    Rob and Michele’s murders have left the entertainment world reeling from an unfathomable tragedy.

    HOLLYWOOD DIRECTOR ROB REINER’S SON NICK IN CUSTODY FOLLOWING DEATHS OF HIS PARENTS

    The entertainment world was rocked by the tragic deaths of Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, found in their Brentwood home on December 14, 2025.  (Ralph Dominguez/MediaPunch via Getty Images)

    Here’s what we know so far:

    Saturday

    Rob Reiner’s son, Nick, gets into heated argument with parents at Christmas party

    Family friends of Rob and Michele Reiner told the Los Angeles Times that Nick got into an argument with his parents at Conan O’Brien’s Christmas party Saturday evening. Many people noticed Nick was behaving strangely, according to the outlet.

    “Nick was freaking everyone out, acting crazy, kept asking people if they were famous,” a source also told People magazine.

    Per TMZ, after Rob and Nick got into a “very loud argument,” the director and Michele left the party.

    Sunday 

    Authorities arrive at Rob Reiner and his wife Michele’s home to find them dead inside

    Los Angeles Fire Department officials responded to a home on the 200 block of Chadbourne Ave. at around 3:30 p.m. Sunday where two bodies were discovered, Fox News Digital confirmed. Officials later confirmed the bodies to be of Rob Reiner and his wife Michele.

    Michele Reiner, Rob Reiner, Nick Reiner

    Rob Reiner’s son, Nick Reiner, was arrested on suspicion of murder in connection with his parents’ deaths, according to police statements. (Michael Buckner/Getty Images for Teen Vogue)

    Police give a press conference sharing little details

    Authorities remained tight-lipped about the deaths of Rob and Michele Reiner during a press conference held outside the couple’s home on Sunday night.

    Rob Reiner’s son Nick is taken into custody

    Nick Reiner was located and arrested around 9:15 p.m. local time Sunday evening, the Los Angeles Police Department said in a press release shared the next day.

    ROB REINER, ICONIC HOLLYWOOD DIRECTOR AND STAR OF ‘ALL IN THE FAMILY,’ DEAD AT 78

    Monday

    Nick Reiner remained behind bars with bail set at $4 million

    Rob Reiner’s son, Nick, was booked around 5 a.m. Monday morning.

    No details regarding what led to his arrest were shared in online records.

    Rob Reiner who was killed with his wife Michele in a photo with their family

    Authorities confirmed that Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner were found dead in an apparent homicide, prompting an ongoing investigation by the LAPD.  (Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images)

    More details emerge regarding the deaths of Rob Reiner and his wife Michele

    New details emerged about the deaths of Rob Reiner and his wife Michele as authorities continued investigating. A law enforcement official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity confirmed investigators believe the couple suffered stab wounds.

    Rob and Michele’s home also showed no signs of forced entry, officials told the Los Angeles Times.

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    Rob Reiner, Michele Reiner

    Tributes poured in from colleagues and fans mourning the life and work of Rob Reiner, a beloved figure in film and television.  (Stefanie Keenan)

    Authorities confirm Nick Reiner is a suspect in parents’ deaths

    Rob Reiner’s son, Nick Reiner, was confirmed as a suspect in the deaths of “The Princess Bride” director and his wife, Michele Reiner on Monday. Reiner was arrested on suspicion of murder, according to LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell.

    During a press conference on an unrelated matter, the LAPD brought up the deaths of the filmmaker and his wife. McDonnell admitted the information surrounding the deaths was limited.

    “First of all, our hearts go out to the family and friends of the Reiners,” the LAPD police chief said at the press conference.

    “LAPD responded to a residence, the residence of Rob and Michele Reiner, located in West Los Angeles division. At that location, they found two deceased adults, a male and a female. Through the night, working with the coroner’s office, they were able to identify them definitively as Rob and Michele Reiner. We have our robbery homicide division handling the investigation.”

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    Bail is revoked for Rob Reiner’s son Nick

    Nick Reiner and Rob Reiner

    Nick Reiner remained behind bars without bail as of Monday. ( Rommel Demano/Getty Images)

    Nick Reiner’s $4 million bail was revoked at some point Monday. Online records show the son of Rob Reiner has no bail option currently.

    Investigation into Rob Reiner and wife Michele’s deaths will be presented Tuesday to the DA

    Rob Reiner and Michele Reiner’s death investigation will be presented Tuesday to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, the LAPD confirmed in a press release.

    Rob Reiner’s son transferred to Downtown Los Angeles jail

    Nick Reiner was transferred Monday to the Twin Towers Correctional Facility, according to the Los Angeles Sheriffs Department. He was originally booked into the Metropolitan Detention Center before being transferred to the Inmate Reception Center in Los Angeles, Calif.

    Online records now show the Twin Towers Correctional Facility as his permanent housing location.

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    Fox News Digital’s Tracy Wright and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • How Michele Singer Reiner influenced the end to ‘When Harry Met Sally…’

    Michele Singer Reiner is being remembered as a talented photographer who tried to make the world a better place through a passion for activism that she shared with Hollywood director Rob Reiner, her husband of more than 35 years.

    The couple was found dead Sunday at their home in Los Angeles’ Brentwood area. On Monday, police said their 32-year-old son Nick Reiner was arrested on suspicion of murder in connection with the killings and being held without bail.

