Author: rb809rb

  • German Star Christian Ulmen Accused of Revenge Porn Against Ex-Wife

    German Star Christian Ulmen Accused of Revenge Porn Against Ex-Wife

    The ex-wife of German actor and comedian Christian Ulmen has filed a criminal complaint accusing the Berlin Blues star of creating and decimating fake sex videos and nude photos of her online.

    Collien Fernandes, a well-known German actress and TV presenter, made her allegations public in an Instagram post on Friday, detailing what she alleges was a decade of systematic “humiliation” by Ulmen.

    She accuses Ulmen of creating AI-generated photos and videos of her that he spread online and sent to other men in the German film and TV industry. One fake video, which she claims was sent to 21 men, depicted her being gang-raped. Ulmen, Fernandes alleges, also used AI to clone her voice for the purpose of fake telephone sex chats with other men.

    Ulmen, through his lawyer, had denied all charges.

    In an in-depth investigation, published in German newsmagazine Der Spiegel, Fernandes alleges that her ex-husband created fake social media profiles in her name and used them to contact men to send them pornographic photos and videos.

    A media law firm, commissioned by Ulmen, has called the Spiegel report “unlawful for several reasons” and that it disseminated “untrue facts” based on a “one-sided account.”

    Fernandes had been aware of the spread of the digital fakes for years. In 2024 she hosted a TV program, “The Hunt for the Perpetrator” which tried to find the people behind her fake social media profiles. Last year, she claims, she discovered her husband was behind it all.

    Fernandes and Ulmen married in 2012. They separated last year and announced their divorce earlier this month. They have a daughter.

    The criminal complaint, filed in Spain, where the couple have a second residence, accuses Ulmen of, among other things, alleged identity theft, violation of business or private secrets, and public insult.

    Fernandes and Ulmen were one of Germany‘s best-known celebrity couples. Ulmen has been a household name in Germany for decades, first as a MTV VJ, then as a comedian and actor on hit series including Jerks and crime procedural Tatort, and in films, including Berlin Blues (2003), and Maria, ihm schmeckt’s nicht! (2009). Fernandes is a prominent TV presenter and actress who has appeared in such German comedies as Night of the Living Dorks (2004) and Ossi’s Eleven (2007).

    In response to the allegations, German commercial network Pro7 pulled all episodes of Ulmen’s Jerks from its online platform Joyn. Public broadcaster ARD not yet removed Ulmen’s Tatort episodes from its on-demand service.

  • “BTS 2.0 Is Just Getting Started”: K-pop Supergroup Makes Grand Return to Global Stage With Netflix Event

    “BTS 2.0 Is Just Getting Started”: K-pop Supergroup Makes Grand Return to Global Stage With Netflix Event

    To quote RM, “I need the whole stadium to jump. Put your phone down, let’s get all the fun.” Or the maybe not the whole stadium, but the whole gathered crowd at Seoul landmark Gwanghwamun, which has been outfitted for the grand return of the groundbreaking K-pop group, BTS.

    Fresh off the release of their fifth studio album, Arirang, the seven members of BTS — RM, Jin, Suga, J-hope, Jimin, V and Jungkook — kicked off their first group live performance in over three years, BTS The Comeback Live | Arirang, Saturday night in Seoul. The concert special, which was broadcast live around the world on Netflix, had been highly anticipated.

    Starting with a sweeping shot of Seoul’s Joseon-era Gyeongbokgung Palace, the live stream kicked off eventually revealed the seven men of BTS standing in front of the palace. “Hello, Seoul,” the group’s leader RM told the crowd. “We’re back.”

    The show kicked right into “Body to Body,” which ended with a group of performers in traditional Korean hanbok, playing the Korean folk song “Arirang.” They then jumped into new songs “Hooligan” and “2.0.” BTS then introduced themselves to the gathered crowd. “We are finally here, and we are seeing you again,” Jimin, 30, told the crowd. “The fact that I’m speaking here, I am so moved.”

    BTS continued through the show playing some non-Arirang hits like “Butter” and “MIC Drop” before singing “Aliens,” “FYA,” their new single “Swim,” “Like Animals” and “Normal.”

    “BTS 2.0 is just getting started,” J-hope, 32, told the crowd after singing “Normal.” His group member Jin, the eldest at 33, added, “Thank you for waiting, ARMY.”

    The K-pop superstars closed out the night with their smash hit “Dynamite” and the fan favorite “소우주” — known as “Mikrokosmos” in English. The melodic track had the crowd energized and swaying along with the pop group.

    ‘BTS The Comeback Live | Arirang’ in Seoul.

    BigHit Music/Netflix

    While the entire group performed, RM, was said limited in his participation due to an ankle injury he suffered during rehearsals for the show, the band’s label BigHit Music announced Friday. The label said RM suffered a serious-sounding ankle injury while practicing with his bandmates on Thursday. The rapper, however, was mobile throughout the show despite his injury, using a stool at the front of the stage as his home base for the performance.

    “Although there will be limitations to his performance, RM will participate on stage to the extent possible and hopes to connect with ARMY and the audience,” a statement released Friday read. “As many have waited a long time for this performance, he will do his utmost to deliver his best.”

    The live stream, unsurprisingly, let the viewers at home hear the men of Bangtan Sonyeondan crystal clear, however, the in-person quality was also notably crisp. The sound at the square was truly impressive, their voices booming and echoing throughout the square.

    Arirang, the group’s first album in nearly four years, served as the official return to the global stage for the boy group, who spent their years away releasing solo music and completing their mandatory military service in their home country of South Korea. Fans of the group, collectively known as ARMY, have been waiting in anticipation as each member was discharged over the last year.

    BTS, a trailblazer in the globalization of K-pop, has seemingly taken over their home city of Seoul to celebrate their return. The choice to stage the first performance of the album in front of Gwanghwamun, the main gate and historic entryway to Seoul’s Gyeongbokgung Palace, is no coincidence — the album is a reflection on the group’s identity. The palace was lit up with a dynamic video projection, integrating it into the stage show; the first time that’s ever been done.

