Category: Entertainment

  • ‘Project Hail Mary’ Holds No. 1 at U.K., Ireland Box Office as ‘Magic Faraway Tree’ Opens Strong

    ‘Project Hail Mary’ Holds No. 1 at U.K., Ireland Box Office as ‘Magic Faraway Tree’ Opens Strong

    Project Hail Mary,” distributed by Sony, held the No. 1 position at the U.K. and Ireland box office in its second weekend, taking £4.7 million ($6.3 million) and lifting its total to £15.1 million ($19.9 million), according to Comscore.

    Entertainment Film Distributors’ “The Magic Faraway Tree” was the top new entry, debuting in second place with £2.8 million ($3.7 million).

    Disney’s “Hoppers” continued its steady run in third, adding $1.4 million in its fourth weekend for a cumulative $14.4 million. Moviegoers Entertainment’s “Dhurandhar: The Revenge” followed in fourth with $885,000, reaching $4.4 million overall.

    Universal’s “Reminders of Him” placed fifth in its third frame with $686,000, bringing its total to $4.4 million. Disney’s “Ready or Not 2: Here I Come” ranked sixth with $530,000, pushing its cumulative to $1.8 million.

    Warner Bros.’ new release “They Will Kill You” opened in seventh place with $434,000, while family event title “Bluey at the Cinema: Playdates With Friends” debuted in eighth with $247,000.

    Further down the chart, Entertainment Film Distributors’ “Mother’s Pride” added $199,000 in ninth place for a total of $4.3 million, while Studiocanal’s “How to Make a Killing” rounded out the top 10 with $189,000, bringing its cumulative to $2.5 million.

    Looking ahead, Universal is set to dominate the upcoming Easter holiday frame with “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” launching wide across more than 300 locations. Entertainment Film Distributors counters with “The Drama,” starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, also opening wide.

    Event cinema continues to play a prominent role, with Trafalgar Releasing presenting “Siegfried – ROH, London 2026,” while Dartmouth Films releases the music documentary “McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass.”

    The specialty and repertory market remains active. Curzon marks the 25th anniversary re-release of “Amelie,” while Park Circus brings “Merrily We Roll Along” back to cinemas. Studiocanal adds thriller “Fuze,” and BFI Distribution releases “D Is for Distance.” Further independent titles include Icon’s “Two Women,” Tull Stories’ “Being Ola” and Peccadillo Pictures’ “Night Stage,” alongside Dogwoof’s “Kim Novak’s Vertigo.”

  • Disney+ Strikes Latest Content Deal With Euro Broadcast Giant, This Time With RAI in Italy

    Disney+ Strikes Latest Content Deal With Euro Broadcast Giant, This Time With RAI in Italy

    And the latest content deal between Walt Disney‘s streaming service Disney+ and a big European broadcaster is with… RAI in Italy.

    The agreement, unveiled on Tuesday, follows a Friday deal with RTVE in Spain that marked the first time that a state broadcaster in Europe agreed to make shows available on a streaming platform the day after their linear broadcasts. Now, the RAI deal marks the second agreement for Disney, and also the second within a week, that will bring content to Disney+ immediately after its linear broadcast.

    As part of it, popular talk show Belve, hosted by Francesca Fagnani, and game show The Floor – Ne rimarrà solo uno, hosted this year by Paola Perego and Gabriele Vagnato, will be available for Disney+ customers in Italy to stream from the day after airing on RAI 2.

    In addition, Disney+ will feature such RAI titles from the recent past as Braccialetti rossi, Mina SettembreL’amica genialeUn passo dal cielo and Màkari, as well as the docu-reality series Il Collegio. These programs will be offered in a dedicated collection on Disney+ in Italy, which will launch soon.

    The RAI deal is the latest step in a big Disney+ push to strike collaborations with European free-to-air broadcasters. Its previous deals have been with ITV in the U.K., which was recently extended to Hulu, ARD and ZDF in Germany, SIC in Portugal and Atresmedia in Spain.

    Karl Holmes, general manager, Disney+ EMEA

    Courtesy of Disney

    Disney executives have touted the content-sharing agreements with European broadcasters as a win-win proposition, citing how the big free-to-air channels still aggregate the largest audiences and have the largest shows, along with the largest production budgets. These deals allow Disney+ to complement its global hit content with local programming, while the broadcasters get a chance to reach younger audiences via the Disney streamer.

    “This collaboration with RAI will bring Disney+ customers in Italy an even broader selection of incredibly iconic local shows,” said Karl Holmes, general manager, Disney+ EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa). “RAI has a deep connection with viewers, an extraordinary decades-long heritage of high-quality storytelling, and we are proud to bring them to our audience on Disney+. 

