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Tag: Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere

  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Pod: Jeremy Allen White on ‘Springsteen,’ the Categorization and Future of ‘The Bear,’ and the ‘Social Network’ Sequel

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    For fans of the actor Jeremy Allen White — our guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, which was recorded in front of 500 film students at Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts — it may be time to retire “Yes, Chef!” in favor of “Okay, Boss!”

    That’s because the 34-year-old actor, who shot to stardom playing Carmy Berzatto, a cook, on FX’s The Bear — for which he personally has won two Emmys, three Golden Globe Awards and three SAG Awards — is now garnering rave reviews and awards buzz for his portrayal of Bruce Springsteen in Scott Cooper’s film Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere. In the dark drama, White depicts the singer/songwriter during the years between the releases of his hit albums Born to Run in 1975 and Born in the USA in 1984, when he was grappling with personal demons and making 1982’s Nebraska.

    Over the course of this conversation, White reflected on his entire life and career, including how he seriously pursued dancing as an adolescent, and why he walked away from it to focus instead on acting; how his 11 seasons on the Showtime dramedy Shameless shaped him as an actor; and just how close he came to taking another project instead of The Bear.

    Speaking of The Bear, he addressed the long-running debate about whether the show should be classified as a comedy (the category in which it has been submitted for awards shows) or a drama (the category in which many feel it belongs, given that it’s not exactly a barrel of laughs) by putting forth an interesting suggestion: “I think it’s a dramedy. You have to choose one Movie News when you’re in this in-between space, and I think there should be another category at a certain point. Television has changed so drastically in the last few decades, and the structure of the awards system has remained the same, and that feels strange to me.”

    White also dished about the future of The Bear. Will its recently-announced fifth season be its last? And will he remain a part of the show if it continues beyond that? “The fourth season was going to be the last,” he explains. “Chris [Storer, the show’s creator and co-showrunner] called me on Christmas Eve last year and was like, ‘We’re gonna do some more.’ And, I don’t know, that could happen again around this holiday time. There’s no plans for it to be the last. There’s no plans right now for us to do more. I think it’s just all dependent on what Chris wants to do. But if it was up to me? I just feel so lucky to read Chris’ words, and also to work with these actors who’ve become some of my best friends, so I’d do it for a very long time.”

    As for Springsteen, specifically, he discussed why the offer to play the iconic music artist in a big studio film wasn’t an immediate “yes” for him; how he learned to sing and play guitar over just six months; why he was thrilled to get to meet and question Springsteen, but wasn’t always excited to see him on set; what he makes of Springsteen’s reaction to the film; plus more.

    White also teased a little about another high-profile film project, one for which he has been traveling to Vancouver quite frequently of late: Aaron Sorkin’s The Social Reckoning, which he describes as “a sort of continuation of the story of The Social Network” that is “more about the effects of Facebook on us.” The latter project reunites him with his Springsteen costar Jeremy Strong. Strong plays Mark Zuckerberg, while White plays a journalist.

    You can hear the entire conversation via the audio player near the top of this post or any major podcast app. Please also take a moment to leave us a rating and review, which helps other to discover the podcast.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Box Office Meltdown: ‘Regretting You’ Tops Worst Halloween Weekend in 31 Years With $8.1 Million

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    Paramount and Constantin Films’ romance-drama Regretting You — the second Colleen Hoover book adaptation to hit the big screen after It Ends With Us — is proclaiming itself the victor of this year’s Halloween box office contest.

    According to Sunday estimates from David Ellison’s new regime, Regretting You placed No. 1 with $8.1 million from 3,245 cinemas in its sophomore outing.

    Or did it? Universal is likewise estimating a first-place finish for Blumhouse’s Black Phone 2 with $8 million from 3,425 cinemas. Most rival studios also show the horror sequel, now in its third weekend, coming in ahead of Regretting You).

    But Paramount has good reason to be bullish. Last weekend, Regretting You did switch positions with Black Phone and place No. 2 when final numbers came in, with Regretting You beating the Blumhouse pic by a safe margin. Monday will determine the correct order of the Oct. 31-Nov. 2 frame and whether Paramount was being too aggressive in the hunt for a good headline.

    Generally in such situations, a studio in Universal’s position would call the contest a tie, but in this case, no one complained, considering overall ticket sales for the weekend came in at $49.8 million — the worst showing of the year to date.

    But that’s not the most frightening fact — it was the lowest-grossing Halloween weekend in 31 years, according to Comscore. This excludes 2020, when the COVID-19 crisis forced theater closures for months.

    The last time Halloween weekend revenue came in lower was in 1993, when combined ticket sales reached $49.2 million, and that’s not adjusted for inflation, according to Comscore chief box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

    “While this was a truly scary weekend for the industry, a confluence of factors created an imperfect marketplace storm wherein Halloween festivities along with one of the biggest sporting events on the planet [the World Series] dominated the zeitgeist over the weekend and thus had the effect of taking the spotlight off the movie theater experience,” says Dergarabedian, adding studios and cinemas should be commended for doing what they could up the holes.

