Lithuanian filmmaker Saulė Bliuvaitė’s Toxic, a coming-of-age teenage tale, secured this year’s Work in Progress prize at Meeting Point Vilnius (Mpv), the annual audiovisual industry event that takes place during the Vilnius International Film Festival, Kino Pavasaris.
The award lands the filmmaking team a €5,000 cash prize from the Lithuanian Film Centre,
Toxic is being produced by Lithuania’s Giedrė Burokaitė, with Bliuvaitė, the pair are looking for a sales agent and “a premiere at a film festival” for the title which they anticipate finishing by the end of May this year.
It is about a young girl abandoned...
The award lands the filmmaking team a €5,000 cash prize from the Lithuanian Film Centre,
Toxic is being produced by Lithuania’s Giedrė Burokaitė, with Bliuvaitė, the pair are looking for a sales agent and “a premiere at a film festival” for the title which they anticipate finishing by the end of May this year.
It is about a young girl abandoned...
- 3/28/2024
- ScreenDaily
Everything changed when the Fire Nation attacked, but nothing is more distorted than attempting to make another Avatar: The Last Airbender live-action adaptation only to disappoint fans again.
Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender
After M. Night Shyamalan’s 2010 film version of the iconic animated series, the latest Netflix rendition ought to fulfill fans’ wish: to assemble a group of indigenous actors and wonderfully translate the story of Aang and company to the screen. This did not seem to be the present case.
Suggested“Because the protagonist was a girl”: Nickelodeon Sabotaged Avatar: The Last Airbender Spin-off Due to Sexism After Original Series Fought So Hard to Fight Patriarchy
Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender Was Not The Artistic Vision Of Original Creators
Avatar: The Last Airbender recently premiered on Netflix, and the cold reception of fans towards the adaptation is already telling the franchise’s future. Though there...
Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender
After M. Night Shyamalan’s 2010 film version of the iconic animated series, the latest Netflix rendition ought to fulfill fans’ wish: to assemble a group of indigenous actors and wonderfully translate the story of Aang and company to the screen. This did not seem to be the present case.
Suggested“Because the protagonist was a girl”: Nickelodeon Sabotaged Avatar: The Last Airbender Spin-off Due to Sexism After Original Series Fought So Hard to Fight Patriarchy
Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender Was Not The Artistic Vision Of Original Creators
Avatar: The Last Airbender recently premiered on Netflix, and the cold reception of fans towards the adaptation is already telling the franchise’s future. Though there...
- 2/23/2024
- by Ariane Cruz
- FandomWire
Following a couple who are hosting an event to celebrate their first wedding anniversary, director Arne Gjelten’s short film The Best Day of Our Lives takes a turn when one member of the couple reveals that he has no memory of their big day. The brilliance of Gjelten’s tense relationship drama comes in its tone and carefully construed depiction of a contemporary relationship. The soft colour palette, the lack of a score, the carefully constructed dialogue and camerawork. It all feeds into an awkward whirlwind that grips the viewer whilst subtly unpacking societal expectations of relationships and marriage. Dn is delighted to premiere Gjelten’s thought-provoking short alongside a deep dive with the filmmaker where he talks through the film’s inception as a satire, its tonal evolution through the writing phase and the process of nailing its uncomfortable ambience in the edit.
The Best Day of Our Lives,...
The Best Day of Our Lives,...
- 1/9/2024
- by James Maitre
- Directors Notes
Indian Filmmaker Q’s TikTok Saga ‘Zewel’ Boarded by Bangladesh’s Chorki, U.S.’s Luminary (Exclusive)
Streamer Chorki has acquired Bangladesh rights to iconoclastic Indian filmmaker Q’s latest film “Zewel,” it was revealed on the sidelines of Singapore’s Asia TV Forum and Market.
Chorki has also boarded the project as a co-producer alongside Rita Meher, curator of Tasveer Festival and CEO of Luminary Pictures (Seattle). Produced by India’s Oddjoint, the project is currently in post-production.
