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Tag: Nicole Kidman

  • Keith Urban Is Already Reportedly Dating ‘Another Woman’ He Met Before Nicole Kidman Filed for Divorce—It Was ‘Inevitable’

    Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman‘s relationship is officially over. Kidman filed for divorce on Sept. 30, 2025, according to People and Page Six.

    The divorce filing comes a day after reports surfaced about their split. “She didn’t want this,” a source told People. “She has been fighting to save the marriage.” People close to the Baby Girl actress had been supporting her through the difficult time. “Nicole’s sister has been a rock and the entire Kidman family has come together to support one another,” the source continued.

    The two met in 2005 on G’Day Australia, and married less than a year later. The ex-couple share two daughters, Sunday Rose, 17, and Faith Margaret, 14.

    Related: How Keith Urban’s Net Worth Really Compares to Wife Nicole Kidman’s

    Did Keith Urban cheat on Nicole Kidman ?

    TMZ reported that Keith Urban was already involved with another woman when news of their split broke. “All the signs point to the fact Keith is with another woman,” a source told the gossip site. “Let’s just say, Nicole doesn’t dispute that, but she’s still shocked over it.”

    A source close to Nicole said, “It’s all over Nashville.” However, the site reports that the sources don’t know when the other woman became involved, adding that it could be well after their separation.

    Multiple outlets reported that Keith Urban had moved out earlier in the summer. “Their lives were moving in different directions, and once he quietly set up his own place, it felt like the writing was on the wall,” a source told People. E! News reported that Urban had applied to become a resident of Portugal.

    “It really hasn’t been a secret in their circles that Keith and Nicole have been living separately for a while now,” the People source adds. “People close to Keith felt like the split was kind of inevitable.”

    “She was blindsided, but we shall see how things go during the holiday season and his upcoming birthday [next month]. They have some work to do,” a source told the Daily Mail

    This isn’t the first time that the couple was surrounded by cheating rumors. According to the Daily Mail, a model named Amanda Wyatt alleged that the “Somebody Like You” star had cheated on Kidman with her right before their wedding in 2006.

    Lea Veloso

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  • Nicole Kidman ‘Blindsided’ by Keith Urban Split After He ‘Called Her Out’ in Heated Confrontation



    Nicole Kidman’s Response to Keith Urban Breakup



























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    Lizzie Lanuza

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  • Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban Have Separated

    Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban, the Hollywood power couple who wed in 2006, have broken up, a source confirms to Vanity Fair. According to TMZ, the two Aussies have been living apart in their hometown of Nashville for months, since the beginning of the summer. The gossip site indicates that Urban initiated the separation.

    The Oscar winner and the country singer share two teenage daughters, Sunday and Faith. They’ve earned a reputation for being one of the entertainment industry’s most devoted couples. In a 2007 Vanity Fair cover story, shortly after she and Urban got married, Kidman spoke candidly about her feelings for her new husband: “Since getting married, I’ve passed on things,” she says. “I do not want to be living my life away from the person I love. I just won’t do it.” In 2021, Urban called marrying Kidman his greatest achievement.

    In 2022, Urban spoke to The Sun about his marriage and maintaining his sobriety: “I still make the odd mistake, but not anything like I did in the past—and these days I see them coming before everything implodes,” he explained. “Work-life balance is never really achieved, it is maintained. It can easily go out of whack. I’ve learned a lot about how to correct them. Umpteen years ago I never corrected things until it was too late, but now I see it starting to go out and I’m much better at catching it before things implode.” He made headlines again this summer, when he hung up on a radio show after the hosts asked what he thinks when he sees Kidman films that include sex scenes.

    Reps for both have not responded to requests for comment.

    Hillary Busis

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  • Keith Urban’s Subtle Response to Nicole Kidman’s Sex Scenes Resurface After Their Shocking Split—She ‘Didn’t Want This’

    One of Hollywood’s famous couples have called it quits. Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban have reportedly split after 19 years of marriage.

    Urban had been married to Nicole Kidman since 2006. The two met in 2005, and though Kidman was instantly charmed, Urban didn’t call her back for months. “I had such a crush on him and he wasn’t interested in me. It’s true!” Kidman told Ellen DeGeneres in 2017. “He didn’t call me for four months.”

    Related: Keith Urban’s Ex Once Predicted He & Nicole Kidman Wouldn’t ‘Last Very Long’—See His Dating History

    The ex-couple share two daughters Sunday Rose, 17, and Faith Margaret, 14. Urban gushed about his relationship to CBS News in 2016, saying, “Meeting [Nicole] and getting married wasn’t life-changing, it was life-beginning. It was literally, like, ‘Okay, life starts.” Kidman, meanwhile, told CBS Mornings in 2022, “I met him later in life and it’s been the best thing that’s ever happened to me. That man is the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”

    Why did Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban break up?

    The exact reasoning behind Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban’s breakup hasn’t been revealed. However, it didn’t seem like it was a mutual split “She didn’t want this,” a source told People. “She has been fighting to save the marriage.”

    “Nicole’s sister has been a rock and the entire Kidman family has come together to support one another,” the source continued.

    TMZ was the first to report about the breakup with sources saying that the ex-couple have been living apart “since the beginning of summer.”

    E! News reported that Urban was trying to be a resident of Portugal earlier in the summer. “Keith was unable to be in Portugal for this appointment as he is currently on tour in the U.S.,” the source explained, “and it is mandatory for applicants to be physically present in order to apply for the visa. He is scheduled to submit his application at a later date that works with his tour schedule.” 

    In July 2025, Keith Urban was hung up on a “very tricky … deeply personal” question about Nicole Kidman’s sex scenes with Zac Efron in A Family Affair on Mix 102.3’s “Hayley & Max in the Morning” show.. The singer “disconnected from Zoom” according to a producer on the show, to Page Six.

    A source told New Idea earlier in the year that Keith was worried about his wife’s work ethic. “It’s extraordinary. Not even a month later and already she’s back on set. Keith isn’t angry, but he’s worried and understandably very frustrated,” the source claimed to the publication.

    “He knows how much Nic loves her job, but she keeps moving the goal posts. Instead of putting herself first – something he and the kids need her to do – she’s putting work first every time.”

    Lea Veloso

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  • Nicole Kidman plans Hollywood takeover of Nashville with Reese Witherspoon

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    Nicole Kidman wants to cue the spotlight on her beloved Nashville community.

    The “Nine Perfect Strangers” actress told guests at the Nashville Film Festival that she’s partnering up with “bestie” Reese Witherspoon to bring a little bit of the entertainment industry out east.

    “I’ll be bringing more and more production here,” Kidman said during the panel at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s CMA Theater, according to People magazine. “Reese Witherspoon lives here too, and she’s one of my best besties.”

    Kidman, 58, has lived in Nashville since 2008, and admitted she sees a void in opportunities for Tennessee’s capital.

    REESE WITHERSPOON SHARES PARENTING REGRET AFTER HER SPLIT WITH RYAN PHILLIPPE

    Nicole Kidman plans to partner with her pal Reese Witherspoon to bring more of the entertainment industry to Nashville, Tenn. (John Shearer/Getty Images)

    “I can’t say that we will be bringing ‘Big Little Lies’ here,” she said. “That’s all got to go where it is.

    “But in terms of just, you know, there is so much room here for production. The crews are fantastic and the actors, and the people, all of… I feel that it’s taking off and will continue to take off, so off we go.”

    NICOLE KIDMAN’S TENNESSEE HOME ALLOWS HER TO BE ‘JUST A CITIZEN’: ‘MY KIDS LOVE THAT’

    She added, “Come on, Tennessee, we’ve got this.” Kidman admitted her favorite part about Music City was the people.

    Keith Urban nuzzles up to wife Nicole Kidman

    Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban moved to Nashville in 2008. (Angela Weiss)

    “I love the Nashville people because they embraced me two decades ago, and they keep making it possible for our family to have the most beautiful life here,” she told audiences. “Incredibly grateful.”

    The “Cold Mountain” actress previously admitted she thought about giving up her career to build a life on the farm.

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    “When I gave birth to Sunday, I was like, ‘I think I’m pretty much done now,’” Kidman said during the Dec. 15 episode of “CBS Sunday Morning.” “I’d moved to Nashville, we were living on a farm, and that’s when my mom actually said, ‘I wouldn’t give up completely. Keep your finger, sort of like, in it.’”

    “And I’m like, ‘No, no. I’m done now. I’m done.’”

    Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman hugging

    Nicole Kidman once contemplated giving up her acting career to pursue life on the farm. (John Shearer)

    However, Kidman’s mom was insistent with her advice.

    “She’s going, ‘Just listen to me. I think keep moving forward. Not saying you have to do it to the level you’ve been doing it, but I wouldn’t give it up completely.’”

    The Oscar Award-winning actress can be found contributing to her community by buying diapers for a school donation drive or visiting a local children’s hospital.

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    “I like being a part of something not about my work, not about who I am, none of that,” Kidman previously said in an interview with Elle magazine. “Just a citizen who’s in the world. And my kids love that, too, when I do that.”

