Guy Lodge
An Emmy
film
beautiful
shootings
career
experts
love
UPS
Guy Lodge
An Emmy
The website popstar.one is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.
Oscars: Ireland Submits Documentary ‘In The Shadow Of Beirut’, EP’d By Hillary And Chelsea Clinton, For International Feature Race - deadline.com - New Zealand - Ireland - city Belfast - Berlin - Cyprus - Lebanon - county Clinton - city Beirut
deadline.com
06.10.2023 / 00:43

Oscars: Ireland Submits Documentary ‘In The Shadow Of Beirut’, EP’d By Hillary And Chelsea Clinton, For International Feature Race

Stephen Gerard Kelly and Garry Keane’s documentary In The Shadow of Beirut has been submitted as Ireland‘s entry for the 2024 Oscar International Feature Film race.

‘Menus-Plaisirs — Les Troisgros’ Review: Frederick Wiseman Feasts at Length on Culinary Process and Pleasure - variety.com - France - New York - county Frederick
variety.com
05.10.2023 / 15:01

‘Menus-Plaisirs — Les Troisgros’ Review: Frederick Wiseman Feasts at Length on Culinary Process and Pleasure

Guy Lodge Film Critic It’s the quiet that strikes you in “Menus-Plaisirs — Les Troisgros,” a documentary rejoinder to every image of cacophonous haute cuisine environments — complete with clattering pans, hissing steam and chefs screaming invective — that has been fed to us by “Hell’s Kitchen”-style reality shows and the propulsive drama of “The Bear.” Serenity reigns in Frederick Wiseman’s languidly mesmerising 240-minute anatomy of one of the world’s greatest restaurants: The masters and staff of Le Bois Sans Feuilles, a three Michelin-star establishment in France’s Loire region, work with a hushed intensity of concentration that recalls a science lab, or a surgery table, more than any standard kitchen. That suits Wiseman, a patient, rigorous examiner of institutional structure and process, who observes this culinary cathedral as seriously and methodically as he has such comparatively vast cultural hives as London’s National Gallery or the New York Public Library.

‘Dance First’ Review: A Staid, Respectable Samuel Beckett Biopic That Misses Its Subject’s Sense of Mischief - variety.com - Ireland - Wisconsin
variety.com
01.10.2023 / 15:59

‘Dance First’ Review: A Staid, Respectable Samuel Beckett Biopic That Misses Its Subject’s Sense of Mischief

Guy Lodge Film Critic In a genre not traditionally given to brevity, James Marsh‘s literary biopic “Dance First” at least has that on its side: In 100 minutes, it races through the key events and alliances in the life of Irish author and dramatist Samuel Beckett, even finding time for some metaphysical musings alongside the cradle-to-grave checklist. But Beckett’s characteristic terseness — or radical “lessness,” to borrow a title from one of his stories — isn’t a feature of this creditable but ponderous film, which ultimately achieves its efficient runtime by skirting any meaningful engagement with Beckett’s work and literary legacy.

‘Close Your Eyes’ Review: Victor Erice Returns From a 30-Year Absence With an Aching Ode to Film, Time and Memory - variety.com - Spain - France
variety.com
01.10.2023 / 12:07

‘Close Your Eyes’ Review: Victor Erice Returns From a 30-Year Absence With an Aching Ode to Film, Time and Memory

Guy Lodge Film Critic “Long-awaited” isn’t quite the term for Victor Erice’s “Close Your Eyes,” a film that dedicated admirers of the Spanish master may have hoped for, but didn’t dare expect. Instead, Erice’s first feature in 31 years — and only his fourth overall — arrives as something between a desert oasis and a mirage: a shimmery, nourishing culmination of ideas and ellipses in a career so elusive as to have taken on a mythic quality, to the point that his latest feels almost dreamed into being.

