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Tag: oppenheimer

  • Peloton Instructor Who Dissed Christopher Nolan’s ‘Tenet’ Reacts to His Shoutout

    Peloton Instructor Who Dissed Christopher Nolan’s ‘Tenet’ Reacts to His Shoutout

    Not since Mr. Big’s death by Peloton—and later brief resurrection—has the fitness company made such waves in Hollywood. While accepting the best-director award for Oppenheimer at the 2024 New York Film Critics Circle dinner on Wednesday night, filmmaker Christopher Nolan remembered a critical cycling workout he completed with Peloton.

    “I was on my Peloton doing some high-interval, some shit, gasping,” he recalled. “The instructor started talking about one of my films, saying, ‘That’s a couple of hours of my life I’ll never get back.’” After eliciting laughter from the crowd, Nolan expressed gratitude for the diligence of actual film critics. “When Rex Reed takes a shit on your film, he doesn’t ask you to work out more with him,” he joked.

    After Nolan’s headline-making anecdote began to circulate, the internet soon unearthed the footage he had seen. It shows Peloton instructor Jenn Sherman leading a workout to the soundtrack of Travis Scott’s song “The Plan,” which was written for Tenet. “What the fuck was going on in that movie?” Sherman says. “Seriously, you need to be a neuroscientist to understand. And that’s two-and-a-half hours of my life I want back. I want it back.”

    She wasn’t alone in her critique. Nolan’s high-concept, coronavirus-era blockbuster starring John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Kenneth Branagh, and Elizabeth Debicki, which was released during the height of Peloton’s popularity, was labeled as confusing by many. That includes VF’s own Richard Lawson, who in his review of the film called the script a “mess,” writing: “It’s still really hard to understand what the hell is going on, and all the head-scratching starts to hurt pretty quickly.”

    Almost four years later, Sherman offered an explanation for her assessment on Instagram. “Huge day for me when I come to find out that the one and only Christopher Nolan, one of the leading filmmakers of the 21st century, knows who the hell I am,” she began in a reel posted to Instagram on Thursday. “Listen: It was 2020, it was a dark time. I’m on the platform, teaching my little class, and I’m running my mouth off like I’m known to do. And I make a random comment about a movie I had seen the night before. What do you think the odds are that the director of said movie would take that ride some four years later? That would only happen to me.”

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    Despite her niceties, Sherman maintained her stance on Nolan’s 2020 movie. “I may not have understood a minute of what was going on in Tenet, that shit went right over my head,” she said. But she has far more appreciation for the most recent entry in Nolan’s filmography. “I have seen Oppenheimer twice,” she added. “And that’s six hours of my life that I don’t ever want to get back.”

    Sherman then extended Nolan an invite to her next cycling session. “Mr. Nolan, I’m inviting you to come for a ride with me in the Peloton studio. You can critique my class,” she continued. “You’ll have a great time. You’ll sit in the front row. And I promise you, it’ll be insult-free.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • ‘All of Us Strangers’ and ‘Saltburn’ Finally Break Out in the Oscar Race

    ‘All of Us Strangers’ and ‘Saltburn’ Finally Break Out in the Oscar Race

    We’ve finally received our first broad glimpse at what the industry thinks of this year’s awards contenders—and the most resounding message? Barbenheimer. On Friday,  BAFTA announced its annual longlists, which provide key early indicators of strength and momentum as the British Academy (which shares considerable overlap with the Oscars’ voting body) signals their favorites of the year. This first stage includes a Best Film longlist of 10 movies, the same size as the Oscars’ final best-picture lineup, and acting, writing, and technical categories largely determined by chapters—the equivalent of peer-voting branches, which is also how the Academy makes its nominations . In other words, while the crossover is never 100%, these matter—significantly.

    So yes, Barbie and Oppenheimer unsurprisingly lead the way this year with 15 mentions apiece, alongside Killers of the Flower Moon, Martin Scorsese’s epic that has been keeping pace all season so far. These remain your undisputed front-runners, along perhaps with The Holdovers, which despite being a less tech-driven movie fared well with seven mentions, and Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest extravagance which placed an impressive 14 times on Friday.

    After that, though, things get interesting.

    Last year, BAFTA’s longlists most crucially signaled the strength in international contenders All Quiet on the Western Front and Triangle of Sadness, which made the Best Film list of 10 in addition to screenplay and various other races. This year, they’ve given a similar boost to Anatomy of a Fall and The Zone of Interest, which feel stronger by the day. Both movies are mentioned for best film, director, screenplay, acting, and more. The best film lineup also includes stalwart American indie Past Lives and Bradley Cooper’s Maestro, which haven’t really missed a notable list yet either. That makes nine extremely strong players for best picture, then. BAFTA rounding out its list with All of Us StrangersAndrew Haigh’s critical darling that was waiting for a breakout like this—says as much for what it included as what it didn’t.

    Last year, eight movies on BAFTA’s Best Film longlists went on to Oscar nods; they missed only the biggest American movie of the year Avatar: The Way of Water, and the smallest to go all the way with the Academy, Women Talking. BAFTA instead went for homegrown talent, in Living and Aftersun. We can see that the British All of Us Strangers is playing a similar role here—though it’s worth noting that with an incredibly impressive 10 mentions, the Searchlight title is officially in the thick of it, with all four of its actors beating out serious competition here. Aftersun and Living both went on to major Oscar nods, to boot.

    So how will the Oscars alter this top 10? Saltburn, a major question mark on the trail thus far, found some much needed hometown love with 11 nominations, but it’s hard to imagine it performing better than it has today and it ultimately missed the best-film list. (Still, good news for stars Rosamund Pike and Barry Keoghan, both of whom made the cut.) BAFTA most eye-poppingly snubbed American Fiction up top. That’s a major dent to its aspirations as a front-running best picture candidate, even as star Jeffrey Wright and writer-director Cord Jefferson landed in their respective categories. (By comparison, BAFTA didn’t love Everything Everywhere All at Once, but the movie still made its best-picture five.) Some of Fiction’s absence can be attributed to the unfortunate particularities of BAFTA, which often overlooks American films with largely Black casts—but only some. Same goes for The Color Purple, which requires a boost from the Screen Actors Guild next week to stay competitive. (Stars Danielle Brooks and Fantasia Barrino did place on the acting lists, at least.)

    This was, finally, a very disappointing morning for May December, Netflix’s critical darling that should’ve appealed more to this group. It’s up only for Samy Burch’s original screenplay and Julianne Moore in supporting actress. Unlike his co-star, though, even its breakout star Charles Melton could not make the longlist of 10—not a dealbreaker for an Oscar nod, by any means, but a blow to his positioning in a very competitive supporting-actor field. 

    David Canfield

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  • BAFTA Awards: ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Lead Longlists in Three-Way Tie

    BAFTA Awards: ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Lead Longlists in Three-Way Tie

    The British Academy has unveiled the results of the first round of voting across all 24 categories for the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards, with a perhaps unsurprising trio of films at the top. 

    The cultural phenomenon that was “Barbenheimer” has continued to smash its way into awards season, with both “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” named in 15 categories, including best film and director. But joining the two with 15 slots, making it a three-way tie going into the final nominations, is “Killers of the Flower Moon.” Last year, only “All Quiet on the Western Front” earned 15 longlist places, with the film going on to dominate the awards ceremony (and winning best film). 

    Further down, “Poor Things” was named in 14 categories, “Maestro” in 12 and “Saltburn” in 11, with “Saltburn” missing out on a best film slot. Other U.K. films fared well, with “The Zone of Interest” and “All of Us Strangers” named in 10 categories (including best film), “Wonka” in eight, “How to Have Sex” in six and “Rye Lane” in five. “How to Have Sex” and “Rye Lane” also saw their debut directors, Molly Manning Walker and Raine Allen-Miller, respectively, and their lead stars, Mia McKenna-Bruce and Vivian Oparah, find longlist slots in the director and leading actress categories (among some well-established greats). 

    The final nominations list are set to be announced on Jan. 18, with the BAFTA Film Awards ceremony taking place Feb. 18 from London’s Royal Festival Hall. 

    See the full BAFTA Longlist below.

    Best Film

    • “All of Us Strangers”
    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “Barbie”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Past Lives”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Outstanding British Film

    • “All of Us Strangers”
    • “Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget”
    • “The Deepest Breath”
    • “The Great Escaper”
    • “How to Have Sex”
    • “Napoleon”
    • “The Old Oak”
    • “One Life”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “Rye Lane”
    • “Saltburn”
    • “Scrapper”
    • “Tetris”
    • “Wonka”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer

    • “Blue Bag Life”
    • “Bobi Wine: The People’s President”
    • “Earth Mama”
    • “The End We Start From”
    • “How to Have Sex”
    • “If the Streets Were on Fire”
    • “Is There Anybody Out There?”
    • “Polite Society”
    • “Rye Lane”
    • “Scrapper”

    Film Not in English Language

    • “20 Days in Mariupol”
    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “The Boy and the Heron”
    • “The Eight Mountains”
    • “Fallen Leaves”
    • “Past Lives”
    • “Society of the Snow”
    • “The Taste of Things”
    • “The Teachers’ Lounge”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Documentary

    • “20 Days in Mariupol”
    • “American Symphony”
    • “Beyond Utopia”
    • “The Deepest Breath”
    • “High & Low – John Galliano”
    • “Little Richard: I Am Everything”
    • “Mad About the Boy: The Noël Coward Story”
    • “The Pigeon Tunnel”
    • “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie”
    • “Wham!”