    Kidman is a mom to four kids. She shares her two daughters — Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret — with husband Keith Urban. The actress also shares two kids, Bella and Connor, with her ex-husband, Tom Cruise.

    Witherspoon, 49, raised her family in both Hollywood and Nashville. She shares son Deacon and daughter Ava with ex Ryan Phillippe. Witherspoon’s divorce from Jim Toth was finalized last year. The former couple have one son, Tennessee.

    Reese Witherspoon poses with her children Ava and Deacon on red carpet with ex-husband Jim Toth

    Witherspoon shares daughter Ava and son Deacon with ex-husband Ryan Phillippe. She also has a son with ex-Jim Toth named Tennessee. (Gregg DeGuire)

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    The Hello Sunshine founder became part-owner of Nashville’s Major League Soccer team in 2022.

    Fox News Digital’s Lauryn Overhultz contributed to this report.

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  • Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock Are Brewing a Practical Magic Sequel

    Photo: Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Potion for a perfect sequel includes:
    – 2 Oscars
    – 2 Emmys
    – 1 George Lopez producer credit
    – 1 AMC commercial
    – 1 Paddington Bear astronaut

    It’s midnight somewhere, so start making some margaritas. Here are all the details bubbling up about a Practical Magic sequel.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, a Practical Magic sequel is brewing with Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock attached to executive-produce and reprise their roles as sisters Gillian and Sally Owens. It will be written by one of the original screenwriters of the first film, Akiva Goldsman. Right now, there are no plot details available for the sequel. But when we last left off with the witches, they overcame the family curse preventing them from ever finding love. Are any more curses going to be uncovered from the past 20 years? Sally’s daughters would be all grown up by now; maybe they have their own relationship (or broomstick) woes.

    Aunts abound on the cast for Practical Magic 2. Dianne Wiest and Stockard Channing are reprising their roles as the Owens girls’ aunts. Unfortunately, Evan Rachel Wood isn’t coming back as eldest daughter Kylie. “I am getting asked about this a lot, so l’ll just clear it up now; I was not asked to come back and be in the Practical Magic sequel,” Wood wrote on Instagram Stories. “l offered my services, even if it was one scene or one line. I was told they are recasting. I am sorry to disappoint the fans. It was not in my control or my choice. I would have happily rejoined my sisters.”

    We know two things for certain: Lee Pace is (1) six-foot-five, and (2) appearing in Practical Magic 2. Other new faces in Spookytown, Massachusetts, include Joey King (who’ll play Sally’s daughter), Maisie Williams, Xolo Maridueña, and Solly McLeod.

    A better question is, have they finished frolicking in the fields? The answer to both is yes. “That’s a wrap on #PracticalMagic2! Thank you to the cast & crew for all your magic ✨” Kidman wrote in an Instagram caption on September 13.

    The magic returns to theaters on September 18, 2026. Get your broomsticks ready.

    Alejandra Gularte

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  • ‘Practical Magic 2’ Wraps Production, Nicole Kidman Says

    The Owens sisters are heading back to the big screen soon.

    On Saturday, Nicole Kidman announced on Instagram that Practical Magic 2 has completed production by posting a video of her and Sandra Bullock laughing and walking into the sunset while on set.

    “That’s a wrap on Practical Magic 2,” Kidman wrote as the caption. “Thank you to the cast & crew for all your magic.”

    In July, Kidman shared a post to celebrate the first day of filming. The post showed another video of her and Bullock, hugging with the caption: “The witches are back. Owens sisters’ first day on set!”

    The original film, released in theaters in 1998, starred Kidman and Bullock as orphaned sisters Sally and Gillian Owens, who are raised by their witch aunts Aunt Jet (Dianne Wiest) and Aunt Franny (Stockard Channing). They work to learn how to use their powers against a curse that threatens them from finding love. Wiest and Stockard are also returning for the sequel, announced in July.

    “25 years ago, Sally, Gillian, Aunt Jet and Aunt Franny flew off the pages of Alice Hoffman’s beloved novel and into theaters around the world, and we are thrilled to bring the Owens family back to the big screen with Joey, Lee, Maisie, Solly and Xolo joining the next chapter in our story,” the filmmaking team said in a statement at the time. “The enduring affection for these characters has been our inspiration to deliver the next installment in the Owens’ story to new fans, and those who’ve been with us since the beginning.”

    More additions to the cast include Joey King (The Act), Lee Pace (Bodies Bodies Bodies), Maisie Williams (Game of Thrones), Xolo Maridueña (Cobra Kai) and Solly McLeod (The Dead Don’t Hurt).

    However, not returning for the follow-up is Evan Rachel Wood, who played Sally’s (Bullock) daughter, Kylie, in the original movie. Wood wrote on her Instagram stories in July: “I was not asked to come back and be in the Practical Magic sequel. I offered my services, even if it was one scene or one line. I was told they are recasting. I am sorry to disappoint the fans. It was not in my control or my choice. I would have happily rejoined my sisters.”

    Susanne Bier (The Perfect Couple, Bird Box) directs the feature, and Akiva Goldsman (co-writer of the original Practical Magic) and Georgia Pritchett (Succession) penned the screenplay.

    Warner Bros.’ Practical Magic 2 is set to hit theaters Sept. 18, 2026.

    Lexi Carson

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  • Venice Film Festival Recap: Films We’ll Be Talking About For The Rest of the Year

    Venice Film Festival Recap: Films We’ll Be Talking About For The Rest of the Year

    For those of us who love the glamor and the glitz of the entertainment industry, September passes by in a train of tulle and sartorial spectacle. Fashion weeks across New York, Paris, London, and Milan take the cake.


    Packed front rows and celebrity-studded catwalks keep the internet entranced. From my couch – clad in my hole-ridden sweatpants – I judge couture and ready-to-wear fashion shows from the mega-brands and the sparkling stars who actually attend these exclusive events.

    But to me, fashion week is just the punctuation to the summer film festival season. There’s the Tribeca Film Festival and Cannes, Toronto Film Festival, and Venice International Film Festival to name the heaviest hitters. Some films premiere across all these festivals; others are more selective. But each one has its headlines: the drawn-out standing ovations, the celebrity attendees, the future award winners.

    Indeed, September marked the Venice Film Festival, one of the most anticipated film events of the year, and spawned some of the most talked about films of the year. The 2024 Venice Film Festival’s pomp and circumstance – arguably the film festival circuit’s glittering crown jewel – transforms the floating city into a playground for the cinematic elite.

    Venice has long been the preferred launchpad for Oscar hopefuls and auteur passion projects alike. In recent years, Timothee Chalamet used it to flex his fashion prowess, the cast of The Idol used it to gaslight us into thinking it was going to be a good show (as we extensively reviewed: it wasn’t), and the Don’t Worry Darling cast played out their workplace drama for the world to see. This year was no exception. Lido was alight with couture gowns and paparazzi flashes, albeit a lot less drama and gossip to satiate us. So, rather than hashing out the latest cast feuds, let’s talk about the films.

    What to watch at the Venice Film Festival 2024?

    The 81st Venice International Film Festival is organized by La Biennale di Venezia and ran on the Lido di Venezia from 28 August to 7 September 2024. A parade of A-listers descended upon the city, ferried to Lido in glamorous water taxis to promote some of the films we’ll be seeing at award shows this year, and….some films that flopped.

    Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore – those chameleons of the silver screen – graced the red carpet for Pedro Almodóvar’s English-language debut, The Room Next Door, which ultimately snagged the coveted Golden Lion (Venice’s top prize). The ever-ethereal Nicole Kidman turned heads alongside her fresh-faced co-star Harris Dickinson after her turn in The Perfect Couple. Meanwhile, Daniel Craig proved he’s still got it, swapping his Bond tuxedo Loewe alongside new It Boy Drew Starkey in Luca Guadagnino’s “Queer.”

    This year’s theatrics were at their peak – enough to manufacture and stoke social media chatter. And it worked. Brad Pitt and George Clooney played up their pairing’s nostalgia factor by chasing each other around the red carpet, reliving their youth but also relying on the reputations of their glory days. Luca Guadanino took a selfie with his absolutely stacked cast. Jenna Ortega looking fabulous in one of her gothic Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice outfits proved that thematic press tour dressing is far from dead.

    But this year’s films were just as conversation-worthy. Let’s dive into the films that have everyone talking:

    Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

    Tim Burton returns to the 1988 classic that launched his career, reuniting with Michael Keaton and Winona Ryder while adding Gen Z darling – Jenna Ortega – to the mix. After her turn in Wednesday, Scream, and even the video for Sabrina Carpenter’s “Taste,” it’s clear that Ortega can handle horror – she’s a scream queen with the acting chops to back it up. The result is a nostalgic trip that manages to feel fresh, thanks in large part to Ortega’s deadpan charm (honed to perfection in Wednesday) as set in counterpoint to Keaton’s manic energy. It’s a welcome return to form for Burton. His triumphant release is a rare example of commercially and critically successful and was an energetic opening to the Festival.