The film, shot across India and Bangladesh, tells the story of a young TikToker’s journey from zero to villain. Zewel wants to be a hero on Tiktok and already has 15,000 followers. He is a firestarter, a matchstick master who never misses a target. Living at the edge of an industrial wasteland in Bangladesh, Zewel and his brother Zibon, both daily-wage labourers, were planning to move to Qatar to join the booming influencer factories. But dreams come at a cost. As Zibon gets busted selling drugs, all doors...
Chorki has also boarded the project as a co-producer alongside Rita Meher, curator of Tasveer Festival and CEO of Luminary Pictures (Seattle). Produced by India’s Oddjoint, the project is currently in post-production.
The film, shot across India and Bangladesh, tells the story of a young TikToker’s journey from zero to villain. Zewel wants to be a hero on Tiktok and already has 15,000 followers. He is a firestarter, a matchstick master who never misses a target. Living at the edge of an industrial wasteland in Bangladesh, Zewel and his brother Zibon, both daily-wage labourers, were planning to move to Qatar to join the booming influencer factories. But dreams come at a cost. As Zibon gets busted selling drugs, all doors...
- 12/10/2023
- by Naman Ramachandran
- Variety Film + TV
When you look at David Gordon Green’s career, it’s really difficult to nail down just what type of filmmaker he is. Does he make indie films? Comedies? Reboot horror franchises? Yes, yes, and yes. Hell, he’ll also show up in an occasional acting role, such as in “Bones & All.” But even though he is very eclectic in the subjects he tackles in his films, he does tend to stay away from a lot of big I.P.
Continue reading David Gordon Green Is Developing A “Naughty” ‘Garbage Pail Kids’ Animated Series With Danny McBride at The Playlist.
Continue reading David Gordon Green Is Developing A “Naughty” ‘Garbage Pail Kids’ Animated Series With Danny McBride at The Playlist.
- 10/9/2023
- by Charles Barfield
- The Playlist
The Nineties are in full swing on the soundtrack to the recent second season of Yellowjackets.
Yellowjackets Season 2 Official Soundtrack: Music from The Original Series, set for release Sept. 1, will include tracks from Alanis Morissette, Nirvana, Garbage, Elliott Smith, Veruca Salt, the Cranberries, and Pulp. It also features an original track, “Just a Girl,” by Florence + the Machine, as well as Papa Roach’s “Last Resort” in a nod to a memorable moment from the show.
Morissette’s contribution is a cover of the Showtime series’ theme song, “No Return,...
Yellowjackets Season 2 Official Soundtrack: Music from The Original Series, set for release Sept. 1, will include tracks from Alanis Morissette, Nirvana, Garbage, Elliott Smith, Veruca Salt, the Cranberries, and Pulp. It also features an original track, “Just a Girl,” by Florence + the Machine, as well as Papa Roach’s “Last Resort” in a nod to a memorable moment from the show.
Morissette’s contribution is a cover of the Showtime series’ theme song, “No Return,...
- 7/21/2023
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
A Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds gig in Saratoga Springs, New York on Saturday was abruptly stopped early due to reports of a bomb threat.
Via Billboard, after opening act Metric and co-headliner Garbage finished their sets, the Saratoga Performing Arts Center displayed an emergency message stating the venue needed to be completely evacuated because of “circumstances beyond our control.” The evacuation was complete before Gallagher and company were able to perform.
“We have no idea what happened tonight,” Garbage wrote on Twitter. “We were just all evacuated and we were concerned for everyone !!! I’m sorry we have no real information. We were just told there was an emergency evacuation!!!!”
Sunday Morning, the NY State Park Police clarified the cause for evacuation: “Out of an abundance of caution, the concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center was suspended at 9:40 pm and concert attendees were evacuated without incident,” reads a statement on Facebook.
Via Billboard, after opening act Metric and co-headliner Garbage finished their sets, the Saratoga Performing Arts Center displayed an emergency message stating the venue needed to be completely evacuated because of “circumstances beyond our control.” The evacuation was complete before Gallagher and company were able to perform.