    Animated Film

    • “The Boy and the Heron”
    • “Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget”
    • “Elemental”
    • “Nimona”
    • “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”
    • “The Super Mario Bros. Movie”
    • “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem”
    • “Wish”

    Director

    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “All of Us Strangers”
    • “American Fiction”
    • “Barbie”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “How to Have Sex”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Past Lives”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “Priscilla”
    • “Rye Lane”
    • “Saltburn”
    • “Scrapper”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Original Screenplay

    • “Air”
    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “Barbie”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “How to Have Sex”
    • “Maestro”
    • “May December”
    • “Past Lives”
    • “Rye Lane”
    • “Saltburn”

    Adapted Screenplay

    • “All of Us Strangers”
    • “American Fiction”
    • “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret”
    • “Dumb Money”
    • “The Killer”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “Wonka”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Leading Actress

    • Annette Bening, “Nyad”
    • Carey Mulligan, “Maestro”
    • Emma Stone, “Poor Things”
    • Fantasia Barrino, “The Color Purple”
    • Greta Lee, “Past Lives”
    • Lily Gladstone, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Margot Robbie, “Barbie”
    • Mia McKenna-Bruce, “How to Have Sex”
    • Sandra Hüller, “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • Vivian Oparah, “Rye Lane”

    Leading Actor

    • Andrew Scott, “All of Us Strangers”
    • Barry Keoghan, “Saltburn”
    • Bradley Cooper, “Maestro”
    • Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer”
    • Colman Domingo, “Rustin”
    • George MacKay, “Femme”
    • Jeffrey Wright, “American Fiction”
    • Leonardo DiCaprio, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Paul Giamatti, “The Holdovers”
    • Teo Yoo, “Past Lives”

    Supporting Actress

    • America Ferrera, “Barbie”
    • Cara Jade Myers, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Claire Foy, “All of Us Strangers”
    • Danielle Brooks, “The Color Purple”
    • Da’Vine Joy Randolph, “The Holdovers”
    • Emily Blunt, “Oppenheimer”
    • Jodie Foster, “Nyad”
    • Julianne Moore, “May December”
    • Rosamund Pike, “Saltburn”
    • Sandra Hüller, “The Zone of Interest”

    Supporting Actor

    • Anthony Hopkins, “One Life”
    • Ben Whishaw, “Passages”
    • Dominic Sessa, “The Holdovers”
    • Jacob Elordi, “Saltburn”
    • Jamie Bell, “All of Us Strangers”
    • Mark Ruffalo, “Poor Things”
    • Paul Mescal, “All of Us Strangers”
    • Robert De Niro, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Robert Downey Jr., “Oppenheimer”
    • Ryan Gosling, “Barbie”

    Casting

    • “All of Us Strangers”
    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “Barbie”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “How to Have Sex”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Saltburn”
    • “Scrapper”

    Cinematography

    • Barbie
    • The Creator
    • Ferrari
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Saltburn
    • The Zone of Interest

    Costume Design

    • Asteroid City
    • Barbie
    • Ferrari
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Saltburn
    • Wonka

    Editing

    • All of Us Strangers
    • Anatomy of a Fall
    • Barbie
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Saltburn
    • The Zone of Interest

    Make-Up and Hair

    • Barbie
    • Ferrari
    • Golda
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Priscilla
    • Wonka

    Original Score

    • American Fiction
    • Barbie
    • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Saltburn
    • Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
    • Wonka

    Production Design

    • Asteroid City
    • Barbie
    • Ferrari
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Wonka
    • The Zone of Interest

    Special Visual Effects

    • Barbie
    • The Creator
    • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
    • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
    • Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
    • Wonka

    Sound

    • Barbie
    • Ferrari
    • Killers of The Flower Moon
    • Maestro
    • Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things
    • Wonka
    • The Zone of Interest

    British Short Animation

    • Crab Day
    • Sweet Like Lemons
    • The Smeds and The Smoos
    • Visible Mending
    • Wild Summon
    • World to Roam

    British Short Film

    • Essex Girls
    • Festival of Slaps
    • Finding Alaa
    • Gorka
    • Jellyfish and Lobster
    • Jill, Uncredited
    • Mighty Penguins
    • The One Note Man
    • Such A Lovely Day
    • Yellow

    Ellise Shafer

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  • 2023 Box Office: Domestic Revenue Clears $9B in Post-Pandemic First (Thanks, Barbenheimer)

    2023 Box Office: Domestic Revenue Clears $9B in Post-Pandemic First (Thanks, Barbenheimer)

    Whew.

    Domestic box office revenue was able to clear $9 billion after all, despite a dismal fall season at the multiplex, according to Comscore. That’s the best showing of the post-pandemic era, with revenue in U.S. and Canada up 20 percent over 2022’s $7.5 billion.

    But movie ticket sales are still down sharply from pre-pandemic times, when domestic revenue crossed $10 billion every year beginning in 2009 and $11 billion every year beginning in 2015 and ending in 2019, the last year before COVID-19 struck. Comscore believes 2023 domestic revenue will come in at $9.03 billion-$9.05 billion for 2023, a drop of roughly 21 percent from 2019’s $11.4 billion.

    In terms of box office trends, 2023 will be remembered as a year of enormous change as audiences spurned tried-and-true staples, such as superhero fare — The Marvels was the biggest stumble in the history of Marvel Studios — and instead embraced originality or genres that had previously struggled.

    The marquee example of the new world order was the Barbenheimer phenomenon. The one-two-punch of filmmaker Greta Gerwig‘s Barbie and Universal‘s Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan, saw box office revenue for July and August reach pre-pandemic levels.

    “Another box office target was set and hit in 2023 as the domestic year surpassed the $9 billion threshold, owing much to a notable Barbenheimer-powered $4 billion summer movie season and a unique year in which alternative content, specialized film and international cinema made their mark in an unprecedented show of strength adding to the bottom line,” says Comscore’s Paul Dergarabedian.

    He’s referring to such films as Angel Studios’ hit indie pic Sound of Freedom, which drew much of its strength from faith-based and conservative audiences. The pic came out of nowhere to earn $184.1 million domestically, putting it at No. 10 on the list of top-grossing 2023 movies.

    Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour was another unicorn. The superstar pop singer decided to bypass the Hollywood studio system and bring her concert pic directly to cinemas via a deal with AMC Theatres. In an unimaginable feat, Eras Tour earned $179.6 million domestically to land at No. 11 on the top 20 list, ahead of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny ($174.5 million) and Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part 1 ($172.1 million).

    Barbie, from Warner Bros., was far-and-away the year’s biggest earner and the only film to cross the $600 million threshold domestically on its way to topping out at $636.2 million. It was also the No. 1 pic globally after strutting to $1.44 billion.

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie, released in the spring, was the year’s first major surprise. It earned $574.9 million domestically and $1.36 billion globally to become the top-grossing video game adaptation of all time in a huge win for Universal.

    There was more good news in store for Universal, culminating with the studio ending Disney‘s long-running winning streak and narrowly winning the domestic marketshare race with an estimated $1.94 billion in ticket sales between Jan. 1-Dec. 21, 2023, according to unofficial estimates. (Universal may also be first in global marketshare after Disney had ranked No. 1 for seven consecutive years).

    Disney’s 2023 domestic revenue was an estimated $1.9 billion, although final numbers for all of the studios won’t be revealed until Tuesday or Wednesday.

    Among other 2023 Universal titles, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer — an adult-skewing biographical drama running just over three hours — earned an eye-popping $326 million domestically and $952 million globally, while Fast X grossed $704.9 million worldwide (it was soft in North America but did well internationally).

    Back on the chart of top-grossing films domestically, Sony’s Spider-Man: Across the Universe placed No. 3 ($381.3 million), followed by Disney and Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 ($359 million). Disney also took spots No. 6 and No. 7. with The Little Mermaid ($298.1 million) and Avatar: The Way of Water, which, while released at the end of 2022, raked in $283.1 million in 2023.

    Lionsgate’s John Wick: Chapter 4 ranked No. 9 on the top 10 list domestically with $187.1 million in ticket sales.

    If Hollywood execs aren’t exactly setting off fireworks over 2023, it’s because they’re bracing for a tumultuous ride at the 2024 domestic box office after a slew of high-profile tentpoles were pushed to 2025 because of the lengthy writers and actors strikes.

    In a major blow to the post-pandemic recovery effort, domestic box office revenue in 2024 could come in behind that of 2023. If projections are right, domestic box office in 2024 could top out at $7.5 billion to $8 billion, say multiple studio executives who spoke with The Hollywood Reporter (a few are more bullish in thinking $8 billion to $8.5 billion is possible).

    Pamela McClintock

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  • What do the most-Googled searches of 2023 tell us about the year? Here’s what Americans wanted to know, and what we found out.

    What do the most-Googled searches of 2023 tell us about the year? Here’s what Americans wanted to know, and what we found out.

    The news we followed, the people who fascinated us, the culture and trends that grabbed our attention — Google’s “Year in Search” data for 2023 sheds light on the top trending topics Americans wanted to know about this year.

    From celebrities and athletes to TV shows and box-office hits, people across the country turned to the search engine for answers to pressing questions like “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?” and recipes for McDonald’s hit beverage of the year, the Grimace Shake.

    While we may not have gotten all the answers, here’s what some of the top searches in the U.S. have to tell us about the past year:

    The stories we followed

    This year, the world was shocked by the war in Israel and Gaza, which was Google’s most-searched news story of the year. Following the deadly Oct. 7 attack on Israel by the militant group Hamas, Israel vowed to destroy the group and launched airstrikes and a ground operation into the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian territory controlled by Hamas.

    A missile explodes in Gaza City during an Israeli air strike
    A missile explodes in Gaza City during an Israeli airstrike on Oct. 8, 2023.

    MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images


    The second most searched story of the year, according to Google, was the frantic search in June for the OceanGate Titan submersible, which vanished on a dive to the Titanic shipwreck site with five people aboard. Tragically, everyone on the tourist vessel was killed when it imploded under the pressures of the deep sea.

    Americans also did a lot of searching for updates on hurricanes, with Hurricane Hilary, Hurricane Idalia, and Hurricane Lee rounding out the list of top 5 most-searched news stories. 

    The people we were curious about

    NFL player Damar Hamlin became the No. 1 most-Googled person on the list after the Buffalo Bills defensive back collapsed on the field in cardiac arrest during a Jan. 3 game. Hamlin has since made a full recovery and returned to play this season. Hamlin was also Google’s most-searched athlete of 2023.

    Damar Hamlin
    Damar Hamlin #3 of the Buffalo Bills after a game on Sept. 19, 2022.

    Timothy T Ludwig / Getty Images


    Actor Jeremy Renner was the No. 2 most-Googled person in the U.S. in 2023 following a New Year’s Day snowplow accident that left him hospitalized with over 30 broken bones. Renner was run over by the vehicle while trying to protect his nephew. He has since made a remarkable recovery. Renner was also the No. 1 most-Googled actor of the year.

    Also high on Google’s list is the NFL’s Travis Kelce, the tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs who helped bring home a Super Bowl victory in Feburary. Kelce, who was the No. 3 most-Googled person and No. 2 most-Googled athlete in the U.S. this year, has also been publicly dating pop superstar Taylor Swift since July. 

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce
    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have dinner at Waverly Inn on Oct. 15, 2023, in New York City. 

    Gotham/GC Images via Getty Images


    Ranking 4th and 5th on the most-Googled people list were former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlsonwho was ousted from the network in April, and internet personality Lil Tay, whose death was falsely reported in August.

    The nation also searched for information on a number of beloved celebrities we lost in 2023, with “Friends” actor Matthew Perry‘s death being the most-Googled of the year. Perry was found dead at his home in Los Angeles at age 54 following a ketamine overdose in October.

    Matthew Perry shooting
    Matthew Perry shooting “Friends” in 1998.

    Mathieu Polak/Sygma via Getty Images


    Iconic singer-songwriter Tina Turner, TV host Jerry Springer, “Margaritaville” singer Jimmy Buffet, and singer and activist Sinéad O’Connor filled out the top 5 on the list of most-Googled celebrity passings of 2023.

    What kept us entertained

    Barbenheimer” dominated the U.S. box office, with the Greta Gerwig-directed “Barbie” and biopic “Oppenheimer” smashing records in their July joint-opening weekend. The two films were Google’s No. 1 and No. 2 most-searched movies of 2023 in the U.S.