    He concluded: “Building on over 40 years of Disney and RAI working alongside each other in Italy, this initiative also aligns with our approach to working with free‑to‑air broadcasters across Europe, helping them bring their stories to wider audiences while giving Disney+ customers more extraordinary local entertainment and more ways to enjoy the shows they love.”

  • Canneseries 2026 Dials Up U.S. Presence With HBO Opening Series ‘Half Man,’ Scott Free’s Latest ‘Terror’ Season and Apple TV+’s ‘Star City’ 

    Canneseries 2026 Dials Up U.S. Presence With HBO Opening Series ‘Half Man,’ Scott Free’s Latest ‘Terror’ Season and Apple TV+’s ‘Star City’ 

    The Hollywood studios may be sitting out the Cannes Film Festival but a more than respectable cohort of major U.S. players will hit Canneseries, Cannes TV festival, a month earlier. 

    They are led by HBO with Richard Gadd’s highly anticipated “Half Man” which opens the French TV festival on April 23. “Half Man” screens in the evening day and date and a few hours after its release on HBO in the U.S. Other higher profile U.S. shows playing out of competition are world premieres: Apple TV+’s ““Star City,” produced by Sony Pictures Television, and “The Terror: Devil in Silver,” the third iteration of the Scott Free franchise, backed by AMC+ and Shudder. 

    Titles were revealed at a Canneseries presentation in Paris March 31 which confirmed that among U.S. stars expected to walk Canneseries’ pink carpet are “Severance” lead Adam Scott, a Canal+ Icon Award recipient, “Transparent” matriarch Judith Light who will leave her handprint on Cannes’ Walk of Fame and among U.S. creatives “Alien: Earth” showrunner Noah Hawley and “Mad Men” and “Homeland” director Leslie Linka Glatter. 

    In more U.S. involvement, Disney+ is backing “Alice and Steve,” from “Sex Education” director Sophie Goodhart. Another main competition player, the Sweden-set “Summer of 1985” from “The Bridge” creator Bjorn Stein, is produced by L.A.-based Media Res, behind “The Morning Show” and “Pachinko” and sold by Fifth Element. Both are world premieres.

    It is symptomatic, however, of the way that global markets are trending that the biggest star at Canneseries may well be K-pop phenom Jisoo, an ex-Blackpink girl band member and Dior face and now Tommy Hilfiger global ambassador who starred in this month’s Netflix chart-topper “Boyfriend on Demand.” She will pick up a Madame Figaro Rising Star Award.  

    Running April 23-28, Canneseries will close with the buzzy “California Avenue,” ‘70s-set and described as a “fractured family drama”starring Bill Nighy and Helena Bonham Carter, and created by “The English” writer-director Hugo Blick.

    A still growing Canneseries Industry also includes conversations with U.S.-U.K. “Unorthodox” showrunner Anna Winger and Ron Leshem, creator of the original “Euphoria,” “No Man’s Land” and “Bad Boy.” Gadd will be presented with a Konbini commitment prize at Canneseries’ opening ceremony. Spain’s Isabel Coixet (“The Secret Life of Words,” “Three Goodbyes”) chairs the main competition jury award. 

    Canneseries Artistic Director Albin Lewi described several series as “dark” or “very dark.” For him, there are few higher terms of praise. 

    “I was very afraid when we started selecting that we wouldn’t get as many series driven by strong creative voices. But I was wrong. I’m very pleased commissioners are betting on talented authors as well as IPs. There’s still room for inventiveness, for risk-taking. What we try to achieve is to have a diverse selection that reflects everything that takes place. Some are crowd pleasers, some are not,” Lewi told Variety

    He added: “Certainly, it’s harder to finance a project now. You need to be inventive in the way you finance a show, finding different partners, linking streamers and linear channels. But producers manage to find solutions and we want to represent this.”

    Of potential crowdpleasers, Lewi cited Disney+’s U.K. show “Alice and Steve,” and from France TF1’s “Zodiac,” France Televisions’ Stendhal adaptation “The Red and the Black” and Disney+ comedy “Minimal Security,” fronted by big French star Jean-Pascal Zadi (“Simply Black”) in a series he dubs “’The Office’ in prison.” 

    Regarding trends, Lewi noted the rise of sports-adjacent programming, seen in this year’s doc titles “Platini” and “Cruyff,” from Box to Box Films and madcap HBO Max French series “I Hate Swimming” as well as in the scripted realm, “Guts,” from Finnish “Money Shot” creator Jemina Jokisalo, about self-sacrifice in competitive cross-country skiing.  