“We have no idea what happened tonight,” Garbage wrote on Twitter. “We were just all evacuated and we were concerned for everyone !!! I’m sorry we have no real information. We were just told there was an emergency evacuation!!!!”
Sunday Morning, the NY State Park Police clarified the cause for evacuation: “Out of an abundance of caution, the concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center was suspended at 9:40 pm and concert attendees were evacuated without incident,” reads a statement on Facebook.
- 7/10/2023
- by Abby Jones
- Consequence - Music
The audience attending Noel Gallagher‘s High Flying Birds concert at Saratoga Performing Afters Center in New York over the weekend was only able to catch performances from the two opening acts, Metric and Garbage. Before Gallagher could hit the stage for his headlining performance, the venue was evacuated in response to a bomb threat.
At around 10 p.m., an announcement canceling the rest of the show was shared through digital monitors at the venue. “At this time, we will need to evacuate the venue. We ask you to calmly proceed to the nearest exit.
At around 10 p.m., an announcement canceling the rest of the show was shared through digital monitors at the venue. “At this time, we will need to evacuate the venue. We ask you to calmly proceed to the nearest exit.
- 7/10/2023
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
One of the things we love most about the dark Showtime series “Yellowjackets” is all the fantastic ’90s music. Half of the show takes place in 1996, when high school girls’ soccer team crash lands in the wilderness and half is set 25 years later, with the still traumatized adult survivors.
Season 2 features an exclusive track by Florence + the Machine, an eerie cover of No Doubt’s “Just a Girl,” Sharon Van Etten’s “Seventeen,” and such ’90s feminist icons as Tori Amos.
And of course, we love the kind of creepy main title theme, “No Return,” by Craig Wedren and Anna Waronker. The opening credits from Season 1 teased some of the things we would see unfold, and the updated Season 2 credits sequence also gives us hints at what we’ll see in upcoming episodes.
Also Read:
‘Yellowjackets’ Season 2 Trailer Teases Blood, Birth and Florence Welch’s ‘Just a Girl’ (Video)
The series stars Melanie Lynskey,...
Season 2 features an exclusive track by Florence + the Machine, an eerie cover of No Doubt’s “Just a Girl,” Sharon Van Etten’s “Seventeen,” and such ’90s feminist icons as Tori Amos.
And of course, we love the kind of creepy main title theme, “No Return,” by Craig Wedren and Anna Waronker. The opening credits from Season 1 teased some of the things we would see unfold, and the updated Season 2 credits sequence also gives us hints at what we’ll see in upcoming episodes.
Also Read:
‘Yellowjackets’ Season 2 Trailer Teases Blood, Birth and Florence Welch’s ‘Just a Girl’ (Video)
The series stars Melanie Lynskey,...
- 5/26/2023
- by Sharon Knolle
- The Wrap
[Editor’s note: The following contains spoilers for Yellowjackets, Season 2 Episode 8, “It Chooses.”]
After a riveting first season filled with sonic callbacks to the ’90s, Season 2 of Showtime’s Yellowjackets kicked off with a similarly wistful tone, thanks to the new trailer, spotlighting Florence and the Machine’s cover of No Doubt’s “Just a Girl.”
Season 1 of the series took viewers back to 1996 when a young group of soccer players survives a plane crash and the aftermath forced the characters to deal with a string of psychologically unfortunate events. Considering when the story starts, music from the era is paramount to the series. So far, we’ve heard everything from Portishead’s “Glory Box” to “Rump Shaker” by Wreckx-n-Effect in the series, with Season 2 promising to keep that same energy while jumping in between timelines.
The ’90s part of the series shows Sophie Nélisse, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Sophie Thatcher, Sammi Hanratty, Liv Hewson, and Courtney Eaton playing...
After a riveting first season filled with sonic callbacks to the ’90s, Season 2 of Showtime’s Yellowjackets kicked off with a similarly wistful tone, thanks to the new trailer, spotlighting Florence and the Machine’s cover of No Doubt’s “Just a Girl.”