    Barbenheimer

    Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images


    Alejandro Gómez Monteverde’s “Sound of Freedom,” the 2022 Oscar-winner “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” and the third installment of popular Marvel franchise “Guardians of the Galaxy,” occupied the third through fifth spots on the most-Googled films list.

    “The Last of Us,” starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey and based on the popular video game of the same name, was the most-Googled television show in the U.S. in 2023. Pascal was also the fifth most-Googled actor.

    Bella Ramsey and Pedro Pascal attend an event for HBO’s “The Last Of Us” on April 28, 2023 in Los Angeles.

    FilmMagic/FilmMagic for HBO via Getty Images


    When it comes to music, the controversial country hit “Try That in a Small Town” was the most-Googled song of the year, and the musician behind it, Jason Aldean, the most-Googled singer of the year in the U.S. in 2023. The track amassed widespread attention in July following the release of its music video, which depicted protesters confronting police officers.

    2023 Country Thunder Wisconsin - Day 3
    Jason Aldean performs onstage at Country Thunder Wisconsin

    Joshua Applegate / Getty Images


    Recipes, memes and more

    In one of the more surprising results, McDonald’s Grimace Shake was the No. 1 most-Googled recipe in the U.S. in 2023. The purple milkshake inspired a viral TikTok trend this summer, with users trying Grimace’s berry-flavored beverage and then pretending to die.

    The top Google search that began with the phrase “How often…” was in response to another viral Internet trend that encouraged users to ask men, “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?” The question took the No. 1 spot on Google’s most-searched trend list in the U.S. as well. 

    The most-searched “Explained” query on Google was “The Menu explained,” referring to the 2022 film starring Ralph Fiennes as a celebrity chef, and Anya Taylor-Joy and Nicholas Hoult as a couple who dine in his restaurant.

    And finally, the most-Googled meme in the U.S. of 2023 was Kevin James, referring to an image of the actor with his hands in his pockets and smirking at the camera. 

    Promotional portrait of actor and comedian Kevin James, in character for his role on the TV sitcom “The King of Queens,” late 1990s.

    TONY ESPARZA / Getty Images


    Google’s top search lists

    See more of Google’s top-searched lists below, and read the U.S. data in full here:

    News:

    1. War in Israel and Gaza
    2. Titanic submarine
    3. Hurricane Hilary
    4. Hurricane Idalia
    5. Hurricane Lee

    People:

    1. Damar Hamlin
    2. Jeremy Renner
    3. Travis Kelce
    4. Tucker Carlson
    5. Lil Tay

    Passings:

    1. Matthew Perry
    2. Tina Turner
    3. Jerry Springer
    4. Jimmy Buffet
    5. Sinéad O’Connor

    Actors:

    1. Jeremy Renner
    2. Jamie Foxx
    3. Danny Masterson
    4. Matt Rife
    5. Pedro Pascal

    Athletes:

    1. Damar Hamlin
    2. Travis Kelce
    3. Brock Purdy
    4. Lamar Jackson
    5. Jalen Hurts

    Musicians:

    1. Jason Aledean
    2. Ice Spice
    3. Oliver Anthony
    4. Peso Pluma
    5. Joe Jonas

    Songs:

    1. Try That in a Small Town – Jason Aldean
    2. Rich Men North of Richmond – Oliver Anthony
    3. Unholy – Kim Petras and Sam Smith
    4. Ella Baila Sola – Eslabon Armado and Peso Pluma
    5. Boy’s a liar Pt. 2 – Ice Spice and PinkPantheress

    Movies:

    1. Barbie
    2. Oppenheimer
    3. Sound of Freedom
    4. Everything Everywhere All At Once
    5. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

    TV Shows:

    1. The Last of Us
    2. Ginny & Georgia
    3. Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story
    4. Daisy Jones & The Six
    5. Wednesday

    Recipe:

    1. Grimace Shake
    2. Lasagna soup
    3. Chicken cobbler
    4. Black cake
    5. Pumptini

    Meme:

    1. Kevin James
    2. Ohio
    3. Police girl
    4. Folding chair
    5. Smurf cat

    Trends:

    1. Roman empire trend
    2. Moon phase trend
    3. AI yearbook trend
    4. Instagram notes number trend
    5. Fruit Roll-Ups trend

    Explained:

    1. The Menu explained
    2. No One Will Save You explained
    3. Silo explained
    4. Reptile explained
    5. Israel Palestine conflict explained

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  • The 10 Best Movie Trailers of 2023 — Whether or Not the Films Were Any Good

    The 10 Best Movie Trailers of 2023 — Whether or Not the Films Were Any Good

    In a world…where moviegoing isn’t what it once was and blockbusters run three hours…a great trailer gets audiences motivated to check out a film on opening weekend. But the very best previews are so much more than that: They hold up as short-form works of art in their own right.

    Keep in mind, marketing pros get just two and a half minutes to grab your attention and make their pitch. A clumsy trailer can also ruin the experience, misrepresenting the movie and setting ticket buyers up for disappointment. These days, fans devour trailers online, watching ads for anticipated new franchise entries by the millions within the first 24 hours they hit the internet. Earlier this month, an impressive ad for the upcoming “Grand Theft Auto 6” game set new highs on YouTube.

    The trailer for “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One” led with a handful of jaw-dropping stunts, like the one where Tom Cruise races his motorcycle up to and eventually over the edge of a precipitous cliff (watch AV Squad’s trailer). And a pair of trailers for “Evil Dead Rise,” cut to a classic record player warbling “Que Sera Sera,” served up a nightmare-fuel montage of creepy sights from the spinoff (check out the all-audiences preview by MOCEAN, as well as Buddha Jones’ gorier red-band trailer).

    Still, sequels, prequels and reboots have it relatively easy — their task is to convince fans that the movie will deliver on their preexisting excitement. By contrast, it’s infinitely harder to introduce audiences to an original film, which is why you won’t see AV Squad’s rad teaser for “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” on this list. The trick is distilling the selling points of an unfamiliar property (or, in the case of “Barbie,” a longstanding brand) into something concise enough to entice.

    So, setting aside the finished product to consider each preview on its own merits, here are Variety’s picks for the year’s best trailers, according to chief film critic (and admitted trailer addict) Peter Debruge. Click the arrow on each photo to watch the trailer in question.

    Peter Debruge

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  • Will ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon,’ or ‘Barbie’ Be Crowned Best Picture?

    Will ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon,’ or ‘Barbie’ Be Crowned Best Picture?

    Many industry folks, some of whom are no doubt Oscar voters, are grateful to Nolan for all that he’s done for the business: tethering auteur-ish prestige to marketability, vocally resisting the streaming incursion. That, coupled with the fact that Nolan is widely seen as overdue for his first Oscar, makes him a strong best director contender. But Oppenheimer as a whole should not be discounted. It may not be as screener-friendly as some of its competitors, but Oppenheimer has enjoyed one of the defining film narratives of 2023. A best picture win would be a fitting end to that story.

    As for the other half of the summer box office equation, Greta Gerwig’s Barbie made more money than Oppenheimer, most of it without the advantage of IMAX pricing. It’s not a weighty, masculine affair like Oppenheimer—which better fits the traditional best picture mold—but Barbie’s difference is probably its greatest asset. Gerwig’s film created a new version of branded filmmaking, swaddling its IP commercialism in sociopolitical commentary. If 2023 becomes known for one film, it will be Barbie, a movie that leaned into its cynical origins hard enough that it broke through to some other realm.

    But maybe the Academy, or at least enough of the Academy, isn’t quite ready for that seismic shift. They could, instead, turn to Bradley Cooper’s Maestro, a Leonard Bernstein biopic that is comfortably recognizable as an old-fashioned awards movie while still taking artistic swings. Cooper is mesmerizing in the lead role, as is his costar, Carey Mulligan. While reviews for the film may be somewhat muted, the stars have been almost universally praised. Which might mean that Maestro’s best chances are in the acting categories—or, the film, buoyed by its beloved performances, could snatch best picture as a popular tiered-ballot second choice.

    At this year’s Venice Film Festival, Maestro was perhaps the glitziest competition entry. But it had a bit of its thunder stolen by Yorgos Lanthimos’s sex-happy bildungsroman Poor Things, a movie originally scheduled for release in early September but that was, in a bit of strange luck, pushed to the more prestigious climes of December. Poor Things is in much better position now, with time to build on the momentum created by its top-prize victory at Venice and sustained good notices from subsequent festivals.

    All of the filmmakers I’ve thus far mentioned have directed best picture nominees in the past. So what of the new class? First-time filmmaker Celine Song had a debut for the ages in Past Lives, a Sundance breakout that was a modest summer hit for A24. A decades-spanning romantic drama, Past Lives is gauzy and gentle but far from insubstantial. It offers a bleary, soul-stirring consideration of immigration and aging, animated by lovely performances from Greta Lee, Teo Yoo, and John Magaro.

    Jonathan Glazer is perhaps one of the cinéaste world’s most respected filmmakers, despite having made only four films. His latest is The Zone of Interest, a Holocaust movie focused on the perpetrators rather than the victims. Glazer’s film is harrowing, operating at a clinical remove but certainly not spare in style or effect. The Zone of Interest is such a visceral statement of artistic vision that even the more art-film-averse members of the Academy might embrace it. The Zone of Interest took second place at Cannes; the Palme d’Or winner was Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall, an electrifying drama starring best actress contender Sandra Hüller, who also plays a supporting role in Glazer’s film. Anatomy has played like gangbusters at subsequent film festivals—a frequent Telluride talking point, a hot-ticket sensation at Toronto—and may be the best positioned of any non-American film.

    Richard Lawson

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  • Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Erika Alexander and Jeffrey Wright in Orion/Amazon MGM Studios’ American Fiction.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Producer Jermaine Johnson worked primarily as a literary manager for clients like first-time movie writer-director Cord Jefferson (whom he’s represented for close to a decade) before the pair collaborated on Jefferson’s darkly comic adaptation of the novel Erasure by Percival Everett, which Jefferson wrote on spec with Johnson’s encouragement. 

    Naturally, first-time filmmaking meant an inherent learning curve. “Day one was a tough day because Cord didn’t really feel qualified to tell Jeffrey Wright how to act,” Johnson recalls. “He did not feel like he was the guy for the job.” That meant adding pep talks to Johnson’s job description. “The conversation was, ‘Hey, man, Jeffrey wants to be directed. Actors want to collaborate and get in the clay with you,’ ” he says. “Next thing, he’s just in there, between takes, talking to Jeffrey, playing around with it. And they established a rapport, from day two on.”

    Shooting constraints prompted production to relocate from New York to the Boston area, where Jefferson would be able to film the scenes at Monk’s (Wright) family beach house in the Massachusetts coastal town of Scituate. “You start to crunch the numbers and think about what it takes to shoot in New York,” Johnson says. “Once we landed on Boston, it was a very quick yes.”

