Author: rb809rb

  • Dialled In Launches Record Label in Partnership With Island-EMI’s The Collective, Signs Excise Dept and Ahadadream (EXCLUSIVE)

    Dialled In Launches Record Label in Partnership With Island-EMI’s The Collective, Signs Excise Dept and Ahadadream (EXCLUSIVE)

    South Asian culture platform Dialled In has unveiled Dialled In Records, a London-based label dedicated to developing and breaking South Asian artists across genres. The label has launched in partnership with The Collective, the A&R entrepreneur imprint within Island-EMI at Universal Music Group U.K.

    The label’s inaugural signings are Ahadadream — one of Dialled In’s own co-founders — and New Delhi and Mumbai-based multidisciplinary collective Excise Dept. Born and raised in Karachi before relocating to the U.K. at 12, Ahadadream has become a notable presence on the British music scene, earning the backing of major names including Skrillex, with whom he features on debut single “Bass Dhol” alongside Raf Saperra. Excise Dept blend experimental electronics with South Asian identity, singing and rapping across multiple regional languages — their inclusion speaks to the label’s intention to work with artists based on the subcontinent itself, not only within the diaspora.

    Dialled In co-founder Dhruva Balram framed the launch as the culmination of an infrastructure the organization has spent five years assembling across live events, touring, artist development and now recorded music. “This isn’t just a label launch,” Balram said. “It’s a statement about what’s possible when you build from within the culture, with the right people and refuse to compromise.”

    The Collective’s A&R director Callum Ross, who hails from an Indian family, said the partnership’s appeal lays in Dialled In’s willingness to challenge received ideas about what South Asian music looks like today. “Their take on what South Asian music is in 2026 is so refreshing — it challenges and breaks stereotypes,” he said. Nicola Spokes, managing director of The Collective at Island-EMI, praised the platform’s range and its focus on artist development, adding that Dialled In brings “deep commitment to signing, developing and breaking artists on the global stage” and calling the launch “a truly special moment.”

    Founded by a collective of South Asian entrepreneurs, curators and music professionals, Dialled In has built a presence across South Asian arts and culture in the U.K. over the past five years, with programming reaching institutions such as Glastonbury, the Barbican and the V&A as well as grassroots venues.

    The label will be celebrated at the Dialled In 5th Birthday Festival on May 30, a one-day event spread across eight Dalston venues, drawing an expected 3,000 attendees alongside a lineup of international South Asian acts.

  • Jack Whitehall to Host ‘SNL U.K.’ With Jorja Smith as Musical Guest

    Jack Whitehall to Host ‘SNL U.K.’ With Jorja Smith as Musical Guest

    Saturday Night Live U.K.” has revealed that British comedian Jack Whitehall will host the April 11 episode with R&B artist Jorja Smith as the musical guest.

    Whitehall is best known for his time as a panelist on the comedy game show “A League of Their Own” and his Netflix docuseries “Travels With My Father.” Smith released her second album, “Falling or Flying,” in 2023 and is gearing up to headline London’s All Points East Festival alongside Tems in August.

    The series, which is set to run for eight episodes, will then take a weeklong hiatus and return for its next batch of shows starting April 25.

    The first-ever season of the British twist on the U.S. comedy staple kicked off on March 21 with host Tina Fey and musical guest Wet Leg. Last weekend’s show featured Jamie Dornan with Wolf Alice, and Riz Ahmed is up next on April 4 with Kasabian. Just before its premiere, Sky revealed that the first season of “SNL U.K.” had been extended from six episodes to eight.

    SNL U.K.‘s” first episode delivered solid ratings for Sky and mostly positive reviews, while the Dornan-hosted second episode experienced a slight dip in viewership. In his review for Variety, Scott Bryan wrote that the show is strongest when leaning into what makes British comedy great.

    “Thankfully, ‘Saturday Night Live U.K.’ largely took the basics of what makes the U.S. version successful — sketch comedy, rotating guest hosts and the unpredictability of live television — and left the Brits to it. That’s where it works,” Bryan wrote. “The sketches are darker and more surreal than its U.S. counterpart, the comedy much more deadpan. Even if all the sketch itself doesn’t work (hey, they kept that feature too) there’s enough one-liners to keep you going and try out the next.”