    The album’s name, Arirang, pays tribute the folk song of the same name, which is the first Korean song recorded by Korean men with American ethnologist Alice Fletcher in the U.S. in 1896. Motifs from “Arirang” can be heard in the first track of the album, “Body to Body.” One of the most striking tracks on the album is “No. 29,” a minute-and-38-second recording of resonant tolling of the Divine Bell of King Seongdeok, which has been designated as South Korea’s National Treasure No. 29. Arirang sends a clear message — BTS is proud of their roots. They are, and always will be, a Korean band, even if their audience has expanded to the entire world.

    No pop concert has previously been held in Gwanghwamun Square, because of the site’s deep historical and political significance. Netflix and Hybe raffled off 22,000 tickets for a cordoned seating area surrounding the stage, but the streamer and label were expecting at least 260,000 people to pour into the square and its surrounding streets. After the show ended, the production was extremely cautious about getting the crowd out of the area, releasing attendees in stages to lessen any overcrowding or chaos. It was still, however, quite backed up leaving the concert area.

    ‘BTS The Comeback Live | Arirang’ in Seoul.

    BigHit Music/Netflix

    BTS The Comeback Live | Arirang marks the first-ever live stream of a standalone concert for Netflix. The production is using a jaw dropping 23 camera setup to capture the live experience for fans around the world. “It was very clear from the start that this opportunity was one we could not pass up,” Netflix’s vice president of nonfiction sports and series Brandon Riegg told press at a briefing ahead of the show.

    “We view these live events as an opportunity to reach fans and members around the world in a way that is becoming increasingly tough to find: singular events that really pull people together,” Reigg continued, noting it “just doesn’t get any bigger than BTS” when speaking about the live stream. “I would venture to guess this might be the biggest thing this year that we see on Netflix in terms of our live ambition.”

    Saturday’s live stream concert is being directed by live television performance pro Hamish Hamilton, known for directing several Super Bowl halftime shows, including this year’s with another global icon, Bad Bunny. “BTS is the greatest band in the world, so it’s a huge honor to be asked to direct this live show in such an iconic location,” Hamilton told press at the briefing.

    “Every decision we have made in terms of camera approach, stage design and production has been built around one question: how do we make the person watching at home feel like they are standing in that square?” Hamilton said. “There are big sweeping moments that convey the full scale of what is happening in Seoul, and then there are moments of real intimacy where you are right there with the band. The millions watching around the world are every bit as much a part of this night as the people on the ground in Seoul.”

    With the whole arena-style gig taking place in a busy public square, staging the concert was more like a military takeover than a typical arena show, suggested Jonathan Mussman, the streamer’s vice president of production for nonfiction and live programming.

    “When you do this in a stadium, you can completely control the environment and you can take your time setting up,” Mussman said during a press walkthrough of the venue the day before the gig. “We’re really pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in the live concert broadcast world.”

    Whereas a typical arena rock show — like Harry Styles’ recent Netflix concert — requires a few hundred crew, Netflix and Hybe employed over 1,000 local and international production pros — not including security — to pull off Saturday night’s show.

    “It really takes an army of production veterans — plus BTS ARMY, of course — to make this happen,” Mussman added.

    BTS will make perform for the first time in U.S. in nearly four years this coming week. The group is slated to perform at a Spotify event Monday and the members will make their return to U.S. television later in the week, appearing on two nights of The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.

    This story will be updated throughout the performance. More details to come.

  • Kevin Durant’s just 26 points behind Michael Jordan after Friday night’s action

    Kevin Durant’s just 26 points behind Michael Jordan after Friday night’s action

    Kevin Durant is 26 points behind Michael Jordan for No. 5 on the all-time scoring list after the Rockets defeated the Hawks.

    What we know about Friday night’s games

    • Kevin Durant (25 pts) is now just 26 points from passing Michael Jordan on the all-time scoring list after leading the Rockets over the Hawks 117-95.
    • The Knicks beat the Nets 93-92 in a Big Apple battle behind Karl-Anthony Towns (26 pts, 15 reb).
    • The Nuggets defeated the Raptors 121-115 in a close contest behind Jamal Murray (36 pts) and Nikola Jokić (22 pts, 8 reb, 9 ast, 1 stl, 1 blk).

    MARCH 20, 2026 // 12:24 ET

    Friday’s results

    Donovan Clingan (21 pts, 15 reb, 4 ast, 3 blk) is your top performer of the night.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 11:30 ET

    Nuggets defeat Raptors

    121-115.

    Jamal Murray (31 pts, 5 reb, 6 ast) was the star of the show for the Nuggets, along with Nikola Jokić (22 pts, 8 reb, 9 ast, 1 stl, 1 blk).

    Jakob Poetl (23 pts, 11 reb, 2 stl) put up a strong night on 10-of-14 shooting for the Raptors.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 11:12 ET

    League Pass Alert: Raptors-Nuggets

    107-103 Denver with 4:22 to go in the fourth quarter, as Jamal Murray (26 pts) goes off.

    Catch the finish on League Pass!


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 11:01 ET

    Durant on the chase

    The Rockets defeated the Hawks 117-95, as their legendary forward continues his climb up the all-time scoring chart.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 10:57 ET

    Blazers take a clutch win on the road

    As they defeat the Timberwolves 108-104 behind Jerami Grant (26 pts) and Deni Avdija (25 pts).

    Minnesota, which was without Anthony Edwards, had six players score in double figures, led by Julius Randle (19 pts) and Rudy Gobert (18 pts, 15 reb, 2 stl, 1 blk).


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 10:45 ET

    Celtics on a streak


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 10:26 ET

    Rising high for the A

    Our top dunk of the evening so far — an 83.1 on the Dunk Score scale.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 10:11 ET

    Brunson in Brooklyn

    The Knicks’ captain (17 pts, 8 reb) came up clutch as New York took control of a game that featured nine lead changes in the fourth quarter to win 93-92.