    Northeastern weather, however, proved one of the main production challenges. “I learned what it takes to light a beach at night. That is an extremely difficult task,” Johnson says of a scene in which Leslie Uggams, as Monk’s aging mother, wanders away from her home. Rigging lights amid 20-mile-an-hour winds proved nearly impossible. But for the 80-year-old actress, the wind was no problem. “We’ve got Leslie the legend out in this weather, and she is such a professional that she did as many takes as we needed,” Johnson says, adding that Uggams was “just the brightest light there.”

    Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    From left: Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features

    An Oscar winner for Rain Man, Mark Johnson wasn’t cowed by Alexander Payne’s rigorous commitment to getting his story right. But The Holdovers, set in a New England boarding school over Christmas break, proved a particular exercise in patience. “With Alexander, the script is understandably the most important part of moviemaking,” Johnson says. “He spent a lot of time [giving first-time feature writer David Hemingson feedback] on it.” One of the main developmental changes was expanding the character of grieving chef Mary, played by Da’Vine Joy Randolph. “I really do believe her performance is the heart of the movie,” he adds.

    Finding financing for a story on this scale — an intimate, humanist dramedy centered on Mary along with Paul Giamatti’s weathered teacher Paul Hunham and troubled schoolboy Angus (newcomer Dominic Sessa) — also proved a challenge: “It’s not a big, bombastic subject. Paul Giamatti has such great respect, but is he a big box office name? No,” says Johnson. But midscale films about life are “the movies that so many of us really enjoy,” he says. “These movies are harder and harder to put together. Movies that I’ve made from the very beginning, like Diner or even, quite frankly, Rain Man, I wonder how we would go about putting them together today?”

    Another challenge was location: The preppy Barton Academy where most of the movie takes place is actually a composite of multiple New England schools — though all that snow is, remarkably, very real (about “85 percent” of it, anyway). “I’ve had people come up to me after screenings saying, ‘Oh, I went to that school,’ ” says Johnson. “Well, no, they didn’t, because that school didn’t exist.”

    Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    From left: Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    Eric Chakeen/A24

    Writer-director-producer Sean Durkin had been obsessed with his drama’s subject matter — the Von Erich wrestling family — since an early age, having read about them in magazines and watched old tapes of their matches. When he began writing the script, he was very conscious of the constraints he would need to adhere to. “When I started out, I really did all the line producing myself,” says Durkin, whose films include Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011) and The Nest (2020). “I’ve never been able to separate financials. I’m so envious of writers who can just not worry about it. I’m very conscious of how to craft a world and to be aware of the type of budget [for] the film I’m making.”

    Most of the film takes place in the wrestling arena known as the Sportatorium or on the Von Erichs’ Texas ranch, and simulating those spots proved surprisingly difficult. Preparing to shoot in Louisiana, the scouting team had their work cut out for them. “We really covered the entire state to find the right feel for the ranch,” Durkin says. After landing in the Baton Rouge area, finding a warehouse that could house a wrestling stadium was equally tough. Production designer James Price “was going into every single building that could work size-wise, but it’d be the wrong shape inside, or the wrong texture.” The solution was found in a furniture showroom. “It was just a bunch of fake living rooms. We had to convince the place to let us clear out everything, knock down all the walls.”

    Zac Efron and the cast worked intensely to transform physically to play the Von Erichs, though Durkin didn’t require it. “I wanted them to feel comfortable getting to whatever shape they felt was best for the character,” he says. But for the wrestling, authenticity was key. “They had to learn how to wrestle all the way through from top to bottom, and do multiple takes,” he says, noting that he filmed matches live in front of an audience. “We got really lucky with the Baton Rouge crowd, because they were really into wrestling. It was really quite beautiful, that energy between the background [performers] and the actors.”

    Kristie Macosko Krieger, Maestro

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Jason McDonald/Netflix

    Kristie Macosko Krieger was originally planning to produce a Leonard Bernstein biopic directed by her longtime collaborator, Steven Spielberg, with Bradley Cooper signed on to star as the famed conductor and composer. When Spielberg made the decision to step away from the director’s chair, Cooper offered his own name as a replacement, and asked Spielberg and Krieger to watch an early cut of his directorial debut, A Star Is Born

    Krieger recalls, “Twenty minutes into the film, Spielberg got up and walked over to Bradley and said, ‘You’re directing this fucking movie.’ ”

    Cooper had a clear vision of the details he wanted to bring to Maestro, and he would not budge on any of them. “He was like, ‘We’re absolutely going to go over many time periods,’ ” Krieger says. (The film spans from the 1940s through the 1980s.) Cooper also worked with prosthetics designer Kazu Hiro for three and a half years to transform his face into Bernstein’s. “He wouldn’t stop until he got it right,” Krieger says.

    The film was shot on location in New York’s Carnegie Hall and Central Park, in England’s Ely Cathedral and at Massachusetts’ Tanglewood Estate. Some desired locations, however, were impossible to get. “We could not shoot in the Dakota apartment [on Central Park West],” she says. “Bradley wanted to re-create that to almost exactly what it looked like. He enlisted Kevin Thompson, our production designer, to build the entire Dakota set.”

    Cooper also insisted they shoot with live orchestras, which meant that the film could not shoot during the height of COVID and had to be postponed. “But again, he wasn’t compromising,” says Krieger. “He was like, ‘It will look better, it will be better, it will be the movie that I want to make.’ He made all of us better as department heads in figuring out this film, so none of us were settling, either.”

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Emma Thomas has worked as a producer for her husband, Christopher Nolan, “on pretty much all of his films, ever,” as she puts it. “When I first read Chris’ script, I thought it was the best he’d ever written. It was very clear that he was approaching the story with a large scope in mind, as a blockbuster.”

    But despite Nolan’s pedigree and Oppenheimer’s seemingly endless scale, the biggest production challenge was working on a minimal budget. “It’s about very difficult and weighty subjects,” Thomas explains. “I wasn’t daunted by the things he was proposing shooting, but I knew that the only responsible way to make a film this challenging, that was inevitably going to be R-rated and three hours long, was to make it for a reasonable amount of money. And a reasonable amount of money was probably going to be about half of what anyone else would do it for.”

    Proposing a budget cut in half to department heads meant each sector of the crew had to find creative ways to consolidate resources. “Our production designer, Ruth De Jong, got really smart about ways in which she could build things, with a very targeted eye, building only what was necessary for the shots,” says Thomas. “Our DP, Hoyte van Hoytema, said, ‘There are things that I can do to go faster: to only have one camera, to do as much handheld as possible.’ Our actors were all on set all the time, ready to go as soon as the camera was ready. Those are things that added up to us being able to finish the film on this incredibly punishing schedule.”

    Building Los Alamos, the site of the atomic bomb’s creation, meant battling freezing temperatures in the mesas of New Mexico. “The weather was so cold, it was impossible to dig into the ground because it was frozen,” says Thomas. “We had snowstorms and windstorms. And that was just when we were building the town. Once we got the shoot there, we had another great big windstorm, and we weren’t even sure that the tents were going to stand.” But the production ultimately used the weather to its advantage. “It looks amazing on film — that shot of Cillian when he walks up to the Trinity Tower, and climbs up it, that’s real wind.”

    Paul Garnes, Origin

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Courtesy Array Filmworks

    Paul Garnes had worked as a producer with writer-director Ava DuVernay in the past, but it had been some time since the pair had operated outside the studio system. “In the early days, we were at Netflix,” he says. “[Origin] got caught up in the industry slowdown. Ava made the really bold choice to go out and make this independently.” 

    That decision made things more exhilarating and terrifying, Garnes says. “In every production, there’s some executive that you can call and say, ‘Hey, this is happening, what do we do?’ We didn’t have that. It was just me and Ava. We could really only depend on each other.”

    The film spans centuries and continents, with scenes in Berlin at the height of World War II, aboard slave ships in the 1600s and in the streets of contemporary India. The decision to finance independently meant working with local governments to shoot in as many historical locations as possible. “We weren’t going to build a bunch of sets on soundstages,” Garnes says. “Outside of the slave ship sequence, because obviously slave ships don’t exist, we shot everything else pretty much on location.”

    That made for some awkward asks. “Could we shoot a Nazi rally in downtown Berlin, in the place where that book burning in the Bebelplatz really happened?” says Garnes. “We didn’t know at the time, but they had never let anyone film there.” Filming also took place at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. “It’s a sensitive place. You don’t want to cause any stress or damage or anything to a place people visit in very solemn moments.”

    As a home base, production landed on Savannah, Georgia, where they were able to re-create a concentration camp. Bringing in those extras meant “Ava [taking] very careful time to get the background talent to understand what they were doing, who they were,” says Garnes. A sequence portraying the murder of Trayvon Martin was also filmed in that area, as well as scenes set in cotton fields in the 1930s South. 

    This story first appeared in the Dec. 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • ‘Oppenheimer’ to Get Japan Release

    ‘Oppenheimer’ to Get Japan Release

    Oppenheimer will get a theatrical release in Japan.

    Japanese distributor Bitters End has confirmed it will bow Christopher Nolan’s biopic in local cinemas next year, though it did not set a specific release date.

    In a statement, Bitters End said it had made the decision after screening the film and “following months of thoughtful dialogue associated with the subject matter and acknowledging the particular sensitivity for us Japanese.”

    With his biopic about the brilliant physicist who led the Manhattan Project that built the atomic bomb, Nolan had “created a singular cinematic experience that transcends traditional storytelling and must be seen on the big screen,” the company said. “We invite the audience to watch the film with their own eyes when it comes to Japan.”

    Oppenheimer, a Universal release, starring Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Robert Downey Jr. and Florence Pugh, has been a phenomenal critical and commercial success, grossing more than $950 million worldwide and is a frontrunner for next year’s Oscars. But the subject matter has meant the film was always highly controversial in Japan.

    This summer, Warner Bros. Japan was forced to apologize after Warners’ U.S. Twitter account posted memes featuring mashups of Warners’ Barbie with Nolan’s Oppenheimer film, something many Japanese took to be making light of the more than 200,000 killed in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The phrase #NoBarbenheimer trended in Japan and it was not clear whether Oppenheimer would get a local release.

    Nolan has defended his choice to not explicitly depict the bombings and the Japanese victims, arguing his film is on told subjectively from Oppenheimer’s point of view and that the physicist never witnessed the devastation he helped bring about. “He learned about the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the radio — the same as the rest of the world,” Nolan told NBC.

    This isn’t the first Universal title Bitters End has released in Japan, having previously handled the local bow of Joe Wright’s Churchill biopic Darkest Hour and Paul Thomas Anderson’s 70s dramedy Licorice Pizza.