    Babygirl

    The latest in the buzzy pantheon of female-driven age-gap dramas, Babygirl carves out a fresh niche for our darling Ms. Kidman. After her comic turn in A Family Affair, A24’s latest offering sees her playing an all-business CEO who becomes entangled with her much younger intern (Harris Dickinson). Fans of Triangle of Sadness, Scrapper, or The Iron Claw will recognize Dickinson and admire his remarkable range. It takes an impressive young actor to shine alongside Kidman but Dickinson is up for the task. Director Halina Reijn – fresh off her Gen Z slasher hit Bodies Bodies Bodies – brings a distinctly female gaze to the May-December romance trope. The result is a steamy, thought-provoking exploration of power dynamics that will have HR departments squirming in their seats.

    The Room Next Door

    Pedro Almodóvar ventures into English-language territory with this Golden Lion winner, proving that his particular brand of melodrama translates beautifully in any tongue. Based on Sigrid Nunez’s book What Are You Going Through, the film pairs Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore, two of cinema’s most captivating chameleons. It follows a writer who reconnects with an old friend after years of distance in a tale of friendship, grief, and deep discussions about what it means to be a writer. It’s intimate and intellectual but feels accessible and human thanks to Almodóvar’s direction and the nuanced performances of these two powerhouse thespians.

    Maria

    This year’s Venice International Film Festival was a big one for shimmering stars of the silver screen. Angelina Jolie triumphed as opera legend Maria Callas, securing instant iconic status and positioning herself for Oscar recognition. The gravitas she lends to Pablo Larraín’s portrait of Callas reveals that Jolie’s side projects (like her fashion brand, Atelier Jolie) have not dampened her acting skills. Following in the footsteps of Natalie Portman’s Jackie and Kristen Stewart’s Spencer, Jolie disappears into the role of the troubled diva. Larraín’s dreamlike direction and Jolie’s raw performance make for a haunting exploration of fame, art, and the price of genius. When picking Jolie for the titular role, Larrain said he wanted an actress who would “naturally and organically be that diva,” and Jolie delivered with aching nuance. Oscar buzz is already building, and rightly so.

    Queer

    Speaking of actors challenging themselves, no one is in their comfort zone in Luca Guadagnino’s Queer. For this adaptation of William S. Burroughs’ semi-autobiographical novel, Guadagnino reunites with his A Bigger Splash star Ralph Fiennes and ropes in Daniel Craig. Craig shed his 007 persona entirely in order to play Lee – a Burroughs stand-in – as he navigates the seedy underbelly of mid-century Mexico City. It’s a mix between last year’s Venice darling Strange Way of Life by Pedro Almodóvar and Guadagnino’s famous Call Me By Your Name.Drew Starkey – of Outer Banks fame – is the object of his desire, with Guadagnino’s camera lingering on his lithe frame in a manner that would make even Timothée Chalamet blush. It also stars singer Omar Apollo in his first major acting role. Between unflinching sex scenes and luscious landscapes, it’s a heady blend of desire and ennui that solidifies Guadagnino’s place as cinema’s Yearner In Chief.

    Disclaimer

    Venice isn’t all movies. Some limited dramas also make their way to Lido. Two years ago, The Idol got the full Venice treatment, but we know how that went. Luckily, Alfonso Cuarón’s return to the festival circuit fared better. This twisty psychological thriller stars Cate Blanchett – last at Venice with Tar. This time, she plays a documentary filmmaker whose life unravels when a mysterious novel appears on her bedside table. As always, Blanchett is a force of nature, her icy exterior cracking as she realizes that she’s the subject of a book that will reveal her long-buried secrets. Cuarón proves he’s as adept at space epics as he is with intimate character studies, crafting a nail-biting exploration of truth, memory, and the stories we tell ourselves.

    The Order

    Starring Jude Law, Nicholas Hoult, Tye Sheridan, and Jurnee Smollett, The Order is a historical crime drama that plunges us into the action-packed world of counterfeiting operations, bank robberies, and armored car heists in the Pacific Northwest. Told through the eyes of the lead detective, these crimes are deemed acts of domestic terrorism, revealing the deep-seated hatred and violence in the United States. Inspired by the January 6 insurrection – when nooses were hung in front of the Capitol Building – this film references a fictional white nationalist insurrection that’s at the center of William Luther Pierce’s 1978 novel The Turner Diaries. Taking this hatred back to its roots, The Order explores how these same psychologies have been buried in the US consciousness for decades.

    The Brutalist

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_s8SdygxUhs

    Joe Alwyn, Taylor Swift’s ex-London Boy, sauntered through Venice alongside castmates Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce for Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist. This sprawling epic follows a Hungarian immigrant architect (Brody) navigating love, loss, and artistic integrity. Initially forced to toil in poverty, he soon wins a contract that changes the course of his life for the next 30 years. Clocking in at a hefty three-and-a-half hours, it’s not for the faint of heart. But those who stick with it will be richly rewarded with a deeply felt meditation on the American Dream and the cost of creation. Corbet’s ambition is a labor of love, as his official statement expresses how he spent “the better part of a decade revving the engine to bring this particular story to life.” His toiling is definitely worth it.

    Joker: Folie à Deux

    Closing Venice was the ambitious, melodramatic Jukebox musical Joker: Folie à Deux. It’s the polarizing sequel to the controversial original, and although everyone’s talking about it — no one can make up their minds about whether or not it’s good. Todd Phillips returns to Gotham, bringing Lady Gaga along for the ride as Harley Quinn to Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker. The addition of musical numbers is either a stroke of genius or a bridge too far, depending on who you talk with. Phoenix and Gaga commit fully to the madness, their chemistry undeniable even as the plot threatens to buckle under the weight of its own ambition.

    This is a swing for the fences that doesn’t always connect, but you have to admire the creative audacity. Gaga is electric, though you can’t help but wonder if her talents are wasted in this convoluted film that, just like the original, isn’t always sure what it’s trying to say.

    As the curtain falls on another Venice Film Festival, one thing is clear: cinema is alive and well, continuing to push boundaries and provoke thought even in the face of industry upheaval. Whether these films will stand the test of time remains to be seen, but for now, they’ve given us plenty to chew on as we sail away from the Lido and into the heart of awards season.

    LKC

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  • “The Perfect Couple” Review: Netflix’s Messy Murder Mystery is Overrated

    “The Perfect Couple” Review: Netflix’s Messy Murder Mystery is Overrated

    I’ll watch Nicole Kidman in anything. I applaud whenever her AMC ad comes on in the theater. In fact, when I watched Blink Twice, it was the best part of my viewing experience. And I will always-always-always watch Nicole Kidman play an elite woman dripping with cash who has an ambiguous accent and an unhinged family. Thankfully for me, that’s all she seems to be playing these days. And I eat it up every time.


    While I’ve mourned and lamented the fact that we’re probably never getting another season of Big Little Lies, Kidman has not been slacking when it comes to prestige drama. She starred in Nine Perfect Strangers, The Undoing, and Expats, playing what TV critics call “the sad wife.” While some call it repetitive, I call it iconic. And the latest entry in this genre is Netflix The Perfect Couple. Messy, murderous, and mysterious, the miniseries is currently going viral for its addictive plot and the TikTok video of a dancey “intro” (opening credits) where the entire cast dances on the beach.

    And, as you can probably tell from the dancey intro, it’s a new take on the murder mystery for one key reason: the showrunners wanted it to be fun. It’s based on a beach read, after all, so it’s aiming for a soapy, sundrenched take on the murder mystery. And the result is something between The White Lotus and The Summer I Turned Pretty. I’m not kidding. So, not prestige television but an entertaining watch. Netflix The Perfect Couple is overrated, but perhaps because it’s misunderstood.

    What’s the plot of The Perfect Couple?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AdpQuXTWup0

    In the ever-expanding pantheon of rich-people-behaving-badly content, Netflix The Perfect Couple is the latest entry that attempts to marry Big Little Lies’ glamor-drenched trauma with the sardonic bite of Succession. The result? An unpolished but highly-addictive six-hour binge that’ll make you question everything while also making you wish you live in Nantucket — with friends who wouldn’t murder you.

    Let’s start with the premise: It’s wedding season in Nantucket, and the obscenely wealthy Winbury family is about to welcome a new member into their dysfunctional inner circle. Bride-to-be Amelia — played with electric likability and nuance by Eve Hewson (Bad Sisters, Flora and Son) — is not from the world of money like the Winburys — and she’s paying for it. In the opening scene, she walks through the house in boxer shorts only to release a ladybug outside. Of course, the matriarch of the house, Greer (Kidman), does not like that.

    From snide digs about Amelia’s carb consumption to endless nitpicking about her sartorial choices, Greer’s doubts about the couple are documented plenty. Husband-to-be, Benji, is so devoted to Amelia that he stands up to his domineering mother to defend Amelia — brave for any rich momma’s boy. But his deference to Greer feels justified. Everyone in the family defers to her. She sets a high bar, especially considering her own relationship with Tag (Liev Schreiber), which has been touted as the perfect relationship by everyone — including book publishers. As a bestselling author, Greer’s brand is her everything. And when the maid of honor’s dead body washes up on the shore the morning of the wedding, the ideal world Greer created begins to crumble.