    This year’s Halloween weekend meltdown — which follows the worst October in 27 years — is due to the lack of a big commercial title on the marquee, such as 2024’s Venom: The Last Dance. This year, exhibitors had to rely on an eclectic batch of holdovers; rereleases, including Back to the Future; and the expansion of Focus Features’ awards darling and specialty offering Bugonia.

    Halloween is alway a tough holiday for Hollywood and cinema owners, especially when the actual day falls on a Friday, as it did this year. Regretting You took a major hit that day since its target audience — younger females — were otherwise occupied. On Saturday, sales spiked 200 percent.

    Domestically, Regretting You has earned $27.5 million in its first 10 days. Overseas, it earned another $8.2 million from 56 markets for a foreign tally of $23.3 million and $50.8 million globally.

    Black Phone 2, a major win for Blumhouse, sailed past the $104 million mark over the weekend after finishing Sunday with a domestic tally of $61.5 million and $43.3 million internationally, including a weekend haul of $7.3 million.

    As expected, the acclaimed Japanese manga pic Chainsaw Man – the Movie: Reze Arc fell off steeply in its second weekend of play at the domestic box office, declining 67 percent to $6 million for a 10-day domestic tally of $30.8 and a dazzling $139 million globally. Sony’s Crunchyroll division is handling Chainsaw Man in the U.S. and a number of foreign markets, excluding Japan. Its share of the total gross is $87.4 million.

    Bugonia, from Focus Features, placed No. 4 with $4.8 million as it expanded into 2,043 theaters after first launching earlier this month in select theaters. That is the widest break ever for a film directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, whose credits include Poor Things and The Favourite. Emma Stone (Poor Things) and Jesse Plemons lead the high-profile cast. Overseas, the specialty film earned $4.4 million from 47 markets for a foreign total of $5.3 million and $11.1 million globally.

    Disney provided a moment of levity when reporting grosses for the 40th anniversary rerelease of Back to the Future, saying it earned $4.7 million from 2,290 theaters in its “2,105th” week for a cume of $221.7 million (that isn’t adjusted for inflation). The classic pic placed an impressive No. 5 domestically and even beat Bruce Springsteen biographical drama and awards hopeful Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.

    Also from Disney, Deliver Me had to settle for No. 6 after falling off a steep 57 percent to $3.8 million from 3,460 theaters for a domestic total of $16.3 million. Overseas, it took in another $4 million from 40 material markets for a foreign tally of $14.3 million and $30.6 million globally. The filmmakers and Disney are hopeful the pic will have staying power because of its subject matter, originality and solid audience scores.

    In addition to Back to the Future and perennial Halloween favorite Rocky Picture Horror Show, other rereleases included screenings of all five Twilight movies timed to the 20th anniversary of Stephenie Meyer’s seminal first novel in the romance-vampire series. Fathom and Lionsgate partnered in bringing the movie adaptation of the books back to the big screen for five days, beginning Oct. 29 and concluding Nov. 2. Roughly 1,500 theaters participated and played a different film each night. Ticket sales through Sunday are an estimated $3.5 million, including $1.5 million for the Oct. 29 showing of the first film. (Because of the way it rolled out, the rerelease did not make the weekend top 10 chart).

    Paul Thomas Anderson‘s awards frontrunner and Leonardo DiCaprio starrer One Battle After Another, however, did remain in the top 10 chart in North America in its sixth outing, earning $1.2 million from 954 runs for a domestic total of $67.8 million. And defying the naysayers, it is approaching the $200 million mark globally after finishing Sunday with a foreign share of $123 million. It is far and away the filmmaker’s top-grossing film; his previous best was 2007’s There Will Be Blood ($77.2 million), unadjusted. And 2024’s Licorice Pizza, topped at at $37 million, which was considered a success for an indie title. (Granted, One Battle sports a far bigger budget but nevertheless is hanging in there, unlike a number of awards players.)

    Elsewhere, another special event pic trying to fill the gap mentioned by Dergarabedian was Depeche Mode: M, a concert pic from Sony Music Vision and Trafalgar that grossed $1.1 million domestically and $4.7 million overseas for a total of $5.7 million from more than 2,600 cinemas across 70 countries after opening midweek (Imax screens ponied up 29 percent of all ticket sales). Conceived and directed by Mexican filmmaker Fernando Frías, the concert pic celebrates the band’s global influence while also delving into the profound connection between death, music, mortality and Mexican tradition the band captured during their 2023 Memento Mori tour

    Nov. 2, 12 p.m.: Updated with revised estimates.
    Nov.2, 4:15 p.m.: Updated with additional foreign estimates.