    Scott Roxborough

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  • Ripping the Headlines Today – Paul Lander, Humor Times

    Ripping the Headlines Today – Paul Lander, Humor Times

    Making fun of the headlines today, so you don’t have to

    The news, even that about Southwest Airlines, doesn’t need to be complicated or confusing; that’s what any new release from Microsoft is for. And, as in the case with anything from Microsoft, to keep the news from worrying our pretty little heads over, remember something new and equally indecipherable will come out soon: 

    Really all you need to do is follow one simple rule: barely pay attention and jump to conclusions. So, here are some headlines today and my first thoughts:

    Southwest Airlines
    A Southwest Airlines passenger climbed onto a wing.

    Southwest Airlines passenger hospitalized after opening emergency exit and climbing onto wing, officials say

    … Some people will do anything for extra leg room.

    Moms for Liberty founder and her husband in 3-way and now battery is alleged

    Oh, I’m guessing all kinds of batteries were involved.

    Man who stripped naked on Disneyland ride was on drugs, police say

    Ironically, he slipped himself a Mickey.

    Century-overdue library book is finally returned in Minnesota

    … No word if it was found with Joe Biden’s boxed papers.

    Jared Leto becomes the first person to legally climb to the top of the Empire State Building

    The last time he was that high, he agreed to do ‘Morbius.’

    George Santos was expelled from Congress

    … Saying that’s nothing compared to time he was suspended from baseball for using PEDs.

    Darryl Hall broke up with John Oates

    … look for a new group: John Oates and Pete Davidson!

    Cyber Monday biggest on-line shopping event ever

    And, now that Black Friday, Small Business Saturday and Cyber Monday are done, let’s make way for ‘Burglary Tuesday.’

    Henry Kissinger dies at 100

    It probably was the vaccine.

    Huge crack opens up in Iceland, steam pouring forth

    … So, just another vacation for Chris Christie.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ bests ‘Barbie’ in weekend premiere VOD viewership

    … That would explain the giant pink mushroom cloud where Barbie’s dream house used to be.

    Aaron Rodgers talks Jets return this season

    And says he’ll stomp his leg once if yes, twice if no.Will Smith’s team responds to accusations that the actor bottoms

    Will Smith’s team responds to accusations that the actor bottoms

    Damn, a ‘race to the bottom’ is now a description of people rushing to Will Smith’s house!

    The Las Vegas Sphere is already losing a 100 million dollars

    … Look for Elon to pay billions for it …

    Paul LanderPaul Lander
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    Paul Lander

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  • Why Won't Universal Let 'Oppenheimer' Fancams Stay? | The Mary Sue

    Why Won't Universal Let 'Oppenheimer' Fancams Stay? | The Mary Sue

    For one brief moment, we were alive. When the SAG-AFTRA strike ended, the Oppenheimer girlies really were thriving. The fancams erupted within moments and edits took over on social media of J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) set to Taylor Swift songs or “Bad Guy” by Billie Eilish just for the fun of it all.

    The art of the fancam has evolved through time, Fans began making video edits of their favorite characters or ships on YouTube, and now younger generations are moving to “fancams” on apps like Twitter and TikTok. When the strike ended and people could talk freely about Oppenheimer, fancams began to flood the app but were taken down for copyright infringement by Universal Pictures almost instantly. So our brief moment of happiness living in the fancam era of Christopher Nolan’s epic was dashed by the reality that most of the time, studios can and will use copyright to take fancams from us.

    On the one hand, it is technically well within their right as a studio to stop fancams. It is also why screen-capping has become more difficult. On the other hand, fancams are fun. Engaging with media in this way makes it more universal and helps fans engage with their fandom’s community. Taking that option away really does limit our ability to talk about movies in an entertaining way.

    Instead, we’re stuck with only talking about movies like Oppenheimer in think pieces or multi-thread posts on social media. This is fine, I suppose, but that’s not the only way to engage with a movie. Sometimes, you just want to watch a fancam of Oppy putting his hat on repeatedly for the vibes.

    Let the Oppy fancams live!

    In comparison to how swiftly the Oppenheimer fancams have been taken down, Barbie fancams have been thriving on social media because fans can interact with the media and with each other.

    Marvel fans are notorious for making edits of their favorite couples. I have been seeing plenty of Lokius on my timeline (even if I ship the throuple on Loki).

    The point is that, out of all of the studios, only one seems to see an issue with fancams and takes action against them. Frankly, it’s a harmless way for people to engage with film and TV. You’re just making something that others can talk about and share with friends.

    What hurts is that the Oppenheimer fancams were great and something I shared with others who love the movie. But every time my friends went to open them, they’d already be gone. So, what’s the deal? Why not just let fans engage with your media in a way that makes them happy? Especially when it keeps people talking about the movie in question?

    I’ll miss you forever, Oppenheimer fancam set to “The Chain” by Fleetwood Mac.

    (featured image: Universal Pictures)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Rachel Leishman

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  • Robert Downey Jr.’s Third Act: ‘Oppenheimer’ Is Just the Beginning

    Robert Downey Jr.’s Third Act: ‘Oppenheimer’ Is Just the Beginning

    That was the appeal of making Oppenheimer with Nolan and his producing partner Emma Thomas, who, like the Downeys, are another husband-and-wife filmmaking duo prone to taking big swings. “For him, Chris and Emma have just figured that out like nobody else,” Susan says.

    Even their process for casting has a no-nonsense streamline to it. “When you’re doing a Chris Nolan thing, basically you get a phone call: ‘Chris wants you for this. Will you come read the script at his house?’ ” says Susan, who joked that her husband’s curiosity clashed with his, let’s say, more inert tendencies. “Robert’s like, ‘Wait, I have to drive that far east?… Okay.’ Once he was willing to do that, I already knew his mindset was very open.”

    The Oppenheimer team was surprised to meet a movie star who was willing to cast off his armor. “Honestly, he kind of subverted all my expectations of him,” Thomas says. “We’ve often talked about how amazing it’d be to work with him, but we work in a very specific, fairly stripped-down way. I wasn’t sure how he was going to adjust to that way of working because, when you’re a big movie star like Robert, that isn’t necessarily the way you’re used to working.”

    But his Avengers experience had also prepared him for being part of Oppenheimer’s gargantuan ensemble, one of 79 speaking roles in a cast that includes three best actor Oscar winners. Downey’s Strauss clashes repeatedly with Murphy’s Oppenheimer but also with his own aide (played by Alden Ehrenreich) and even with Albert Einstein (Tom Conti). Fueled by a potent mix of sincere conviction and petty grievance, he commands scene after scene of crowded public hearings, strategy sessions, and backroom machinations, but without the bemused pizzazz of his Marvel alter ego. Strauss may be a politically savvy survivor, but he’s also a black hole of personality who doesn’t so much fill a room as draw everyone into his own.

    As he had on his Marvel films, Downey relished the opportunity to stray from best-laid plans, carefully mapping out a scene with filmmakers and crew only to go rogue. “From a creative point of view, he came extraordinarily well prepared,” Nolan says. “It’s a very complicated part, and he had it absolutely down. And he also had a number of, I wouldn’t call them improvisations because a lot of it was very carefully planned, but he had a number of embellishments, things that he wanted to bring to the character, things that he wanted to try out.”

    Nolan and cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema would follow Downey in a room as he delivered monologues that stretched multiple pages.

    “I think he loved that freedom to move around the room and present himself with whatever energy he felt like: ‘Let’s try it again! Let’s try it a different way!’ ” Nolan says. “However heavy the 70-millimeter camera was, Hoyte would never get too tired. In a way, Robert was probably waiting for him to get tired, but he didn’t. So he was able to really thrash it out, really reach for something and stretch himself.”

    Joe and Anthony Russo, who directed Downey in three Marvel movies, describe the Downey method in similar terms: “When he’ll come back to set, Robert is famous for throwing the plan out the window and climbing on top of the couch and whatever, sort of going off-book,” Joe says. “He does this because he likes to surprise himself. He likes to keep things fresh. He lights up for that.”

    Anthony Breznican

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  • Christopher Nolan on the Danger of Streaming-Only Films Disappearing: “It Will Need to Be Fixed”

    Christopher Nolan on the Danger of Streaming-Only Films Disappearing: “It Will Need to Be Fixed”

    Christopher Nolan is addressing the concern that filmmakers’ projects could vanish if they are removed from streaming platforms and not available to be seen via physical media.

    During a conversation with The Washington Post published online Friday, the Oppenheimer director discussed his film’s upcoming home release. Nolan clarified that a comment he made at a recent Oppenheimer screening about the home release being important to prevent an “evil streaming service” from stealing the project from viewers was just a joke, but that he does see a potential danger for movies that only exist on streamers.

    “There is a danger these days that if things only exist in the streaming version, they do get taken down,” Nolan told the publication. “They come and go — as do broadcast versions of films, so my films will play on HBO or whatever, they’ll come and go. But the home video version is the thing that can always be there, so people can always access it. And since the 1980s, as filmmakers, we’ve taken that for granted, and now we have to make sure that there’s a way that that can continue to happen, if not the physical media.”

    Nolan explained that he doesn’t discourage changes in how people experience movies and said that “the culture of film thrives with new innovations.” But he also knows that “the accessibility of your work” is something that needs to be protected.

    “The danger I’m talking about with a filmmaker’s film just sort of disappearing from streaming one day and then maybe not coming back or not coming back for a long period of time, that’s not an intentional conspiracy,” he continued. “That’s just a way that with the particular licensing agreements, the way things are evolving. So it’s something worth pointing out because it will need to be fixed, but I’m very confident that it will be.”

    The topic of titles permanently disappearing from streaming services has become a relevant one in recent months. Earlier this year, Disney took a $1.5 billion tax write-down after dropping more than 70 titles from Disney+ and Hulu, while Warner Bros. Discovery has signed licensing deals with free, ad-supported channels for its previously dropped shows, including Westworld, which was co-created by Nolan’s brother Jonathan Nolan.

    Ryan Gajewski

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  • Alden Ehrenreich Is Back in the Spotlight—For Now

    Alden Ehrenreich Is Back in the Spotlight—For Now

    While preparing to play a prequelized Han Solo in the biggest film of his life, Alden Ehrenreich came across an interview from the late ’70s with Harrison Ford, following the release of the original Star Wars. Ford was asked what it felt like to come off of such a massive cultural hit and responded with relief that he didn’t feel much. Ehrenreich could relate. “We all live under this mythology that success in a certain way is salvational and changes everything,” the Solo star says now over Zoom. “The actual back end of success or failure ends up revealing itself to be not nearly as meaningful as you think on the front end. I’ve had that experience so many times. A movie comes out and you want to go like, ‘Yes!’—and you just don’t.”

    Ehrenreich thinks back to that Ford interview after I ask him a similar kind of question. In terms of his own career, 2023 has been major—and not just because it’s the first year in which he’s appeared in a film since 2018, when Solo flopped at the box office. Ehrenreich is the fiery colead of this past Sundance’s smash premiere, Fair Play, which launched to No. 1 on Netflix’s movies chart last month. He’s a key supporting figure in both Cocaine Bear, the hit B movie comedy from Elizabeth Banks, and Oppenheimer, Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-front-running epic that’s grossed close to $1 billion globally (with no signs of stopping). His directorial debut, the short film Shadow Brother Sunday, has played festivals and picked up prizes around the world, a concrete step forward in his filmmaking ambitions.