    Kidman — fresh off her tour de force role of wig-wearing Grace Fraser in The Undoing — brings her A-game to B-grade material. Her Greer is a master class in barely concealed contempt, with every arched eyebrow screaming, “I’m Nicole Kidman; what am I doing here?” It’s a sentiment the audience might share. But damn if it isn’t fun to watch.

    Amelia’s wide-eyed innocence and desire to belong in this family turns into suspicion and resentment as she tries to uncover which of her potential in-laws killed her best friend, Merritt (Meghann Fahy). Since Fahy wowed in The White Lotus Season 2, campy murder mysteries are not new to her. Her turn as seemingly shallow Merritt with secrets of her own is imbued with depth that keeps the audience guessing to the very end.

    And, because the women are the most compelling characters in this cast, Dakota Fanning rounds out the mother ensemble as Abby, the heavily pregnant, vanity-obsessed wife of the eldest Winbury son. She’s a cold queen bee, who apparently has more money than Amelia and Merritt, but still trying to win over Greer like the rest of the world.

    When the police descend on the Winbury estate on the day of the would-be wedding to dig up the family’s secrets, it seems everyone has something to hide. Classic rich family problems: the dishonest husband cheating on his wife, the obnoxious and entitled eldest son Thomas (Kendall Roy if he had frat energy), the non-white family friend who is, of course, the first suspect. And while the show’s structure isn’t necessarily innovative, it works.

    We bounce between police interviews and flashbacks, feeling half-invested in each subplot until the suspense finally finally kicks into gear — mostly because Nicole Kidman dominates the screen in the final few episodes.

    But here’s the kicker: despite its middling plot and lackluster character development, The Perfect Couple is oddly… entertaining? The show’s aware that it’s not reinventing the wheel; it’s just hoping you’re too dazzled by the star power to notice the lack of substance.

    SPOILER ALERT: This article contains spoilers for Elin Hilderbrand’s book The Perfect Couple and all six episodes of Netflix The Perfect Couple.

    How does the book The Perfect Couple end?

    Fans have noticed that the TV version of The Perfect Couple is very different from the book. While this is true for many adaptations, most scripts will keep the basic plot points. But in this case, director Susanne Bie and creator Jenna Lamia were intentional about the kind of changes they wanted to see and the tone they wanted to strike. The key words: murder, but make it fun.

    Elin Hilderbrand’s novel The Perfect Couple is a murder mystery without the murder. The book ends with a smart, but somewhat underwhelming, revelation: Merritt’s death was an accident.

    In the book, Thomas’ wife Abby (Fanning) is the culprit (kind of) but she didn’t mean to drug Merritt. Instead, she puts one of Greer’s sleeping pills into a drink meant for the family’s eccentric, fab foreign friend, who is, in both versions, having an affair with Thomas, her husband. Abby’s intentions were simpler: she just wanted her husband to come to bed, rather than sneaking off to sleep with another woman.

    But the drink is accidentally passed to Merritt. She drinks it and heads out on a late night canoe ride with Tag. She then goes into the water to retrieve the ring he gave her (in the series it’s a bracelet). The sleeping pills go into effect as she’s in the water, causing her to drown.

    While this makes for a subversion of expectations, it doesn’t make for very exciting TV. Hence the changes. “I realized that it may be more satisfying for the audience to find out that there was a murderer who fully intended to murder the person they murdered,” creator Jenna Lamia told Indie Wire. “We decided that the killer had intended to kill the person she kills, and that she had a very clear motive for doing so, and it wasn’t just jealousy. So [we] added the money plot.”

    Who’s the killer in The Perfect Couple ending?

    In the series, Abby is still the killer, but this time it’s committed on purpose. Per Lamia’s directives, the motive needed to be fleshed out. For Abby, it was money.

    A central tension that drives Merritt’s death is her affair with Tag. As we discover later, Merritt is pregnant with Tag’s baby. When wedding party members learn her secret, many have motive to murder Merritt. The main reason: the family trust fund. The Winbury family trust has a rule that only bestows the money to the boys upon the 18th birthday of the youngest son. If Merritt were to have a baby, the trust would get reset for another 18 years.

    With her own baby on the way, Abby’s been pressuring Thomas to move them into a bigger house. She can’t wait another 18 years to finance the lifestyle she expects from being a Winbury — certainly not with Thomas’s risky investments and flagrant affairs. So she kills Merritt.

    However, the trust fund motive could not appear in the novel because Will Winbury — the brother on the cusp of his 18th birthday — doesn’t even exist. In the book, there are only two Winbury boys: Benji and Thomas. The addition of Will adds conflict and is causes the show’s ending to really ramp up.

    Other character changes range from small to significant. A big one is names. Eve Hewson’s Amelia Sacks in the show, is named Celeste Otis in the books. I like to think they wanted to cast French actress Isabelle Adjani so much that they changed the family friend character from a Londonite named Featherleigh Dale (which, respectfully, is a very Colleen Hoover name) to the aloof French family friend named Isabel Nallet. Also altered: Gosia, the Winbury’s housekeeper, who is named Elida in the book; and family friend Shooter Dival is Shooter Uxley in the book.

    The detective in the novel is also quite different. First of all, the fictional version is male. And he tries to keep the peace with the Winburys, hoping to coax cooperation out of them through kindness. In the show, Donna Lynne Champlin plays a version of the detective that has no sympathy for the Winburys and blatantly calls out their privilege. Her relatable and comedic quips serve as a breath of fresh air when you get sick of the Winbury’s entitlement.

    The miniseries positions itself as a scathing critique of wealth and privilege, but it often feels like a lifestyle porn video that occasionally realizes it needs a plot. The camera lovingly caresses every inch of the Winbury estate as if it’s auditioning for an Architectural Digest tour. But this light, beachy vibe is intentional. Athough it’s a murder mystery, Lamia wanted the tone to be capricious and fun.

    The most talked-about way she achieved her goal? The opening credits dance scene. One second you’re immersed in the narrative’s drama… the next you’re watching the cast doing a choreographed, flash-mob dance sequence.

    “You see that it’s directed by Susanne Bier, who did “The Undoing” and “The Night Manager” so incredibly well. So you’re expecting a bit of a self-serious show,” sais Lamua. “But I think when you get to the credits and everyone’s dancing to Meghan Trainor, you have to think, ‘Well, wait a minute. I think this might be a fun ride.’”

    And she’s right — the series might not be particularly good in the traditional sense. But in the landscape of peak TV — where every show’s striving to be the next big thing — there’s something refreshing about a show that’s content to be a glossy, star-studded mess.

    By the time you reach the finale, you’ll have developed a love-hate relationship with every character, a newfound appreciation for prenuptial agreements, and no desire to ever visit Nantucket. The resolution — when it comes — is both satisfying and eyeroll-inducing — much like the entire series itself.

    LKC

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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
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    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
    Patti Smith. Getty Images

    Patti Smith

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Amy Jackson. WireImage

    Amy Jackson

    in Alberta Ferretti 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Izabel Goulart. WireImage

    Izabel Goulart

    in Ermanno Scervino 

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

    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
    Paola Turani. Getty Images

    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
    Barbara Paz. Getty Images

    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
    Sveva Alviti. Getty Images

    Sveva Alviti

    in Armani Privé

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

    Morgan Halberg

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  • Nicole Kidman Wins Best Actress, and Loses Her Beloved Mother, in One Overwhelming Moment

    Nicole Kidman Wins Best Actress, and Loses Her Beloved Mother, in One Overwhelming Moment

    In Oscar terms, we’ve lived through a whole season in about a week—at least when it comes to the best actress race.

    Between the Venice, Telluride, and Toronto Film Festivals, what once felt like a shapeless and wide-open lead actress field has come into abrupt, exciting focus. Credit Nicole Kidman’s thrilling but bittersweet Volpi Cup win in Venice this evening. Her performance in Babygirl, Halina Reijn’s acclaimed erotic drama, is among the very best of her screen career—fearless, vulnerable, and slyly comic at once. But she was unable to accept the award in person, as after just returning to Venice for the closing ceremony, she received some tragic personal news.

    “Today I arrived in Venice to learn shortly thereafter that my beautiful, brave mother, Janelle Ann Kidman, has just passed,” Kidman wrote in a statement, which Reijn read while accepting the award on her behalf. “I’m in shock and I have to go to my family, but this award is for her. She shaped me, she guided me, and she made me. I’m beyond grateful that I get to say her name to all of you through Helena. The collision of art and life is heartbreaking, and my heart is broken.”

    As Kidman steps out of the public eye to be with her family, she’s likely to remain on many voters’ minds as the race continues. Let’s start with Telluride, where several potential players cemented their status as major contenders. There was Saoirse Ronan’s The Outrun, which played well enough in Sundance, and first-time campaigners Mikey Madison (Anora) and Karla Sofía Gascón (Emilia Pérez), coming off of their movies’ Prize-winning launches in Cannes. The Colorado mountains offered each film a second wave of screenings, and goodness did both play spectacularly—as well as, if not better than the world premieres on the ground. Ronan was also honored with a Tribute Medallion, Telluride’s highest honor for actors, while I heard of hundreds being turned away from Anora and Emilia screenings due to demand. For those that did find a seat, the films and performances were received extremely well.