  • Galaxy Digital Analyst Alex Thorn: “There’s a Hidden Reason Why Banks Are Stopping Bitcoin and Cryptocurrencies”

    Galaxy Digital Analyst Alex Thorn: “There’s a Hidden Reason Why Banks Are Stopping Bitcoin and Cryptocurrencies”

    The cryptocurrency world is discussing not so much Bitcoin’s price movements, but rather the intriguing paradox between institutional adoption and regulatory pressures.

    Appearing on The Wolf Of All Streets, Alex Thorn stated that global banks are facing the “Innovator’s Dilemma,” suggesting they are conducting a strategic “delay” operation.

    According to Thorn, giant institutions like JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley are simultaneously establishing their own crypto custody services and blockchain-based payment systems, while also creating legal obstacles to stifle the industry through their lobbyists in Washington.

    Thorn summarizes the situation with these words: “Banks are currently both building things and obstructing the process through their lobbyists. This is actually a clever strategy: They are slowing down innovation and buying time to integrate their own products before advanced technologies displace them.”

    Related News BREAKING: Fed Chair Jerome Powell Is Making Hot Statements

    Thorn notes that despite Bitcoin being in the $70,000 range, there is a “bear market feeling” in the market, attributing this to the complacency that comes with success.

    Thorn says that individual investors are disappointed, while institutions are quietly and steadily continuing to enter the market, noting that the gap between these two groups has widened more than ever before.

    Thorn predicts that the biggest future surge may come not from politicians, but from “Autonomous Agents.” Citing research, Thorn notes that autonomous AI tools tend to prefer stablecoins for payments and Bitcoin for savings and value preservation.

    Thorn argues that AI could become one of the biggest players in the Bitcoin economy, saying, “It’s very easy to explain to a rational machine why it should prefer a currency that cannot be seized and that has no sovereignty.”

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Bitcoin Exchange Upbit Announces New Listing and Update! Here Are the Details

    South Korea-based cryptocurrency exchange Upbit has announced the addition of two new digital assets to its platform and a partial change to its listing schedule.

    According to the announcement, Sky Protocol ($SKY) and USDS will be made available to users with KRW and USDT trading pairs.

    The exchange announced an update to the planned trading start time, particularly for USDS. Previously announced for March 31, 2026 at 12:00 PM, the opening time has been postponed to 1:00 PM. For $SKY, the planned start time for trading is 12:00 PM on the same day.

    It was emphasized that both assets operate on the Ethereum network, and users were reminded to select the correct network when making deposits and withdrawals. It was also stated that transaction start times may be delayed if sufficient liquidity is not available.

    Upbit also announced that some trading restrictions will be implemented initially for newly listed assets. Accordingly, measures such as short-term buy restrictions after trading opens, limitations on low-priced sell orders, and the acceptance of only limit orders for a certain period will be put into effect.

    Sky Protocol stands out as a decentralized lending platform where users can generate USDS by providing collateral, while USDS is designed as a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar. The project reportedly uses various algorithmic mechanisms to ensure price stability.

    This development shows that new project listings continue unabated in the Asian market.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Cult Japanese Director Shinya Tsukamoto Unveils Vietnam Vet Drama ‘Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People?’ 

    Cult Japanese Director Shinya Tsukamoto Unveils Vietnam Vet Drama ‘Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People?’ 

    Shinya Tsukamoto, the iconoclastic Japanese filmmaker best known for the body-horror landmark Tetsuo: The Iron Man, has set a Japan release for his latest feature, Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People?, an English-language drama based on the true story of an African American Vietnam War veteran who became a peace activist with deep ties to Japan. The film is scheduled to open in Japanese theaters in September, setting up a potential Venice Film Festival launch.

    The project marks a significant departure for Tsukamoto, who wrote, directed, shot and edited the film — his first primarily English-language feature — across locations in the United States, Thailand, Vietnam and Japan. Broadway veteran Rodney Hicks, an original and closing cast member of Rent, takes his first major screen lead as Allen Nelson, while Oscar-, Emmy- and Tony-winner Geoffrey Rush plays Dr. Daniels, a Veterans Affairs physician who intervenes in Nelson’s downward spiral. Tatyana Ali (The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) plays Nelson’s wife Linda, and newcomer Mark Merphy appears in flashbacks as the young Nelson.