‘Un Amor’ Review: An Excellent Laia Costa Brightens Isabel Coixet’s Dark Return to Form - variety.com - Spain - Sudan
variety.com
27.09.2023 / 18:31

‘Un Amor’ Review: An Excellent Laia Costa Brightens Isabel Coixet’s Dark Return to Form

Guy Lodge Film Critic The negotiations of adult sexual relationships, as well as the demands forced upon single women in society, are recurring fascinations in the work of Spanish writer-director Isabel Coixet, albeit to erratic effect: In recent years, particularly in such English-language efforts as “It Snows in Benidorm” and “The Bookshop,” her voice has felt unconfident, even a little stifled. But Coixet strikes with a renewed sense of conviction in “Un Amor,” an adaptation of Sara Mesa’s Spanish-language bestseller that plays to her unusual strengths as a full-blooded feminist filmmaker.

Cate Blanchett’s ‘The New Boy’ Snapped Up for U.K., Ireland by Signature Entertainment (EXCLUSIVE) - variety.com - Australia - USA - Ireland - county Wayne - county Blair
variety.com
26.09.2023 / 14:11

Cate Blanchett’s ‘The New Boy’ Snapped Up for U.K., Ireland by Signature Entertainment (EXCLUSIVE)

Naman Ramachandran Signature Entertainment has acquired U.K. and Ireland rights to writer-director Warwick Thornton’s Australian drama “The New Boy” from The Veterans. The film follows a nine-year-old Aboriginal orphan boy who arrives in the dead of night at a remote monastery run by a renegade nun, disturbing the delicately balanced world.

‘A Silence’ Review: Joachim Lafosse’s Gradually Shattering Probe Into Toxic Family Secrets - variety.com - Belgium
variety.com
26.09.2023 / 07:45

‘A Silence’ Review: Joachim Lafosse’s Gradually Shattering Probe Into Toxic Family Secrets

Guy Lodge Film Critic In his staggering 2012 film “Our Children,” Belgian writer-director Joachim Lafosse turned an unthinkable true-life tragedy — the story of a mentally ailing mother who, one hitherto ordinary afternoon, single-handedly murdered all five of her children — into deeply compassionate drama, focusing not on the lurid whats of the event, but its more intimate, less discussed whys. That approach again serves Lafosse well in “A Silence,” another solemn, upsetting domestic chamber piece that lightly fictionalizes and foregrounds the hidden, knotty familial tensions behind a headline-making scandal.

‘Jersey Shore’ star Angelina Pivarnick ripped by NFL wife for sliding into husband’s DMs: ‘Weirdo’ - nypost.com - New York - Jersey - New Jersey - county Rutherford
nypost.com
25.09.2023 / 22:51

‘Jersey Shore’ star Angelina Pivarnick ripped by NFL wife for sliding into husband’s DMs: ‘Weirdo’

TikTok Sunday after the Jets lost to the New England Patriots at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, claiming that “Angela” from “Jersey Shore” saw her on the field before the game, then DM’d her husband, “I don’t know, like 10 minutes later after this chick is eyeing me on the field.”Pivarnick, 37, as well as her “Jersey Shore” roommates Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi, Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino, Jenni “JWoww” Farley, Sammi “Sweetheart” Giancola, and Deena Cortese all attended Sunday’s game. “It’s the girl from Jersey Shore,” Alexis claimed, although admitting in a follow-up TikTok that she only “assumed” Pivarnick was the “brunette chick that looked like Angela” that was eyeing Alexis on the field.“[Angelina] DMs my husband and said, ‘See you soon.’ Here’s the DM, weirdo,” Alexis showed a screenshot of a message Pivarnick allegedly sent to Nick.

‘Fingernails’ Review: Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed Prove Chemistry Isn’t a Science In a Wise, Tender Sci-Fi Romance - variety.com - Greece
variety.com
23.09.2023 / 22:01

‘Fingernails’ Review: Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed Prove Chemistry Isn’t a Science In a Wise, Tender Sci-Fi Romance

Guy Lodge Film Critic It’s the stock answer that many a happy long-term couple has given prying friends and relatives to explain why they haven’t married: “We don’t need a piece of paper to prove our love.” True enough. What can official documents tell you of something as wily and elusive as human desire? Is a band of gold a safeguard against a change of heart? Of course not, yet millions want it anyway, a ratification of feelings that might otherwise seem slippery or intangible from the outside.