    Four of Canneseries’ nine long-form main competition titles are from Scandinavia, two more from Spain’s Movistar Plus+. “We’ve always been strong in Scandinavia. It is the most inventive of global territories and for me Movistar Plus+ is the local HBO of Europe,” Lewi said. 

    Panels take in Palestine’s Tawfik Abu Wael and Israel’s Hagai Levi discussing making together 2019 HBO-Keshet Studios series “Our Boys,” and a talk from producer David Bernad about how “The White Lotus” ended up shooting in France.   

    A closer look at the just announced titles: 

    “Half Man,” (Richard Gadd, U.K.)

    Gadd’s follow-up to “Baby Reindeer,” a HBO-BBC production from Banijay’s Mam Tor and one of the year’s most anticipated series. Gadd and Jamie Bell (“Rocket Man”) play Ruben and Niall, thick as thieves when kids and now life-defining enemies. An examination of entrenched masculinity, capturing the wild energy of a changing city – “a changing world,” its makers say. “‘Baby Reindeer’ was such a good shock. I’m very impressed that, after auto-fiction, Gadd is tackling fiction so quickly,” said Lewi.

    “Paris Police 1910,” (Fabien Nury, France)

    The third and final season of the high-end, crafted Canal+, Sky and Studiocanal banner crime franchise bowed by “Paris Police 1900,” Belle Epoque Noir reverberating down to the modern day in its bracing violence, gritty street settings, torrid racism and women’s subjugation. Here, Inspector Jouin (Jérémie Laheurte) investigates the real-life Meg Steinheil case where the socialite was accused of murdering her husband and mother. “I’ve rarely seen historical reconstruction at this level. It has fans over the world. I’ve talked to very high-level showrunners in the U.S. who love the series,” Lewi commented.  

    “Prisoner,” (Matt Charman, U.K.)

    A Canal+ and Sky crime action thriller from Matt Charman, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of Steven Spielberg’s “Bridge of Spies,” and directed by “Peaky Blinders”helmer Otto Bathurst. “Boiling Point’s” Izuka Hoyle plays a prison officer escorting – and handcuffed to – a trained killer high-value prisoner (Tahar Rahim, “A Prophet”) to court to testify against his elite crime syndicate, which suddenly ambushes the duo. Co-starring Eddie Marsan and Catherine McCormack. Release scheduled for late April. An international premiere. “A crowd-pleasing very efficient action series,” said Lewi. 

    “Star City,” (Ben Nedivi, Matt Wolpert and Ronald D. Moore, U.S.)

    “House of the Dragon” star Rhys Ifans fronts the Apple TV+ “For All Mankind” spinoff, produced by Sony Picture Television, playing the driving force behind the Soviet Union’s space program. An alt-history take on the space race, like “For All Mankind,” just renewed for a sixth and final season, “Star City,” which debuts May 29, imagines the Soviet Union putting the first man on the moon. “It’s a series that talks about how the Soviet Union manipulated even its best talent,” Lewi commented A world premiere.

    “The Terror: Devil in Silver,”(Chris Cantwell, U.S)

    Produced by AMC+ and Shudder, a third iteration in horror anthology “The Terror,” produced again by Scott Free. After “The Terror” (2018) chronicling Sir John Franklin’s doomed Arctic expedition and “Infamy,” charting the devastation of WWII Japanese-American internment, in “Devil in Silver,” adapting  Victor LaValle’s novel, Dan Stevens plays Pepper, wrongfully committed to a psychiatric hospital, contending with patients, doctors and maybe the Devil. A world premiere.  

    “California Avenue,” (Hugo Blick, U.K.)

    Starring Bill Nighy (“About Time”), Helena Bonham Carter (“The Crown”) and reuniting Blick, Mediawan’s Drama Republic, Eight Rooks and the BBC following “The English,” “The Honourable Woman” and “Black Earth Rising.” A ‘70s-set family saga, Lela and her daughter, seeking a fresh start, join a canal-side caravan community, but the life she escaped begins to hunt her down. A French premiere.

    Long-Form Competition

    “Alice and Steve,”(Sophie Goodhart, U.K. )

    A Disney+ title from“Sex Education” writer-director Goodhart in her first role as a creator and “Baby Reindeer” producer Clerkenwell Films, owned by BBC Studios. Jermaine Clement (“What We Do in the Shadows”) and Nicola Walker (“The Split”) play a pair of platonic middle-aged friends whose relationship is tested when he begins dating her 26-year-old daughter. “I couldn’t have dreamed of a better cast,” Lewi commented. World premiere.

