The crypto market is trading back in familiar territory following a short-lived spike to its highest point since early February on Friday.
Bitcoin is trading a hair under $75,000 while ether ($ETH) is at $2,300, both significantly lower than Friday’s highs of $78,300 and $2,460.
One reason for traders to be bullish is that the bitcoin futures market on the CME, a venue favored by institutions, closed at $77,540 on Friday and opened at $74,600 to create “CME gap” that spans 3.8% to the upside. A similar gap occurred last week and was filled before the end of the day on Monday.
The first steps have been taken: Bitcoin’s gained 1.5% since midnight UTC, suggesting sentiment is warming following a volatile weekend.
The market tumbled over the weekend as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz came to a halt after opening on Friday. The renewed closure led to a jump in the price of crude oil from $78 to $88 per barrel.
This weighed on risk assets, with Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 futures both down by 0.59% since midnight.
Derivatives positioning
Marketwide, crypto open interest (OI) held steady near $120 billion over the past 24 hours. Trading volume, in contrast, jumped 30%, suggesting a surge in activity without a corresponding increase in new positions. That potentially points to increased turnover, short-term positioning or traders rotating risk rather than deploying fresh capital.
OI in solana (SOL), bitcoin , ether ($ETH) and $XRP ($XRP) held largely steady. OI in HYPE futures declined by 3% alongside as the price fell, pointing to capital outflows. Elsewhere, OI in AVAX and SP 500 perpetuals rose by 6% to 10%, respectively.
OI in $AAVE futures surged to a record high of 3.46 million tokens as collateral damage from the weekend exploit of KelpDAO led to rapid withdrawals of from the Aave lending platform.
Funding rates tied to $BTC, $ETH and several other tokens flipped negative, indicating a bias for short positions that would benefit from a price drop in these tokens.
$BTC and $ETH options on Deribit continue to trade pricier than calls in a sign of lingering downside concern.
Block flows featured bias for $BTC call spreads, which are directional bets, and ether straddles, a volatility play.
Token talk
The altcoin sector was rocked by a $292 million exploit of Kelp DAO’s rsETH token over the weekend, leading to contagion risks across the DeFi market.
Total value locked (TVL) on Aave dropped from $26.5 billion to $17.5 billion as a result, with the exploit sparking fears of bad debt hitting Aave’s WETH pool, triggering heavy withdrawals and a liquidity crunch.
Aave’s token, $AAVE, rose 2.2% on Monday after tumbling 22% on Saturday.
The bitcoin-dominant CoinDesk 20 (CD20) Index advanced 1% on Monday, outperforming the altcoin-weighted CoinDesk 80 (CD80) and the DeFi Select Index (DFX), which are up by 0.6% and 0.9%, respectively.
One particularly volatile token is celestia (TIA), which remains 3.9% down over the past 24 hours even after surging by more than 4% since midnight.
CoinMarketCap’s “Altcoin Season” indicator is at 36/100, demonstrating investor preference for bitcoin following Friday’s short-lived breakout.
Although the price of Bitcoin ($BTC) increases numerically in each cycle, its actual upward momentum and potential are decreasing.
Galaxy Digital research head Alex Thorn argues that the current Bitcoin market cycle is dramatically weaker compared to the previous three cycles.
At this point, Thorn compared the price movements since the Bitcoin halving in April 2024 to the 2012, 2016, and 2020 cycles.
The study concluded that volatility has significantly decreased in the current cycle and the upside potential is lower.
Although Bitcoin reached its all-time high of over $125,000 on October 5, 2025, it only managed to surpass 97% of its 2024 halving price of approximately $63,000. According to the analyst, this indicates that the peak of the cycle so far has been significantly calmer compared to other cycles.
This increase is quite small compared to other cycles. According to historical data, in the 2012 halving cycle, the $BTC price increased by approximately 9,294%, rising to $1,163. In 2016, it approached $19,891 with an increase of approximately 2,950%, and finally, in the 2020 cycle, a gain of approximately 761% was observed.
According to the analyst, the decreasing volatility with each new $BTC halving cycle indicates that traditional market dynamics are changing and that the price is becoming more influenced by factors other than the four-year halving cycle theory.
While bull cycles in Bitcoin are becoming less frequent, Fidelity analysts also note that with decreasing volatility, Bitcoin declines are becoming less severe.
At this point, according to Zack Wainwright, research analyst at Fidelity Digital Assets, declines in previous Bitcoin bear markets ranged from 80% to 90%. However, in the latest cycle, Bitcoin’s drop from its all-time high of $125,000 to $60,000 represents a decline of approximately 50%.
Fresh talks between the US and Iran are uncertain. But these are the key figures who have driven negotiations so far.
Published On 20 Apr 202620 Apr 2026
Negotiators from the United States are expected to arrive in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, for a second round of talks with Iran aimed at extending a two-week ceasefire that is set to expire on Wednesday.
The diplomatic efforts are unfolding amid sharp military escalation, hours after the US Navy intercepted and captured the Touska, a 294m (965 feet) long Iranian-flagged container ship in the Gulf of Oman.
The negotiations follow a period of heightened rhetoric, with US President Donald Trump threatening to destroy Iran and wipe out power plants and civilian infrastructure if a deal is not reached. Tehran has labelled the ship’s seizure “piracy” and has expressed uncertainty regarding its participation in the sessions while the naval blockade remains.
The current diplomatic track predates the outbreak of the US-Israel war on Iran, which began on February 28. While some figures at the table led indirect talks before the conflict, another key Iranian negotiator has been permanently silenced.