    Josh Minott (22 pts, career-high six 3-pointers) was the top man for the Nets.


     

    MARCH 20, 2026 // 9:46 ET

    Piston powered

    By defeating the Warriors 115-101, the Pistons clinched a top-six spot in the Eastern Conference Playoffs for the second straight year.

    NBA.com’s Jeff Zillgitt has more for you about Detroit’s postseason plans.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 9:21 ET

    A born scorer at work


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 8:50 ET

    Jalen Johnson soars

    The Duke product has 13 triple-doubles this season — nearly doubling the former Hawks’ franchise record of 7.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 8:15 ET

    Entering to chase His Airness


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 6:30 ET

    KD chasing MJ

    NBA.com’s Shaun Powell has a look at Kevin Durant’s pursuit of Michael Jordan’s No. 5 spot on the all-time scoring list.

    Kevin Durant’s best basket of 2025-26.


    MARCH 20, 2026 // 6:00 ET

    Welcome to a six-game night!

    Jalen Johnson and the Atlanta Hawks are in Houston to face the Rockets on NBA TV.

    Our slate tonight is highlighted by a clash between Jalen Johnson’s Hawks and Kevin Durant’s Rockets on NBA TV (8 ET)

    Here’s the complete slate:

  • Trump hints at ‘winding down’ Iran war as US deploys more troops to region

    Trump hints at ‘winding down’ Iran war as US deploys more troops to region

    United States President Donald Trump says he is considering “winding down” the military operations in Iran even as his administration deploys 2,500 additional marines to the region and asks Congress for more money to fund the war.

    In a social media post on Friday, Trump said the US was “getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East”.

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    The mixed messages from Trump came after another climb in oil prices plunged the US stock markets. His administration also announced that it was lifting sanctions on Iranian oil already loaded on ships, a move aimed at wrangling the soaring fuel prices.

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, in a post on X shortly after Trump’s message, said “the President and the Pentagon predicted it would take approximately 4-6 weeks to achieve this mission.

    “Tomorrow [Saturday] marks week 3 – and the US Armed Forces are doing an exceptional job,” Leavitt wrote. “Day by day, the Iranian Regime is being crippled, and their ability to threaten the United States and our allies is being significantly weakened.”

    Al Jazeera’s Rosiland Jordan, reporting from Washington, said four to six weeks is “the new number coming from the Trump administration about when Operation Epic Fury could possibly end”.

    “The White House has never been clear since the war began on February 28 about just how long the war was going to take, how many different platforms it would be fought on, and what would be the final metric for the US deciding to declare victory,” she said.

    But the three-week-old war has shown no signs of abating, with the US-Israeli forces attacking the Iranian capital, Tehran, and nearby areas as the country welcomed the first day of the Persian new year, Nowruz. At least two people were killed by shelling on a residential area in the village of Dastak in northern Iran’s Kiashahr, Gilan province’s governor said.

    Meanwhile, Iran fired ⁠two ⁠ballistic missiles at the Diego Garcia military base in the ⁠Indian Ocean, run jointly by the US and the United Kingdom, the semi-official Mehr news agency reported on Saturday.

    Israel said Iranian forces continued to fire missiles at it early on Saturday, while Saudi Arabia said it downed 20 drones in just a couple of hours in the country’s eastern region – home to major oil installations.

    US near completion of goals: Trump

    The US and Israel have offered shifting rationales for the war at different times, from hoping to foment an uprising that topples Iran’s leadership to eliminating its nuclear and missile programmes.

    While Trump claimed the US is “very close” to meeting the war’s objectives, his administration is moving to bolster its firepower in the region and request another $200bn from Congress to fund the war.

    Earlier this week, the US redirected another group of amphibious assault ships carrying 2,500 marines from the Pacific to the Middle East. The marines will join more than 50,000 US troops already in the region.

    Trump has said he has no plans to send ground forces into Iran, but has also asserted that he retains all options.

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei on Friday said Iran has dealt “a dizzying blow” to its enemies and that the US-Israeli war on his country was a “gross miscalculation”.

    In a written statement read on Iranian television to mark Nowruz, Khamenei praised the Iranians’ steadfastness in the face of war. Khamenei has not been seen in public since he became the supreme leader following the Israeli strikes that killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and reportedly wounded him.

    More than 1,400 people have been killed in Iran during the war, according to the authorities, while Israeli bombing has killed more than 1,000 people in Lebanon. In Israel, at least 18 people have been killed by Iranian missiles, while at least 13 US soldiers have died so far, according to officials.

  • Hong Kong FilMart 2026: Six Takeaways From Asia’s Buzzy Film and Entertainment Content Marketplace

    Hong Kong FilMart 2026: Six Takeaways From Asia’s Buzzy Film and Entertainment Content Marketplace

    Thirty years in, and FilMart still knows how to fill a room.

    The Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre hummed with a density that attendees said felt more like the market’s pre-pandemic peak than anything seen in recent years – a buzzing, deal-hungry crowd that reflected just how much the appetite for Asian content has grown, and how many new players now want a seat at the table. From Myanmar’s first international market debut to Sri Lankan distributors comparing notes with European buyers, the 30th edition of the Hong Kong International Film & TV Market made a persuasive case that the screen business, for all its anxieties about AI and fragmentation, remains hungry for connection.

    “I am meeting friends and new business partners from Turkey, the U.K., the U.S., and even Brazil,” said Timothy Oh, general manager of leading microdrama player COL International Group, a first-time FilMart participant from Singapore. “Hong Kong’s role as an international hub helps create a bustling market with many business opportunities for those looking at innovation and what’s next.”

    FilMart and its co-located forum EntertainmentPulse, organized by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), drew roughly 8,000 industry professionals from 53 countries and regions, with over 790 exhibitors from a record 38 countries – including first-time participants from Belgium, Poland, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Uzbekistan.

    Here are six takeaways from FilMart 2026.