‘Day of the Fight’ Review: Another Broken-Down Boxer Travels the Comeback Trail - variety.com - New York - USA
variety.com
23.09.2023 / 16:25

‘Day of the Fight’ Review: Another Broken-Down Boxer Travels the Comeback Trail

Guy Lodge Film Critic As directorial head-to-heads go, Jack Huston versus Stanley Kubrick isn’t anyone’s idea of a fair fight. But that’s exactly the clash the actor and Hollywood scion sets up for himself in his directorial debut “Day of the Fight” — named for Kubrick’s famous 1951 documentary short of the same title, and likewise following an Irish-American boxer through his daily New York routine, in the hours leading up to a climactic evening match.

Leslie Jones Says ‘SNL’ Made Her A Caricature Of Herself: “Either I’m Trying To Love On The White Boys Or Beat Up On The White Boys Or I’m Doing Something Loud” - deadline.com - city Omaha
deadline.com
22.09.2023 / 18:21

Leslie Jones Says ‘SNL’ Made Her A Caricature Of Herself: “Either I’m Trying To Love On The White Boys Or Beat Up On The White Boys Or I’m Doing Something Loud”

In a candid new interview with NPR, former Saturday Night Live cast member Leslie Jones says the show’s limitations made her “a caricature” of herself, although she came to realize that the process was par for the course at the longrunning NBC show.

‘Coup!’ Review: Jaunty Class-War Comedy Pits Peter Sarsgaard Against Billy Magnussen - variety.com - Spain - county Stark - city Venice, county Day
variety.com
16.09.2023 / 16:29

‘Coup!’ Review: Jaunty Class-War Comedy Pits Peter Sarsgaard Against Billy Magnussen

Guy Lodge Film Critic That perky exclamation point sets the tone for “Coup!,” a story of murder, class struggle, One Percent entitlement and a global pandemic that nonetheless unfolds with all the eager, scrappy energy of an off-Broadway musical, minus most of the songs. The pandemic in question is not the one you’re thinking of — Austin Stark and Joseph Schuman’s puckish comic thriller unfolds against the dire backdrop of the 1918 Spanish Flu — but it also sort of is, as its study of wealthy exceptionalism in a time of national crisis is clearly intended to chime with more recent memories of regimented distancing and mixed safety messages from on high.

‘Housekeeping for Beginners’ Review: Goran Stolevski’s Queer Family Portrait Bursts Onto the Screen With Equal Parts Joy and Fury - variety.com - Australia - city Venice - Macedonia
variety.com
14.09.2023 / 15:29

‘Housekeeping for Beginners’ Review: Goran Stolevski’s Queer Family Portrait Bursts Onto the Screen With Equal Parts Joy and Fury

Guy Lodge Film Critic Unorthodox family structures yield correspondingly unpredictable drama in “Housekeeping for Beginners,” a vital, febrile multi-character study that further confirms writer-director Goran Stolevski as a talent to be reckoned with. Departing radically from the poise of his folk-horror debut “You Won’t Be Alone” and the gentle intimacy of its swift follow-up “Of an Age,” this study of domestic, romantic and generational conflicts in a crowded queer household instead embraces a spirit of antic chaos, both in subject matter and jagged, hit-the-ground-running execution.

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
13.09.2023 / 13:03

‘The Morning Show’ Review: Hit Apple TV+ Show Leans Into Soap Opera Melodrama in Entertaining Third Season

Numerous clips have been shared online regarding how self-importantly Aaron Sorkin and company took themselves while they were making “The Newsroom,” a show that practically announced itself as the last stand for human rights and journalistic decency in the world. Holding that impossible standard high in its third season is Apple TV+’s expensive hit “The Morning Show,” a program that makes it feel like if morning news in America falls, then the apocalypse is just around the corner.

‘Society of the Snow’ Review: J.A. Bayona Wrests the Andes Flight Disaster Away From Hollywood - variety.com - Britain - USA - Hollywood - Argentina
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 20:11

‘Society of the Snow’ Review: J.A. Bayona Wrests the Andes Flight Disaster Away From Hollywood

Guy Lodge Film Critic Frank Marshall’s film “Alive” has never exactly been a classic, but for a certain bracket of moviegoers who saw it in 1993, it remains a vivid memory. A heart-in-mouth recreation of the 1972 Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 crash — from which 16 people eventually survived 72 days stranded in a remote, snowy stretch of the Andes in western Argentina, while 29 perished — it visualized the events past the remit of worldwide news reports and magazine stories.