    Over in Venice, beyond Kidman’s Babygirl, Angelina Jolie’s tour-de-force Maria launched. While the movie divided critics, her work at its center is undeniable, and the emotional biopic met a warmer reception overall in Telluride. With the Oscar winner out and about in Colorado, she’s clearly putting her might behind this one, and is not one to be counted out—especially with Netflix backing her campaign. (They’ve secured nominations in the category of late for Annette Bening and Ana de Armas, whose movies similarly received mixed reviews.) Here in Toronto, I also just caught another Venice premiere, Walter Salles’s terrific I’m Still Here, where Fernanda Torres is simply transcendent as Brazilian human rights activist Eunice Paiva. Sony Classics is handling that movie, The Outrun, and The Room Next Door—with a lovely Julianne Moore running in lead—so they have their hands full. But any discussion of this race without Torres is, to my mind, an incomplete one—and in an era of a globalizing Academy, merits serious consideration.

    On Friday night, Toronto then introduced two intriguing, if less obvious, names to the mix. Screening opposite each other, Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths and John Crowley’s We Live in Time offer diametrically opposed experiences—the former a prickly, intimate, uncompromising character study, and the latter a classically packaged tearjerker. Yet in the former, Marianne Jean-Baptiste is sensational, reuniting with the director behind the film that earned her an Oscar nomination, Secrets & Lies. Her role here is even richer, if a bit less broadly accessible. We Live in Time, meanwhile, certainly doesn’t have that problem—who doesn’t want to cry along to Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield’s tragic love story? But while Pugh gives yet another major, wrenching performance as a young woman facing the end of her life, A24 will have to work to position the film in a way where voters take it as more than a basic weepie.

    David Canfield

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  • The Best Off-Duty Fashion at the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    The Best Off-Duty Fashion at the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    The 2024 Venice Film Festival officially kicks off on August 28, but A-listers have already arrived in Lido ahead of the 11-day extravaganza. While the couture looks spotted all over the red carpet never fail to impress, attendees always make the most of their time in the Floating City and don what might be some of the best street style ensembles of the year.

    When the filmmakers and celebrities aren’t attending premieres, screenings and official fêtes, they’re enjoying all that Venice has to offer, and they’re doing so in style—the Venice Film Festival is where you’ll find some of the best off-duty looks, because is there really any better backdrop than that of a Venetian gondola?

    While last year’s Venice Film Festival was a somewhat sleepier event due to the SAG-AFTRA and WAG strikes, the 2024 edition is back in full force, with highly anticipated movies including Todd PhillipsJoker: Folie à Deux, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga, and Pablo Larrain’s Maria, starring Angelina Jolie, set to premiere.

    The 81st annual Venice Film Festival runs from August 28 through September 7, so get ready for 11 days of incredible fashion. Below, take a look at the best off-duty looks from all your favorite stars at the 2024 Venice Film Festival.

    81th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 2024
    Nicole Kidman. WireImage

    Nicole Kidman

    in Bottega Veneta 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Green. Getty Images

    Eva Green

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sophie Wilde. Getty Images

    Sophie Wilde

    in 16Arlington 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Riccobono. Getty Images

    Eva Riccobono

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Charli Howard. WireImage

    Charli Howard

    in Self-Portrait

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. Getty Images

    Isabelle Huppert

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Giusy Buscemi. Getty Images

    Giusy Buscemi

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    81th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 202481th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 2024
    Angelina Jolie. WireImage

    Angelina Jolie

    in Saint Laurent

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sigourney Weaver. Corbis via Getty Images

    Sigourney Weaver

    in Chanel

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Miriam Leone. FilmMagic

    Miriam Leone

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Herzigova. FilmMagic

    Eva Herzigova

    in Etro

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Beatrice Vendramin. FilmMagic

    Beatrice Vendramin

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. Corbis via Getty Images

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Izabel Goulart. Getty Images

    Izabel Goulart

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. FilmMagic

    Cate Blanchett

    in Giorgio Armani 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Amy Jackson. Getty Images

    Amy Jackson

    in Alberta Ferretti 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. Getty Images

    Alba Rohrwacher

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Poppy Delevingne. Getty Images

    Poppy Delevingne

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Catherine O’Hara. Getty Images

    Catherine O’Hara

    in Petar Petrov 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. Corbis via Getty Images

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Izabel Goulart. Getty Images

    Izabel Goulart

    in Ermanno Scervino

    Celebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jenna Ortega. GC Images

    Jenna Ortega

    in an Alessandra Rich blazer and Tod’s bag 

    Celebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Angelina Jolie. GC Images

    Angelina Jolie

    in Christian Dior 

    81th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 202481th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 2024
    Moran Atias. WireImage

    Moran Atias

    Celebrity Arrivals At Excelsior Pier Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Arrivals At Excelsior Pier Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sigourney Weaver. Getty Images

    Sigourney Weaver

    in Chanel

    Celebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci. GC Images

    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci

    Bellucci in Balmain 

    Celebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings Ahead Of The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Izabel Goulart. GC Images

    Izabel Goulart

    The Best Off-Duty Fashion at the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    Morgan Halberg

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  • From ‘A Family Affair’ to ‘The Idea of You’: Are These Age Gap Romances Truly Feminism?

    From ‘A Family Affair’ to ‘The Idea of You’: Are These Age Gap Romances Truly Feminism?

    There’s a lot to be said about the new Zac Efron romantic comedy on Netflix (and when it comes to Zac, I’ll always say it), A Family Affair.


    First of all, the press tour has revealed a wealth of information about my dear Zac — and unlike with many movie stars, the more I know, the
    better. Just weeks ago, the internet was set ablaze when Zac revealed that his seminal, star-making performance of the hit “Bet On It” in High School Musical 2 was completely improvised. Beyond his critically acclaimed performance in The Iron Claw (famously snubbed by The Academy Awards), this info finally clued people into Efron’s true acting prowess.

    He also revealed that “Get Your Head In The Game” from the original
    High School Musical was shot in one take. Is there anything this man can’t do? Mastering choreography while sinking baskets and giving us some of the most iconic Disney scenes of all time? Olivia Rodrigo, watch your back, Zac Efron is coming for the crown of Disney’s biggest musical success story. It’s also refreshing to hear a male movie star speak fondly of the projects he did in his youth for younger fans — Jacob Elordi, take note.

    But beyond the revelations about the beloved
    HSM franchise — and the hints that Efron is itching to do another movie musical to recapture the magic of Hairspray and Greatest Showman — the most surprising thing about A Family Affair is that it’s kind of … good?

    Let me be clear, I watched it purely because
    I’ll watch anything with Zac Efron. I watched the recent Amazon Studios film Ricky Stanicky starring Efron and John Cena, after all, and it certainly wasn’t for the plot. I can only watch The Paperboy so many times to get my fix of him and Nicole Kidman together (I’m an Evangelist for that movie — if you haven’t seen the underrated Lee Daniels masterpiece, run, don’t walk). But I didn’t have high hopes for A Family Affair. That was my mistake. Imagine my surprise when the film wasn’t merely tolerable but quite charming.

    The reviews prove I’m not the only one who thought so.

    Don’t get me wrong, it’s not a cinematic masterpiece. Yet, I have no doubt that I’ll be returning to it as a comfort movie many times in my future. It’s funny! It’s delightful! The acting is good enough to buoy the unfathomable plotlines. And it has enough heart to justify its more outrageous elements.

    A Family Affair has officially joined the ranks of classic romantic comedies. But more notably, it’s joined the ranks of Hollywood’s latest obsession: hot young dudes paired with fabulous older women. It’s like The Graduate got a glow-up and decided to call itself feminism. And I’m all for feminism in mainstream movies — thank you, Barbie — I wonder about the limits of this genre and if it can deliver the promises it purports to make.

    What is the A Family Affair movie about?

    A Family Affair is not the 2009 Mary J. Blige song, much to my dismay. Rather, it’s Netflix’s latest rom-com effort starring Nicole Kidman and Disney Channel alum turned thirst-trap Zac Efron. At the center of their unconventional romance is Joey King, who you might know from The Kissing Booth or her awful accent in Bullet Train. Apparently, joey’s graduated from Netflix teen rom-coms to… Netflix mom-coms (you heard that term here first!)

    The premise? Kidman finds herself in an entanglement with Efron — her daughter’s famous boss. Honestly, the most unbelievable thing about this is that King’s character goes from being a pretty terrible assistant to managing a company. Some ex-assistant definitely wrote this screenplay.

    Semantics aside,
    A Family Affair is unexpectedly funny, engaging, and poignant in many ways. Just not the way it probably thinks. King goes from being wholly insufferable and selfish to learning that the world doesn’t revolve around her. Frankly, a lot more of these proto-girlboss characters need to experience the same harsh reality checks that King does in this film. Imagine if one of the characters in Lena Dunham’s Girls was told to their face that they were the worst. That’s what King goes through, and it shows a shift in the zeitgeist of narcissistic female characters paraded as simply chaotic yet relatable feminists. However, the film takes another would-be-feminist angle: the romance between Kidman, a 50-year old writer, and Efron, a 34-year-old movie star. It’s played as a feminist milestone. But is it?