Season 1 of the series took viewers back to 1996 when a young group of soccer players survives a plane crash and the aftermath forced the characters to deal with a string of psychologically unfortunate events. Considering when the story starts, music from the era is paramount to the series. So far, we’ve heard everything from Portishead’s “Glory Box” to “Rump Shaker” by Wreckx-n-Effect in the series, with Season 2 promising to keep that same energy while jumping in between timelines.
The ’90s part of the series shows Sophie Nélisse, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Sophie Thatcher, Sammi Hanratty, Liv Hewson, and Courtney Eaton playing...
- 5/22/2023
- by Cervanté Pope
- Consequence - Music
While classic artists like The Rolling Stones had busy schedules of writing, recording, and touring, many made time to cover Irish music. In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, here are four classic artists who have covered Irish songs.
Mick Jagger | Evening Standard/Getty Images The Rolling Stones
In 1995, The Rolling Stones teamed up with The Chieftains, a traditional Irish folk band from Dublin, to cover “Rocky Road to Dublin” on the album Long Black Veil. The song, which is originally from the 19th century, is about the adventures and challenges a man faces while on the road.
The Rolling Stones | Scott Gries/Getty Images
Paddy Moloney of The Chieftains sings the song, but the Stones back him. The cover features traditional Irish instruments, but The Rolling Stones’ influence is evident, particularly toward the end of the song. Mick Jagger also appears on the album and sings the titular song.
Mick Jagger | Evening Standard/Getty Images The Rolling Stones
In 1995, The Rolling Stones teamed up with The Chieftains, a traditional Irish folk band from Dublin, to cover “Rocky Road to Dublin” on the album Long Black Veil. The song, which is originally from the 19th century, is about the adventures and challenges a man faces while on the road.
The Rolling Stones | Scott Gries/Getty Images
Paddy Moloney of The Chieftains sings the song, but the Stones back him. The cover features traditional Irish instruments, but The Rolling Stones’ influence is evident, particularly toward the end of the song. Mick Jagger also appears on the album and sings the titular song.
- 3/17/2023
- by Emma McKee
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
When the marriage of a heavyweight in the music industry comes to an end, the divorce will be trending news. It’ll also probably be expensive. Here are seven musicians who faced costly divorce settlements.
Kenny Rogers and Marianne Gordon | Bettina Cirone/Images/Getty Images Lionel Richie and Diane Alexander
Lionel Richie reportedly began a relationship with designer Diane Alexander while he was married to his first wife, Brenda Harvey. Richie and Alexander married in 1995, two years after he finalized his divorce from Harvey. The couple shares two children, and they divorced in 2003.
Lionel Richie and Diane Alexander | Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Per E!, Alexander reportedly claimed that she bought $15,000 of clothes a month and spent $20,000 on plastic surgery annually. The musician paid roughly $20 million in the divorce.
Phil Collins and Orianne Cevey
Phil Collins and Orianne Cevey married in 1999 after meeting when he was...
Kenny Rogers and Marianne Gordon | Bettina Cirone/Images/Getty Images Lionel Richie and Diane Alexander
Lionel Richie reportedly began a relationship with designer Diane Alexander while he was married to his first wife, Brenda Harvey. Richie and Alexander married in 1995, two years after he finalized his divorce from Harvey. The couple shares two children, and they divorced in 2003.
Lionel Richie and Diane Alexander | Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Per E!, Alexander reportedly claimed that she bought $15,000 of clothes a month and spent $20,000 on plastic surgery annually. The musician paid roughly $20 million in the divorce.
Phil Collins and Orianne Cevey
Phil Collins and Orianne Cevey married in 1999 after meeting when he was...
- 3/17/2023
- by Emma McKee
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds — surely to the dismay of Oasis super fan Matty Healy — will hit the road again this summer on a joint-headlining tour with Garbage.
The tour will kick off June 2 at the White River Amphitheatre in Auburn, Washington, and wrap July 15 at the MGM Music Hall at Fenway in Boston. Metric will provide support throughout the tour (save for a July 3 show in...
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds — surely to the dismay of Oasis super fan Matty Healy — will hit the road again this summer on a joint-headlining tour with Garbage.