    1. AI Moves From Buzzword to Workflow

    Artificial intelligence was the year’s dominant conversation – but the tenor has shifted. Where previous editions treated AI with theoretical enthusiasm, this year’s market found practitioners speaking in more practical, and sometimes cautious, terms.

    The returning AI Hub, supported by the Cultural and Creative Industries Development Agency (CCIDA) and the Film Development Fund, showcased companies including Alibaba Cloud, Kling, MiniMax and Vidu alongside academic partners from the University of Hong Kong and the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts. The newly launched AI Academy offered 19 hands-on workshops covering generative text, audio and animation. At the Golden Rooster Roundtable, organized by the China Film Association and China Film Co-production Corp., AI was cast as a creative “partner.” Meanwhile, Mei Ah Entertainment unveiled a slate of AI-generated short dramas reimagining classic IP for mobile-first audiences, and Red Empire Productions and Organic Media Group bowed hybrid animated vertical series “Home Away AI.i.Ce.”

    Yet legendary director Peter Chan Ho-sun offered a more sobering counterpoint at the Producers Connect panel. “I think we’re at the worst times. Those days of the blockbusters are gone. We’re experiencing now what I learned when I went to Hollywood in the late 90s. Nobody knows anything,” said Chan. “With the fragmented markets, with the vertical short dramas, with AI, and with cinemas closing. I think we’re at the worst times.” Chan drew a sharp line between commercial cinema and auteur work: “I don’t think AI is an enemy to auteur film. But AI would be an enemy to mediocre blockbusters. Basically, AI can replace any blockbuster or commercial film in three years, I believe.” He reserved particular scorn for the industry’s reliance on data analytics: “Big data. That’s one of the dirtiest words I’ve ever heard for creative people. A lot of these so-called big data could actually end up killing the film.”

    Henry Or, SVP of strategic partnerships, Asia at Boat Rocker Studios, says the divergence in attitude between Asian and Western markets is striking. “If you look at the whole AI development from China, it is more advanced, because it’s something that the government is really leading the whole development for the industry,” he tells Variety. AI dubbing is already widespread in Chinese drama production, he notes, though he adds a caveat about its screen applicability: “China is okay, because 90% of people, they watch content on their mobile. So it’s a small screen.”

    Bizhan Tong, a U.K. and Hong Kong-based filmmaker, frames AI as a force multiplying collaboration rather than diminishing it. “The use of AI has emboldened more collaborations to occur, because they see AI not as a tool for removing jobs, but one that can actually save jobs by reducing costs, and therefore enabling more productions to be made,” he says.

    Quietly, the technology has spread throughout production workflows, even if few are advertising it. One director noted matter-of-factly that certain generative AI shots in his sizzle reel would be replaced with conventional VFX before release – an admission that spoke volumes about how embedded the technology has become, and how wary practitioners remain of audience or investor scrutiny.

    2. China: The Gateway Is Warming, but Not Yet Wide Open

    With 355 mainland Chinese companies participating at this year’s FilMart, expectations were high for distribution breakthroughs. The reality proved more complicated.

    China remains a heavyweight in the global box office, its market generating approximately $7.4 billion in 2025 and maintaining its position as the world’s second-largest. Year-to-date 2026 revenue stands at roughly $1.58 billion – down 52.9% from the same period last year, in large part because of the outsized performance of “Ne Zha 2” in early 2025 – but still running some $350 million ahead of North America. Local films account for nearly 80% of ticket sales, and the audience itself is transforming: women now make up 60% of cinemagoers, over-25s represent 85% of the audience base, and emerging tier cities are posting double-digit growth.

    However, China has maintained an unofficial ban on Korean content – dramas, films and K-pop performances – since 2016, when Beijing imposed the restrictions in retaliation for Seoul’s deployment of U.S. missile defense systems. Diplomatic signals of a thaw have been building: Chinese President Xi Jinping met South Korean President Lee Jae-myung in Beijing in January 2026 and suggested improvement would come gradually. But at FilMart, Korean distributors were still waiting.

    Paul D. Kim, CEO of Seoul-based Hive Filmworks, says Korean distributors remain frustrated by persistent barriers. “It’s unfortunate the mainland China censorship is not lifted yet. We were hoping that we meet more Chinese distributors to be able to do the distribution of really good Korean commercial films,” he tells Variety. “We did meet some, but seems like nothing’s gonna move forward for a little longer while, so we are hoping the second half of the year we might be able to do more collaboration with China.”

    Yet there are signs of gradual thawing. On the market floor, talk of loosening censorship red lines circulated, with recent mainland screenings of previously unreleased library titles in the horror genre – among them “Alien: Romulus” and “The Shining” – drawing notice as cautious indicators of a shifting content environment.

    Diplomatically, the mood is more optimistic. For Tong, the biggest recent catalyst has been political: U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to China, which paved the way for visa-free travel for British citizens from Lunar New Year. “I’ve had meetings where people have just reached out to me and asked me, can we quickly meet in Shenzhen or Guangzhou, and suddenly I can now do that,” he says. Tong adds that his company is currently working with China on both scripted and unscripted projects.

    3. Co-productions Find New Momentum – and New Complexity

    Cross-border collaboration is rising, driven partly by economics, partly by shifting audience behavior. A new generation of viewers increasingly receptive to subtitles and foreign languages has lowered cultural barriers, while tightening production budgets are making multi-territory partnerships a necessity rather than a luxury.

    The Producers Connect initiative – jointly organized by the HKSAR’s Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau, the CCIDA, the Hong Kong Film Development Council and the HKTDC – brought together more than 100 producers from Hong Kong and around the world. At a panel titled “International Coproductions in an Evolving Film Industry Landscape,” producer Janet Yang observed that “the world is getting flatter, language is mattering less and less to audiences everywhere.” Chan, addressing the same session, counseled diversifying investors and partners across regions as essential strategy.

    The Shanghai Broadcasting Film & TV Producers Association and the Hong Kong Screenwriters’ Guild formalized their relationship at the market, signing a memorandum of understanding covering co-production, talent cultivation and technological exchange.