    The deaths sparked tributes from colleagues in the entertainment industry, political figures and more.

    “Michele was an enormously talented photographer whose eye applied not only to what she captured on film but also to her own personal (aesthetic),” said actor Rita Wilson, a friend of the Reiners. “Her work as a producer focused on social justice and creating awareness of our world. She was wry, funny, opinionated but also reasonable and self reflective. She was so close to her sister and her family understanding the importance of close connection.”

    Rob Reiner, the 78-year-old son of comedy legend Carl Reiner, was married to photographer Michele Singer, 68, in 1989. The two met while he was directing “When Harry Met Sally” and have three children together — Nick, Jake and Romy.

    Comedy legend Rob Reiner and wife Michele, a talented photographer, were found dead Sunday in side their Brentwood home. Tracey Leong reports for the NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Dec. 14, 2025.

    In a 2018 interview with The Guardian, Reiner said it was his Michele who influenced his decision to change the hit rom-com’s ending.

    “Originally, Harry and Sally didn’t get together,” Reiner told The Guardian. “But then I met Michele and I thought: OK, I see how this works.”

    The two appeared together at the film’s 1989 premiere. The movie, starring Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal, went on to become a defining film of the era.

    In 1989, Rob Reiner told the New York Times that Michele visited the New York set with the then-fiancée of a cinematographer on the film who predicted the two would end up together. He said Michele caught his eye when the film’s characters were engrossed in a heated argument.

    Photos: Celebrated Hollywood film director Rob Reiner through the years

    “I look over and I see this girl, and whoo! I was attracted immediately,” Reiner said. “I wormed my way into their lunch. But that’s what he said to me, ‘You’re going to marry her.’ And one thing led to another and here we are.”

    Michele Singer Reiner was a producer for “Spinal Tap II: The End Continues,” “God & Country,” “Albert Brooks: Defending My Life” and “Shock and Awe,” according to IMDB. Earlier in her career, she photographed the cover image of Donald Trump for his 1987 bestseller “The Art of the Deal.”

    Singer Reiner worked on several films directed by her husband, including as a special photographer on 1990’s “Misery,” an adaptation of the psychological horror novel by Stephen King. The two went on to collaborate on other projects, including advocacy campaigns.

    Rob Reiner was previously married to actor-director Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981. He adopted her daughter, Tracy Reiner. Carl Reiner died in 2020 at age 98 and Marshall died in 2018.

    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner Found Dead in Apparent Homicide

    Photo: Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

    Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner have died in an apparent homicide. “It is with profound sorrow that we announce the tragic passing of Michele and Rob Reiner,” the family said in a statement. “We are heartbroken by this sudden loss, and we ask for privacy during this unbelievably difficult time.”

    Sunday evening, the Los Angeles Fire Department reported that two people had been found dead at the home of Rob Reiner. TMZ first reported that it was Reiner and Singer Reiner. TMZ also said the bodies had injuries consistent with a knife. People claim that Singer and Reiner were killed by their son, Nick. However LAPD chief of detectives Alan Hamilton said “we have not identified a suspect at this time,” and that there “was no person of interest,” per the Hollywood Reporter.

    Reiner, the son of comedian Carl Reiner, first came to national attention as Archie Bunker’s “Meathead” son-in-law on All in the Family. He became a prolific director, making such films as This Is Spinal Tap and When Harry Met Sally. He founded production company Castle Rock, which produced Seinfeld among many other projects for film and television. Singer Reiner, a photographer, ironically shot Donald Trump’s cover phot for The Art of the Deal. She and Reiner would become vocal opponents of Trump as a political figure. The couple were also instrumental in overturning Proposition 8 in California.

    Tracy Reiner, whom Rob Reiner adopted when married to Penny Marshall, told NBC News that she was at a loss for words. “I came from the greatest family ever,” she said. “I don’t know what to say, I’m in shock.”

    Bethy Squires

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  • Rob Reiner remembered as one of the preeminent filmmakers of his generation

    Rob Reiner, the son of a comedy giant who went on to become one, himself, as one of the preeminent filmmakers of his generation with movies such as “The Princess Bride,” “When Harry Met Sally …” and “This Is Spinal Tap,” has died. He was 78.

    Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer, were found dead Sunday at their home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation confirmed that Reiner and Singer were the victims. The official could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

    Rob Reiner and Sally Struthers speak onstage at the 75th Emmy Awards on Monday, Jan. 15, 2024 at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. (Photo by Phil McCarten/Invision for the Television Academy/AP Images)

    Authorities were investigating an “apparent homicide,” said Capt. Mike Bland with the Los Angeles Police Department. The Los Angeles Fire Department said it responded to a medical aid request shortly after 3:30 p.m.

    Reiner grew up thinking his father, Carl Reiner, didn’t understand him or find him funny. But the younger Reiner would in many ways follow in his father’s footsteps, working both in front and behind the camera, in comedies that stretched from broad sketch work to accomplished dramedies.

    “My father thought, ‘Oh, my God, this poor kid is worried about being in the shadow of a famous father,’” Reiner said, recalling the temptation to change his name to “60 Minutes” in October. “And he says, ‘What do you want to change your name to?’ And I said, ‘Carl.’ I just wanted to be like him.”