    The film is rooted in the nonfiction account of Nelson, who grew up in New York and enlisted in the Marine Corps at 18, seeking an escape from poverty and discrimination. After training at Camp Hansen in Okinawa, he was deployed to Vietnam in 1966, where he participated in village raids that targeted men, women and children as suspected Viet Cong. He returned home severely traumatized, and spent years homeless before finding treatment through the VA. Nelson went on to devote his life to anti-war advocacy, returning to Okinawa in 1996 and ultimately delivering more than 1,200 lectures at schools and community halls across Japan. He died in 2009 and is buried in the country.

    Shinya Tsukamoto working behind the scenes on ‘Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People?’

    Kino Films

    Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People? completes what Tsukamoto has described as an informal trilogy of 20th-century war films. Fires on the Plain (2014), his adaptation of Shohei Ooka’s classic novel about a Japanese soldier’s harrowing experience in the Philippines, competed in the main competition at the Venice Film Festival. Shadow of Fire (2023), set in Japan’s devastated black markets in the immediate aftermath of World War II, premiered in Venice’s Orizzonti section, where it won the NETPAC Award. Where those films examined the Japanese experience of wartime atrocity and its aftermath, Mr. Nelson shifts the lens to the American side — and specifically to what the filmmaker calls “the wounds of those who perpetrated war.”

    Tsukamoto says the project gestated for seven years, tracing its roots to his research for Fires on the Plain

    Geoffrey Rush in ‘Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People’

    Kino Films

    “The most terrifying work of nonfiction I encountered was Mr. Nelson, Did You Kill People?” he says. “This book, in which he poured out his crimes and the life that followed without holding anything back, has stayed with me ever since and is deeply etched in my heart.” 

    He adds that Nelson’s story — “having spent his entire life sharing his wartime experiences” — is more essential now than ever, “in today’s world, where conflicts are raging in various places.”

    The film is produced and distributed in Japan by Kinoshita Group and its distribution arm Kino Films. The announcement was timed to coincide with National Vietnam War Veterans Day on March 29.

  • ‘Dog Day Afternoon’ Theater Review: Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach Lead a Disastrous Adaptation of a Cinema Classic

    ‘Dog Day Afternoon’ Theater Review: Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach Lead a Disastrous Adaptation of a Cinema Classic

    In his review for The New York Times, the critic Vincent Canby wrote of Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon, “If you can let yourself laugh at desperation that has turned seriously lunatic, the film is funny, but mostly it’s reportorially efficient and vivid, in the understated way of news writing that avoids speculation.” He is right, of course: Lumet’s 1975 masterpiece is, on occasion, ruefully amusing, the tics and foibles of regular life incongruously interrupting a situation most dire and extraordinary. 

    For the most part, though, Dog Day Afternoon is a sober thriller (Canby called it a melodrama) about a small-time Brooklyn bank heist blown up into a hostage crisis and city-wide fascination, about a man hard done by the system, who, for a few glorious and dangerous hours, almost breaks free by bending that very system to his will. There is a lot of serious stuff whirring through the film’s mind, a consideration of the fraught tempers of its fraught times. It crackles with immediacy, murmurs with furious sorrow. 

    But the creators behind the new Broadway production of Dog Day Afternoon seem to have gotten stuck on the funny part. Adapted by Pulitzer-winning playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis, this Dog Day is an antic comedy of bumblers and busybodies and freaks, of nasty jokes and weak attempts at rabble-rousing. It’s a frustrating image, Guirgis and everybody else involved in this folly watching the intimate neorealism of Lumet’s film and saying, “Let’s turn this into a big Broadway farce.”

    There were reportedly some clashes over tone during production; the Times reports that Guirgis was, for a time, banned from the rehearsal room. Which might indicate that sometime in the lead-up to previews pointed out that maybe not everything in this true-ish story should be a joke. But the production barreled ahead anyway, and what’s resulted is a garish disaster of tone and tempo, dull and grating at once. 

    Perhaps the first sign that something is wrong comes right at the very beginning, when a minor character, timid would-be third perpetrator Ray Ray, declares that he doesn’t have the fortitude to continue with the robbery. In the film, ringleader Sonny (Al Pacino then, Jon Bernthal now) simply sighs and lets him go. Which does eventually happen on stage, too, but not before Ray Ray loudly complains of stomach issues and then promptly soils himself. We are, I guess, meant to laugh at this pathetic display — look at these bozos, already almost literally shitting the bed — instead of seeing, as we do on film, the fragile humanity of those about to be framed by the media and police as animal degenerates. 