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    Pamela McClintock

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  • ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere’ Has Struggled to Break Out, Perhaps by Design

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    It is the season of ghost stories. Go to any major multiplex this week and you can find at least three films concerned with ghosts, haunted spaces and haunted heads. Each features people from all walks of life, forced to confront loss made evident by malicious spirits. And in each case, these people engage with ghosts, battling them on both a physical and emotional level despite the increasing toll they take.

    In the hope of what? Survival? A better understanding of life and death? Or perhaps because they are called to it?  

    Of course, we associate these elements with horror.  But suppose those elements were approached from another perspective, one absent of horror, but still innately concerned with being haunted. The most surprising ghost story of the season isn’t horror at all, but rather the story of one of America’s great artists wrestling spirits and trying to contain them on a cassette, which serves as its own kind of sacred vessel. In Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, filmmaker Scott Cooper continues to his work of exorcising America’s soul.

    As many fans of Bruce Springsteen are aware, the Boss’s sixth studio album, Nebraska (1982) marked a significant departure for the artist. Springsteen’s most personal album was marked by somber, stripped-down tracks recorded in solitude without the E Street Band. While still retaining the blue-collar perspective Springsteen had made a name for himself on, Nebraska was forged from America’s violent past, both real and fictional.

    The killer Charles Starkweather, the short stories of Flannery O’Connor, Charles Laughton’s sole cinematic offering, The Night of the Hunter (1955), Terrance Malick’s debut film, Badlands (1973), and Springsteen’s own emotionally fraught childhood each served as inspiration and influence. The story of Nebraska’s composition, recording and release is chronicled in Warren Zanes book, Deliver Me from Nowhere (2023) and Springsteen’s autobiography, Born to Run (2016), which form the basis of Cooper’s film and Jeremy Allen White’s portrayal of the man. Like the album Nebraska, Cooper takes an unconventional approach to Springsteen’s story, making for one of the decade’s most compelling biopics of an artist, and entirely unconcerned with being a crowd-pleaser for the masses.

    Deliver Me from Nowhere focuses on Bruce Springsteen in the midst of a depressive episode, struggling to create something meaningful and finite, while suicidal ideation plays discordant sounds in his head. Bruce’s relationship with a waitress, Faye (Odessa Young), is doomed from the start because he can’t love the way he knows she deserves. His past is marred by his childhood desire to protect his mother, Adele (Gabby Hoffman) from his father, Douglas (Stephen Graham) whom he was desperate to receive recognition and love from. And his music career has execs and his manager, Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong), eager to help him decide his next move while he’s stuck between who he was and who he’s on the path to becoming.

    It’s a fascinating portrait of artistry and the painful, often isolating process of making it. If there’s any point of comparison for Cooper’s film, it would be Love & Mercy (2014) Bill Pohlad’s film centered around Beach Boy Brian Wilson’s attempts to complete the album Smile in the aftermath of a nervous breakdown while dealing with schizophrenia. Is it any wonder why the film is struggling to break out?

    Biopics focused on musicians have become a genre onto themselves, complete with their own agreed upon conventions, stylistic choices and narrative beats. These films have always had a place on our screens, though certainly over the last decade they’ve become a more frequent trend. While Ray (2004) and Walk the Line (2005) served as the foundation and formula for musical biopics, the success of Straight Outta Compton (2015), and Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) subsequently proved to studios that they could be major blockbusters as well.

    Over the last decade we’ve seen the best and worst of what this genre has to offer, and frequently, even in best cast scenarios, it involves trying to cram the entirety of a person’s life into an under 3-hour runtime, while actors cover or lip-synch their greatest hits with varying levels of convincibility. There’s a reason why Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007) has had the greatest hold of 21st century satirical films. It regains relevancy as soon as the first trailer for a new biopic about a popular musical artist hits, because often, it’s right on point. Most biopics about musicians are pastiche, formulaic, and even when highly entertaining, end up being less informative than a Wikipedia entry. They’re a series of snapshots over changing decades and aesthetics, preluded by some variation of “Dewey Cox has to think about his whole life before he plays.”

    Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is not that film. While marketing for the feature has focused on Springsteen giving a concert performance, as seen in the trailers, film stills and on the posters, the concert aspect of the movie only accounts for a few minutes of the film’s opening act. Cooper flat-out rejects delivering a flashy, nostalgic vision of the ’80s, complete with all of Springsteen’s greatest hits, to the point where White’s Springsteen catches the opening notes of “Hungry Heart” on the car radio and turns it off in disgust. And in fact, the only moment in the film that straddles Cox, is when Bruce and the E Street Band first record “Born in the U.S.A.” But even that moment of dawning realization, “hey, I think we’ve got something here” from the sound technicians is quickly met with frustration from Springsteen who knows it doesn’t fit with what he wants Nebraska to capture.