    After starting out as a writer for “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour,” Reiner’s breakthrough came when he was, at age 23, cast in Norman Lear’s “All in the Family” as Archie Bunker’s liberal son-in-law, Michael “Meathead” Stivic. But by the 1980s, Reiner began as a feature film director, churning out some of the most beloved films of that, or any, era. His first film, the largely improvised 1984 cult classic “This Is Spinal Tap,” remains the urtext mockumentary.

    After the 1985 John Cusack summer comedy, “The Sure Thing,” Reiner made “Stand By Me” (1986), “The Princess Bride” (1987) and “When Harry Met Sally …” (1989), a four-year stretch that resulted in a trio of American classics, all of them among the most often quoted movies of the 20th century.

    A legacy on and off screen

    For the next four decades, Reiner, a warm and gregarious presence on screen and an outspoken liberal advocate off it, remained a constant fixture in Hollywood. The production company he co-founded, Castle Rock Entertainment, launched an enviable string of hits, including “Seinfeld” and “The Shawshank Redemption.” By the turn of the century, its success rate had fallen considerably, but Reiner revived it earlier this decade. This fall, Reiner and Castle Rock released the long-in-coming sequel “Spinal Tap II: The End Continues.”

    All the while, Reiner was one of the film industry’s most passionate Democrat activists, regularly hosting fundraisers and campaigning for liberal issues. He was co-founder of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which challenged in court California’s ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. He also chaired the campaign for Prop 10, a California initiative to fund early childhood development services with a tax on tobacco products. Reiner was also a critic of President Donald Trump.

    That ran in the family, too. Reiner’s father opposed the Communist hunt of McCarthyism in the 1950s and his mother, Estelle Reiner, a singer and actor, protested the Vietnam War.

    “If you’re a nepo baby, doors will open,” Reiner told the Guardian in 2024. “But you have to deliver. If you don’t deliver, the door will close just as fast as it opened.”

    ‘All in the Family’ to ‘Stand By Me’

    Robert Reiner was born in the Bronx on March 6, 1947. As a young man, he quickly set out to follow his father into entertainment. He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles film school and, in the 1960s, began appearing in small parts in various television shows.

    But when Lear saw Reiner as a key cast member in “All in the Family,” it came as a surprise to the elder Reiner.

    “Norman says to my dad, ‘You know, this kid is really funny.’ And I think my dad said, ‘What? That kid? That kid? He’s sullen. He sits quiet. He doesn’t, you know, he’s not funny.’ He didn’t think I was anyway,” Reiner told “60 Minutes.”

    On “All in the Family,” Reiner served as a pivotal foil to Carroll O’Connor’s bigoted, conservative Archie Bunker. Reiner was five times nominated for an Emmy for his performance on the show, winning in 1974 and 1978. In Lear, Reiner also found a mentor. He called him “a second father.”

    “It wasn’t just that he hired me for ‘All in the Family,’” Reiner told “American Masters” in 2005. “It was that I saw, in how he conducted his life, that there was room to be an activist as well. That you could use your celebrity, your good fortune, to help make some change.”

    Lear also helped launch Reiner as a filmmaker. He put $7.5 million of his own money to help finance “Stand By Me,” Reiner’s adaptation of the Stephen King novella “The Body.” The movie, about four boys who go looking for the dead body of a missing boy, became a coming-of-age classic, made breakthroughs of its young cast (particularly River Phoenix) and even earned the praise of King.

    With his stock rising, Reiner devoted himself to adapting William Goldman’s 1973’s “The Princess Bride,” a book Reiner had loved since his father gave him a copy as a gift. Everyone from François Truffaut to Robert Redford had considered adapting Goldman’s book, but it ultimately fell to Reiner (from Goldman’s own script) to capture the unique comic tone of “The Princess Bride.” But only once he had Goldman’s blessing.

    “At the door he greeted me and he said, ‘This is my baby. I want this on my tombstone. This is my favorite thing I’ve ever written in my life. What are you going to do with it?’” Reiner recalled in a Television Academy interview. “And we sat down with him and started going through what I thought should be done with the film.”

    Though only a modest success in theaters, the movie — starring Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Wallace Shawn, André the Giant and Robin Wright — would grow in stature over the years, leading to countless impressions of Inigo Montoya’s vow of revenge and the risky nature of land wars in Asia.

    ‘When Harry Met Sally …”

    Reiner was married to Penny Marshall, the actor and filmmaker, for 10 years beginning in 1971. Like Reiner, Marshall experienced sitcom fame, with “Laverne & Shirley,” but found a more lasting legacy behind the camera.

    After their divorce, Reiner, at a lunch with Nora Ephron, suggested a comedy about dating. In writing what became “When Harry Met Sally …” Ephron and Reiner charted a relationship between a man and a woman (played in the film by Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan) over the course of 12 years.

    Along the way, the movie’s ending changed, as did some of the film’s indelible moments. The famous line, “I’ll have what she’s having,” said after witnessing Ryan’s fake orgasm at Katz’s Delicatessen, was a suggestion by Crystal — delivered by none other than Reiner’s mother, Estelle.

    The movie’s happy ending also had some real-life basis. Reiner met Singer, a photographer, on the set of “When Harry Met Sally …” In 1989, they were wed. They had three children together: Nick, Jake and Romy.