    So, a natural inquiry: How does it all feel? No short way to answer that. For starters, SAG-AFTRA’s strike rules prevented Ehrenreich from talking about most of these projects as they were released. Their buzz existed on text threads with family and friends and in the occasional headline he’d failed to avoid. “It didn’t feel nearly as real,” he says. As we chat, he’s been allowed to publicly discuss the films for about 48 hours. Then there’s the broader reality. At just 33 years old, the young actor has already hit Hollywood highs and lows, been forced to learn the transitory nature of any level of standing in this industry. He wonders if he’s built for it at all. “You just try to navigate, as we all do, caring too much about what other people think of you, and you try to listen to something that’s more important,” he says. “It’s very, very hard to do.” Especially, perhaps, when the feedback is as good as it’s been lately.

    Ehrenreich is big on quoting. Titans of Hollywood, like Harrison Ford, have articulated ways of surviving through showbusiness that he’s not only absorbed, but adopted as a kind of philosophy. “Are you ready for a pretentious reference?” he asks me knowingly, as he works through one of many long, candid answers. “I go back to an AFI speech that Orson Welles gave where he said, ‘Maybe my films would’ve been better, but they wouldn’t have been mine.’”

    Before turning 20, Ehrenreich made his feature-acting debut in Francis Ford Coppola’s noir drama Tetro, and was promptly compared to a young Leonardo DiCaprio by Roger Ebert. He went on to work with Woody Allen, Park Chan-wook, and most auspiciously, the Coen brothers in their old-Hollywood pastiche Hail, Caesar! His deadpan tour-de-force there, as a Gene Autry-esque dimwit singing cowboy, drew raves, and his profile skyrocketed. The film was released in February of 2016. In March, reports surfaced that Ehrenreich had been shortlisted to play Han Solo in the mega-budgeted eponymous prequel to be directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller; his casting was confirmed by May. After the film’s box office disappointment—relative to its $275-plus million budget anyway, as it grossed nearly $400 million worldwide—the actor took time off, given the process’s length from pre-production prep to post-release promotion. (One reason it took so long: Lord and Miller were replaced by Ron Howard mid-shoot.) More recently, he’s reflected on what that time gave him.

    “I loved the original spirit of how they wanted to make [Solo], and I did it because it was this great platform from which I could do my own thing,” he says. “But what I realized at that point is: I hadn’t built my own thing enough to be able to do it…. I knew that I didn’t know myself in that way yet, and that takes a certain amount of time and effort and failure in its own kind of enclosed way. That’s what I spent that time doing.”

    He ended his post-Solo hiatus with a role on the ill-fated Peacock series Brave New World, which was in production for eight months. Covid hit immediately thereafter. Suddenly, as the world emerged out of the pandemic, Ehrenreich found himself no longer shortlisted for the most plum roles available to actors his age. “When you go back and want to do something, you realize that there’s other people on the list who have surpassed you, and you have to fight harder for a particular role that you want,” he says. “I’ve lived that over and over again.”

    But Ehrenreich quotes that Welles speech to affirm that he stands by his choices and his selectiveness. “There’s a practical arithmetic as an actor now that, frankly, I just don’t have the stomach for in the long run,” he says. “I don’t want to do projects on the cut. I don’t want to do things I don’t really love if I can avoid it—and with the cadence now, you kind of have to be doing a certain amount of projects.” Case in point: “There are things that I really wanted that I didn’t get. The heartbreaker is when the director goes, ‘You’re who I want, but I can’t cast you because they need to have this guy who came off this thing.’”

    This makes Ehrenreich’s 2023 work stand out all the more. One could argue he’s conformed to the expectation of a hustling rising star. He does not see it that way: “When I hear people say, ‘God, you weren’t in a movie for five years,’ I’m like, ‘Holy shit!’” He made Cocaine Bear to ease back into the routine and had a blast. A few months later, he flew to Serbia to star with Phoebe Dynevor in the taut thriller Fair Play, about an engaged couple working at the same financial firm whose bond unravels when one is promoted over the other. Ehrenreich’s performance in this blazing feature debut from Chloe Domont, which Netflix bought out of Sundance for $20 million, is dark and explosive, in a key he hadn’t hit before. What pushed him to take such a risky, volatile approach? “You have to trust the filmmaker. You live and die on them—and if you’re going to die, you’re already dead at that point.”

    David Canfield

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  • ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among Top Artisan Awards Season Contenders 

    ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among Top Artisan Awards Season Contenders 

    This year’s awards-contending films offer a treasure trove of crafts that includes transformations, exquisite sets, lavish costumes, memorable scores and songs and immersive cinematography. The contenders range from newcomers to legends — Variety breaks down the categories below.

    MAKEUP AND HAIR

    Prosthetic makeup designer Kazu Hiro could very well walk away with his third Oscar for his work on Bradley Cooper’s “Maestro.” Transforming Cooper into the legendary composer Leonard Bernstein consisted of five different stages to gradually age the actor. And the guild as well as the Academy love a transformation.

    Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3” could be a contender in this area, following in the footsteps of the first two films that landed guild nominations. The sheer volume of prosthetics and wigs went into building the characters such as the humanimals, the hybrid of humanoid and animal, and the villain, the High Evolutionary, played by Chukwudi Iwuji. Makeup head Alexei Dmitriew and hair department head Cassie Russek used over 22,500 prosthetics, 500 wigs and 130 facial hairpieces to create the characters. That number broke the world record for most prosthetics used in a film, previously held by “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”

    With Warner Bros.’ blockbuster “Barbie,” each Barbie and Ken in the film sported custom hair and makeup looks created by hair and makeup artist Ivana Primorac. For star Margot Robbie alone, Primorac used 18 wigs and 30 hairpieces to transform her into the most famous doll in the world.

    Willem Dafoe’s makeup in “Poor Things” is a notable contender. Prosthetic pieces were needed for his Dr. Frankenstein-like scientist. Nadia Stacey referenced paintings by Francis Bacon for his character design and gave him prominent scars. Her most intricate work came on Kathryn Hunter’s brothel owner, Swimey, whose tattoo-covered body required more than 100 designs that needed to be applied to the actor.

    Lily Gladstone’s transformation is a subtle one in Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.” Makeup artist Kay Georgiou made subtle changes to Gladstone’s Mollie, the Osage Native who marries Leonardo DiCaprio’s Ernest Burkhart. Early on, she added extensions and pieces to make Mollie’s hair appear fuller. As the film progresses, and Mollie gradually succumbs to poisoning, Georgiou would remove the pieces and add grease into Gladstone’s hair “to make her look sick.”

    VISUAL EFFECTS

    With “Dune 2” moved into 2024, Disney’s futuristic sci-fi thriller “The Creator” finds its place in the race. Helmer Gareth Edwards shot the film on an $80 million budget, shooting on location. The VFX team added effects entirely in post-production. VFX supervisor James Cooper essentially worked with an empty frame as he built-in effects for the giant destroyer tank and the Nomad airship that brings destruction to regions in the war against AI.

    Disney’s other contender, “The Little Mermaid,” is the live-action reimagining of its 1989 animated classic. Director Rob Marshall used a dry-for-wet approach simulating the appearance of the actors being underwater as they filmed against a blue screen. VFX supervisor Tim Burke digitally re-created the underwater scenes in post-production to help bring Ariel and her friends to life.

    Christopher Nolan shot “Oppenheimer” in-camera, including the testing of the atomic bomb. VFX teams added in explosions. The team also worked to remove modern details. In all, about 200 VFX shots, the majority of which were computer-generated, were used.

    Groundbreaking visual effects work bleeds into the world of animation in “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.” With Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) able to cross dimensions, the team used various art styles to differentiate the worlds. Take Earth 42, where the world was heavy and gritty with a noir aesthetic. The world of Spider-Punk was influenced by ‘70s London punk, as the artists used razor blades to cut up newspapers, album covers and posters to give that world its edge.

    Marvel’s “The Marvels” — with a Nov. 10 U.S. release date — could also find itself in the running, alongside “Blue Beetle” and “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts.”

    CINEMATOGRAPHY

    In 1963, cinematographer landed a double nomination at the Oscars, and that was Leon Shamroy for “Cleopatra” and “The Cardinal.” Roger Surtees followed in 1971 “The Last Picture Show” and “Summer of ’42.” Most recently, Roger Deakins landed a double-nom in 2007 for “The Assassination of Jesse James” and “No Country for “Old Men.” This year, Rodrigo Prieto could be competing against himself.

    Prieto shot “Barbie” and “Killers of the Flower Moon,” demonstrating his command of his craft with two very different films: one a pink-saturated, hyper-real world of toys and the other a naturalistic period piece encompassing world of the Osage Nation. Prieto has been nominated three times previously and never won.

    But just as impressive is “Oppenheimer,” for which DP Hoyte Van Hoytema will probably land his second Oscar nomination. For the film about the father of the atom bomb, director Christopher Nolan — renowned for shooting practical effects — worked closely with Van Hoytema on on-camera experiments to re-create the first test of the bomb without using VFX. Van Hoytema also worked with Kodak to develop black-and-white 70 mm film stock so Nolan could shoot the monochromatic aspects of the film.

    For “Maestro,” director/star Bradley Cooper called on his “A Star Is Born” DP Matthew Libatique to capture the story of conductor/composer Leonard Bernstein. The DP worked in both color and black and white. During one key scene between Bernstein’s wife, Felicia (Carey Mulligan) and Leonard, he transitions from the monochrome world to color but keeps his camera subjective. It’s a powerful moment that allows the audience to decide which side to take.

    Dan Lausten takes on his first musical with “The Color Purple.” He works with a lush palette and sweeping camera that infuses scenes with a diffuse yet rich period look while transitioning into showstopping, fantastical numbers such as “I’m Here,” “Hell No” and “The Color Purple.”

    “The Zone of Interest’s” DP Lukasz Zał used 10 cameras that had been drilled into walls to capture “life’s moments” in Jonathan Glazer’s film about the Auschwitz commandant and his family living in the shadow of the concentration camp. The actors could move about the house unobstructed, offering a more natural portrait of the family’s everyday life.

    One of the most searing images of the year belongs to the final moments of Celine Song’s “Past Lives.” Shabier Kirchner’s framing has a lasting emotional impact as he follows Greta Lee’s Nora and her reunion with her childhood friend Hae Sung (Teo Yoo). As Hae’s Uber leaves, there is a moment of peace and a metaphoric door closing. Nora goes home and weeps. She has finally said goodbye to her old life while Kirchner captures a sad realization.

    Robbie Ryan used Petzval lenses on “Poor Things” to give the effect that the only thing in focus is the center. 35mm Ektachrome was made for the film to make the technicolor world of the film more vibrant.