    Watch the A Family Affair trailer here:

    A Family Affair is not the only film pushing this take. In the past year alone, multiple movies are tapping into this new fantasy. It’s like Eat, Pray, Love, but instead of finding yourself through travel, you find yourself through… Zac Efron’s abs. Hey, whatever works, right?

    It’s not just Netflix. Welcome to the boy-toy boom

    At the core of this sexy storyline, there’s a deeper message that’s been largely ignored by mainstream media: the idea that women can rediscover their sexuality and sense of self at any age.

    Wasn’t that the same message of the early-summer smash,
    The Idea of You, featuring Anne Hathaway getting her groove back with a character based on Harry Styles? It seems the fantasy of dating a One Direction member isn’t just for teenagers anymore. Moms can have their fan fiction-esque y/n moment, too.

    And lets not forget that Gabrielle Union, queen of 90s rom-coms, starred in her
    own version of this too in last year’s The Perfect Find. Alongside Keith Powers, she played an ambitious 40-year-old career woman making a comeback while falling in love with a younger man. Based on the book by Tia Williams, it was poorly received by critics but beloved as a comfort movie by its target audience.

    And it’s easy to understand why. There’s something undeniably empowering when women — who society often tries to make invisible — take center stage in these romantic fantasies. It’s a celebration of female sexuality that has no expiration date. It’s saying that desire, passion, and yes, even silly, giddy infatuation aren’t just the domain of the young.

    There’s been a market for this kind of story for decades. Hollywood just kind of … forgot? The essential
    Eat, Pray, Love is the epitome of the post-divorce drama. Under the Tuscan Sun is for all the women who dream of leaving it all behind and buying a house in Italy, then finding love, of course. But the real blueprint is How Stella Got Her Groove Back, in which Angela Bassett goes on a restorative vacation and falls for the younger Taye Diggs.

    Real-life seems to provide a plethora of examples of older women in recent relationships with younger men. However, from Jada Pinkett Smith’s entanglement with August to Cher and Madonna’s 39 and 35-year age gaps respectively, these might not be the greatest examples.

    Yet, we take what we can get. Let’s be real, in a world where women are constantly bombarded with messages about how to stay young, how to fight aging, how to basically apologize for daring to continue existing past the age of 40 (which is
    not that old?), these movies feel like a breath of fresh air. They’re saying: You’re not past your prime, honey. You can still snag one of the internet’s boyfriends.

    Subverting the genre

    In a way, these “reverse” age-gaps are refreshing. For decades, we’ve been force-fed the tired narrative of older men with younger women. From Bond Girls to Woody Allen’s entire filmography, Hollywood has been telling us that men age like fine wine while women don’t exist beyond 25 — just ask
    Leonardo DiCaprio.

    Even now, looking at the age difference between many actors and their co-stars gives me the ick. Some of our favorite rom-coms are guilty of this too. Kiera Knightly was just
    17 in Love, Actually. That says more than enough.

    In that sense, these new films are giving a big middle finger to that tired old trope. They’re saying, “Hey, women over 40 are still sexual beings! They can be desirable! They can desire!” And honestly? It’s about damn time. They’re starting conversations. They’re challenging norms. And, as Hathaway asserted when taking the controversial role in
    The Idea of You, just because a woman isn’t in her twenties, doesn’t mean she can’t have interesting roles. And-so. This genre is giving actresses over 40 complex, sexy roles.

    It’s also important to note that many of these films are written or produced by women. Gabrielle Union’s production company was behind both
    The Perfect Find and The Idea of You. And many of these storylines are sourced from books. So these are real women’s voices — and there’s clearly a market for it. But does that make it feminist?

    To be or not to be a feminist narrative

    While I champion the idea of women exploring their sexuality and finding themselves, why does a woman’s journey of self-discovery have to revolve around a man? Are we still saying that to be fulfilled, a woman needs to be desired? Does her journey of self-discovery need to involve a man — even if it’s a younger, hotter one?

    The problem isn’t that these movies exist. Like any sweet treat, they’re easy and comforting and scratch a specific itch. There will always be a place in my heart for Zac Efron doing anything. The problem is that this genre is being touted as the apex of feminist cinema — which is taking up space that could be used for actual feminist art. Just like
    Barbie’s fickle feminism (which I loved, but barely said anything), we’ve seen how feminism-lite can get in the way of actual radical ideas.

    Real feminism isn’t just about flipping the script — it’s about rewriting it entirely. It’s about telling stories about women who are fully realized human beings, with lives, interests, and passions that exist independently of their relationships with men (or anyone else, for that matter).

    So where does that leave us? These age-gap movies can be celebrated for giving us fresh narratives, but they’re a starting point, not an end goal. We need stories that celebrate women’s sexuality and desirability at all ages, yes. But we also need stories that celebrate women’s intellect, ambition, friendships, and personal growth — stories that recognize that a woman’s worth isn’t tied to those who need or desire her but to who she is as a person.

    So go ahead and enjoy A Family Affair and The Idea of You. Swoon over Zac Efron’s abs and Nicholas Galitzine’s accent. But remember, this is only the beginning.

    Langa Chinyoka

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  • Mira Rajput praises brother-in-law Ishaan Khatter for The Perfect Couple after its trailer release; says ‘So proud of you’

    Mira Rajput praises brother-in-law Ishaan Khatter for The Perfect Couple after its trailer release; says ‘So proud of you’

    Ishaan Khatter, who was last seen in a biographical war film, Pippa, in 2023, is soon making his Hollywood debut. Ishaan will now feature in Netflix’s TV series, The Perfect Couple, starring Australian-American actress Nicole Kidman in the leading role.

    The teaser trailer of The Perfect Couple was recently unveiled on YouTube.

    Mira Rajput’s sweet shout-out to Ishaan Khatter for The Perfect Couple

    On July 11, Shahid Kapoor’s wife, Mira Rajput, who shares a close bond with her brother-in-law, Ishaan Khatter, took to her Instagram story to share the trailer of The Perfect Couple.

    Mira accompanied her post with a sweet caption dedicated to Ishaan. Calling it “solid”, she wrote, “Proud of you. You won brother.”

    Here’s the screenshot of Mira’s Instagram story:

    Ishaan Khatter’s post about The Perfect Couple

    Earlier on Thursday, Ishaan Khatter dropped the teaser trailer of The Perfect Couple on his Instagram handle. In the video, the Pippa actor can be seen taking a shower as he flaunts his chiselled physique.

    “Just a tease,” he wrote in his caption.

    Here’s his post:

    Here’s how netizens reacted to Ishaan’s scene in The Perfect Couple

    Ishaan’s father, actor Rajesh Khattar and other celebrities reacted to his post. Senior actress Soni Razdan, producer Guneet Monga, actor Namit Das, and filmmaker Zoya Akhtar dropped their reactions in the comment section.

    Rajesh expressed his excitement about Ishaan’s sequence by saying, “Wohooooo!” “Whoa! Can’t wait,” Soni wrote. Namit commented, “Je baat.”

    Guneet dropped fire emojis and Zoya wrote, “Woohoo! Looks so good!”

    Let’s check out their reactions listed below:

    Picture courtesy: Ishaan Khatter/Instagram

    Ishaan Khatter’s work front

    Ishaan Khatter made his Bollywood debut with Beyond The Clouds in 2017. He then appeared in Shashank Khaitan’s romantic drama, Dhadak. Ishaan was paired with Janhvi Kapoor in the 2018 movie. The actor has also worked in movies like Khaali Peeli and Phone Bhoot. 

    In 2020, he was featured in Mira Nair’s mini-TV series, A Suitable Boy.

    The actor began his career as a child artist in Shahid Kapoor and Amrita Rao’s 2005 movie, Vaah! Life Ho To Aisi! He worked as an assistant director in the 2016 film, Udta Punjab.

    Coming back to The Perfect Couple, the series is an adaptation of the 2018 novel of the same name penned by author, Elin Hilderbrand. It will start streaming on Netflix on September 5, 2024.

    ALSO READ: Ishaan Khatter says he was busy ‘third wheeling’ Shahid Kapoor-Mira Rajput; drops adorable post to wish on their anniversary

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  • Inside the AFI Awards Gala Honoring Nicole Kidman

    Inside the AFI Awards Gala Honoring Nicole Kidman

    Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon. Getty Images for AFI

    On a balmy April evening in Hollywood, the stars aligned to honor one of cinema’s most acclaimed talents: Nicole Kidman. At the iconic Dolby Theatre, the Australian actress reached rarified air, becoming only the 49th recipient of the prestigious American Film Institute (AFI) Life Achievement Award in its nearly 50-year history. Kidman is the first Australian, and one of the youngest, to receive this highest honor.

    The festivities began back in November 2022, when it was announced Kidman would join the ranks of previous AFI honorees like Bette Davis, Alfred Hitchcock, Sidney Poitier and Tom Hanks. After postponement due to the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, the ceremony finally took place on April 27. The televised tribute, airing on TNT on June 17, celebrated Kidman’s career through film clips and testimonials from her co-stars.