    Reiner’s subsequent films included another King adaptation, “Misery” (1990) and a pair of Aaron Sorkin-penned dramas: the military courtroom tale “A Few Good Men” (1992) and 1995’s “The American President.”

    By the late ’90s, Reiner’s films (1996’s “Ghosts of Mississippi,” 2007’s “The Bucket List”) no longer had the same success rate. But he remained a frequent actor, often memorably enlivening films like “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) and “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013). In 2023, he directed the documentary “Albert Brooks: Defending My Life.”

    In an interview earlier this year with Seth Rogen, Reiner suggested everything in his career boiled down to one thing.

    “All I’ve ever done is say, ‘Is this something that is an extension of me?’ For ‘Stand by Me,’ I didn’t know if it was going to be successful or not. All I thought was, ‘I like this because I know what it feels like.’”

    The Associated Press

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  • Rob Reiner remembered: ‘All in the Family’ star dead at 78

    IWC CEO Chris Grainger-Herr, Emma Deigman, James Marsden, Rob Reiner, Michele Reiner, Festival Directors Karl Spoerri and Nadja Schildknecht attend the ‘Shock and Awe’ premiere at the 13th Zurich Film Festival on September 30, 2017 in Zurich, Switzerland. The Zurich Film Festival 2017 will take place from September 28 until October 8.

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  • ‘Zootopia 2’ reclaims No. 1 spot at box office, grosses $1B worldwide

    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — “Zootopia 2” regained the No. 1 spot at the domestic box office with $26.3 million in its third weekend of release, according to studio estimates Sunday, as The Walt Disney Co. animated sequel became the year’s second film to gross $1 billion worldwide.

    With “Avatar: Fire and Ash” arriving Friday, it was a relatively quiet weekend in theaters. There were no major new releases, leaving holdovers “Zootopia 2” and “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” to duke it out for the top spot.

    The edge went to “Zootopia 2,” which has quickly amassed $1.14 billion in global ticket sales thanks significantly to its enormous success in China. There, it’s grossed $502.4 million, making “Zootopia 2” the biggest Hollywood hit in the country in years.

    The only other 2025 Hollywood title to surpass $1 billion worldwide was Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch” ($1.04 billion). The highest grossing movie of the year, though, is the Chinese blockbuster “Ne Zha 2,” which collected nearly $2 billion just in China.

    In its second weekend of release, the Universal Pictures and Blumhouse Productions sequel “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” collected $15.4 million, a brutal drop of 70% from its above-expectations debut. Still, with a domestic total of $95.5 million, the $36 million production is a big win for Blumhouse, adding another horror franchise to its portfolio.

    The weekend’s most notable new release was James L. Brook’s “Ella McCay,” his first directed film in 15 years. “Ella McCay” earned a scant $2.1 million from 2,500 locations, making it one of the year’s worst wide releases.

    But box-office expectations weren’t high coming in from “Ella McCay,” a comic drama about a 34-year-old woman (newcomer Emma Mackey) who becomes governor of her home state. Reviews (22% “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes) were poor, and the kind of award-winning comic dramas movies that Brooks (“Terms of Endearment,” “Broadcast News”) has long specialized in today seldom find large audiences in theaters. “Ella McCay,” featuring a supporting cast including Jamie Lee Curtis, Ayo Edebiri and Woody Harrelson, cost $35 million to make.

    With overall ticket sales on the year running close to even with last year’s disappointing grosses, according to Comscore data, Hollywood will be hoping the coming holiday corridor, traditionally the busiest moviegoing period of the year, ends 2025 on a high note. Movies on tap include “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants,” “Marty Supreme,” “Anaconda” and “Song Sung Blue.”

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “Zootopia 2,” $26.3 million.

    2. “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” $19.5 million.

    3. “Wicked: For Good,” $8.6 million.

    4. “Dhurandhar,” $3.5 million.

    5. “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t,” $2.4 million.

    6. “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution,” $2.1 million.

    7. “Ella McCay,” $ 2.1 million.

    8. “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas” (2000), $1.9 million.

    9. “Eternity,” $1.8 million.

    10. “Hamnet,” $1.5 million.

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  • ‘Zootopia 2’ reclaims No. 1 spot at box office, grosses $1B worldwide

    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — “Zootopia 2” regained the No. 1 spot at the domestic box office with $26.3 million in its third weekend of release, according to studio estimates Sunday, as The Walt Disney Co. animated sequel became the year’s second film to gross $1 billion worldwide.

    With “Avatar: Fire and Ash” arriving Friday, it was a relatively quiet weekend in theaters. There were no major new releases, leaving holdovers “Zootopia 2” and “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” to duke it out for the top spot.

    The edge went to “Zootopia 2,” which has quickly amassed $1.14 billion in global ticket sales thanks significantly to its enormous success in China. There, it’s grossed $502.4 million, making “Zootopia 2” the biggest Hollywood hit in the country in years.

    The only other 2025 Hollywood title to surpass $1 billion worldwide was Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch” ($1.04 billion). The highest grossing movie of the year, though, is the Chinese blockbuster “Ne Zha 2,” which collected nearly $2 billion just in China.