    “Guts,” (Jemina Jokisalo, Finland, Slovenia) 

    From Jokisalo, behind feminist porn tale “Money Shot,” a mystery drama thriller, “Guts” turns on cross-country skiing top athlete Anna who gets one more chance to become a world champion, despite her nemesis, natural-born skiing sensation Maria. Commissioned by Finnish pubcaster Yle and sold by About Premium Content, which bills it “‘Black Swan’ in snow.” An international premiere.

    “Snake Killer,” (Anders Ølholm)

    Starring Pilou Asbæk, Kasper Juul in “Borgen” and Euron Greyjoy in “Games of Thrones,” here playing a corrupt cop in Amazon MGM Studios’ first Danish Original. Inspired by real events, it depicts Copenhagen’s infamous Uropatruljen police unit battling to face down the local mafia, by any means necessary. From Anders Ølholm whose movie “Shorta,” a Venice Festival premiere, was picked up by Magnolia for North America. “It channels the energy of Nicolas Wending Refn’s ‘Pusher’ trilogy. Few cops are so charismatic and horrific as Asbæk’s character. It’s like ‘Dirty Harry’ but dirtier,” said Lewi.  World premiere.

    “Harvest,” (Martin Zandvliet,” Denmark)

    Produced by DR Drama, an original series written and directed by Oscar-nominated Zandvliet (“Land of Mine”) and produced by Rikke Tørholm Kofoed (“Prisoner”). In a modern Danish farming family, the patriarch Gorm unexpectedly chooses to pass the family farm to his youngest daughter, Astrid, causing a deep rift. Supported by broadcaster New8 in its just-announced third slate of series. World premiere.

    “I Always Sometimes,” (“Yo siempre a veces,” Marta Bassols, Marta Loza, Spain)

    The latest from “Veneno” and “La Mesías” creators Javier Ambrossi and Javier Calvo as producers and Movistar Plus+, a realistic coming of age tale depicting the travails of a single mother, pregnant, and then with a toddler son, in Barcelona. Directed by Ginesta Guindal (“Perfect Life”), Claudia Costafreda (“Cardo”) and Loza. Bowing at Barcelona’s D/A fest, an international premiere. “A young auteur series,” Lewi told Variety.

    “Many People Need to Die,” (Victoria Martín, Spain)

    “Pure comedy with big punchlines that will make everybody laugh,” said Lewi. The series is also a second play for younger audiences by Movistar Plus+ adapting a novel from Victoria Martín, one of Spain’s most prominent YouTube and podcast comedians. Created by Martín and directed with Sandra Romero (“The New Years”), an archly ironic vision of early thirties female friendship and crises drive by a top-notch Spanish cast led by Anna Castillo (“Nowhere”) and Macarena Gómez (“30 Coins”). World premiere.

    “Summer of 1985,” (Bjorn Stein, Sweden, U.S.)

    An SVT adaptation of “Let The Right One In” author John Ajvide Lindqvist‘s latest novel created by “The Bridge” co-creator and “Whiskey on the Rocks” director Björn Stein. Described as “a psychological coming-of-age thriller,” it turns on a group of young friends who discover a strange creature on the mythical island of Svärtan.  Sold by Fifth Element after a recent deal with producer Media Res Studio (“Pachinko”) in L.A. World premiere.  

    “The Red and the Black,” (Ida Panahandeh, Iran)

    In mid-19th century Iran, painter Nowruz falls for a fearlessly defiant Roma fortune teller, sparking their desperate flight and a tragic saga echoing down generations, the synopsis runs. Directed and co-written by Panahandeh whose film “Nahid” won a Prix de l’Avenir special prize at Cannes 2015 Un Certain Regard. Set for release on Iranian SVOD service Filimo and produced and sold by HA International.

    Short Form Competition 

    “Avant qu’on m’oublié,” (Olivier Aubé, Quebec, Canada)

    A nostalgic, dramedic return to 2008 and the dawn of social media, with Alex persuading his friends to webcam pranks. But the project sours. Supported by TV5’s Creators in Series program. 

    “Boho,” (Abbie Boutkabout, Netherlands)

    A millennial female-led dramedy directed by Olympia Allaert and set in the vibrant neighborhood of Borgerhout in Antwerp boasts intricately choreographed dance and music to tell the intertwined stories of three young friends. From Banijay’s leading Flemish production house jonnydepony whose “The Big Fuck-Up” was a highlight of Canneseries 2025. 