    What Cooper delivers is a deconstruction of the mythology of the Boss. Rather than seeking to tell Springsteen’s story in larger than life episodes, complete with cameos from a who’s who of musical greats portrayed by various character actors, Deliver Me from Nowhere is focused on the creation of a singular album, and one point in the life of Bruce Springsteen as he tries to reckon with his childhood spent in the presence of his mentally-ill, abusive father, and the angry broken pieces of America, these ghosts unable to move on, that he feels connected to.

    These jagged spirits are what Cooper’s filmography are defined by. Crazy Heart (2009), Out of the Furnace (2013), Black Mass (2015), Hostiles (2017), Antlers (2021), and The Pale Blue Eye (2022), which each deconstruct a genre, the redemption drama, the crime saga, the gangster movie, the western, the horror movie, and the detective story and reframe them through the lens of American hardship, of the ghosts of the past set loose within each film’s present events. He is, in my eyes, one of the most quintessential American filmmakers of his generation and there’s a quality he has a filmmaker that is not unlike Arthur Penn when it comes to deconstructing archetypes and focusing on characters who don’t quite have a sense of self but are haunted by a past they can’t reconcile with and a future they can’t fully imagine.

    It only makes sense that Cooper should bring meaning to one of the most quintessential American musical artists in the form of a stripped down, character study that isn’t about the hardships of drug abuse, fame, fortune, stalkers, or the break-up of a band, but about the hardship of being alone in a room with, and all due respect to author Paul Tremblay who coined so succinct a phrase, a head full of ghosts, and an empty page.

    Battling ghosts means confronting death, and throughout Deliver Me from Nowhere, there are long shots of Springsteen staring at elderly men. Yes, they remind him of his father. But they also remind him of himself, of what he will one day be, and it both frightens and motivates him to the point where he feels he must create something lasting and defining in his lifetime or take his own life. Of course, as the film showcases, the completion of the album wasn’t a cure for his depression and only the first step towards the realization that he needed continual therapy, and to reconcile and forgive his father.

    The film’s final message, a post-script reading that Bruce has continued to deal with depression throughout his life, but never without help or hope is sincere in a way that some may find treacly. But it feels poignant and necessary in this age to be confronted with the fact that one of the defining icons of masculinity in America, born well before such emotional openness was taken seriously, is still alive because he sought help in fighting his ghosts, and understood that the exorcism that he needed is an ongoing journey, much in the same way it is for America.

    For many people, that’s not the kind of story they want to see about a globally famous rock star. Part of what has made the most successful biopics about musical artists so successful is that they reinforce what their target audiences already know and believe about the artist’s life, greatest success stories, and personal tragedies. In other words, they just play the hits.

    There won’t be any special sing-along showings of Deliver Me from Nowhere. No audience members are going to get up and dance in the aisle. But I think Cooper delivers something more meaningful, purposeful and ultimately honest in his story of Springsteen’s creation of Nebraska. Cooper made a film that rejects the conventions of its genre, that is unafraid to be slow and patient in the telling of its narrative, and that wasn’t made to appeal to everyone immediately upon release. In other words, Scott Cooper made a film worthy of the spirit of Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska.

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    Aaron Couch

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  • Box Office Upset: ‘Chainsaw Man’ Eyes $15M-$17M Win, Colleen Hoover Strikes Again With ‘Regretting You’

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    Japanese anime feature Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc is off to an impressive start at the U.S. box office, where it topped Friday’s chart with $8.5 million from 3,003 theaters. The acclaimed manga pic — now on course to open to a better-than-expected $15 million to $17 million — boasts a 96 percent critics score and a 99 percent audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, a rarely seen combo, in addition to an A CinemaScore.

    Friday’s earnings include a stellar $3.4 million in Thursday previews.

    Since launching in cinemas last month in Japan, Chainsaw Man — The Movie has already grossed north of $64 million at the global box office. Sony and Crunchyroll are handling the movie domestically and in select overseas markets. Produced by the team at MAPPA, the R-rated pic is based on the hit manga-turned-anime TV series that is available to stream in the U.S. on Disney+, Crunchyroll and other platforms.

    Chainsaw Man follows the adventures of Denji (Kikunosuke Toya), a teenager and demon hunter who is killed by his overlords, the yakuza. But when his beloved chainsaw-powered, devil-dog Pochita (Shiori Izawa) makes a deal and sacrifices himself, Benji is reborn with the ability to transform parts of his body into chainsaws. Along with violence, the pic doubles as a teenage romance with the arrival of the mysterious Reze. However, Reze is not quite who she seems, and a series of battles ensues that could destroy Tokyo when their love story takes a twisted turn.

    Directed by Tatsuya Yoshihara, the film is based on Tatsuki Fujimoto’s original story, with a screenplay by Hiroshi Seko. “It’s safe to say that manga and anime fans won’t be disappointed, even if they’ll inevitably be nitpicking about one narrative aspect or another,” writes THR in its review.