    In its second weekend of release, the Universal Pictures and Blumhouse Productions sequel “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2” collected $15.4 million, a brutal drop of 70% from its above-expectations debut. Still, with a domestic total of $95.5 million, the $36 million production is a big win for Blumhouse, adding another horror franchise to its portfolio.

    The weekend’s most notable new release was James L. Brook’s “Ella McCay,” his first directed film in 15 years. “Ella McCay” earned a scant $2.1 million from 2,500 locations, making it one of the year’s worst wide releases.

    But box-office expectations weren’t high coming in from “Ella McCay,” a comic drama about a 34-year-old woman (newcomer Emma Mackey) who becomes governor of her home state. Reviews (22% “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes) were poor, and the kind of award-winning comic dramas movies that Brooks (“Terms of Endearment,” “Broadcast News”) has long specialized in today seldom find large audiences in theaters. “Ella McCay,” featuring a supporting cast including Jamie Lee Curtis, Ayo Edebiri and Woody Harrelson, cost $35 million to make.

    With overall ticket sales on the year running close to even with last year’s disappointing grosses, according to Comscore data, Hollywood will be hoping the coming holiday corridor, traditionally the busiest moviegoing period of the year, ends 2025 on a high note. Movies on tap include “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants,” “Marty Supreme,” “Anaconda” and “Song Sung Blue.”

    With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

    1. “Zootopia 2,” $26.3 million.

    2. “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” $19.5 million.

    3. “Wicked: For Good,” $8.6 million.

    4. “Dhurandhar,” $3.5 million.

    5. “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t,” $2.4 million.

    6. “Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution,” $2.1 million.

    7. “Ella McCay,” $ 2.1 million.

    8. “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas” (2000), $1.9 million.

    9. “Eternity,” $1.8 million.

    10. “Hamnet,” $1.5 million.

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  • Vin Diesel Wants Cristiano Ronaldo in the Fast and Furious Family

    Photo-Illustration: Illustration: Vulture, Images: Getty Images

    Vin Diesel is hoping to add one more member to the Fast family ahead of the final movie. “Everyone asked, would he be in the Fast mythology… I gotta tell you he is a real one. We wrote a role for him…” he wrote with a photo of Cristiano Ronaldo. Who could Rolando play? A new villain? Lety’s long-lost brother? Or maybe he can play some version of himself, a famous soccer player who gets kidnapped by Fast X villain Dante Reyes (Jason Momoa), and the team has to go rescue him. Like an updated version of the now-defunct Supercharged ride at Universal Studios. Thankfully, Vin Diesel has plenty of time to get the ball rolling, as Fast 11 is scheduled to premiere in April 2027. Diesel previously confirmed that the film would be the last in the franchise in 2024, adding, “This grand finale is not just an ending; it’s a celebration of the incredible family we’ve built together.” Rolando, start those acting lessons.

    Alejandra Gularte

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  • Adrian Grenier calls out ‘woke liberal college kids’ trying to tell farmers how to do their jobs

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    Adrian Grenier has “compassion” for farmers who encounter critics trying to tell them how to do their jobs.

    During a recent interview on “The Dan Buettner Podcast,” the 49-year-old actor spoke about his passion for sustainability and why people should “show some respect” to farmers and understand the realities they are facing before judging how they operate.

    “Frankly, these woke liberal college kids who come in with all these big ideas trying to tell farmers that they got to do one thing because it’s bad for the environment,” he said. “Well, you know, put your money where your mouth is and go out and try and solve for farming practices instead of telling the farmers who are in the trenches trying to make food that you don’t even want to pay whatever for organic cause it’s too expensive.”

    He explained that, growing up in New York, he didn’t know much about farming, but as an environmentalist, he “had all these abstract ideas of how things should be,” and he understood why farmers may “turn to chemical fertilizers.”

    Grenier called out college students trying to tell farmers how to do their jobs. (Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

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    “I get the luxury of trying to reinvent and figure out regenerative, healthy, organic ways of doing things, but it’s hard,” he explained. “If my crop dies, I’ll still get to eat. Farmers, their margins are razor-thin, and if they lose a crop, their family doesn’t eat.”

    Grenier also discussed his life as an actor and why he chose to leave Hollywood. The actor initially left Hollywood in 2016 but has appeared in projects since then.

    Known for his roles in “The Devil Wears Prada” and “Entourage,” Grenier explained that on episodes of the show there were never any consequences for bad behavior, but that “real life isn’t like that.”

    “I always attempted to keep a level head about myself, even though, as time went on, I realized that I had indulged a little too much in that world, that I had forgotten my true center or my north star Or perhaps I never had a north star to begin with, but I had to reorient myself with spirituality and my purpose on the planet,” he said.

    Adrian Grenier at the premiere of "Entourage" in June 2015.

    Grenier founded his farm in 2020. (Karwai Tang/WireImage)

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    He came to realize that the path he was on was not leading him anywhere good, leaving him to think, “What have I given? What have I cultivated?”

    He told “Today with Hoda & Jenna” in February 2024 he felt as if he “was flying high for many years” living in Hollywood and New York, noting, “I live a much more grounded lifestyle now.”

    In 2020, the actor founded Kintsugi Ranch with his wife, Jordan Roemmele, outside Austin, Texas, and has been involved with environmental work for many years, calling the farm his “ultimate recognition of” what he wants to do with his time on Earth.