The tour will kick off June 2 at the White River Amphitheatre in Auburn, Washington, and wrap July 15 at the MGM Music Hall at Fenway in Boston. Metric will provide support throughout the tour (save for a July 3 show in...
- 2/13/2023
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds and Garbage have announced a North American co-headlining tour with special guest Metric. The early summer jaunt spans 25 shows in total, kicking off on June 2nd in Auburn, Washington.
A Live Nation ticket pre-sale is set for Thursday, February 16th (use access code Chorus), with a genera on-sale following on Friday, February 17th via Ticketmaster. Alternatively, tickets are available to purchase via Stubhub.
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds are set to release their fourth studio album, Council Skies, on June 2nd. Garbage recently marked their 30th anniversary by releasing a compilation Anthology; they’re currently at work on a new album — their first since 2021’s No Gods No Masters.
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds 2023 Tour Dates:
06/02 – Auburn, Wa @ White River Amphitheatre ^*
06/03 – Ridgefield, Wa @ Rv Inn Style Resorts Amphitheater ^*
06/06 – Concord, CA @ Concord Pavilion ^*
06/07 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl ^*
06/09 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre ^*
06/10 – San Diego,...
A Live Nation ticket pre-sale is set for Thursday, February 16th (use access code Chorus), with a genera on-sale following on Friday, February 17th via Ticketmaster. Alternatively, tickets are available to purchase via Stubhub.
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds are set to release their fourth studio album, Council Skies, on June 2nd. Garbage recently marked their 30th anniversary by releasing a compilation Anthology; they’re currently at work on a new album — their first since 2021’s No Gods No Masters.
Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds 2023 Tour Dates:
06/02 – Auburn, Wa @ White River Amphitheatre ^*
06/03 – Ridgefield, Wa @ Rv Inn Style Resorts Amphitheater ^*
06/06 – Concord, CA @ Concord Pavilion ^*
06/07 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl ^*
06/09 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre ^*
06/10 – San Diego,...
- 2/13/2023
- by Alex Young
- Consequence - Music
Paul McCartney has been a vegetarian for years and has devoted himself to animal welfare so intensely that he once felt obligated to apologize to frogs. The former Beatle hunted frogs as a child in order to prepare for potential military service. As an adult, he felt ashamed of his behavior. Consequently, he issued a public apology to all frogs.
Paul McCartney | Les Lee/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images The former Beatle became a vegetarian in the 1970s
McCartney grew up eating meat and rarely picked a vegetarian option at restaurants.
“I’d go to America and have the biggest steaks in the world,” he told The Guardian in 2010. “So big I’d have to give half of it away. Or I’d have chicken kiev with all the butter oozing out of it. That was great.”
"We became part of a vegetarian revolution." – Paul
Celebrating the release of #LindasFamilyKitchen,...
Paul McCartney | Les Lee/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images The former Beatle became a vegetarian in the 1970s
McCartney grew up eating meat and rarely picked a vegetarian option at restaurants.
“I’d go to America and have the biggest steaks in the world,” he told The Guardian in 2010. “So big I’d have to give half of it away. Or I’d have chicken kiev with all the butter oozing out of it. That was great.”
"We became part of a vegetarian revolution." – Paul
Celebrating the release of #LindasFamilyKitchen,...
- 1/26/2023
- by Emma McKee
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Vice TV has ordered the series “Super Maximum Retro Show,” from Jimmy Kimmel’s Kimmelot and ITV America. The series, which is based on the Super70sSports viral Twitter feed, launches on Tuesday, March 7 at 10 p.m. Et.
Ricky Cobb is behind the Twitter account, while comedian Chris Distefano will host. The show will include videos, photos, ads and games from the pre-Internet era and focus on things that would have gone viral had the web existed back then. A group of guest panelists will join in and comment, as well as share their memories from the 1970s, 80s and 90s.
Among the panelists lined up: Hasan Minaj, Roy Wood Jr., Chris Redd, Matteo Lane, Judy Gold, Chris Gethard, Adam Pally and others.