    “Ina,” (Rachel Maxine Anderson, Australia)

    Created, written and directed by Rachel Maxine Anderson a co writer-director on LGBT web series “Two Weeks” (2017) and doc “Bananas” another exploration of identity and roots by Maxine Anderson, here with driven TV producer Madeline is forced to cast her Asian mother as the guest star of her cooking show. A YouTube production. World premiere. 

    “Paradoxes,” (Maxime Donzel, Émilie Valentin, Pierre Zandrowicz, France, Greece)

    A depressive journalist discovers a forest area that seems to embody the fears of those which explore it, forcing him to confront his inner demons to save the world. 

    Set to air on Arte France and Greece’s Cosmote TV, and produced by VR specialist Atlas V with Byrd and Mediawan’s Imagissime. World premiere.    

    “Sheep,” (Alex Reinberg, Leni Gruber, Austria)

    Sheep believe they have domesticated humans, but it remains a delusion and “saving a blinded herd from certain death proves anything but easy,” says the synopsis. 

    Produced by Horse & Fruits Filmproduktion, to air on public broadcasters ZDF – Das kleine Fernsehspiel and ORF.World premiere. 

    “Sneakermania,” (Vilja Keskimäki, Jani Airiainen, Aleksi Aro-Heinilä, Finland)

    Ola, a 17-year-old sneakerhead chases social media cache in Helsinki but when former best-friend Jay steals the limelight at a high stakes raffle, Ola has to choose between friendship and fame. Backed by Helsinki-filmi Oy, aired by Yle. International premiere. 

    Docuseries

    “The Oligarch and the Art Dealer,” (Andreas Dalsgaard, France, Denmark, U.S. Switzerland, Netherlands)

    Co-created, written and directed by Dalsgaard and a Sundanc and CPH-Dox highlight, the $1 billion dispute between Swiss art dealer Yves Bouvier and Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, and the currency of the ultra-rich: Investing in art. “Better than gold. Better than diamonds,” says Dalsgaard. An Arte series, repped by CAA for the U.S. and Dogwolf in international.

    “Colonna, Une Tragedie Corse,” (Ariane Chemin, Agnès Pizzini, France)

    60 years of latent war between Corsica and the French government, exposed in 2022 by the prison murder of Corsican activist Yvan Colonna—convicted of the assassination of Prefect Érignac. A French Télévisions three-part series.

    “Cruyff,” (Sam Blair, U.K.)

     A take on Johan Cruyff, soccer genius and inventor of modern soccer as seen by other greats such as Pep Guardiola, Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit. San Blair (Ronnie O’Sullivan: The Edge of Everything,” “Maradona ’86”) directs and edits. 

    “A Woman Was Killed,” (Nahid Shaikh, Phara de Aguirre, Belgium)  

    Four cases of feminicide in Belgium, explores four lives through

    family testimonies, revealing missed red flags, repeated pleas for help and how police and justice failed. Aired on Flemish public broadcaster VRT. 

    “The Deal With Iran,” ( Lennart Stuyck, Maarten Stuyck, Belgium) 

    Another VRT doc miniseries. A bomb plot near Paris sparks a high-stakes investigation and a shadow war, exposing covert

    networks, political pressure and a deadly game of hostage diplomacy.  

    Canneseries Rendez-Vous

    Now one of its biggest of sections catering for French audiences, takes in a Mediawan’s “Platini,” Season 2, a portrait of the legendary French soccer player directed by Blue August and featuring Sam Claflin and Jeremy Irons. In the mix is M6 kidnapping thriller “Vigilantes” with Eric Cantona, and French classic novel adaptation “The Red and the Black,” both from France Télévisions, Disney+ prison workplace comedy “Minimum Security” and TF1 serial killer thriller “Zodiaque,” a sequel to the 2004 ratings buster of the same name, seen by 8 million viewers and adapted by RAI2 and Germany’s Sat.1. 

    Also set to unveil are candid HBO Max doc miniseries “I Hate Swimming” starring French Olympic gold medallist swimmer Florent Manaudou, France 2 and Slash social media show “Putain de Soirée,” about one last chance at romance, and Arte’s animated short form bromance series “The Broos,” adapting the French TikTok and Instagram sensation.

    The Rendez-Vous also features Season 1 of Belgium’s English-language 1930s whodunit “This Is Not a Murder Mystery,” featuring Salvador Dali and René Magritte, commissioned by VRT, backed by New8 and sold by Studiocanal. 