    In the days preceding this grand convocation, Kidman stoked anticipation by sharing intimate behind-the-scenes shots on Instagram alongside some of the illustrious presenters—her dear friends and frequent collaborators Meryl Streep, Reese Witherspoon, Morgan Freeman and Naomi Watts. “Just a few of the people I can’t wait to see again on Saturday,” the actress teased in the heartwarming snaps, whetting appetites for the emotional reunions to come.

    On the Dolby red carpet, Kidman stunned in a gold Balenciaga gown with a five-inch train, accessorized solely with gold rings and a one-of-a-kind 26mm De Ville Mini Trésor watch from Omega in Moonshine Gold, pavéd with glittering diamonds and emerald hour markers. She was joined by husband Keith Urban and daughters Sunday and Faith, marking their first public appearance with the actress.

    Keith Urban, Faith Margaret Urban, Sunday Rose Kidman-Urban, Sybella Hawley and Nicole Kidman. Variety via Getty Images

    The evening’s festivities kicked off with 2011 AFI honoree Morgan Freeman setting the tone in a video spoof of Kidman’s infamous AMC Theatres “we make movies better” ad. His quip, “Nicole Kidman. She makes movies better,” resonated with everyone who took the stage to honor the actress that night. A lineup of celebrities paid tribute, including Zac Efron, Zoe Saldana and a disguised Mike Myers, who slinked onstage donning one of the eerie orgy masks from Eyes Wide Shut. In a recorded Zoom segment, fellow Aussies Cate Blanchett and Hugh Jackman engaged in cheeky banter with Jimmy Fallon, collectively praising Kidman while playfully joshing that Blanchett should have been the first Australian honored.

    The most emotional highlights came from Kidman’s loved ones. Her husband brought her to tears saying she showed him “what love in action really looks like” when his substance abuse issues arose shortly after their 2006 wedding. “Nic pushed through every negative voice, I’m sure even some of her own, and she chose love. And here we are, 18 years later.”

    Nicole Kidman accepts the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award from Meryl Streep. Getty Images

    Big Little Lies co-star Witherspoon lauded Kidman’s collaborative talents as a producer, recalling how their hit show materialized from their shared desire to bring it to life. “Instead of fighting it out in court or some televised Las Vegas boxing match, we decided to team up. Because there’s one thing Nicole knows very, very well—there’s power in collaboration and even more power in sisterhood,” Witherspoon explained, adding, “That’s why I’m here tonight, sister. I want to thank you for being a friend and the best colleague ever.”

    Streep, who presented Kidman with the Life Achievement Award after receiving it herself in 2004 for The Hours, poked fun at being “incessantly called the greatest actress of my generation.” She revealed the hardest part is facing someone “really, really, really, really, really, really great” like Kidman, who did things Streep couldn’t on Big Little Lies. Still, Streep assured Kidman her best work lies ahead.

    Miles Teller, Reese Witherspoon, Lee Daniels, Nicole Kidman, Meryl Streep and Zac Efron. Getty Images for AFI

    In her speech, Kidman expressed gratitude to the directors, living and late, who enabled her unconventional roles, name-checking Stanley Kubrick, Lars von Trier, Baz Luhrmann, Jane Campion, Yorgos Lanthimos and Sydney Pollack. “It is a privilege to make films. And glorious to have made films and television with these storytellers who allowed me to run wild and be free and play all of these unconventional women,” she said, adding, “Thank you for making me better at my craft and giving me a place, however temporary, in this world.”

    Miles Teller and Morgan Freeman. Variety via Getty Images

    As Hollywood royalty congregated to enshrine Kidman’s legacy, it was clear this revered actress’s cinematic journey has reached immortal heights. Just as opening speaker Morgan Freeman serenaded the radiant star with a line from one of her most beloved musical roles in Moulin Rouge!, prophetically intoning: “How wonderful life is, now you’re in the world.” For this cinematic luminary, the brightest adventures still lie ahead.

    Inside the AFI Awards Gala Honoring Nicole Kidman

    Paul Jebara

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  • The Irony of “I’m Just Ken” Grafting “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” at the 2024 Oscars

    The Irony of “I’m Just Ken” Grafting “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” at the 2024 Oscars

    There is a long tradition of women emulating Marilyn Monroe’s famed performance of “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. In fact, it is very much a women’s song and visual (even if directed by Howard Hawks) that speaks on things being more satisfying (and enduring) than men. A sardonic sendup of the material girl trope—which is how many men still view women, seventy-one-ish years later (the film was released in July of 1953). This being, of course, why Madonna chose to tongue-in-cheekly reuse it in her 1985 video for “Material Girl.”

    In fact, after that, Madonna not only secured her position as the Queen of Postmodernism (sorry Ariana Grande), but, in many ways, prompted a new generation to forget that Marilyn Monroe was the original pink gown-wearer traipsing about on a pink staircase as tuxedoed men fawned over and followed her around with rebuffed gifts. Granted, Carol Channing (a gay icon with a decided contempt for gays) was the first to bring Lorelei Lee to life on Broadway in 1949, but Monroe eclipsed that performance with her celluloid prowess. 

    Thus, the eternal Hollywood love of paying homage to that segment of the film that helped launch Monroe into “instant icon” status. After “Material Girl,” the next most memorable homage would become Nicole Kidman’s. Specifically, as Satine in 2001’s Moulin Rouge! (during which she incorporates the verse from “Material Girl,” “‘Cause we are living in a material world/And I am a material girl”). Many other musicians, including Kylie Minogue, Beyoncé and Christina Aguilera, have referenced/performed the song and visual as well, but not until 2020’s Birds of Prey (which would also feature a riff on “Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friend” by Megan Thee Stallion and Normani called “Diamonds” for the soundtrack) was the re-creation of the performance so blatant again. Uncannily enough, Barbie’s star (one hates to break it to Ryan Gosling), Margot Robbie—as Harley Quinn—would be the one to engage in her own macabre sendup of the original. For added Hollywood incestuousness (or “six degrees of separation,” if you prefer), Ewan McGregor (who plays Christian in Moulin Rouge!) appears in the scene with her in his own modern take on the 1950s-era tuxedo (this one without tails).

    Indeed, he was the one who, as Roman Sionis/Black Mask, caused her to hallucinate such a fantasy in the first place after slapping her with enough force. This after taunting her about losing the Joker’s favor in the wake of their breakup, “For all your noise and bluster, you’re just a silly little girl with no one around to protect her.” The accusation of being a silly little girl (when not instead substituted by the venomous “epithets” of “bitch” and/or “slut”) remains one of the most effortless ways for a man to demean a woman. And demeanment is, unfortunately, on the rise rather than on the decline—a reality that Ken brings to life onscreen with his inferiority complex that ends up causing him to destroy the matriarchal utopia of Barbie Land. 

    The reason? He wants attention, of course (not to mention praise and acknowledgement for doing nothing). For when “silly little boys” posing as men have their ego threatened, most of the rest of the world suffers (see: Donald Trump, who outshines Ken’s tan with orangeness). And when they see that the spotlight isn’t enough on them, they’re liable to mimic the person (particularly if that person is a woman) getting the most attention in a manner so obnoxious that it cannot be ignored. That, to this viewer, is how Gosling’s performance of “I’m Just Ken” came across at the 96th Annual Academy Awards (complete with the additional sausage party “cachet” of Guns n’ Roses’ Slash on guitar). For not only was Monroe something of the original Barbie (minus the rail-thin body type), but she was somebody that men were always trying to co-opt for themselves. Trying to turn into their little doll and take credit for “inventing” her out of the raw clay that was Norma Jeane Baker. But Marilyn was her own creation. It was just often hard for her to remember that with all the men around (including Joe DiMaggio and Arthur Miller) filling her head with mantras that she was somehow “wrong” or “unequipped.”

    Thus, for Gosling to graft the “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” number for himself doesn’t feel “feminist,” so much as an unwanted and unnecessary impingement on Marilyn Land, ergo Women’s Land (known to some as Barbie Land). Marilyn, who died before she could suffer the inevitable Hollywood criticisms about looking old. Barbie, at least, has the benefit of being perennially plastic so as to uphold her Aryan-centric good looks. 

    Incidentally, during his Oscar monologue, host Jimmy Kimmel made a crack about Gosling and Robbie winning the genetic lottery. But even those (read: women) with good looks and regular plastic surgery upkeep end up falling prey to what Marilyn forewarns of in her illustrious number: “Men grow cold as girls grow old/And we all lose our charms in the end.” Unless, of course, you’re the kind of privileged white male that Ken embodies. Greta Gerwig, by creating “empathy” for such a character, perhaps didn’t fully understand what she hath wrought in doing so. Nor has Gosling fully understood the homoerotic coding (posing as a “butch” interpretation) he’s entered into the canon of “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” performances (already gay kryptonite to begin with, especially at drag shows). 

    Maybe Kimmel foreshadowed as much by making the Brokeback Mountain-related joke (also during his monologue) to Gosling, “You are so hot. Let’s go camping together and not tell our wives.” Because women, as has been emphasized repeatedly in life and in pop culture, are secondary to “men’s things” (which takes on a new level and meaning in terms of gay men imitating straight women). Even when they were originally “women’s things” (à la “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend”) to begin with. Nonetheless, Ken’s “big dick Kenergy” still proved no match for fellow Barbie Soundtrack-er Billie Eilish in the Best Original Song category. But a “What Was I Made For?” win is, in effect, an “I’m Just Ken” win. Because what belongs to women also belongs to men (#dowry). That is, in “liberal” Hollywood, what Gretchen Wieners would call “just, like, the laws of feminism.” 