    Such cheap comedy abounds as the play unfolds. The chief police negotiator’s last name has been changed to Fucco, perhaps only so a swaggering FBI agent can repeatedly call him “Fucko.” The bank teller characters — women of varying ages all fearing for their lives while warily bonding with their captors — are turned into floozies or sardonic sitcom moms. Sal, the edgier and less predictable robber softly played by John Cazale in the film, is 2026-ified into a dumb, loose-cannon maybe-closet-case by The Bear’s Ebon Moss-Bachrach, doing a tired riff on his character from that show. Sitting through the play, I kept thinking to myself, “Wait, is this what the movie is like?” I then rewatched the film afterward and can confidently state that, no, of course it is very much not. 

    Guirgis would seem a natural choice to adapt the film. His best plays — Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Between Riverside and Crazy — are vivid depictions of hardscrabble New Yorkers, many of them caught in the undertow of crime and consequence. He can swing between kitchen-sink drama and poetic-comedic fugue with stunning ease. Surely he, so rooted in the argot of the city at the center of Dog Day, could find a way to massage Lumet’s minimalist approach into something that might proportionately fill a Broadway house. But his instincts fail him badly here. Worse, he seems quite sour on the people of this story, often mocking them when compassion would be far more effective. 

    The way Guirgis handles Sonny’s second wife, Leon — a trans woman who has just attempted suicide — is particularly galling. It’s quite something that a film from 50 years ago is far more sensitive to Sonny and Leon’s complicated relationship than is a play made in the present day. Guirgis paints Leon (played by Esteban Andres Cruz) as a flighty, feisty, man-crazy sex worker. It’s all a big gag, another bit of crassness to join the rest — like, say, the wheezy jokes about how one bank teller is supposed to see Deep Throat with her husband, or how another slept with their uptight boss. (I probably need not remind you, but none of that is in the movie.) Guirgis is practically begging us not to take anyone seriously, for what reason I can’t fathom. 

    Director Rupert Goold is ill-suited to mitigate that sneering impulse. Goold has done good things on stage (King Charles III, among others) and decent things on film (Judy, for which Renée Zellweger won her second Oscar), but this particular milieu favors none of his fortes. The action sequences, if we can call him that, are clunky, shouty jumbles. There is nary an ounce of tension to be found during the entirety of this supposedly heated stand-off. Goold doesn’t do much with David Korins’ impressively realistic set but rotate it back and forth depending on whether we’re inside the bank or outside of it. And he has steered most of his actors to the broadest of performances, favoring high pitch and volume over anything that might resemble the measured authenticity of Lumet’s ensemble. 

    Bernthal does, on occasion, register as a real human being caught in a moment of desperation. He maintains a springy energy even when the play around him sags. Jessica Hecht, as head teller Colleen, fights her miscasting with noble grace; she finds ways to turn canned one-liners into something resembling the everyday. Jon Ortiz gives Fucco (sigh) a certain air of decency that vaguely evokes Charles Durning’s brilliant shagginess in the film. Honestly, though, I was most taken with Spencer Garrett of Mad Men fame, who nails the smarmy, officious tone of the FBI guy brought on to fix the NYPD’s mess. He feels truly of the story’s time and place, whereas most others are playing to a studio audience. 

    That audience is made complicit in perhaps the gravest of this production’s crimes. Goold has chosen to turn the “Attica! Attica!” moment from the film — in which Sonny revels in a frenzy of anti-authority sentiment — into a bit of crowd participation. Bernthal takes center stage, waving his arms and asking those in attendance to repeat “Attica!” and to applaud (or perhaps echo) him when he says “Fuck you, NYPD!” I don’t know that Broadway audiences (especially at the matinee I attended) are exactly the right cohort to try to sway toward such public displays of anarchy, and thus the moment is rendered achingly limp and awkward. 

    More crucially, though, this hammy call-and-response completely upends what makes the moment in the film so electric. Yes, Sonny does initiate the Attica chant — evoking the brutal suppression of a prison uprising that happened the year prior — but he is reacting to the already extant fervor of those who have gathered around the bank to spur Sonny on, to lend their proletarian support. Lumet captures an ailing city bristling with tension, its citizens enraged at corrupt police and politicians, clamoring to assert their humanity in the face of, well, the Man. It is a thrilling, spontaneous and tragically fleeting burst of revolutionary outcry. 