“I love Ricky Cobb’s Super70sSports Twitter feed and Chris Distefano is one of my favorite comics,” Kimmel said in a statement. “I cannot wait for...
Ricky Cobb is behind the Twitter account, while comedian Chris Distefano will host. The show will include videos, photos, ads and games from the pre-Internet era and focus on things that would have gone viral had the web existed back then. A group of guest panelists will join in and comment, as well as share their memories from the 1970s, 80s and 90s.
Among the panelists lined up: Hasan Minaj, Roy Wood Jr., Chris Redd, Matteo Lane, Judy Gold, Chris Gethard, Adam Pally and others.
“I love Ricky Cobb’s Super70sSports Twitter feed and Chris Distefano is one of my favorite comics,” Kimmel said in a statement. “I cannot wait for...
- 1/24/2023
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety Film + TV
After expanding her musical output to Broadway with her 2019 Tony Award-winning jukebox musical Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette will soon explore a new sonic territory: meditation music.
The Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter will release The Storm Before the Calm, an album of guided meditations co-written with Dave Harrington, on June 17. In advance of the album, Morissette dropped track “Safety—Empath in Paradise” — an 11-minute new age epic featuring hypnotic drums and soothing drone sounds.
“Meditating rests my interior, to the point where I can have access to ideas and visions and...
The Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter will release The Storm Before the Calm, an album of guided meditations co-written with Dave Harrington, on June 17. In advance of the album, Morissette dropped track “Safety—Empath in Paradise” — an 11-minute new age epic featuring hypnotic drums and soothing drone sounds.
“Meditating rests my interior, to the point where I can have access to ideas and visions and...
- 5/19/2022
- by Kat Bouza
- Rollingstone.com
Alanis Morissette is back with a new powerhouse piano ballad, “Olive Branch.”
The track features just Morissette’s piano and vocals as she unleashes a raw, striking plea for forgiveness: “And here is my olive branch,” goes the refrain, “And I’m so sorry/And mea culpa/I’m reaching out to make amends/No pressure for you to let me in.”
Morissette wrote “Olive Branch” with Michael Farrell, who produced the track with Henrik Jakobsson. The song marks Morissette’s first bit of new music in 2022. Last year, she...
The track features just Morissette’s piano and vocals as she unleashes a raw, striking plea for forgiveness: “And here is my olive branch,” goes the refrain, “And I’m so sorry/And mea culpa/I’m reaching out to make amends/No pressure for you to let me in.”
Morissette wrote “Olive Branch” with Michael Farrell, who produced the track with Henrik Jakobsson. The song marks Morissette’s first bit of new music in 2022. Last year, she...
- 3/11/2022
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Each week we highlight the noteworthy titles that have recently hit streaming platforms in the United States. Check out this week’s selections below and past round-ups here.
Boiling Point (Philip Barantini)
More often than not, one-take films struggle to justify their gimmick. Whether shot in one go or utilizing an intensive editing process to appear like so, the technique almost always threatens to overshadow whatever story is at the center rather than emphasizing it. Used correctly, it can prove immersive in the exact same way as a theatrical production—breaking down barriers between performer and audience, who can see their work unfold in real-time. Unfortunately, the impracticality of telling a story this way is usually highlighted via several scenes of actors slowly walking between filming locations. – Alistair R. (full review)
Where to Stream: VOD
The Feast (Lee Haven Jones)
Lee Haven Jones’ slow-burn eco-horror The Feast may feature extended...
Boiling Point (Philip Barantini)
More often than not, one-take films struggle to justify their gimmick. Whether shot in one go or utilizing an intensive editing process to appear like so, the technique almost always threatens to overshadow whatever story is at the center rather than emphasizing it. Used correctly, it can prove immersive in the exact same way as a theatrical production—breaking down barriers between performer and audience, who can see their work unfold in real-time. Unfortunately, the impracticality of telling a story this way is usually highlighted via several scenes of actors slowly walking between filming locations. – Alistair R. (full review)
Where to Stream: VOD
The Feast (Lee Haven Jones)
Lee Haven Jones’ slow-burn eco-horror The Feast may feature extended...