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Taylor Swift, Beyonce Concert Movies Generated ‘Literally All’ of AMC’s Revenue

    Taylor Swift, Beyonce Concert Movies Generated ‘Literally All’ of AMC’s Revenue

    TMZ Staff

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  • Why Nicole Kidman Was Absent From Era-Defining Vogue Cover

    Why Nicole Kidman Was Absent From Era-Defining Vogue Cover


    It was an era-defining moment when departing Vogue UK editor Edward Enninful gathered together 40 of the most famous faces to have graced the cover of his magazine for a farewell group shot.

    Famous faces on the March 2024 issue include veterans Oprah Winfrey and Jane Fonda, supermodels Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington, Kate Moss and Linda Evangelista, actresses Jodie Comer, Anya Taylor-Joy and tennis star Serena Williams.

    The Daily Mail reports that the photoshoot was done at Highline Stages in New York’s Meatpacking District, in early December 2023.

    One star noticeable by her absence was Nicole Kidman, who – it transpires – was unable to attend because the end of the writers’ strike meant she had to return to filming duty on her next project, Birthday Girl.

    Questions were also raised over the absence of Meghan Markle, who joined forces with Enninful back in September 2019 to guest-edit an issue of the magazine. The reason given was that only those stars who have previously been on the cover were included.

    One insider told the Daily Mail the logistics involved in bringing together such a celebrated flock were similar to “almost as much planning as D-Day.” Miley Cyrus was one famous face who went the extra mile to be involved, flying 5,000 miles by private jet to New York, to have her photograph taken for 15 minutes.

    Enninful was appointed editor-in-chief of British Vogue in 2017 but stepped down after a short tenure in 2023. He is quoted in the Daily Mail reflecting: “I never expected all 40 to turn up.”



    Caroline Frost

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  • What’s Leaving Streaming This Month: February 2024

    What’s Leaving Streaming This Month: February 2024


    Rebecca Ferguson, Zendaya, Javier Bardem, and Timothee Chalamet (from left) in Dune. Ryan Stetz/HBO

    Whether you want surprisingly funny family dramas, international excellence, or a refresher on one of the decade’s biggest sci-fi franchises, you’re in luck. From indies to blockbusters, these are the titles you need to watch before they leave streaming this month.

    What’s leaving Netflix

    The Farewell 

    While Lulu Wang’s star-studded series Expats is still unfurling, why not watch the movie that catapulted the director into the mainstream? The Farewell stars Awkwafina as Billi, an aspiring writer who’s struggling to find work and her place as a Chinese American woman. When she hears that her beloved grandmother, Nai Nai, has been diagnosed with cancer, though, she drops everything to go see her in China. However, there’s another issue: the family is keeping Nai Nai’s diagnosis a secret from her, and a reluctant Billi must do so too. The Farewell will be available to stream until February 29th.

    Dune 

    After a lengthy, strike-related delay, Dune: Part Two is finally on the horizon. The second installment of Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi epic (out March 1st) features a sprawling cast (with new additions Austin Butler and Florence Pugh) on top of a dense mythos, so there’s no time like the present to catch up by watching Dune. Timothée Chalamet stars as Paul, heir to the House Atreides within the galactic empire, who must contend with political threats to his father (Oscar Isaac) and strange trials courtesy of his mother (Rebecca Ferguson). Along the way, he encounters friends and foes alike, played by Zendaya, Javier Bardem, Jason Momoa, and Josh Brolin. Dune streams through the end of the month.

    What’s leaving Hulu

    Paddington 

    As winter truly begins to wear on us all, it’s the perfect time to watch some of the coziest movies of the 21st century. Paddington and its sequel are the rare family movie franchise to truly appeal to all ages, from the title bear’s expertly animated cuddliness to the A-list actors who get to play cartoonish villains (Nicole Kidman and Hugh Grant, the latter in a BAFTA-nominated performance). Though sweet little Paddington gets himself into quite the precarious predicaments, his mantra of “if we’re kind and polite, the world will be right” always holds true. Paddington streams until the end of the month, while Paddington 2 is available through February 26th.

    What’s leaving Max

    Drive My Car 

    Layered, lengthy, and packed with a lot of languages, Drive My Car is one of the most daring dramas of the decade so far. The film follows a theater actor and director who discovers his wife’s infidelity before her untimely death. Bereft and unmoored, he decides to accept a theater residency that will have him directing a multilingual production of Uncle Vanya. Ultimately, it’s a movie about understanding, and how we may never be able to achieve it when it comes to those we love. Everything about the film is superb, and there’s a reason why the movie was nominated for four Oscars. Drive My Car streams through the end of the month.

    What’s leaving Peacock

    Five Nights at Freddy’s 

    One of last year’s biggest horror hits is departing streaming later this month. Five Nights at Freddy’s became a smash success when it was released in theaters and on Peacock last October, bringing the thrills from the beloved video game to screens both big and small. Josh Hutcherson stars as Mike, a man so desperate for a job that he takes on a gig as a nighttime security guard at Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza, a family pizzeria-slash-arcade with plenty of skeletons in its supply closets. Before long, things begin to go bump in the night, leaving Mike to solve a decades-old mystery. Five Nights at Freddy’s streams through February 25th.

    The Descendants 

    While The Holdovers currently stands as a favorite at the Oscars, it’s far from the first time that filmmaker Alexander Payne has seen success with the Academy. In fact, he won his second Oscar in 2012 for The Descendants, a complex family dramedy. George Clooney stars as Matt, a man who’s inherited and attained great wealth (including a large swath of land in Hawaii), but all of that stability vanishes when his wife gets in an accident that leaves her comatose. He must grapple with his role as a cousin, a husband and a father to his two daughters (Shailene Woodley and Amara Miller). The Descendants streams through the end of the month.


    What to Watch is a regular endorsement of movies and TV worth your streaming time.

    What’s Leaving Streaming This Month: February 2024





    Laura Babiak

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  • Big Little Lies could be returning for season three – here’s what we know

    Big Little Lies could be returning for season three – here’s what we know


    Grab your favourite cardigan, pour yourself a large glass of red wine, and get ready to stare wistfully at the horizon – because Big Little Lies may be returning for a third season. A new instalment of HBO’s Emmy-winning drama series starring Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Zoë Kravitz, and Shailene Woodley is reportedly in the works, with Kidman teasing that she and Witherspoon have been “texting every day” about developing a new chapter of David E. Kelley’s buzzy murder mystery based on Liane Moriarty’s 2014 novel.

    “We’re at work on it,” Kidman told Variety. “And there’s a timeline and we’re doing it.” Witherspoon confirmed that she and Kidman were hard at work reuniting the real mothers of Monterey. “We’re working on it,” she told the publication on the Golden Globes red carpet. “Nic and I are working on it a lot.”

    How did Big Little Lies go from DOA to a potential third season? Let us explain.

    Wait, wasn’t Big Little Lies supposed to be a limited series?

    Initially, it was. Like its HBO sister The White Lotus, Big Little Lies was originally developed and billed as a limited series when it premiered on the network on February 19, 2017. But that’s because the network apparently didn’t realise what a hit it would have on its hands. Big Little Lies was huge both critically and commercially, winning five Emmys, including outstanding supporting actor in a limited series (Alexander Skarsgård), outstanding director of a limited series (Jean-Marc Vallée), outstanding supporting actress in a limited series (Dern), outstanding lead actress in limited series (Kidman), and outstanding limited series.

    The following December, it was announced that Big Little Lies would be returning for a second season.

    How was the second season?

    Well… not great. Things got off to a strong start when HBO announced that the incredibly vibe-appropriate Meryl Streep would be joining the cast in season two as the mother-in-law of Kidman’s Celeste. But production was notoriously bumpy. Director Andrea Arnold was initially hired to direct the seven-episode second season but eventually left the production “heartbroken” due to creative differences between herself and Vallée. Vallée took the reins back, directing the rest of the episodes and re-editing episodes Arnold had already shot, so that they would better fit his style and aesthetic.

    Despite the drama, Big Little Lies’ second season premiered on June 9, 2019. While still buzzy and popular with viewers, the second season was less critically acclaimed than the first. Season two was only nominated for two Emmys — Streep and Dern scored nods for outstanding supporting actress in a drama series — and lost both. While the fate of the series was in the air, it weathered an unexpected tragedy when Vallée died in 2021 at his chalet in Québec City at the age of 58. The following year, Kravitz said that Big Little Lies was effectively “done” after the loss of their director. “I can’t imagine going on without him,” she said.

    So, how did season three of Big little Lies get off the ground?

    According to Kidman, her daughter actually had something to do with it. In an interview for Vogue Australia, Kidman said she recently watched the series with her 15-year-old daughter, Sunday, who immediately became obsessed with the show.



    Chris Murphy

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