Oscar-Nominated ‘Loving Vincent’ Duo Talk Toronto-Bowing, Hand-Painted Animated Feature ‘The Peasants’ - variety.com - Netherlands - Poland - Beyond
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 18:39

Oscar-Nominated ‘Loving Vincent’ Duo Talk Toronto-Bowing, Hand-Painted Animated Feature ‘The Peasants’

Christopher Vourlias Six years after “Loving Vincent,” their groundbreaking biopic of the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh earned an Oscar nomination and raked in more than $50 million at the global box office, the filmmaking team behind that hit is back with a bigger, more ambitious animated feature that utilizes the same stunning hand-painted animation technique to tell an operatic story of life and love in a 19th century Polish village. “The Peasants” world premiered Sept.

Inspired by ‘Poor Things’ and ‘The Zone of Interest,’ Edward Berger Wants to Bring Film4 Model to Germany - variety.com - Britain - Germany - city Venice
variety.com
09.09.2023 / 09:01

Inspired by ‘Poor Things’ and ‘The Zone of Interest,’ Edward Berger Wants to Bring Film4 Model to Germany

Ben Croll Remarking on the sterling success of Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Poor Things” in Venice and of Jonathan Glazer’s “The Zone of Interest” in Cannes, “All Quiet on the Western Front” director Edward Berger has noticed a trend – and he hopes to apply that recognition back to the German industry. “Film4 came and took [filmmakers like Jonathan Glazer,] Yorgos Lanthimos and Steve McQueen and gave them the opportunity, fostering them and sheltering them and [helping] them make their movies — and look where they are now,” said Berger at a Venice Film Festival panel.

‘Out of Season’ Review: Two Lost Lovers Get a Second Chance to Say Goodbye in Stéphane Brizé’s Delicate Mood Piece - variety.com
variety.com
08.09.2023 / 17:45

‘Out of Season’ Review: Two Lost Lovers Get a Second Chance to Say Goodbye in Stéphane Brizé’s Delicate Mood Piece

Guy Lodge Film Critic There’s a faintly between-worlds air to the coastal luxury spa in which the bulk of “Out of Season” is set: Spartan and depopulated, decorated in assorted shades of oyster white and palest aqua, it’s half sanatorium and half heaven’s gate, made uncannier still by the empty, forbidding sprawl of the wintering beach outside. That makes it an apt place for burnt-out actor Mathieu (Guillaume Canet) to come and consider where his life has led him thus far; it also proves a kind of corridor to the past, minus any actual time travel, when his visit reunites him with Alice (Alba Rohrwacher), a spurned lover from years before.

‘Woman Of…’ Review: Heartfelt Polish Character Study Unpacks a Trans Woman’s Life, From Cradle to Rebirth - variety.com - Poland
variety.com
08.09.2023 / 14:17

‘Woman Of…’ Review: Heartfelt Polish Character Study Unpacks a Trans Woman’s Life, From Cradle to Rebirth

Guy Lodge Film Critic There will come a time, perhaps not even too far from now, when films like “Woman Of…” may feel, if not old hat, at least familiar, part of a genre unto itself: not a coming-of-age story but a coming-of-self one, tracing the particular life stages of identifying oneself as transgender, accepting oneself as such, and finally living that truth out loud. Spanning decades in its closeup portrait of a Polish trans woman traveling that trajectory in a social climate hostile to her very existence, Małgorzata Szumowska and Michał Englert’s heart-on-sleeve film isn’t aiming to be revolutionary — there’s an old-fashioned melodramatic heft to its episodic construction, setting its heroine’s tale in a pointedly mainstream context.

‘Holly’ Review: Eerie High School Drama Ponders Whether Second Sight is a Gift, a Curse or a Mirage - variety.com
variety.com
07.09.2023 / 14:51

‘Holly’ Review: Eerie High School Drama Ponders Whether Second Sight is a Gift, a Curse or a Mirage

Guy Lodge Film Critic When Holly’s classroom peers call her “the witch,” she meekly shrugs it off. It’s not the least flattering slur with which the shy, soft-spoken 15-year-old has been bullied, and it beats people complaining about how she smells.

Popular Celebrities

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
DMCA