    Tong, who conducted meetings with partners across Asia during the event, describes the shift in atmosphere as tangible. “In contrast to two recent years, there is a more positive spirit in what we can do together. What we’re seeing is different regions looking to do more international collaborations, more co-productions, and I feel as a result of that, we should be seeing more projects getting made,” he says.

    4. Microdrama Goes Global — and Gets Serious

    For years, microdrama was a Chinese local story: bite-sized vertical episodes, consumed on mobile, monetized at scale, and largely invisible to Western industry. At FilMart 2026, that story acquired a new chapter.

    The format has already overtaken traditional film and television in mainland China in revenue terms, and producers are now pushing hard beyond its borders. Linmon Media arrived at the market with a dedicated microdrama division built on the back of 11 titles in 2025 – 80% of which ranked in the top three in Thai and Indonesian markets – and unveiled a new vertical-format lineup tailored for broader Asian audiences. Mei Ah Entertainment, meanwhile, has been collaborating with Douyin to turn classic films into short-form dramas, using AI to generate new short-form dramas from its classic IP.

    The most telling indicator of the format’s maturation, however, was structural. COL Group and Nasdaq-listed BeLive Holdings launched what they described as the world’s first “Microdrama in a Box” — a bundled offering combining cloud-based platform infrastructure with access to a curated content catalogue, designed to let broadcasters, mobile operators and streaming services in emerging markets deploy a branded microdrama platform within 30 days. The proposition is aimed squarely at markets where appetite for the format is growing but the building blocks – content libraries, platform technology and operational know-how – remain out of reach.

    EntertainmentPulse dedicated a full session to the format, with speakers from Chinese companies including DataEye, Mansen Culture Media and Xiaowu Brothers dissecting both the production economics and the business models driving expansion. The consensus: microdrama is no longer an experiment. It is an industry.

    5. Southeast Asia and New Voices Step Forward

    The market’s geographic footprint continues to widen, with Southeast Asia and a wave of emerging-market first-timers asserting themselves with growing confidence.

    Myanmar production company aTwentyThree used FilMart as its first international market outing, with founder Arker Soe Oo connecting with distributors from the U.S. and Europe. Sri Lanka’s Mogo Studios, another first-time exhibitor, said the market exceeded expectations.

    Filipino producer Wilfredo Manalang of Fusee found the event energizing, particularly around content trends in the region. “There’s a lot of interest in BL [Boys’ Love] stories and BL kind of content from different Southeast Asian countries,” he tells Variety, noting that he also encountered companies actively interested in Filipino content more broadly.

    Liuying Cao of Parallax Films China says FilMart proved far more productive than the Berlin European Film Market, attributing the shift to economic conditions that are driving more Asian buyers toward regional events. “FilMart has been quite busy for us – we had almost three and a half days of meetings nonstop. We got some oral offers already through the meetings, and we’re expecting more deals to be done after FilMart ends,” she says.

    Her wish list for next year is a more geographically diverse buyer pool. “At the moment, our key buyers come from Southeast Asia, Japan and Korea – very traditionally strong markets. But from other territories, we still got less interest,” she says. “So we hope next year this can be a little bit different.”

    6. A Market in Motion – and in Transition

    FilMart 2026 felt noticeably busier than recent editions – and more visibly weighted toward Chinese-language content. Panels and presentations were markedly less likely to offer simultaneous translations into English than in previous years, a shift that several English-speaking attendees remarked upon, and which some attributed to budget pressures or evolving trade relations.

    Henry Or, who has worked in the film and television industry for three decades, says the market’s identity is evolving alongside the industry it serves. “In Hong Kong, when it was a very good time, we had around like over 100 movies a year. But now, maybe less than 20,” he says. “People may be going less to the cinema because there are a lot more other entertainment for people to watch on different devices.” He argues that FilMart’s future lies in content beyond film: “FilMart is really just the name, but there will be more than just movies in this venue here, because this is where you can really connect yourself to China and to the East as well.”

    Ronan Wong, COO and co-founder of AR Asia Production, says the expansion into new formats is creating tangible energy. “We feel the vibe in the different format of content – not only movie, TV, AI format, and also vertical drama is heavily discussed this time,” he says. “Cross-industry cooperation and also using the new technology – we feel fear sometimes, but actually, when we see the result and we use it, we feel it’s a strong tool to improve our efficiencies, and also in terms of costing and monetization.” He is also looking ahead to greater crossover between brands and entertainment content, citing conversations that emerged at EntertainmentPulse’s Marketing Pulse event as particularly promising.

    For Paul D. Kim, the market’s overall value holds even as its character changes. “The more efficient people are narrowed down to stay in the market,” he says. “So still productive.”

    One notable shift was the reduced presence of European buyers and delegates – a gap that the Middle East conflict goes some way to explaining. Airspace closures across the Gulf region from late February, triggered by military strikes on Iran, forced carriers to reroute Europe-Asia flights around the conflict zone, adding hours to journey times and sending airfares soaring. “People from Europe – I’m not sure if it’s the effect of the war. Before, there were people walking around, you see them everywhere. But now it seems like it’s very Asian-centric in terms of a market,” said Manalang.

    Meanwhile, despite Japan’s ongoing diplomatic tensions with China, 37 Japanese companies attended FilMart. At the concurrent Hong Kong-Asia Film Financing Forum, Japan debuted a dedicated Film Frontier section, placing seven Japanese projects across HAF’s strands in a clear signal that Unijapan is pursuing an outward-facing strategy regardless of bilateral headwinds. Japanese projects were among HAF winners.

    Hong Kong’s own screen industry provided a reminder of what the city still does best. The flashy launch of “Cold War 1994,” an ensemble period thriller featuring Chow Yun-fat, Aaron Kwok, Tony Leung Ka-fai and Louis Koo, the announcement of a sequel to “Twilight of the Warriors” and a peek at upcoming series “The Season,” generated considerable buzz on the market floor – proof that Hong Kong content, even in a contracted state, retains its capacity to electrify.