    On Broadway, though, Dog Day Afternoon attempts to force that out of its onlookers rather than earn it, turning Sonny’s shouts of reckless heroism into a hollow marketing slogan utterly stripped of context. Maybe some theatergoers will put down their $30 themed cocktails to clap and cheer along, deciding right then and there to buy an “Attica! Attica! Attica!” tote bag in the lobby on their way out, happy to have had the Dog Day experience. But the Sonny of the film would certainly be appalled to see such a thing. I think the hostages would be, too.

    Venue: August Wilson Theater, New York
    Cast: Jon Bernthal, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Jessica Hecht, Jon Ortiz
    Director: Rupert Goold
    Writer: Stephen Adly Guirgis
    Set design: David Korins
    Costume design: Brenda Abbandandolo
    Lighting design: Isabella Byrd
    Sound design: Cody Spencer

  • Strategy’s Latest SEC Filing Shows No Bitcoin Purchases or Share Sales During Quiet Week

    Strategy’s Latest SEC Filing Shows No Bitcoin Purchases or Share Sales During Quiet Week

    Strategy reported no bitcoin purchases or equity sales in its latest SEC filing, reinforcing disciplined capital management while maintaining a massive crypto position and spotlighting high-yield, low- volatility instruments within its treasury strategy.

    Strategy Bitcoin Holdings and SEC Filing Activity Pause

    Strategy Inc. filed Form 8-K with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on March 30, 2026, reporting no bitcoin purchases and no equity sales last week. The disclosure confirms no activity under its at-the-market program while continuing its regular reporting on treasury movements.

    The filing presents the update as part of ongoing transparency rather than a shift in capital allocation. Strategy stated:

    “On March 30, 2026, Strategy Inc. announced that, during the period between March 23, 2026 and March 29, 2026, Strategy did not sell any shares under its at-the-market offering program and did not purchase any bitcoin.”

    The update reflects the company’s established practice of providing consistent visibility into both equity issuance and digital asset activity.

    Saylor Highlights STRC Performance as Strategy’s Bitcoin Reserves Remain Central to Balance Sheet

    Over the weekend, Executive Chairman Michael Saylor posted on social media platform X, sharing volatility data for STRC rather than the bitcoin-related chart he has previously used in connection with purchase updates. He wrote that STRC recorded lower volatility than all major asset classes and S&P 500 constituents over a 30-day period while delivering an 11.5% dividend yield, with the dataset placing STRC at about 2% volatility compared with bitcoin at 50% and higher levels across equities, commodities, and bond-linked exchange-traded funds.

    Balance sheet figures reinforce the magnitude of the company’s digital asset holdings and cost basis. Strategy noted in its SEC filing:

    “As of March 29, 2026, Strategy holds approximately 762,099 bitcoin that were acquired at an aggregate purchase price of $57.69 billion and an average purchase price of approximately $75,694 per bitcoin, inclusive of fees and expenses.”

    The data illustrates continued reliance on bitcoin as a core treasury asset while maintaining transparency through regular filings.

    FAQ 🧭

    • What did Strategy disclose in its latest SEC Form 8-K filing?
      Strategy reported no bitcoin purchases or equity sales for the specified week.
    • Does the lack of activity signal a change in Strategy’s bitcoin strategy?
      The company indicated the update reflects routine transparency, not a strategic shift.
    • How does STRC compare to bitcoin in terms of volatility and yield?
      STRC shows significantly lower volatility while offering an 11.5% dividend yield.
    • Why does Strategy’s bitcoin position remain important for investors?
      The firm’s large bitcoin holdings continue to anchor its treasury model and market valuation.
  • $SUI, $EDGE, $BEAT Ready to Witness Key Token Unlocks This Week

    $SUI, $EDGE, $BEAT Ready to Witness Key Token Unlocks This Week

    The next week is set to be full of key token unlocks in the crypto market. In this respect, Sui ($SUI), Definitive ($EDGE), and Audiera ($BEAT) are leading the list of the top seven unlocks of the week. As per the data from CryptoRank, the other names on the list take into account Falcon Finance ($FF), Opinion ($OPN), Ethena ($ENA), and EigenCloud 9$EIGEN). These unlocks include both the smaller and large market-cap tokens with likely effects on tokenomics.