    Heading into its U.S. opening, Chainsaw Man was expected to battle Blumhouse and Universal’s holdover hit Black Phone 2 for No. 1 with a debut in the $11 million to $12 million range. But it quickly pulled ahead of the pack thanks to males, who made up 75 percent of all ticket buyers, and younger moviegoers, with more than 50 percent of ticket buyers under the age of 25. It’s also drawing an ethnically diverse audience, including over-indexing among Asian moviegoers (17 percent), according to PostTrak.

    In second surprise twist, Regretting You — the second Colleen Hoover book adaptation to hit the big screen after 2024’s box office blockbuster It Ends With Us — pulled ahead of Black Phone 2 and Disney’s new bio-drama Deliver Me From Nowhere: Springsteen to come in second on Friday with a better-than-expected $5.2 million from 3,593 locations for an estimated opening of $13 million (rival studios aren’t sure it will actually hit that mark).

    Many expected Regretting You to be dinged by generally withering reviews, but the female-fueled pic is garnering strong exits on PosTrak and boasts an audience score of 90 percent on Rotten Tomatoes (its CinemaScore, however, was only a B). It’s also clearly benefiting from a glut of male-skewing fare that has dominated the marquee for months, and is also a testament to Hoover’s enduring popularity among younger women and teenagers. (She’s one of many who have been caught up in the ongoing legal battle between It Ends With Us director/producer Justin Baldoni and actress/producer Blake Lively). Females made up nearly 85 percent of Friday’s audience, while 73 percent of all ticket buyers were under the age of 35.

    The new film is described as a romantic drama that speaks to the aspirational theme of living life fully and with no regrets. Constantin Films produced and financed the movie, with Paramount acquiring domestic and certain overseas rights. Internationally, the film opens this week in 40 markets, including the U.K., Australia, Brazil and Mexico.

    Instead of holding Thursday previews, Paramount hosted a special Regretting You fan event at AMC Lincoln Square in New York City, which was streamed live into 500 theaters across the country. The screening of the pic was accompanied by a Q&A with director Josh Boone and cast members Allison Williams, Dave Franco and Mason Thames.

    Saturday will determine whether Regretting You can hold its lead over Blumhouse and Universal’s holdover hit Black Phone 2, which earned $3.8 million on Friday and is projecting a debut in the $12 million-plus range. The pic is holding in remarkably well for a horror title, and should continue to take advantage of being the only major studio horror film opening nationwide over the Halloween corridor this year.

    Disney’s bio-drama Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is now expected to come in fourth with $9 million to $10 million after earning $3.5 million on Friday, including $850,000 in Thursday previews. The movie is skewing notably older, which is no surprise. More than 60 percent of ticket buyers on Friday were 45 and older, including 40 percent over the age of 55. Its Rotten Tomatoes critics score presently rests at 66 percent; the RT audience score is far stronger at 83 percent. And it earned a B+ CinemaScore.

    Springsteen, playing in a total of 3,460 cinemas, should see a boost from 250 IMAX runs and an additional 750 in other premium large-format auditoriums. The music-infused pic stars Jeremy Allen White in the titular role, and he is credited in THR‘s review for giving a “raw and internalized performance as The Boss.” Jeremy Strong, Stephen Graham and Odessa Young also star in director Scott Cooper’s examination of a brutal comedown after a blockbuster tour, which yielded the prolific musician’s most personal album.

    It remains to be seen how much of an impact the first two games of this year’s World Series — which pits the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Toronto Blue Jays — have on the weekend box office. Generally speaking, NFL games pose far more competition. At the same time, L.A. is the largest moviegoing market alongside New York City (it is also the biggest market for anime). Friday night’s opening game of the World Series, as well as Saturday’s, are both in Toronto.

    At the specialty box office, Neon is launching Shelby Oaks in 1,823 locations. Marking YouTube movie critic Chris Stuckmann‘s debut feature, the found-footage pic is eyeing an opening in the $2 million to $2.5 million range. So far, its main claim to fame is that it raised $1.4 million via a Kickstarter campaign, the highest amount ever for a horror title, per the crowd-sourcing platform. Neon later provided some additional funds.

    Focus Features’ awards contender Bugonia is also making headlines in its limited debut at the specialty box office, and is on course to post an opening per-location average of $32,765 from 17 cinemas, one of the best platform starts of the year to date (it will also be the top location average of the weekend by a long shot). Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, the acclaimed film stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons.

    Oct. 25, 9:30 a.m.: Updated with Friday grosses.

    This story was originally published Oct. 24 at 6:43 p.m.