  • Chase Infiniti, Ann Dowd Talk ‘The Testaments’ as the Show About ‘Awakening and Rebellion Amongst Younger Women in Gilead’ Opens Series Mania

    Chase Infiniti, Ann Dowd Talk ‘The Testaments’ as the Show About ‘Awakening and Rebellion Amongst Younger Women in Gilead’ Opens Series Mania

    The wait is over: The world premiere of “The Testaments” took place at French festival Series Mania

    The new show, produced by MGM Television and based on Margaret Atwood’s novel of the same name, is set to premiere on Disney+ in April. It tells the dramatic story of a young woman’s coming of age in Gilead. 

    It follows the privileged Agnes (“One Battle After Another” breakout Chase Infiniti) and Daisy (Lucy Halliday), a new arrival and convert from beyond Gilead’s borders, as they navigate the halls of Aunt Lydia’s (Ann Dowd) elite preparatory school for future wives.

    Dowd, famous for her portrayal of everyone’s favorite villain, said of Aunt Lydia: “I love her. That’s our job as actors. The first rule is: do not judge. I don’t judge her, and she has become a very dear friend of mine. I came to know her, she came to know me, and I couldn’t be more grateful.”

    She described reprising her role as “the great pleasure and the great joy, a privilege, all of it.” “Imagine knowing the character for these many years. How lucky can one be?”

    Lucy Halliday, also present at the fest, was happy to have both the novel and the legendary series – which ended after six seasons – to turn to. 

    “We had such strong source material ready, and [with Chase Infiniti] we’ve both been fans of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale.’ We’ve seen the show and read the books. Then we had Ann, Warren Littlefield, Bruce Miller and Elisabeth Moss [who exec produces], all involved in the creation of the show. We had so much to lean on.” 

    She recalled: “Bruce is so open and willing to have a conversation. He would really sit down with you and [talk about] what the character should be, the ideas you had or just trying to know that his thoughts were your thoughts. That really created a wonderful environment where you felt: ‘Ok, there’s a responsibility stepping into this world that’s so beloved, but I feel reassured these people have trusted me and given me the space to step into it.’ I felt: ‘We can do a good job. I really hope the audience thinks so too’.”

    Chase Infiniti discussed the show’s iconic costumes. 

    “For all of us, since we are wearing a variety of costumes in the show, it’s your first piece of armor. All of our costumes were made to fit us perfectly, but they can be restrictive at times. It helped to get into the physicality of our roles.”

    Creator Bruce Miller and producer Warren Littlefield were also in Lille.. 

    “‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ covered people who are at the bottom of Gilead, and this shows women who are at the top of Gilead. But it also shows how for women, the top and the bottom are very similar,” Miller told the audience. 

    “This is a story about awakening and rebellion among younger women in Gilead and those who have grown up there. That’s the expansion of the world.”

    Despite the show’s darkness, it’s “critical to have humanity,” added Littlefield.

    “We live in a world that’s a dark place, and hope comes from their strength and their resilience. Ann crosses over from ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ as Aunt Lydia – she knows that world. These young women have an awakening in our season one, and they will come to fight it. Let’s hope they take it down.”

    During the opening ceremony, Managing Director Laurence Herszberg also welcomed the jury of the International Competition, led by Icelandic director Benedikt Erlingsson who presented “The Danish Woman” only last year.

    “When I came here, ‘The Danish Woman’ didn’t get any prizes. It was a scandal! Now, I’m here to take revenge. And by ‘revenge,’ I mean that I will make sure the best series wins,” he joked, joined by Alice Braga, Hatik and Cécile de France.

    But there was a somber note too, as one of the jurors, Ida Panahandeh, couldn’t attend Series Mania because of the ongoing war. She did send a message to the audience. 

    “I’m deeply happy to know that somewhere in the world, there are people like you, people who strive to make this world a better place to live. You know, if I come out of this war alive, perhaps I will make a series that tells the story of the bitter days and nights my people are dealing. People who have been crushed for decades under the weight of social or political discrimination, economic sanctions, and who are now also living under fallen missiles, emancipated,” she said. 

    “Whenever soldiers begin crossing their country’s borders, artists suddenly find themselves forbidden to leave theirs. It’s a bitter irony, isn’t it? I wish all the soldiers to stay within their own borders and take a rest. While, you know, all the artists could cross borders freely, without a doubt, we would have a far better world.”

    She added: “My dear friends, let us condemn war, any war, whether it’s in Ukraine, Iran, or Gaza. Let us condemn the brutal killing of children and civilians, regardless of the color of their skin or their eyes. And let us not below the promise of peace and democracy to become an excuse for the re-emergence of fascism.”

    Herszberg noted: “In a world rife with violence coming from all sides and deepening divisions, it is essential to remember the role of culture – as a source of guidance and enlightenment – and the role of festivals as a place where we can come together when everything else is in flux.” 

    She called Series Mania an event that “gives a voice to artists and their work.” 

    “It is a week that fosters the exchange of perspectives and opinions, and allows artists to express themselves freely, regardless of their nationality. Here, we do not judge by passport; we look at the works of the mind. We would like to remind everyone of a truth that is often forgotten. Creative freedom is fragile, and wherever that freedom is threatened, artists are among the first victims.”

    “To all these artists, we want to say one simple thing. Their works will always find a place at Series Mania. Because we know that culture is not a luxury reserved for peaceful times. It allows societies to weather storms without losing their soul. It is the thread that connects human beings, transcending borders, languages, and fears.”

  • We Asked 2 AIs: What Must XRP Do to Escape the Ongoing Crisis?

    We Asked 2 AIs: What Must XRP Do to Escape the Ongoing Crisis?

    Alongside the rest of the crypto market, Ripple’s cross-border token tried to break out in the middle of the business week, surging to a monthly peak of over $1.60. However, the subsequent rejection pushed it south to under $1.50 as of press time.

    Even the most recent developments on the Ripple adoption and partnership front cannot truly initiate a notable leg up. As such, we decided to ask what is needed for $XRP to finally break out of its current consolidation.