- 11/19/2021
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Kiana Madeira listened to everything from Snoop Dogg to Tracy Chapman to prepare for her roles in the “Fear Street” slasher trilogy – films that respectively take place in 1994, 1978 and 1666.
“I think the music is like another character in the story for all three films—the soundtrack as well as the score,” Madeira told TheWrap. “They had such a big part in telling the story and the trajectory of what the characters were going though.
The “Fear Street” trilogy centers around Shadyside teens who, after multiple gruesome killings, get together to take on the evil force that’s been tormenting their town for centuries. Many Shadyside residents believe the force to be a doing of the witch, Sarah Fier, who is said to have placed a curse on the town before her death in 1666.
The films are all subversions of the horror genre in many ways. They’re centered on queer love,...
“I think the music is like another character in the story for all three films—the soundtrack as well as the score,” Madeira told TheWrap. “They had such a big part in telling the story and the trajectory of what the characters were going though.
The “Fear Street” trilogy centers around Shadyside teens who, after multiple gruesome killings, get together to take on the evil force that’s been tormenting their town for centuries. Many Shadyside residents believe the force to be a doing of the witch, Sarah Fier, who is said to have placed a curse on the town before her death in 1666.
The films are all subversions of the horror genre in many ways. They’re centered on queer love,...
- 7/17/2021
- by Aarohi Sheth
- The Wrap
A quarter of a century has passed, and Shirley Manson still wants to tear your little world apart — especially if you support the patriarchies and idiocracies destroying the planet. On Garbage’s seventh offering, No Gods No Masters (a slogan for anarchists and labor unions alike), Garbage’s redheaded Molotov cocktail explodes at evangelicals apathetically offering prayers after shootings, “The Men Who Rule the World,” shitty men in general (in case they don’t rule the world), and, as is often the case on a Garbage record, herself. She broods...
- 6/11/2021
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Freeform’s premiere of its new teen thriller series “Cruel Summer” on Thursday was not like any other Hollywood has experienced during the pandemic. Instead of a virtual or drive-in screening, the network booked 80 rooms at the Beverly Hilton for a balcony screening. Each guest was assigned to their own room in order to watch the screening from a terrace overlooking an inflatable jumbo screen. “This is special,” producer Michelle Purple told Variety. “I’ve seen friends have drive-in premieres, but Freeform got creative.”
Each room was decked out with ’90s nostalgia – including “Friends” posters, concert fliers for Garbage and The Cranberries, vintage Seventeen magazines, scrunchies, inflatable furniture and candy – to match the show’s mid-90s setting.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Marc Malkin (@marcmalkin)
Before the screening began, the cast of the show were introduced through a speaker system installed on each terrace. Footage of the stars,...
Each room was decked out with ’90s nostalgia – including “Friends” posters, concert fliers for Garbage and The Cranberries, vintage Seventeen magazines, scrunchies, inflatable furniture and candy – to match the show’s mid-90s setting.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Marc Malkin (@marcmalkin)
Before the screening began, the cast of the show were introduced through a speaker system installed on each terrace. Footage of the stars,...
- 4/17/2021
- by Marc Malkin
- Variety Film + TV
This year’s MTV Video Music Awards bash was the first major Covid-era award show, which meant it had something rare for the VMAs: a reason to exist. The whole night felt like a weird experiment, with everyone figuring out how to do a glitzy music spectacle during a pandemic, with social distancing and no audience. MTV originally planned it as a live broadcast from Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, but it turned into a virtual gala full of pretaped razzle-dazzle. Yet that just gave it a sense of creative risk and emotional stakes — for once,...
- 8/31/2020
- by Rob Sheffield
- Rollingstone.com
When Shirley Manson began hosting The Jump last year — a podcast in which she interviews artists on one song that represents their artistic moment of truth — she was incredibly nervous. “It caused me a lot of stress, truth be told,” the Garbage frontwoman tells Rolling Stone. “The first season, I felt like I wasn’t qualified and I had no right to be sitting in that position as a host talking to these amazing artists. But I absolutely loved the experience.”