    🔓 Top 7 Token Unlocks of the Upcoming Week

    The following tokens with the largest unlock amount will be unlocked next week:$SUI – $47.19M$EDGE – $11.82M$BEAT – $10.53M$FF – $9.66M$OPN – $8.29M$ENA – $8.63M$EIGEN – $6.38M pic.twitter.com/uCdQt0Yo6H

    — CryptoRank.io (@CryptoRank_io) March 30, 2026

    Sui ($SUI) Leads Next Week’s Token Unlocks with $47.19M

    Sui ($SUI) is the 1st among the next week’s crypto token unlocks. Specifically, Sui ($SUI) is poised to unlock a notable 53.40M tokens on the 1st of April. This equals a staggering $47.19M in terms of value. This amount also occupies 1.37% of the project’s market capitalization and 39.0% of its token supply. In addition to this, Definitive ($EDGE) is going to unlock 103.75M tokens on April 2, signifying a total $11.82M worth and 1.37% of its market cap. Additionally, this figure shows 25.5% of the total supply of the project.

    Apart from that, Audiera ($BEAT) has also scheduled an unlock of 21.24M tokens on April 1, occupying an overall $10.53M amount that equals 15.3% of market capitalization. At the same time, the unlocked amount is 22.5% of Audiera’s total token supply. Next name on the list is Falcon Finance ($FF), which is unlocking 136.66M on April 1. The amount totals $9.66M and equals 5.84% of the project’s market cap. Along with that, the respective figure is equivalent to 25.5% of the cumulative token supply.

    CryptoRank’s list of the leading token unlocks to occur next week includes Opinion ($OPN) in the 5th position. The project has scheduled the unlock of a total of 40.42M tokens for April 2, totaling $8.29M. Additionally, these tokens constitute 20.4% of the market capitalization of the project and 19.9% of its supply.

    EigenCloud ($EIGEN) Bottoms List with $6.38M

    Following that, with $8.63M to be unlocked on April 2, Ethena ($ENA) is unveiling 94.18M tokens. So, the project is unlocking 1.11% of market capitalization and 56.8% of total supply. Concluding the list of the next week’s token unlocks is EigenCloud ($EIGEN), which is bringing forth 36.82M tokens on April 1, equaling $6.38M. The respective amounts equal its market cap’s 5.35% and total supply’s 27.1%.

  • Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Protégé Unveils Polyamorous Romantic Drama ‘Between Two Lovers’

    Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Protégé Unveils Polyamorous Romantic Drama ‘Between Two Lovers’

    Japanese director Nanako Hirose, who trained under Palme d’Or winner Hirokazu Kore-eda at his Tokyo-based film collective Bunbuku Inc., has unveiled her second feature, Between Two Lovers, a romantic drama centered on a married woman who pursues a simultaneous relationship with a female lover — and proposes that all three live together. The film is set for release in Japan on Nov. 27.

    The film stars Masami Nagasawa (Our Little Sister) as Uta, a picture book creator described by the filmmakers as “selfish, cunning — yet utterly lovable.” Tasuku Emoto (Kobikicho no Adauchi) plays her husband Morio, an attentive and domestic man torn between his wife’s wishes and traditional family values, while Shizuka Ishibashi — who is set to headline the NHK Morning Drama Series Blossom this fall — takes on the role of Junna, Uta’s lover and editor.

    Hirose says the film “was born from the idea that there should be more diverse forms of family in the world.” She says the premise first came to her during the pandemic and she has spent the years since developing and writing the screenplay. 

    Nagasawa, who recently won the best actress prize at the 49th Japan Academy Awards for Dollhouse, says of her character: “Within Uta-chan’s seemingly conflicted actions lie a mix of ideals, reality, and a sense of justice. Even so, her honesty and authenticity continue to draw people in.” Emoto described the project as “a story about love, brought to life by characters who are clumsy, yet full of longing.” Ishibashi called her character “clumsy and prickly like a hedgehog,” yet carrying a “childlike softness inside.”

    Hirose built her career as an assistant director within Bunbuku, the creators’ collective that Kore-eda (Shoplifters, Monster) founded in 2014 alongside filmmaker Miwa Nishikawa (Under the Open Sky). The company has served as a launchpad and incubator for emerging Japanese directors, with Kore-eda mentoring younger filmmakers from script development through production. Hirose’s directorial debut, His Lost Name, starring Yuya Yagira, premiered in the New Currents competition at the Busan International Film Festival in 2018 and played at festivals internationally.

    Between Two Lovers first attracted industry attention at the script stage, winning both the CJ ENM Award and the ARRI Award at the Asian Project Market (APM) within Busan’s Asian Contents & Film Market in 2023.