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    “You sleep better, you’re more grounded, you have a sense of wellbeing,” he told People about life on the farm in September 2023. “It’s good for mental health, it’s good for skill building, resilience and all of that. I think it allows you to make more informed, wiser choices when it comes to how you live, how you treat others and, in particular, how you treat the environment.”

    Adrian Grenier at a beach clean-up at Zuma Beach in July 2021.

    Grenier is passionate about environmentalism. (Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

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    Although he has slowed down in acting, Grenier recently hosted the reality show “CryptoKnights” and recently wrapped production on the film “You, Always.”

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  • ‘Star Wars’ and ‘Indiana Jones’ rarities are in Lawrence Kasdan’s university archive

    ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Researchers, documentary filmmakers and others will soon be able to get their hands on screenwriter and director Lawrence Kasdan’s papers at his alma mater, the University of Michigan.

    Archivists are about a quarter of the way through cataloging the 150-plus boxes of material that document the 76-year-old filmmaker’s role in bringing to life iconic characters like Indiana Jones and Yoda, and directing actors ranging from Geena Davis and Glenn Close to Morgan Freeman and Kevin Costner.

    “All I wanted to ever do was be a movie director. And so, all the details meant something to me,” Kasdan said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I couldn’t be happier to have this mass of stuff available to anybody who is interested.”

    The archive includes scripts, call sheets and still photos — including a few rarities.

    Before Costner became an Oscar winner and Hollywood icon, he worked various studio jobs while taking nighttime drama lessons. His break — or so he thought — came when Kasdan cast him in 1983’s “The Big Chill.”

    Costner played Alex, whose death brings his fellow Michigan alums together. Unfortunately his big flashback scene ended up on the cutting-room floor.

    What are believed to be among the only existing photographs of the famously deleted scene are part of the Kasdan collection, now housed in Ann Arbor.

    “Different people will be interested in different things,” Kasdan said, pointing to his work writing the “Raiders of the Lost Ark” screenplay as one possible destination for researchers. The archive features audio cassette recordings of Kasdan discussing the film with Steven Spielberg and George Lucas. It also includes Polaroids taken of cast and crew members on the sets of his movies.

    There are props, too, including a cowboy hat from the 1985 Western “Silverado,” worn by none other than Costner. Kasdan and the kid from California would work together again on “Wyatt Earp” in the ’90s. Costner also starred in “The Bodyguard,” which Kasdan wrote.

    A number of unproduced scripts also are part of the collection.

    “I’ve always considered myself a director and a writer. And if you are really interested in any particular movie, you can follow the evolution of that movie in the archive,” Kasdan said.

    Library staff members are working chronologically through Kasdan’s material, meaning the papers for Kasdan’s earliest work — including “Body Heat” and “The Big Chill,” as well as the scripts for two “Star Wars” classics, “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Return of the Jedi” — can be accessed first.

    The remaining material should be completely processed by late 2026, said Phil Hallman, the curator of the collection. Hallman hopes to have Kasdan visit, perhaps next fall, to see the archive and take part in a symposium.

    Kasdan’s papers are part of the University of Michigan Library’s Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers Collection, which includes Orson Welles, Robert Altman, Jonathan Demme, Nancy Savoca and John Sayles. Kasdan, who grew up in West Virginia and earned a bachelor’s degree in 1970 and a master’s two years later, is the lone Michigan alum among the group.

    “To be there, held in the same place as those wonderful directors, is really a great honor,” Kasdan said.

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  • Jessica Alba stuns in revealing bikini snaps from luxury family getaway

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    Jessica Alba is sharing snaps from her recent “escape.”

    In a recent Instagram post, the “Sin City” actress gave her followers a glimpse of her family vacation, which included pictures with her three children, ocean views, inspirational quotes and nights out with her friends. Also included in the carousel of photos were multiple snaps of her in bikinis.

    “Take me back to this dreamy slice of heaven with my favorite humans!” she wrote in the caption. “Truly the most family-friendly, peaceful escape. The spa, the food, our villa… everything was perfect and we had the sweetest Thanksgiving holiday together. Thank you, @zadunreserve 🤍 Besos.”

    One of the photos features Alba standing poolside in a brown bikini with black designs, which she paired with sunglasses and a sun hat. She also gave fans a peek at her toned abs with a shot of her legs as she lounged by the pool.

    Alba posted a series of bikini photos among other pictures from her family vacation. (Jessica Alba Instagram)

    JESSICA ALBA’S ‘STUNNING’ IN GREEN BIKINI AS ROMANCE WITH ‘TOP GUN’ STAR DANNY RAMIREZ HEATS UP

    Also included in the slideshow was a video of her lying on the beach in a green bikini, in addition to a video of her on a boat in a white bikini with brown stripes.

    Alba’s three kids — Honor, 17, Haven, 14, and Hayes, 7 — were prominently featured in the post. Hayes can be seen playing on the beach and eating s’mores with Alba, and all three children posed for photos with her while dressed in matching blue and white outfits.

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    “Looks like a fantastic holiday 👏 and beautiful sunsets 👏👏,” one fan wrote in the comments section, while another added, “Wonderful beautiful family ❤️💋.”