    A Korea Focus takes in “Sacred Jewel,” a 1258-set action melodrama set against Mongol invasions with stars Ahn Bo-hyun and Claudia Kim announced as attending Cannes, pianist drama “All the Things You Are” starring “Sky Castle’s” Kang Chan-hee and short form “Genfluencer,” about a facially scarred creator of an AI K-pop idol. 

  • ‘The Serpent’ Executive Producer Preethi Mavahalli Exits Poison Pen to Launch Drama House Paper Mill With ITV Studios

    ‘The Serpent’ Executive Producer Preethi Mavahalli Exits Poison Pen to Launch Drama House Paper Mill With ITV Studios

    ITV Studios, the production and distribution arm of U.K. broadcaster ITV, is further expanding its presence in the premium drama production space with the launch of Paper Mill Productions, a scripted label spearheaded by drama producer Preethi Mavahalli.

    ITV Studios will handle international distribution for Paper Mill, which will develop and produce premium scripted series designed for U.K. and global audiences.

    Mavahalli is currently creative director at Ben Stephenson’s transatlantic drama house Poison Pen Studios, which is also an ITV Studios label.

    During her time there, she oversaw the development and production of upcoming provocative love-story drama “Adultery,” starring Dominic Cooper and Romola Garai and written by Danny Brocklehurst, and serial killer thriller “The Dark,” based upon G.R. Halliday’s debut novel, “From the Shadows” and adapted by Matt Hartley. Both series are set to launch on ITV later this year.

    Mavahalli’s credits include the critically acclaimed BBC/Netflix hit “The Serpent,” “Noughts + Crosses,” and “The City & the City.” Her credits also include BAFTA nominated “NW,” “The War of the Worlds,” “McDonald & Dodds,” “Tripped” and “Next of Kin.” Mavahalli previously worked as director of drama at Mammoth Screen and at Sky Studios, Film4 and Film London.

    Mavahalli has made her first appointment with Luke Woellhaf as executive producer, who also moves over from Poison Pen where he served as director of development and also EP on “Adultery” and “The Dark.” Prior to this, he was head of development at Left Bank Pictures where his credits include the BAFTA-nominated ITVX thriller “Without Sin,” hit Netflix series “Behind Her Eyes” and the BAFTA award-winning “Sitting in Limbo.”

    Mavahalli said: “Almost my entire television career has been as part of ITV Studios so it only felt natural to take this exciting and significant step as part of the family. I’m thrilled to launch this new venture and continue to collaborate with exceptional storytellers and creatives, Julian, and the wonderfully talented team at ITV Studios.”

    Julian Bellamy, managing director ITV Studios, added: “ITV Studios has a long tradition of championing talented drama executives. I am delighted that the launch of Paper Mill Productions marks the next exciting phase of Preethi’s journey with us, creating a dedicated label for bold and impactful drama.”

    ITV Studios’ portfolio of U.K. drama producers includes Quay Street Productions, World Productions, Happy Prince, Mammoth Screen, Hartswood Films and Moonage Pictures, and its international drama stable includes Cattleya, Plano a Plano, Lingo Pictures, Windlight Pictures, TM Studios, Tetra Media Fiction, Colette Productions, Good Cop and L’Intruse.

  • SXSW London: Sharon Horgan, Russell T Davies and Tom Quinn Set as Keynote Speakers

    SXSW London: Sharon Horgan, Russell T Davies and Tom Quinn Set as Keynote Speakers

    South by Southwest on Tuesday announced the first wave of its world film program and keynote speakers for SXSW London, taking place June 1-6.

    The event’s Screen Festival, which features notable talent and executives from film and TV discussing their work and the future of screen storytelling, will include multi-BAFTA and award-winning actress, writer, producer and director Sharon Horgan; award-winning screenwriter and producer Russell T Davies; and Tom Quinn, founder of Oscar-winning U.S. independent film company Neon.

    Horgan is best known as the creator, co-writer, executive producer and star of the series Bad Sisters, which has earned multiple BAFTAs, Emmy nominations, and international awards. She also co-created the hit comedy Motherland and executive produces its spinoff, Amandaland. Horgan also recently signed a two-year first-look with HBO, launching with original comedy series Youth, written and executive produced by Horgan, who will also star as a 50-year-old divorcee in a search for sex and love while juggling caring for her ailing parents and parenting her should-be grown-up son.

    Davies was awarded the 2006 Dennis Potter Award at BAFTA for his writing services to television and an OBE in the Queen’s 2008 Birthday Honours list for services to drama. His credits include creating Queer as Folk and reviving Doctor Who. He also adapted A Very English Scandal and wrote the BBC One/HBO drama Years and Years, among other credits. He has an upcoming original five-part drama Tip Toe for Channel 4.