    The film is a Japan-Taiwan co-production, with Taiwanese cinematographer Yao Hung-I — who shot several of Hou Hsiao-hsien’s later works as well as Huang Xi’s Missing Johnny — handling the photography, alongside Taiwanese lighting director Hsiao Hung-Yi. Filming took place in September and October of last year, and the film is already complete. Popular Japanese singer-songwriter HIMI composed the score, marking his first time scoring a full feature.

    The project was developed by Bunbuku and is being produced and distributed by K2 Pictures, the Tokyo-based company launched in 2023 by former Toei producer Muneyuki Kii. K2 has positioned itself as a disruptor in the Japanese film industry, eschewing the country’s traditional production committee model in favor of a fund-based financing structure aimed at returning more profits to creators and attracting both domestic and international investment. The company’s directorial roster includes Kore-eda, Nishikawa, Takashi Miike and Shunji Iwai, and its K2P Film Fund I has drawn investment from some of Japan’s biggest financial institutions, including MUFG Bank and the Development Bank of Japan. Kii serves as executive producer on Between Two Lovers, with Daiju Koide producing.

  • Dogecoin at a crossroads: Will DOGE breakout to $0.1 or see another pullback?

    Dogecoin at a crossroads: Will DOGE breakout to $0.1 or see another pullback?

    Amid extended market weakness, memecoin signaled market recovery, making slight gains across the board. With memecoins showing slight upside momentum, Dogecoin [$DOGE] successfully defended $0.09 and then jumped to $0.093 before retracing slightly.

    At press time, $DOGE traded at $0.092, after slightly rising by 1.86% on the daily charts. This price uptick was backed by a 7% increase in trading volume, which exceeded $1 billion, reflecting market momentum.

    Dogecoin: Spot buyers defend key levels

    Dogecoin bulls have attempted to defend and flip $0.09 support over the past few days, with no success. As the market signaled a recovery, bulls jumped in with strength and successfully achieved their goal.

    Source: TradingView

    In fact, the Bulls vs. Bears indicator turned positive again, rising to 6.8 after falling into the negative zone. A rebound here suggested that buyers stepped in and displaced bears.

    According to CoinGlass data, $DOGE recorded $82.79 million in Spot outflows compared to $68.64 million in inflows. As a result, the memecoin’s Spot Netflow dropped 148% to -$14.25 million.

    Source: CoinGlass

    Notably, when outflows outpace inflows, it suggests that exchanges recorded more withdrawal orders than deposit orders.

    Such a setup on exchanges reduces the supply available for immediate sale, effectively increasing scarcity and creating perfect conditions to accelerate upside momentum.

    Futures remain overly bearish

    Although significant capital has flowed into the Spot market, derivatives market participants have continued to reduce their exposure.

    While $DOGE showed slight upside momentum, traders have avoided piling in, especially on the long side. This is due to increased long-position liquidations.

    According to CoinGlass data, over $2.8 million in longs were liquidated. This liquidation rate amplified investors’ fear of taking more long positions.

    Source: CoinGlass

    As such, massive capital flowed into the Futures market, with over $608.4 million in outflows. This suggests that most participants closed their positions, indicating reduced risk appetite.

    Such market conditions have left the Dogecoin market weakened and exposed to potentially more losses on its price charts.

    What’s next for $DOGE?

    Dogecoin is currently at a crossroads, with the Spot market showing greater determination to pull the market out of a slump, while Futures remain bearish. These two conflicting forces expose $DOGE to the fate of whichever side manages to overwhelm the other.

    Looking at the Stochastic RSI, the momentum made a bullish crossover, rising from 7 to 23, reflecting increased buying pressure. Despite this crossover, the momentum index remains firmly stuck in oversold territory, signaling the presence of sellers.

    Source: TradingView

    Even more worrying for memecoin prospects, the future Grand Trend suggested another slip. Based on the future model, $DOGE could drop below $0.09 again, falling to $0.086, with $0.080 as critical support.

    However, if Spot demand outweighs Futures selling, Dogecoin could hold above $0.09 and target $0.106 resistance.


    Final Summary

    • $DOGE rose slightly, flipping $0.09, touching a high of $0.093, before retracing to $0.092.
    • Dogecoin saw fresh capital inflows into the Spot market, but Futures remained bearish, posing a risk of pullback.