    Linus Sandgren approached Emerald Fennell’s “Saltburn” as if it were an oil painting. When Jacob Elordi’s super-wealthy Felix invites Barry Keoghan’s not-so-wealthy Oliver to his family’s estate for the summer, events take a twisted turn. Alfred Hitchcock films were an inspiration. “Shoot the murder stories like a love scene, and a love scene like a murder…,” says Sandgren of his approach. And with Fennell giving him different themes to play with, visually, the DP could mix things up.

    Other contenders include Dariusz Wolski for “Napoleon,” Robert Yeoman’s work on “Asteroid City,” Erik Messerschmidt pulling double duty on “The Killer” and “Ferrari,” Edward Lachman for “El Conde” and Chung-hoon Chung’s take on “Wonka.”

    COSTUME DESIGN

    Holly Waddington referenced baby clothes for an infantilized Emma Stone in “Poor Things.” Ruffles and 1930s-era underwear as well as latex were all fabrics Waddington used for Yorgos Lanthimos’ film to reflect Bella’s sexual awakening. Waddington seeks her first CDGA and Oscar nom with this film.

    For “The Color Purple,” veteran Francine Jamison-Tanchuck had to create costumes that reflected Black Americans in the South, from the poor to the middle class, over several decades, from before WWI to the 1950s, as well as intricate sequined and feathered costumes that stand out in vibrant song and dance numbers. Plus, there’s “Miss Celie’s Pants,” a pivotal ode to women’s freedom and fabulous tailoring. Will Jamison-Tanchuck finally land long-overdue recognition?

    For “Killers of the Flower Moon,” Jacqueline West worked with the Pendleton Company as well as the Osage nation to secure traditional blankets — there were 1,000 used in the film. In addition, Oscar-winner West worked with clothing consultant Julie O’Keefe to bring 1920s Oklahoma to life through costume, but also to ensure the depiction of Native Americans during this tragic time was accurate and authentic.

    Stacey Battat reunited with Sofia Coppola for “Priscilla,” the story of Priscilla Beaulieu and her marriage to Elvis Presley. Chanel helped re-create the iconic lace wedding dress Priscilla wore when she wed the King of Rock and Roll. As Priscilla, Calilee Spaeny donned more than 120 outfits, evolving from the grays and browns she wore as a teenager who first met Elvis on a German military base to peachy hues in Memphis to jeans, natural tones and prints when she blossoms into a liberated woman.

    For “Maestro,” Mark Bridges’ experience on “The Artist” came in handy when he had to design for black-and-white — texture was key. Having Leonard Bernstein’s children give him access to the family history helped the Oscar-winning costume designer build authentic looks.

    Ben Affleck’s “Air” recounts Nike’s 1984 courtship and subsequent deal with then-basketball rookie Michael Jordan. Costume designer Charlese Antoinette Jones dressed Matt Damon’s basketball scout Sonny Vaccaro in polo shirts while Affleck, as Nike founder Phil Knight, wore quintessential 1980s suits that Antoinette-Jones paired with sneakers.

    Rounding out the contenders are Ellen Mirojnick (“Oppenheimer,” no Oscar nominations), Colleen Atwood (“The Little Mermaid,” four Oscar wins) and Janty Yates (“Napoleon,” one Oscar win), whose challenges included early 20th century attire, working with special effects to build the perfect mermaid tail and costuming an entire army.

    SOUND

    “The Creator’s” immense soundscape came together under the supervision of Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van Der Ryn. The ominous sound of the destroyer ship Nomad and the giant futuristic military tank that wreaks havoc on humanity and AI make the film a grand cinematic experience.

    For a pivotal train sequence in “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One,” supervising sound editor James H. Mather started with quiet that exploded into a sudden tempo change that weaves throughout the onscreen action.

    With “Maestro,” Steve Morrow wanted to make the audience feel as if they were in the middle of a live performance. For the Ely Cathedral performance, Morrow rigged 60 different microphones on the floor so the audience would feel immersed in the music.

    Look out for the sound of the racing world in Neon’s “Ferarri,” and the late 18th and early 19th century battle scenes in “Napoleon.”

    “Oppenheimer’s” team was tasked with creating the loudest sound in the world, that of the explosion of the atomic bomb. The film’s sound design was derived from natural sounds and enhanced. But when the audience sees the bomb explode, rather than a giant boom, there are sounds of breathing, a refrain from the expected.

    PRODUCTION DESIGN

    For “Poor Things,” James Price and Shona Heath built a Victorian-era world that includes London, Lisbon, Alexandria and Paris. The Lisbon set was the largest and included homes, hotels and restaurants.

    Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer built Barbieland and made sure the scale was off-kilter for “Barbie.” This idea came from researching doll houses and realizing that the doll inside the house was not to scale. “Everything was reduced by 23%,” Greenwood says. Their sets were built as 360-degree sets, which would allow for director Greta Gerwig and DP Rodrigo Prieto to fully capture the environment.

    EDITING

    In “Oppenheimer,” Jennifer Lame cuts from color to black and white as J. Robert Oppenheimer builds the atomic bomb. There’s the build-up to the test, and the Senate hearing he faces later on in his career.

    Scorsese’s go-to editor Thelma Schoonmaker tracks the evil conspiracy between William Hale (Robert De Niro) and Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) in the true story of the Osage nation murders. The steady pacing as Schoomaker holds onto Lily Gladstone’s quiet performance makes for the film’s most riveting and powerful moments.

    Michelle Tesoro takes on “Maestro,” layering in musical concerto moments that immerse audiences in the performances of the film’s subject, conductor-composer Leonard Bernstein.

    “Barbie” crafts a story that is fun, joyful and heartbreaking. Nick Houy had to balance the two, as well as cut in dance numbers such as “Dance the Night Away” and “I’m Just Ken.” As Margot Robbie’s Barbie goes from the fantastical Barbieland into the real world, Houy delicately cuts her journey of self discovery and realization.

    “The Color Purple’s” Jon Poll cuts his second musical after “The Greatest Showman.” Poll’s challenges were technical, intercutting the dramatic scenes with musical moments, or cutting the film’s opening number with its great crescendo. From that first moment, Poll hooks audiences in and gives enough information about the story, tapping into film’s musical rhythm and pacing.

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  • Christopher Nolan’s ‘Oppenheimer’ Returning to Imax After $183M Worldwide Box Office

    Christopher Nolan’s ‘Oppenheimer’ Returning to Imax After $183M Worldwide Box Office

    Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is returning to Imax screens on Nov. 3 for a one-week exclusive run.

    The limited engagement includes six Imax 70mm film projections locations worldwide — four AMC Imax screens in California and New York City, and two more locations in London and Melbourne, Australia. The rare encore run for a Hollywood tentpole on Imax screens follows Oppenheimer grossing over $183 million worldwide on the company’s large format screens to date.

    That makes Nolan’s epic the fourth highest grossing Imax release of all time. The World War II-set biopic stars Cillian Murphy as physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, known as the “father of the atomic bomb” for his role in the Manhattan Project.

    Oppenheimer also stars Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Robert Downey Jr. and Florence Pugh. The encore presentation will be targeted at best performing locations around the world for the tentpole, which helped lead Imax to its highest grossing summer in 54 countries and territories, including in the U.S. and China.

    Oppenheimer was shot by cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema using Imax cameras and a combination of Imax 65mm and 65mm large-format film. That included the use of Imax black and white analog photography.

    Christopher Nolan is known for his preference of film to digital cinematography, and so his embrace of Imax cameras and technologies.

    Based on the 2005 book American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, Oppenheimer is produced by Nolan, Emma Thomas and Charles Roven. 

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  • What the Success of ‘Oppenheimer’ Proved to Christopher Nolan’s Most Trusted Collaborator

    What the Success of ‘Oppenheimer’ Proved to Christopher Nolan’s Most Trusted Collaborator

    Christopher Nolan’s sets tend to be massive, but on a good day for his longtime cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema, the space for shooting feels as simplified and bare-bones as a black-box theater. On their new movie Oppenheimer, van Hoytema focused on intimacy amid grandiosity, pushing his IMAX camera right up against his actors’ faces. Star Cillian Murphy would look it right in the eye; the rest of the production, elaborate as it was, may as well have been on another planet. “I was in his private space—so it was not only a camera, but also this panting, big, Dutch, hairy camera guy in his face,” van Hoytema says with a laugh. “It feels like a tiny little student film. And for the actors, that’s also a very safe space.”

    That experience translates in Oppenheimer, from the incredibly detailed close-ups of Murphy’s J. Robert Oppenheimer to the relentless pacing achieved for a talky drama about quantum physics. Nolan may be considered a master in his prime here, but that spontaneity—that desire to push the boundaries and see what comes of it—gives his Oscar-countending new film its drive. It’s a testament to the relationship he’s built with van Hoytema over a decade, going back to their first collaboration on 2014’s Interstellar.

    “The first film I did with Chris, I was just nervous beyond myself,” van Hoytema says. “We not only speak the same language now, but we’ve gone through experiences where we have tested everything, done everything. We’ve worked with all the craziest cameras we could imagine, shot on the weirdest locations.”

    We’re speaking from a green room in Savannah, Georgia, where van Hoytema was just honored as part of the SCAD Savannah Film Festival. This will not be his only award stopover of the season. 2017’s Dunkirk earned van Hoytema his first Oscar nomination, and the cinematographer has further bolstered his reputation as a major force in the field since, through his recent work with the likes of Jordan Peele (Nope) and James Gray (Ad Astra). Oppenheimer now appears primed to take van Hoytema all the way, a culmination point for his ambitious ongoing project with Nolan, to expand the possibilities of theatrical filmmaking in an era where the very form feels under threat. “For years Chris has been fighting for this cause of giving what, in his belief, is the best possible cinematic experience, and I’ve been with him on that quest,” he says. “You hear voices coming from other corners, people saying, ‘This is not how people want to see films anymore. This is not the way we shoot films anymore.’ In that way—this film, yeah, it was a vindication.”

    Van Hoytema at the 26th SCAD Savannah Film Festival.

    Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    The success of Oppenheimer speaks for itself: an artsy three-hour drama about the man behind the atomic bomb has made nearly $1 billion worldwide, and is already the highest-grossing biopic in movie history. If the sell for the big-screen of late has especially been related to spectacle and visual scope, then you could call van Hoytema’s character-driven approach to this movie risky even by his own daring standards. “The way people always react [to Nolan’s films] has a lot to do with the grand scale of it—the wide shots,” van Hoytema says. “But on this particular film, we were really turning inward.”

    He describes his job as one of figuring out how to cinematically get inside his brainy, muted, deeply conflicted protagonist’s head. This meant applying macro-photography, or the visual emphasis on small objects, to the concept of quantum physics. “The camera is able to pick up so much subtlety and so much nuance,” van Hoytema says. “But with the macrophotography, that was very new for me—I mean, we had never been able to do macro shots on an IMAX in that way before.” Then there’s the matter of shoving those IMAX cameras inches, maybe centimeters from the cast’s faces. “That’s extremely intimidating for the actors,” van Hoytema says. “But as an audience, you really can feel the proximity of a camera to your subject. You might not be able to put your finger on what it is exactly, but any film watcher understands intuitively if a camera is very far away or if the camera is very close.”