    ChatGPT’s Take

    OpenAI’s solution admitted that $XRP has been quite sluggish as of late, trading over 60% away from its all-time high marked in July last year. Moreover, it has underperformed quite substantially even after the first spot $XRP ETFs went live for trading in the US last November.

    Nevertheless, it remained above $1.00 even during the most intense sell-offs in early February, which is why ChatGPT said that its bear phase “may be weakening.” To break beyond $1.60, though, the token would have to first flip that level into support, not just briefly wick above it as it has done on a couple of occasions since the February low.

    “A clean breakout with strong volume would signal that buyers have absorbed the selling pressure at that level.”

    However, the AI platform also outlined the significance of the broader market’s conditions as $XRP “rarely moves in isolation.” It added that a continued BTC and ETH recovery would likely “provide the momentum needed for other larger-cap alts to follow through.”

    Lastly, it noted that $XRP has historically responded strongly to one of the following catalysts:

    • Regulatory clarity or positive legal developments
    • Institutional adoption or partnerships
    • Increased utility in cross-border payments

    However, these catalysts have failed to impact its most recent price moves, as mentioned above.

    You may also like:

    • $XRP Needs CLARITY Act Momentum to Unlock the Next Critical Price Zone
    • $XRP Ledger Hits All-Time High as Ripple Price Jumps 14% in 48 Hours
    • Zero Net Inflows All Week: Ripple ($XRP) ETFs Lose Investor Momentum

    And Gemini’s View

    ChatGPT’s rival from Google supports much of what was written above, saying that $XRP has failed to materialize on Ripple’s big partnerships and it would need a more sustained revival from bitcoin to chart some gains. The AI solution believes the $2.00 level will remain a mirage for the foreseeable future, especially since riskier assets tend to underperform when the Fed keeps the interest rates high, and uncertainty levels from wars go through the roof.

    “Right now, $XRP isn’t just fighting technical resistance; It’s fighting the Federal Reserve. The post-FOMC hangover from March 18 made it clear: Interest rates are staying higher for longer and speculative capital is hiding out in safe-yielding Treasuries.”

    It explained that the macro winds “need to shift” for $XRP to break past $1.60 and head for $2.00. A cooling in inflation data or an unexpected dovish pivot from the Fed later this year would “instantly inject liquidity back into the crypto markets, lifting all boats – $XRP included.”

  • The AI-Focused Altcoins That Developers Have Been Focusing On Most Over the Past Month Have Been Revealed

    The AI-Focused Altcoins That Developers Have Been Focusing On Most Over the Past Month Have Been Revealed

    Cryptocurrency analytics company Santiment has revealed the AI-themed altcoins that developers are focusing on most, based on GitHub data from the past 30 days. According to the shared data, projects offering oracle, data infrastructure, and decentralized cloud solutions are particularly prominent in attracting developer interest.

    Chainlink ($LINK) topped the list, followed by Internet Computer ($ICP) and $NEAR Protocol ($NEAR). Santiment noted that the arrows in the ranking reflect the change in position of the projects compared to the previous update.

    The top 10 AI-focused altcoins, ranked by developer activity, are as follows:

    1. Chainlink ($LINK) – 263
    2. Internet Computer ($ICP) – 253.07
    3. $NEAR Protocol ($NEAR) – 110.1
    4. Livepeer (LPT) – 43.67
    5. Injective (INJ) – 34.3
    6. Filecoin (FIL) – 33.33
    7. Valve (VALVES) – 19.87
    8. Aleph.im (ALEPH) – 18.77
    9. Qubic (QUBIC) – 17.6
    10. Flux (FLUX) – 17.13

    Among these projects, ChainLink stands out as the largest on the list, with a market capitalization of approximately $6 billion.

    The data shows that projects offering data infrastructure and decentralized computing solutions are becoming increasingly important in the artificial intelligence narrative.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • The Cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer,’ Then and Now

    The Cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer,’ Then and Now

    Catch up with the Hellmouth’s most beloved residents.

    In the mid-‘90s, a new channel found magic by connecting with the then-current generation of teens, Gen Y (for the youngins out there, that’s what they used to call millennials). The WB, which later became The CW, captured the emerging teenagers’ experience of coming of age at the close of the 20th century. Or at least, it provided a glossed-up version of high school: fashions rivaling Clueless’ Cher, evenings spent at under-18 clubs frequented by a parade of on-the-cusp punk and rock bands and the struggles faced by teens growing up in a single-parent home.

    Among this new genre of shows The WB launched is the perennially beloved Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which ran for seven seasons from 1997 to 2003. The series centered on the trials of Buffy Summers (Sarah Michelle Gellar), a cheerleader turned superhero who’s the only thing standing between the California suburb of Sunnydale and the apocalypse. Together with Willow and Xander (Alyson Hannigan and Nicholas Brendon) and the rest of her friends — affectionately called the Scooby Gang — each week Buffy balanced the totally relatable challenges of passing history exams while staking (or dating) the undead, all with her trademark irreverent sass and witty repartee. 

    Much like its heroine, the show wasn’t afraid to take a big swing, with peak episodes including the musical “Once More With Feeling” and the innovative, nearly dialogue-free “Hush.” But despite its cultural impact, Buffy has a complicated legacy that can’t be ignored, with several of the stars speaking out in the #MeToo era against the behavior of the show’s creator, Joss Whedon (who has denied all allegations). 

    That said, whether you’re Team Angel or Team Spike, get ready to find out what Sunnydale’s most beloved residents — and the ones you loved to hate — have been up to since the series wrapped. 

  • How a Local Outcast Found His Nudist Haven in ‘Neighbors’ — And What Happened Next

    [This story contains mild spoilers from the Neighbors finale.]