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    Pamela McClintock

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  • Video: ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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    Hey, it’s Scott Cooper. I’m the writer and director of “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.” This is one of my favorite sequences in the film. “There’s just one more track I have to lay down.” Because it’s not about performance. It’s about confession where we see Jeremy Allen White, who’s playing Bruce Springsteen, is about to record his most personal and enduring song. This sequence is meant to show songwriting isn’t about invention, but, as Bruce said to me, excavation: that he dug down where it hurt most. And I wanted to capture not the spectacle of Bruce Springsteen, but the intimacy. In this particular sequence, “My Father’s House,” obviously, this is Jeremy singing in the bedroom, but there’s a moment here when I cut to the image of young Bruce standing next to the tree. ♫ … through the trees … ♫ where I weave in Bruce’s voice from the original Nebraska recording, which speaks to how I wanted the movie to feel like it’s haunted by Bruce Springsteen and haunted by his pain. The reason I chose to shoot the flashbacks in black and white is because Bruce said to me that he only thinks of this time in his life as Black and white in terms of Jeremy Allen White’s performance as Bruce, both as he embodies Bruce, but also in singing, it wasn’t about mimicry or imitation, it was about finding the truth of who Bruce is. ♫ My father’s house stood shining hard and bright. ♫ You see, father and son in 1958, watching “The Night of the Hunter.” And this is a film that isn’t just a cinematic reference. It’s a psychological mirror for Bruce. It’s a metaphor for Bruce’s childhood anxieties, where he’s trying to outrun the darkness that shaped him. And by showing young Bruce with his father, though we’ve had flashbacks in other places in the film, this isn’t a flashback, but it’s more a confrontation. And we see his father’s silence, his stoicism, his refusal to comfort young Bruce, and that becomes older. Bruce’s greatest wound. Decades later, seeing older Bruce in the theater, watching his younger self with his father, for me, means that Bruce is still searching that silence for meaning.

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    Mekado Murphy

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  • Telluride Awards Analysis: ‘Hamnet,’ ‘Sentimental Value’ Join ‘Sinners’ Atop List of Oscar Frontrunners

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    The 52nd Telluride Film Festival is now in the books. Margot Robbie, Ryan Coogler, Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo, Rian Johnson, Janet Yang, Kathy Kennedy and Frank Marshall were among those who came just to watch movies. Screenings were introduced with a group meditation (Chloé Zhao), a song (Jesse Plemons) and a wave (man of few words Bruce Springsteen). Adam Sandler and Emma Stone posed for photos in the streets with ecstatic local schoolkids. And the Oscar race came into clearer focus.

    Below, you can read my biggest awards-related takeaways from the fest.

    Four high-profile films that already have U.S. distribution had their world premieres in Telluride: Ballad of a Small Player (Netflix), Bugonia (Focus), Hamnet (Focus) and Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (20th Century). How did they go over?

    Focus has plenty of cause for celebration, as both Bugonia and Hamnet played like gangbusters and look almost certain to land Oscar noms for best picture and plenty else.

    Zhao’s Hamnet, an adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s best-selling 2020 novel of the same name, which centers on the Shakespeare family and its tragic loss that allegedly inspired the play Hamlet, garnered rave reviews (it’s at 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and 95 percent on Metacritic), including particularly strong notices for leading lady Jessie Buckley, who plays William’s wife Agnes. Some are already proclaiming it to be the best picture Oscar frontrunner. I certainly think it will be a big factor in the season. I would just caution that numerous Academy members quietly expressed to me their feeling that the film has tonal issues — some called it “trauma porn” — and that it has been so hyped by critics that other Academy members will inevitably feel disappointed when they catch up with it. We’ll see.

    As for Bugonia, which reunites filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos and actress/producer Stone in a dark comedy about people who “do their own research,” reactions have been nearly as enthusiastic. It played, for me, like a high-end Black Mirror episode — I mean that as a major compliment — and it also has been likened to a prior off-the-wall Lanthimos/Stone collab, Poor Things. Like that 2023 film, it could land multiple acting noms (Stone and Plemons are great), if less recognition for below-the-line work.

    Scott Cooper’s Springsteen, meanwhile, is not what a lot of people expected it to be — a jukebox musical in the vein of Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman or Elvis — but rather an examination of the causes and effects of a deep depression that engulfed The Boss (The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White) in the early 1980s and resulted in his iconoclastic 1982 album Nebraska. It remains to be seen if/how that will impact the film’s box office appeal, but reviews have been solid, and White and Jeremy Strong, who plays Springsteen’s manager, stand a real shot at lead and supporting actor Oscar noms, respectively.

    Then there’s Edward Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player, which comes a year after Conclave and three years after All Quiet on the Western Front, Berger films that were of a large scale and about matters of social import (and landed a bunch of Oscar noms, including best picture). Ballad is neither of those things — it’s about a gambling addict in present-day Macao who grows increasingly desperate as his luck runs out — and the no-holds-barred performance of its lead actor, Colin Farrell, is its best bet for a nom.