    IMAX is not known for its ease. Van Hoytema knows that using it, moment to moment, can seem clumsy, unwieldy, and needlessly intensive. He hears his peers disregard the technology for the leaner, meaner methods available via modern equipment. In the rearview, van Hoytema grins at the naysayers for what Oppenheimer has managed—both artistically and commercially. “Sometimes you have to get a little bit impractical,” he says. “Sometimes you have to make things a little bit more difficult for yourself.” This attitude reflects van Hoytema’s general attitude toward the state of theatrical. As he puts it, “It is not about making pretty pictures that maybe look a little less pretty here or a little bit more pretty there.” His goal is to immerse the audience—and to find the best, most innovative, surprising way to do that.

    Van Hoytema with Nolan Murphy and more Oppenheimer crew.

    Van Hoytema with Nolan, Murphy, and more Oppenheimer crew.

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures

    David Canfield

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  • Logan Paul Walked Out Of ‘Oppenheimer’ Because ‘Everyone’s Just Talking’

    Logan Paul Walked Out Of ‘Oppenheimer’ Because ‘Everyone’s Just Talking’

    Logan Paul proved his courage by boxing world champion Floyd Mayweather in 2021, but has just tested his mettle once again by admitting that he walked out of “Oppenheimer” — because “everyone’s just talking” in the historical thriller and “nothing happens.”

    “I walked out of ‘Oppenheimer,’” said Paul in a recent clip from his “Impaulsive” podcast that went viral. “Separately, 18 minutes into ‘Interstellar’ and I was considering walking out ‘cause it was so slow, and now ‘Interstellar’ is in my top three favorite movies.”

    “I didn’t know what they were trying to — what are you doing?” Paul continued in his partial review of the film, which chronicles the titular physicist’s effort to develop the first atomic bomb. “Everyone’s just talking. It’s just an hour and a half, 90 minutes, it’s all exposition, just talking, just talking, talking. It’s all exposition, nothing happens.”

    To his credit, right before he brought up “Oppenheimer,” Paul conceded, “My attention span is horrible.” He admitted as much after his co-host said he showed Paul “No Country for Old Men” and realized the newfound boxer “has a 42-second attention span.”

    “And by the way, after the fact, when it was done, I realized what you were doing,” said Paul in his defense. “Those first 20 minutes are really important for building the characters. But at the time I didn’t know what I was watching.”

    Paul has since been trounced online for his thoughts on “Oppenheimer,” considering the film hit theaters to universal praise — and brought in more than $700 million at the worldwide box office.

    In response to Paul’s take, one user on X, formerly Twitter, suggested his attention span is too short. “‘They’re just talking’ He says. On a podcast,” wrote another user. “I think logan needs a break,” someone else said.

    “Logan realizing all he’s doing on his podcast is talking and walks out of his own podcast,” joked one Twitter user, with another recalling the biggest blemish of his career: “‘Aw man. This movie has talking?!?! Let’s go play around with a dead body in a forest. This is lame.’”

    Paul is currently preparing for a fight against mixed martial artist Dillon Danis.

    Steven Ferdman via Getty Images

    Paul infamously filmed an apparent suicide victim hanging from a tree in Japan’s “Suicide Forest” in 2017 and faced international condemnation after sharing it on YouTube. Paul ultimately grew more popular than ever, however.

    It’s not the first time he’s offered a hot take on a movie, either.

    “‘NOPE’ is one of the worst movies I’ve seen in a long time,” Paul wrote on Twitter, now known as X, about the alien invasion film in 2022. “I love Jordan Peele and Keke Palmer can act her ass off, but this movie is objectively slow and confusing with stretched themes that don’t justify the pace.”

    The boxer is currently preparing for a bout against Dillon Danis, however, and reportedly just wished the fighter a happy birthday — by delivering a cake to their joint press conference in the shape of Danis lying on his back with a bruised face.

    The fight will be held at Wembley Stadium in London on Oct. 14.

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  • “Barbie” rises above “The Dark Knight” to become Warner Bro.’s highest grossing film domestically

    “Barbie” rises above “The Dark Knight” to become Warner Bro.’s highest grossing film domestically

    “The Dark Knight”…falls? In box office rankings, it has.

    “Barbie” is making history yet again, overtaking “The Dark Knight”‘ as the highest-grossing domestic release for Warner Bros. Discovery. “Barbie” has earned $537,390,865 as of Wednesday, surpassing the “Batman Begins” sequel’s $534,987,076, according to Box Office Mojo.

    The pink wave isn’t slowing down either, as “Barbie” has a chance of racing past Universal’s animated “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” which was sitting at $574,243,655 domestically Wednesday.

    Earlier this month, “Barbie” made history, becoming the first film directed by a woman to hit over $1 billion in global sales — a growing figure that could also pass up the worldwide sales of “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” of over $1.35 billion.

    “Barbie,” a film about the existential crisis of the original doll, played by Margot Robbie, has resonated with audiences and maintained the number one spot in movie rankings since its release on July 21 – nearly four weeks in a row, according to Box Office Mojo.

    The all-pink feminist tale, directed by Greta Gerwig, is toy company Mattel’s first foray into cinema. “Barbie” had an intense marketing campaign leading up to its release — from a real life Barbie Dreamhouse in Malibu, to licensing deals with fast food chains.

    In addition to “The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan has seen another one of his films fall behind “Barbie” — “Oppenheimer,” the other big blockbuster of the summer, which opened on the same day as Greta Gerwig’s latest movie. The film, which chronicles the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, “the father of the atomic bomb,” has earned $270,024,705 domestically and $653,975,801 globally.

    Hundreds of thousands of fans bought tickets for both “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” on their shared opening day, according to the National Association of Theater Owners, for a double feature known as “Barbenheimer.”

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  • Cineplex sees profit boost as Barbie, Oppenheimer create ‘unprecedented’ demand – National | Globalnews.ca

    Cineplex sees profit boost as Barbie, Oppenheimer create ‘unprecedented’ demand – National | Globalnews.ca

    Cineplex Inc.’s net income mushroomed to $176.5 million in its second quarter as “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” hit theatres and the cinema chain began preparing for a “Barbie” boost.

    The Toronto-based theatre giant said Thursday that its net income for the period ended June 30 towered over the $1.3 million it earned in the same period a year earlier.

    Ellis Jacob, Cineplex chief executive, attributed the lift to “the return of strong film product,” which came as the company and other theatre chains continued to rebound from the COVID-19 pandemic, which temporarily closed cinemas and slowed the flow of new releases.

    “Our business made tremendous strides during the quarter and that momentum continues,” he said on a Thursday call with analysts.


    Click to play video: '‘Barbenheimer’ provides boost to box office'


    ‘Barbenheimer’ provides boost to box office


    The biggest hit Cineplex had on offer in the second quarter was “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” which set a record for the biggest opening for an animated film ever. Music screenings from BTS member Suga, Machine Gun Kelly and Coldplay and Punjabi films “Annhi Dea Mazaak Ae,” “Godday Godday Chaa” and “Jodi” also delivered audiences.

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    The lineup pushed up Cineplex’s second quarter revenues by 21 per cent to $423.1 million compared with $349.9 million the year before.

    However, box office revenues of $164.5 million remained at 79 per cent of 2019 levels, which reached $189.4 million.

    More progress may be made in the third quarter, which covers the July 21 releases of “Barbie,” the film starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling about the popular Mattel doll, and “Oppenheimer,” Christopher Nolan’s epic about the creation of the atomic bomb.


    Click to play video: 'Barbenheimer: ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ raise the profile of each other in Edmonton'


    Barbenheimer: ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ raise the profile of each other in Edmonton


    The dual releases dubbed “Barbenheimer” were a “cultural phenomenon,” Jacob said, with patrons dressing up and arriving early to take photos in a booth resembling a Barbie box.

    “The buzz around these films created an unprecedented box office and cultural event that transcended any streaming service experience by leaps and bounds,” he said.

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    Along with Tom Cruise’s “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One,” “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” brought Cineplex its highest July box office and its second-highest month on record, trailing December 2015, when “Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens” was released.


    Click to play video: 'Barbenheimer: ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ hits movie theatres this weekend'


    Barbenheimer: ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ hits movie theatres this weekend


    Some 6.8 million moviegoers visited Cineplex just last month compared with 12.8 million in the second quarter, up from almost 11.1 million a year ago.

    They helped the company notch theatre food service revenues of $118.0 million, an increase of $19.9 million or 20.3 per cent compared with the prior year, primarily due to a 15.5 per cent increase in theatre attendance.

    On an adjusted basis, Cineplex said its diluted earnings for the quarter hit $1.99 per share versus two cents per share a year prior, beating analyst expectations of 21 cents per share, according to financial markets firm Refinitiv.

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    Click to play video: '‘Barbenheimer’ craze puts film industry, fans into frenzy'


    ‘Barbenheimer’ craze puts film industry, fans into frenzy


    The results included expenses related to the failed sale of Cineplex to Cineworld Group PLC transaction. Cineworld walked away from a $2.18-billion deal to buy Cineplex in 2020, sparking a court battle over whether Cineworld had the right to exit the agreement.

    An Ontario court ruled in Cineplex’s favour in December 2021, awarding the company $1.24 billion in damages, but Cineworld said it would appeal the judgment, while Cineplex wanted to push for an even higher payout.

    Cineworld has since filed a proposed Chapter 11 plan of reorganization and Cineplex has said it does not expect to recover any material amount from its erstwhile suitor.

    “We are just as disappointed with the outcome as our shareholders, but I want you to know that we will work tirelessly to explore all options to optimize the value of the litigation judgment,” Jacob said.

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    “We will now put this chapter behind us.”

    Cineplex has also been grappling with a pair of strikes from the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and the Writers Guild of America, which have halted film and television productions along with promotional work for completed movies.

    The cast of “Oppenheimer” walked out of their premiere in solidarity with striking workers, while Disney sent Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Maleficent and Cruella de Vil down the “Haunted Mansion” red carpet in lieu of stars Tiffany Haddish, Danny DeVito and Rosario Dawson.

    “Challengers,” the Zendaya-starring tennis film due to open the Venice Film Festival, has since had its release date pushed back because of the strikes.

    Cineplex is monitoring the job action “closely” and working with studio partners to minimize disruptions caused by the strikes, Jacob said.

    “I hope it’s a short-term situation, but I can’t really guarantee anything,” he said.

    Part of his confidence comes from streaming companies seeing “irreplaceable value” in theatrical releases.

    Jacob pointed to Apple’s future releases – Martin’s Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” and Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon” – along with Amazon’s past debut of “Creed III” and “Air” as examples of their confidence in the model.

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

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