On Tuesday, Manson will release the second season of The Jump,...
On Tuesday, Manson will release the second season of The Jump,...
- 8/10/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Presented by:
This story appears in the Den of Geek x eBay special edition trading card magazine.
Garbage Pail Kids gave birth to my anti-authority streak. I was in fifth grade waiting for art class to start and showing off my prized Ashcan Andy to enraptured classmates when my teacher walked in the classroom, sighed, confiscated the card and proceeded to rip it up. “This junk has no place in an art room,” she stoically declared as Andy was transformed into sad confetti before my eyes. Years later, I came to realize that this demonstration was all about jealousy – these cards had instantly engaged students in art in a way that her years of teaching never could.
And let me be clear here: Garbage Pail Kids are most definitely art. Often grotesque and always eye-catching, the unfortunate children showcased on these cards fostered an interest in painting, illustration, and design...
This story appears in the Den of Geek x eBay special edition trading card magazine.
Garbage Pail Kids gave birth to my anti-authority streak. I was in fifth grade waiting for art class to start and showing off my prized Ashcan Andy to enraptured classmates when my teacher walked in the classroom, sighed, confiscated the card and proceeded to rip it up. “This junk has no place in an art room,” she stoically declared as Andy was transformed into sad confetti before my eyes. Years later, I came to realize that this demonstration was all about jealousy – these cards had instantly engaged students in art in a way that her years of teaching never could.
And let me be clear here: Garbage Pail Kids are most definitely art. Often grotesque and always eye-catching, the unfortunate children showcased on these cards fostered an interest in painting, illustration, and design...
- 7/31/2020
- by Chris Cummins
- Den of Geek
If one thing is abundantly clear to anyone who’s ever spent time with Dave Grohl, it’s that he’s an even bigger music fan than he is a rock star. Whether talking about his favorite Van Halen album (“Fair Warning”) or getting to play drums as a teenager with Iggy Pop at a record release show in Toronto, he is as animated as he is on stage.
So Grohl and his Foo Fighters bandmates were the perfect people to resurrect Cal Jam, the massive festival held in 1974 and 1978, and last year when Grohl and the Foos flew the flag again, alongside Queens of the Stone Age, Cage the Elephant, Liam Gallagher and many more.
“Talk about bringing the party,” he says of the original festivals. “When I look at that lineup, I think about the musicianship. To see a band as funky as Earth, Wind & Fire, and then...
So Grohl and his Foo Fighters bandmates were the perfect people to resurrect Cal Jam, the massive festival held in 1974 and 1978, and last year when Grohl and the Foos flew the flag again, alongside Queens of the Stone Age, Cage the Elephant, Liam Gallagher and many more.
“Talk about bringing the party,” he says of the original festivals. “When I look at that lineup, I think about the musicianship. To see a band as funky as Earth, Wind & Fire, and then...
- 7/10/2018
- by Steve Baltin
- Variety Film + TV
Director, producer previously teamed-up on Berlin title Garbage.
Following their collaboration on Berlin title Garbage, Indian director Q and producer Shaailesh R. Singh are reteaming on fantasy horror Replay.
The new project will be produced by Q’s Oddjoint and Singh’s Karma Entertainment & Media. It revolves around a group of young friends who become involved in a twisted game of death and gore.
Q previously directed horror title Ludo, about a group of teenagers locked overnight in a shopping mall, which had a wide festival run, including a Us premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin.
Garbage, which premiered in...
Following their collaboration on Berlin title Garbage, Indian director Q and producer Shaailesh R. Singh are reteaming on fantasy horror Replay.
The new project will be produced by Q’s Oddjoint and Singh’s Karma Entertainment & Media. It revolves around a group of young friends who become involved in a twisted game of death and gore.
Q previously directed horror title Ludo, about a group of teenagers locked overnight in a shopping mall, which had a wide festival run, including a Us premiere at Fantastic Fest in Austin.
Garbage, which premiered in...
- 3/6/2018
- by Liz Shackleton
- ScreenDaily
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