    “❤️❤️You look like you should be their sibling. You guys are all beautiful. ❤️❤️❤️,” a third commenter wrote.

    A split of Jessica Alba with her kids.

    Alba also posted pictures of her spending time with her kids. (Jessica Alba Instagram)

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    The actress shares her three kids with her estranged husband, Cash Warren. The two met while filming the 2005 movie “Fantastic Four” and got married in May 2008. After 16 years of marriage, the two announced their separation in January 2025, with Alba filing for divorce a month later, in February.

    She recently spoke about what it was like to film a nude scene for the film, which she said was something she “dreaded.”

    “I thought that was awful,” she said, according to the New York Post. “It was very humiliating in real life. I grew up with a pretty conservative family, and I am a pretty modest person. I dreaded that scene for weeks. I have a lot of whiplash from those days.”

    Alba explained the character she played in the film, Sue Storm, was someone she “looked up to,” adding that while “she was very maternal and very kind,” she was not a pushover.

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    Jessica Alba at New York Fashion Week in September 2025.

    Alba was not looking forward to filming the nude scene in “Fantastic Four.” (Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Tory Burch)

    “She had a great moral compass. No matter who you are, you can look up to her,” she said. “Oftentimes, the women in these stories need to be saved by a guy or the villain, the problem in the story. This was back then. It’s different now.”

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  • Video: ‘Wake Up Dead Man’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    new video loaded: ‘Wake Up Dead Man’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    transcript

    transcript

    ‘Wake Up Dead Man’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    The writer and director Rian Johnson narrates a sequence from his film.

    “My Name is Rian Johnson. I wrote and directed “Wake Up, Dead Man.” “All right, everyone!” This is a scene that’s about halfway through the movie. And Father Jud right here, who’s Josh O’Connor, he is the prime suspect in the murder of Monsignor Wicks, kind of the local priest that was his colleague. And all the parishioners who you see here have suspected. Jud, have given him a lot of guff, and he’s finally hit his limit, and he’s teamed with Benoit Blanc. “And they’re going to get to the bottom of this. And we’re going to start with what happened that night right here in this very room.” “You mean the time Judd admitted to all of us that he killed a man.” “O.K, no, that was the boxing thing.” So these movies really run off of scenes like this and getting all the suspects together and then having them all bounce off of each other in sometimes terrible, abrasive ways. And it’s about the relationships between everybody. It’s about Glenn Close and Cailee Spaeny in the same frame. So you get that great moment where Glenn screams. “Ahhh!” “Jesus!” “It’s a miracle!” “I can walk, Martha. It just hurts.” We’re getting movie stars who were all number one on the call sheet on their own films to come in and be a part of an actual ensemble. So this scene was one of the first scenes that we shot, because I thought it was really important to get everyone in the same room. And so you can see these actors, some of the best actors working today get in there and you can see the joy they’re taking in watching everyone else’s performance and seeing where everyone else is pitching it, especially on day one and all kind of finding their level. And I don’t for me, it makes my job very easy. But it’s amazing seeing them, seeing them work. “Who wants to go first?”

    The writer and director Rian Johnson narrates a sequence from his film.

    By Mekado Murphy

    December 12, 2025

    Mekado Murphy

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  • AP Breakthrough Entertainer: Chase Sui Wonders’ Harvard astrophysics detour led her to Hollywood

    NEW YORK (AP) — You don’t need to major in astrophysics at Harvard to become an actor — but it doesn’t necessarily hurt, either.

    “I thought that’s what you go there to do. It’s like why are you paying all this money to go to this fancy school if you’re not going to study a hard science to try to save the world? … But I was quickly humbled,” chuckled Chase Sui Wonders, who began failing classes within her first few weeks. Her college application essay had been about making movies, so she decided she “might as well just pivot back to what I know best.”

    That calculated redirection paid off for the magna cum laude graduate who’s now a standout cast member of the Emmy-winning comedy “The Studio,” a cynical and satirical take on the film industry.

    Chase Sui Wonders always thought she was “kind of funny,” but it was confirmed when she booked “The Studio” after just one audition. It’s been an eventful year for the AP Breakthrough Entertainer who plays the ambitious assistant-turned-creative executive Quinn Hackett on the Emmy-winning comedy. (Dec. 10)

    Wonders, who also starred in the “I Know What You Did Last Summer” reboot earlier this year, is one of The Associated Press’ Breakthrough Entertainers of 2025.

    “The attention’s definitely weird, but can feel good,” said the 29-year-old, flashing her warm smile throughout the interview. “The most energizing thing about the whole thing is when you get recognition, the phone starts ringing more, and these other avenues are opening up that I always kind of dreamed about.”

    “The Studio” amassed an astounding 23 Emmy nominations in its debut season, taking home a record-breaking 13 wins. But Wonders may not have seemed like an obvious choice for comedy with her past roles, including the 2022 film “Bodies Bodies Bodies” and her breakout role, the teen-themed series “Genera+ion,” which was canceled by HBO Max after one season. But all it took was one virtual video audition to land the role of Quinn Hackett, the hyper-ambitious, cutthroat assistant-turned-creative executive under studio head Matt Remick, played by the show’s co-creator and co-executive producer Seth Rogen.