    A few days ago, 72-year-old Danny Smiechowski left his house to greet his chauffeur. There was a limousine parked outside, waiting for him. For much of his life, Smiechowski had been an outcast in his San Diego neighborhood, insulted and ostracized for his penchant for wearing nothing but yellow briefs while exercising in his driveway. He describes the treatment as “emotional abuse.” But here he was a local celebrity, the star of a hot HBO/A24 series getting picked up for a splashy finale event in Hollywood.

    “The neighbors were looking out their window, going, ‘Oh my God, that guy,’” Smiechowski says over coffee (well, he just drinks water) in West Hollywood, acting out their disbelief. “You can’t really believe it could be true, but it’s true.” He’s wearing an A24 sweatshirt as Harrison Fishman and Dylan Redford, the creators of the show, Neighbors, sit on either side of him. They crack up at the story. “Amazing,” Fishman says. “They must be like, ‘What’s going on?!’” 

    Each of the six episodes in the first season of Neighbors, billed as a late-night documentary series, depicts random but intense disputes within local communities across the country. Filmed in an immerse, chaotic style that recalls the work of executive producers Josh Safdie, Ronald Bronstein and Eli Bush (Marty Supreme), the installments intercut between multiple feuds at a time — except for the finale, which is both supersized and focused exclusively on Smiechowski. It follows him from his initial unhappy state in California to the Florida nudist community he decides to move into. He winds up back in San Diego, though, after realizing that home is home, for better or worse — a fitting final note for a series dedicated to the brutally funny daily indignities that, for many of us, come with simply coexisting with others.

    “The best revenge is success, so that’s the nail in the coffin with [my neighbors] — and now they ignore me,” Smiechowski says. “There’s this French guy who was horrible to me during my [mayoral] campaign. He betrayed me with money, he told me that I was a crook. And now, he called me a couple days ago and left a message. He goes, ‘Wow, congratulations. Can I go to LA with you?’ Like, oh my God — what are these people thinking?”

    It’s the result Smiechowski had hoped for when he first responded to a Craigslist ad put out by Neighbors casting director, Harleigh Shaw, several years ago. “I just wanted to do it to get the word out,” he says. After an initial conversation, he didn’t hear anything for more than a year and grew incredibly frustrated — so he blocked the phone numbers of almost everyone associated with the show. Fortunately, producer Rachel Walden was not one of them, and she got in touch with him when they were ready to officially bring him in. 

    HBO

    “We had come across a couple disputes in nudist communities…and Harleigh had the idea of, ‘Would Danny be interested in living in a place like this?’” Fishman says. Redford adds, “He had considered moving at various points, so it felt like a natural experiment that Danny was interested in doing and wanted to try.”

    They spent a month together all told, with dozens of hours of footage left on the cutting-room floor. What we do see in Neighbors is an awfully compelling character study, though. We meet Smiechowski in San Diego as locals call him out in front of the cameras for showing so much skin, and he’s baffled by their criticisms. “I do it to be happy, I do it because I feel good inside — I feel younger,” Smiechowski says now of why he prefers not to wear much clothing. “What’s so ironic about this is that for the people who were abusing me — and are abusing me — this is almost impossible for them to believe.” (Smiechowski says that since filming the show and returning home, his situation is “about 90% better.”) 

    Once he gets to the Florida nudist community, called Eden, Smiechowski is taken aback by the feeling of liberation. He meets a welcoming group of people. He lets loose at karaoke. He falls hard for a much younger woman who shows, at least initially, a glancing interest in him. In other words, it’s a rather naked — pun sort of intended — presentation of Smiechowski, and a seemingly vulnerable one. He didn’t see it that way. 

    “I just threw caution to the wind — if they say jump, I say how high, and that’s what we did,” he says. He committed to the nature of doc production: “I would repeat something literally 20 times until I got it right, and then I would go, ‘Well, let’s do it again’ — because I had that Iron Man in me.”  He believes this all speaks to his unique constitution: “Dr. Michael Dean was known all over the world as a hypnotist in San Diego. He tried to crack me. He couldn’t do it, and he became frustrated because he was hypnotizing everybody in the room. I was the only one. So I’m one of the few people in the world who cannot be hypnotized.”

    After filming concluded, Smiechowski started taking drama classes and has been attending consistently in the run-up to the episode’s airing. “People are going to call me a freak, but they don’t understand…. Even my drama teacher said to me, ‘Danny, I’m really sorry for you. You’re going to take a lot of abuse,’” he says. “I said, ‘George, don’t even worry about it, man. Water off the duck’s back. Just forget about it.’” Fishman turns to his subject with a smile and says, “It’s rare to find somebody who is so truly themself. You’re, like, aggressively yourself.”

    HBO

    Fishman and Redford grew increasingly interested in nudist communities the more they learned about them. “Once we got in there, we saw that a lot of these communities were actually functioning much at a much higher and more forgiving level than many of the neighborhoods that we had been to throughout the country,” Redford says. “Everyone there really wanted these communities to work. They didn’t want to lose it. They didn’t want the infighting or whatever conflict existed within there to get to a point where they would lose this place that they love so much.”

    Fishman adds, “People were so happy there. It was insane.” This is very clear in what Neighbors shows. “There’ll be a minority that will, what’s the word to use, gravitate or become interested,” Smiechowski says. He is less confident it will lead to significant changes in perception. 

    “For most people, it’s too socially dangerous. They would be embarrassed. Most people couldn’t do it,” he says. Does he still consider himself a part of the nudist community while living outside it? “Kind of an existential question,” he replies. “My behavior, where I live, is somewhat related to that community.”

    Neighbors has been officially renewed for a second season, and while it seems obvious Smiechowski would be up for another round — perhaps for the best that it’s unlikely, since he’s at relative peace on his block now — Fishman and Redford see a ton of runway for where they can go next. 

    “There’s so many subjects and places that we didn’t get to explore in season one for a bunch of different reasons, so we’re just so excited to get back and see what’s out there,” Fishman says. “The more we’re painting this portrait of America, in a way, and the more that we add to it, the more exciting it gets.”

    The first season of Neighbors is now streaming in its entirety on HBO Max. Read THR‘s in-depth feature on making the series.