    Of films that came directly from world premiering in Venice to make their North American debut in the Rockies, did anything pop?

    Yes, La Grazia (Mubi) and Jay Kelly (Netflix). And it was striking to me how differently people reacted to those two films in Telluride versus in Venice.

    Ironically, La Grazia, the Italian film that opened both fests, was far better received in America. The seventh collab between filmmaker Paolo Sorrentino and actor Toni Servillo, it centers on an Italian president during the last six months of his term. (Maybe Americans were just happy to be reminded that dignified leaders still exist?) I suspect that Italy will eventually submit it for the best international feature Oscar, as it previously did two other Sorrentino films, 2013’s The Great Beauty (which won) and 2022’s The Hand of God, and also that Servillo could make a run at a long-overdue first Oscar nom.

    A similar thing happened with Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly, a film about a movie star (George Clooney) who experiences an existential crisis that forces him and his “team” to question their life choices. It was written off on the Lido, but rebounded in a major way — along with its Rotten Tomatoes score — in Telluride, where Baumbach was fêted with a career tribute, Billy Crudup’s big scene received mid-movie applause at each screening, Adam Sandler cemented his status as a frontrunner for the best supporting actor Oscar, and Clooney, who was absent due to illness, was talked up by his collaborators. I think the film is tailor-made for the Academy.

    The reverse sort of happened with Oscar winner Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, which played through the roof in Venice — it got a 14-minute standing ovation — and then came to Telluride as a surprise late-night screening, and engendered a more muted response. It’s certainly well made, with a knockout score by the great Alexandre Desplat that the Academy’s music branch will surely nominate. But, even given how much people love del Toro, I think that the film’s bloated story and runtime (two-and-a-half hours, versus 70 minutes for the 1931 original) will make it hard for it to crack the top Oscar categories.

    What about films from earlier fests, including Sundance, Berlin and Cannes?

    In Telluride, as far as I could discern, only one film accumulated as many hardcore fans as Hamnet, and that was the Norwegian dramedy Sentimental Value (Neon), which reunites Oscar nominee The Worst Person in the World’s filmmaker Joachim Trier and actress Renate Reinsve, and which won Cannes’ Grand Prix (second-place award). Festival attendees ate it up, to the extent that I think it deserves to be grouped with Coogler’s Sinners (Warner Bros.) and Hamnet in the top tier of best picture contenders.

    Like Jay Kelly, Sentimental Value is about a filmmaker who neglected his family in order to focus on his career — a character played by the veteran Swedish thespian Stellan Skarsgård, who will probably duke it out with Sandler for the best supporting actor Oscar. Unlike Jay Kelly, Sentimental Value also devotes a significant amount of attention to the filmmaker’s children, played by Reinsve (who I see as neck and neck with Buckley for best actress at the moment) and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas. Elle Fanning also stars.

    Neon also had two other films — both political thrillers — that were celebrated at Cannes and then proved popular in Telluride, as well.

    Iranian dissident Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident, which underscores how the brutality of Iran’s current regime haunts the republic’s citizens, won Cannes’ Palme d’Or over Sentimental Value, and was widely admired here as well. (Panahi, visiting the U.S. for the first time in nearly 20 years, enlisted the audience at one screening to join him in recording a video singing “Happy Birthday” to his script consultant, Mehdi Mahmoudian, who is currently incarcerated in Iran, as Panahi himself was until recently.) Obviously, Iran will not submit It Was Just an Accident for the best international feature Oscar, but France, from which the film drew much of its financing, might. More on that in a moment.

    People also couldn’t stop raving about Wagner Moura, the Brazilian best known for TV’s Narcos, who was awarded Cannes’ best actor prize for his tour-de-force turn in Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent. Moura should not be underestimated in the best actor Oscar race, and Brazil, which won best international feature last year with I’m Still Here, might well make another run for it with this smart and funny epic.

    The film that is probably an even bet with It Was Just an Accident to be the French entry is Nouvelle Vague (Netflix), Richard Linklater’s black-and-white homage to the French New Wave. Cineastes loved it in Cannes — I was shocked that it wasn’t awarded a single prize there — and again in Telluride, ahead of which I discussed it with Linklater.

    Other titles that came to Telluride and held their own, even if they didn’t set the world on fire, were, via Cannes, The History of Sound (A24), The Mastermind (Mubi), A Private Life (Sony Classics), Pillion (A24) and Urchin (1-2 Special); via Berlin, Blue Moon (Sony Classics); and via Sundance, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (A24).

    What about the sales titles?

    THR exclusively broke the news of the two deals that have come out of the fest thus far: Netflix bought Oscar nominee Joshua Seftel’s All the Empty Rooms, a powerful doc short about an effort to memorialize children killed in school shootings; and Amazon/MGM nabbed Oscar winner Morgan Neville’s energizing doc feature about Paul McCartney’s post-Beatles life, Man on the Run.