    “I had always … felt like, ‘I think I’m kind of funny,’” she laughed, acknowledging feeling she had to prove herself working alongside comedic heavyweights like Rogen, Catherine O’Hara, Kathryn Hahn and Ike Barinholtz. “That pressure felt really daunting and scary. But I think, hopefully, I rose to the occasion.”

    Despite mere degrees of separation from Hollywood as the niece of fashion designer Anna Sui, an acting career seemed unattainable growing up in Bloomfield Township, a Detroit suburb. Born to a father of Chinese descent and a white mother, Wonders and her siblings were primarily raised by their mom after their parents divorced.

    GET TO KNOW CHASE SUI WONDERS

    AGE: 29

    HOMETOWN: Detroit suburbs

    FIRST ROLE: Technically, 2009’s “A Trivial Exclusion,” a feature-length film made with her family. Otherwise, let’s go with the 2019 horror film “Daniel Isn’t Real.”

    YOU MIGHT KNOW HER FROM: “Bodies Bodies Bodies,” “Genera+ion” and her character’s climactic love of quesaritos in “The Studio”

    2025 IN REVIEW: The “I Know What You Did Last Summer” reboot and “The Studio”

    WHAT’S NEXT: The films “I Want Your Sex” and “October,” as well as a “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” reboot series

    HER HARVARD MAJOR: Film studies and production. In the end, she did graduate magna cum laude.

    Want to know more about Chase and our other Breakthrough Entertainers of 2025? Read our survey.

    An extremely shy child and self-described tomboy, she developed a love for sports — she won high school state championships in both ice hockey and golf — and spent much of her childhood making videos with her siblings. Thanks to her mother encouraging her to take performance arts classes, she was able to break out of her shell. But coming from an achievement-driven family, all signs pointed to a career in business.

    A corporate track nearly began after struggling to break into the industry, and she even considered taking a job in Beijing to begin her adult life in the business world. But with only a week to decide on the job offer, she decided to give Hollywood one more shot. Three months later, she booked “Genera+ion.”

    “There have been different moments in my life where I’ve been seriously humbled,” said Wonders, who has aspirations of directing. “It just has taught me just not to take it all too seriously. … I do feel absurdly lucky that I get to be on set with all my friends and telling a bunch of jokes and being a weirdo on screen.”

    Next up for Wonders is the Gregg Araki-directed “I Want Your Sex,” starring Olivia Wilde, and she’ll star in A24’s horror thriller “October.” She’ll also appear in the upcoming “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” reboot, with Oscar-winning filmmaker Chloé Zhao directing the pilot. And of course, a second season for “The Studio” is in the works.

    Gary Gerard Hamilton’s previous Breakthrough Entertainer profiles include Megan Thee Stallion, Sadie Sink, Simu Liu, Tobe Nwigwe and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. His own media breakthrough came in third grade, after recording a PSA about endangered animals for a Houston TV station.

    Red carpets and magazine covers couldn’t be a more antithetical life for the girl who assumed she’d climb the executive ranks at one of the major car companies headquartered in Detroit. Instead, she’s climbing the Hollywood ladder — and she wouldn’t tell her younger self to speed up the process.

    “It’s so fun how life surprises you,” said Wonders. “I wouldn’t tell her anything. I would tell her it’s all going to make sense in the rearview mirror — but no spoilers.”

    ___

    For more on AP’s 2025 class of Breakthrough Entertainers, visit https://apnews.com/hub/ap-breakthrough-entertainers.

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  • This Colorado town is among top U.S. cities for ‘where a real-life Hallmark holiday story is most likely to unfold’

    Those looking to live out a festive, Hallmark-style Christmas may not need to venture farther than a small town south of Denver.

    “Every year, Hallmark holiday movies drop us into snow-dusted towns full of glowing storefronts, festive markets, and built-in nostalgia,” a holiday-themed analysis stated. “The question is which real U.S. towns actually feel that way.”

    Littleton, which stands out for its Main Street charm and thriving local economy, ranked first in Colorado for its Christmas movie charm and placed ninth nationally, according to The Action Network analysis.

    “In Hallmark terms, Littleton reads like a Rocky Mountain version of a classic holiday town: festive shopfronts, walkable streets, and a community that feels both lively and close-knit,” spokesperson Kathy Morris said in an email to The Denver Post. “It’s the kind of place where the tree lighting on Main Street draws everyone — including the soon-to-be couple at the heart of the story.”

    The Action Network rankings are based on a “Hallmark Likelihood Index” — which pulls data from more than 3,000 towns on population, number of small businesses, historic sites and December snowfall — to determine where a real-life Hallmark holiday story is most likely to happen.

    Lauren Penington

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  • This Clip Of The Rock Thanking Brendan Fraser For His Career Is Going Mega Viral

    Dwayne Johnson Thanked Brendan Fraser For Career Trajectory

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  • Waiting to Exhale” stars look back at iconic film and honor Whitney Houston: “She’d be proud

    The iconic movie “Waiting to Exhale,” starring Angela Bassett, Whitney Houston, Loretta Devine and Lela Rochon premiered 30 years ago this month. The film, which had an all Black cast and focused on female empowerment, was a box office hit. “CBS Mornings” co-host Gayle King spoke with the stars of the film about the movie and what Houston would think.

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