    Quinn is the CEO and founder of Neon, which was established in 2017. Over the past nine years, Neon has nabbed 57 Oscar nominations, with 11 total wins, including two for best picture (Parasite and Anora). Neon has won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival six consecutive times, including this most recent year’s winner, It Was Just an Accident. In 2024, Neon was named The Hollywood Reporter’s Independent Studio of the Year. Upcoming films include Steven Soderbergh’s The Christophers; Hokum,  starring Adam Scott; and Sundance hit Leviticus.

    Also on Tuesday, organizers announced the first wave of films that will be included in the Screen Festival. The event aims to spotlight films from across the world, with more than 43 countries represented in 2025 and films from 22 countries already confirmed for this year’s edition. Organizers said that the international focus of the fest’s program “reflects the multiculturality of London and brings together up-and-coming global talent to connect with the U.K. industry.”

    Said Anna Bogutskaya, head of Screen at SXSW London: “SXSW London Screen Festival is not designed to be just another film festival. What we’re building here is a bridge between international talent and the U.K., between film and the wider creative industries, and points of connection between film, music, art and technology. The program we have curated is celebrating those filmmakers and artists who are exploring and exploding the possibilities of filmmaking. London is a global city, and cinema is an international language. What we’re looking for — and what we are excited to bring to London audiences this summer — is that electricity of discovering something truly groundbreaking from places they weren’t looking in.”

    The films, with the official loglines, include:

    Feast or Famine 
    (Dir: Adrian Choa & Michael Boccalini) (U.K.) – World Premiere
    Narrated by Marco Pierre White, this feature documentary follows London restaurant ‘Angelina’ as it vies for a Michelin Star under the shadow of the colossal French tire company responsible for categorically shaping chefs’ destinies.

    The Remedy 
    (Dir: Alex Kahuam) (U.S.) – World Premiere
    A troubled young man is the caregiver for both his terminally-ill mother and his mentally-ill sister. When he makes a desperate attempt to save his mom, he unleashes a supernatural entity that feeds on human flesh.

    All Night Wrong 
    (Dir: Jason James) (Canada) – World Premiere
    Gary and Ell meet on a blind date only to wind up stealing a killer’s car along with a dead body and $40,000.

    Amoeba 
    (Dir: Siyou Tan) (Singapore, The Netherlands, France, Spain, South Korea) – U.K. Premiere
    Four teenage girls form a gang as an act of resistance in a country where chewing gum and feeding pigeons are illegal.

    Becoming 
    (Dir: Zhannat Alshanova) (Kazakhstan, France, The Netherlands, Lithuania, Sweden) – U.K. Premiere
    In Kazakhstan, 17-year-old Mila escapes her chaotic home by joining an open-water swimming team — but when her place is threatened, she risks everything to keep the fragile balance she’s found.

    On the Road 
    (Dir: David Pablos) (Mexico) – U.K. Premiere
    A drifter who sleeps with truckers meets a reserved driver and joins him hauling freight across northern Mexico. As they grow closer on the road, the drifter’s past threatens them both.

    Father 
    (Dir: Tereza Nvotová) (Slovakia) – U.K. Premiere
    A tragic mistake destroys a man’s life, isolating him in guilt and shaking his marriage. Now facing prison, can he find a path to forgiveness? Can love survive what no heart was built to endure?

    Hijra 
    (Dir: Shahad Ameen) (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Egypt, U.K.) – U.K. Premiere
    Twelve-year-old Janna sets off for Mecca with her strict grandmother, Sitti, and rebellious sister, Sarah, to perform Hajj. But before they reach their destination, Sarah vanishes — forcing Janna and Sitti into a tense, urgent search. Fearing Sarah’s father will find out, Sitti and Janna push themselves to the limit, desperate to uncover why Sarah disappeared. Their journey spans from southern Saudi Arabia to its northern borders, crossing old pilgrimage routes and confronting strangers, harsh landscapes, and long-buried family secrets. As they grow closer, Janna begins to unravel stories from Sitti’s rich and complex past. The search reveals deep intergenerational rifts among the women in their family. And as their difficult journey begins to echo the spiritual trials of Hajj, Janna and Sitti may find something greater than reconciliation — redemption.

    It Would Be Night in Caracas
    (Dir: Mariana Rondón, Marité Ugás) (Mexico) – U.K. Premiere
    In crumbling Caracas, after burying her mother, Adelaida finds her home taken by armed militia. With society falling apart, she must risk all, including her identity, to survive.