    Of the films that are still on the table, I’ve heard a lot of enthusiasm for Tuner, the narrative directorial debut of Navalny Oscar winner Daniel Roher, which stars Leo Woodall and Dustin Hoffman; one Academy member even likened it to Whiplash. Hamlet, Aneil Karia‘s reimagining of the Shakespeare play in present-day London, is all about Riz Ahmed’s compelling performance as the title character, and will probably find a buyer. And Philippa Lowthorpe’s H Is for Hawk features a committed turn by the great Claire Foy as a falconer, but is way too long at 130 minutes; I suspect that any potential partner will insist on tightening it up.

    Among the distributorless documentaries that played at the fest, the most talked about was surely Ivy Meeropol’s Ask E. Jean, a portrait of the former advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, who accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault and twice won legal judgments against him — but is any potential distributor willing to risk the wrath of Trump? I hope and suspect so.

    Mark Obenhaus and Citizenfour Oscar winner Laura PoitrasCover-Up profiles another muckraker, Seymour Hersh, and won a lot of admirers both in Venice, where it debuted, and in Telluride. I heard a lot of chatter about The White Helmets Oscar winner Orlando von Einsiedel’s tearjerker The Cycle of Love. And if the turnout of doc branch Academy members at screenings of Robb MossThe Bend in the River is any indication, it, too, will soon find a home.

    The bottom line

    Much of the awards-industrial complex, including yours truly, has just returned home from Telluride, and is laying low today and tomorrow before decamping to Canada for the 50th Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday. There, many titles that played in Telluride will resurface. A few that debuted in Venice but then skipped Telluride will have their North American premieres, including The Smashing Machine (A24) and The Testament of Ann Lee (still seeking U.S. distribution). And most excitingly, the Canadians will host the world premieres of a bunch of potential awards contenders, including Rental Family (Searchlight), The Lost Bus (Apple), Hedda (Amazon/MGM), Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (Netflix), Roofman (Paramount) and Christy (still seeking U.S. distribution).

    There are 194 days, or six months and 13 days, between now and the 98th Academy Awards on Sunday, March 15, 2026. A lot can still happen. Stay tuned.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • Telluride: Jafar Panahi on Hand, George Clooney Not, as Fest Kicks Off with Patrons Brunch and ‘La Grazia’ Preview

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    The 52nd Telluride Film Festival kicked off on Friday with the annual Patrons Brunch, which brings together filmmakers, journalists and the fest’s highest-spending passholders for bacon, eggs and mingling at a private residence high above the center of town.

    Among those present were Jafar Panahi, the Iranian dissident whose It Was Just an Accident (Neon) won Cannes’ Palme d’Or in May, and who this festival helped to bring to the U.S. for the first time in 20 years; E. Jean Carroll, the former advice columnist who later won legal judgments against Pres. Donald Trump, who took a train from New York to attend the world premiere of the documentary feature Ask E. Jean (still seeking U.S. distribution); and two Skarsgårds, Stellan, here with Sentimental Value (Neon), and Alexander, here with Pillion (A24), who told me they will be seeing each other’s movies for the first time here at the fest.

    Topics of conversation ranged widely. There was speculation about what Friday afternoon’s Patrons Preview screening would be (it turned out to be the North American premiere of Paolo Sorrentino’s La Grazia, which played very well in the Werner Herzog Theater, led by a great Tony Servillo turn); whether or not Jay Kelly star George Clooney would make it to the fest even though a severe sinus infection caused him to miss festivities earlier this week at the Venice Film Festival (unfortunately he won’t, we have learned); and whether or not Bruce Springsteen, the inspiration for Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (Searchlight), would be at the fest in support of that film (the festival confirms: he will!).

    Elsewhere, Ballad of a Small Player (Netflix) star Colin Farrell charmed all comers; Fingernails costars Riz Ahmed, here with Hamlet (still seeking U.S. distribution), and Jessie Buckley, here with Hamnet (Focus), caught up; producer Teddy Schwarzman talked up the two movies he has at the fest, Train Dreams (Netflix) and Tuner (still seeking U.S. distribution); and the trio of Sentimental Value actresses, Elle Fanning, Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, all first-time attendees of the fest, hung out together. Fanning said she would later attend the Merle Haggard documentary Highway 99 A Double Album (still seeking U.S. distribution), which her boyfriend worked on as a producer.

    Meanwhile, two people on polar-opposite sides of the political spectrum chatted beside each other — longtime New Yorker editor David Remnick, who is featured in The New Yorker at 100 (Netflix), and CNBC’s Squawk Box host Joe Kernen, who attends the fest each year with his family. And Annette Insdorf, the Columbia University professor and author who has been attending the fest since 1979, told me that this year, for the first time, she has a film of her own in the fest — indeed, she served as a producer of the documentary Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire (Panorama).

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    Scott Feinberg

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