    Maddie’s Secret
    (Dir: John Early) (U.S.) – U.K. Premiere
    A food influencer secretly struggles with bulimia as she navigates online fame, close friendships and a painful past.

    Remake 
    (Dir: Vladlena Sandu) (U.S.) – U.K. Premiere
    How can the cycle of violence that shapes children and is passed through generations be broken?

    Sicko 
    (Dir: Aitore Zholdaskali) (Kazakhstan) – U.K. Premiere
    Overwhelmed by debt, young couple Azamat and Tanshoplan hatch a desperate plan: fake a terminal illness to raise money through a viral charity campaign. But as the donations pour in and public sympathy grows, their lie spirals out of control.

    Whistle 
    (Dir: Christopher Nelius) (Australia) – U.K. Premiere
    At the Masters of Musical Whistling competition, where virtuoso whistlers compete for global supremacy and bragging rights, we follow an array of quirky personalities and dazzling talents in a film sure to be a crowd-pleaser.

    The Whisper 
    (Dir: Gustavo Hernández Ibáñez) (Uruguay, Argentina) – U.K. Premiere
    Fleeing their violent father, siblings Lucía and Adrián hide in a remote mansion. Using a cat’s hidden micro-camera, Lucía discovers their neighbors run a criminal ring kidnapping teens for snuff films—and plan to eliminate the siblings. As she protects Adrián, a dark family curse invades their sanctuary.

    La Carn 
    (Dir: Joan Porcel) (Spain) – U.K. Premiere
    Lluís Garau, a young dancer, creates a performance inspired by a platform that randomly connects strangers through video calls. But when his online life and his real life begin to intertwine, the boundaries between the virtual and the tangible blur — leaving an irreversible mark on his final work: La Carn.

    Barrio Triste
    (Dir: Stillz) (Columbia, U.S.) – U.K. Premiere
    Four teens as they document their own rowdiness in a hauntingly poetic portrait of violence and loneliness.

    Intelligence Rising
    (Dir: Elena Andreicheva) (U.K.) – U.K. Premiere
    Global heavyweights – from military strategists to philosophers – join AI leader Marc Warner for a bold wargame exploring how artificial intelligence might reshape power itself. Intelligence Rising reveals what happens when the brightest minds face the future they helped create.

  • Canneseries to Honor Jisoo, Adam Scott, Richard Gadd

    Canneseries to Honor Jisoo, Adam Scott, Richard Gadd

    International television festival Canneseries, will honor K-Pop superstar and actress Jisoo, Severance star Adam Scott and Baby Reindeer creator Richard Gadd at this year’s event.

    Jisoo will receive the Madame Figaro Rising Star Award, Gadd the Prix Konbini de L’Engagement honor, and Scott this year’s Canal+ Icon award.

    Gadd’s Baby Reindeer follow-up, Half-Man, premiering on HBO on April 23, will screen out of competition at Canneseries. The high-profile out of comp line-up also includes AppleTV+’s Soviet-era sci-fi series Star City; AMC’s horror anthology The Terror; BBC drama California Avenue with Bill Nighy and Helena Bonham Carter; Canal+ period procedural Paris Police 1910; and Sky’s Prisoner starring Tahar Rahim.

    Canneseries 2026 competition lineup includes British relationship dramedy Alice and Steve, staring Jemaine Clement and Nicola Walker as unlikely friends; the Finnish/Slovenian psychological drama Guts (Finland/Slovenia); Danish series Harvest — described as a Succession-style drama set on a family farm; the Spanish coming-of-age dramedy I Always Sometimes; Danish real-life crime drama Snake Killer; Swedish period series Summer of 1985; the Spanish comedy thriller Many People Need to Die; and The Red and the Black, an Iranian drama from Ida Panahandeh and Arsalan Amiri (At the End of Night).

    Spanish director Isabel Coixet (My Life Without Me) will head up this year’s competition jury, together with director Lesli Linka Glatter (Homeland, Mad Men); actors Simon Astier (Hero Cop), Vincent Elbaz (The Hundred-Foot Journey), and Mamadou Sidibé (A Prophet: The Series); and composer Ruth Barrett (The Terminal List).

    The Canneseries industry section, which runs April 23-25, will feature discussions and keynotes from The White Lotus producer David Bernad and Our Boys creators Hagai Levi and Tawfik Abu Wael as well as panels on K-Drama, artificial intelligence, and vertical, mobile-phone-first series, among others.

    The 2026 Canneseries festival runs April 23-28.

  • 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.”

  • 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