The absent negotiator
Just weeks before the war broke out, Ali Larijani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, was engaged in indirect negotiations with Washington, mediated by Oman. Born in 1958, Larijani was widely viewed as the pragmatic face of the Iranian establishment. A mathematician and philosopher who wrote his university thesis on Immanuel Kant, he served as the country’s chief nuclear negotiator and was a bridge between the security apparatus and the political establishment. He was killed in an Israeli air attack in early March, removing one of Tehran’s most experienced strategic minds from the current diplomatic equation.
The US delegation
JD Vance: The 41-year-old US vice president has been tapped to lead the American delegation, having previously led the first round of talks in Islamabad on April 11. Born in August 1984, Vance is a former Marine and Yale Law School graduate who served in Iraq before entering politics. Once a fierce critic of US President Donald Trump, he has evolved into a staunch loyalist known for his unwavering support for Israel and his advocacy for an “America First” foreign policy.
Jared Kushner: Trump’s 45-year-old son-in-law currently holds no official government title but remains a highly influential, unofficial player in US foreign policy. Kushner, who built his wealth in real estate, co-led indirect negotiations with Iran in Oman early in 2026, just before the conflict erupted. He previously served as a senior adviser in the White House, where he was a primary architect of the Abraham Accords and recently participated in ceasefire negotiations for Gaza.
Steve Witkoff: The 69-year-old US Special Envoy to the Middle East is a New York real estate investor and a long-time golfing companion of Trump. Witkoff partnered with Kushner to spearhead the pre-war backchannel talks with Tehran, giving him crucial prior experience with the Iranian delegation. He has been described by Trump as an “unrelenting voice for peace”.
The Iranian delegation
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf: Iran’s 64-year-old parliament speaker led Tehran’s team during the first round of talks and is a conservative political heavyweight. Born in August 1961, Ghalibaf has a deep military and security background, having served as the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Air Force, national police chief and mayor of Tehran.
Abbas Araghchi: Iran’s 63-year-old foreign minister is a veteran pragmatist and academic holding a doctorate from the United Kingdom’s University of Kent. Born in December 1962, Araghchi is best known as the chief negotiator who successfully navigated the complex technical talks leading to the 2015 landmark nuclear deal. He has served under both reformist and conservative administrations, establishing a reputation as one of Tehran’s most skilled diplomats.
As the Wednesday deadline nears, the prospect of a lasting agreement remains deeply uncertain. Millions of people, in the Gulf and beyond, are watching how the talks play out. They also fear the escalation that could follow if Iran and the US do not reach a peace deal, and how the prospects of a prolonged conflict directly impacts their daily lives.
The second edition of SXSW London has unveiled the lineup of films and speakers for its screen program, which will open with the world premiere of “Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day.”
From BAFTA-nominated director Tina Ghavari and screenwriter Justine Waddell, the adaptation features a cast including Haley Bennett, Jack Whitehall, Jennifer Saunders, Lily Allen, Sally Phillips and Misia Butler, with Bennett and Whitehall among those expected to attend.
The darkly satirical “Savage House” — featuring Richard E. Grant and Claire Foy, Bel Powley and Jack Farthing — is also getting its world premiere at the festival, with Grant and Foy reported to be hitting the red carpet.
Elsewhere, SXSW London will feature an exclusive first-look screening of the Adult Swim animated series “Get Jiro,” based on The New York Times bestselling DC/Vertigo graphic novel from renowned chef Anthony Bourdain.
SXSW London has also unveiled six films selected for this year’s Official Competition section, including “The Other Side of the Sun” (Dir: Tawfik Sabouni), “The Red Hangar” (Juan Pablo Sallato), “Roya” (Mahnaz Mohammadi), “Memory” (Vladlena Sandu), “Remake” (Ross Mcelwee) and “Only Rebels Win” (Danielle Arbid).
“The films in our Official Competition embody what we are most excited about in contemporary cinema: no-holds-barred, deeply human and formally audacious films that provoke and challenge us to think wider, deeper and more empathetically,” said Anna Bogutskaya, head of screen at SXSW London.
Alongside the film, the festival has also announced its lineup of panels and speakers. Among them are “Toy Meets Tech: The New Technologies of Toy Story 5” with Thomas Jordan, VFX supervisor on “Toy Story 5” and “BookTok to Screen,” about transforming viral literary trends to streaming, with Prime Video’s head of originals UK and Europe Tara Erer and Banijay’s head of adaptations Hannah Griffiths.
Neo co-founder Erik Zhang has launched transparency.neo.org, a public disclosure portal that commits the Neo Foundation’s temporary committee to continuously publishing every on-chain use of funds under its control. The portal delivers on a financial-transparency commitment Zhang made when he announced the committee earlier this month.
The site operationalizes Zhang’s April 14 disclosure of the primary NF fund address he controls, NVg7LjGcUSrgxgjX3zEgqaksfMaiS8Z6e1. When Zhang announced the temporary committee, he pledged to publicly disclose every funding decision it makes. In his announcement on X, Zhang wrote:
After disclosing the address, the next step is to disclose the spending records. I have already launched a public page to continuously disclose every use of funds promoted by, or decided with the participation of, the temporary committee, subject to community oversight.
Four disclosure principles guide the site:
Timeliness,
Clear purpose, with each expenditure having its purpose, amount, asset type, and relevant context noted,
On-chain verifiability, with address or transaction details provided where applicable, and
Community oversight, including the ability for the community to raise inquiries based on the public records
Records can be filtered by date, status (executed, pending, or under review), asset type, and keyword. The Update Policy holds the committee accountable to record-by-record disclosure and states that the portal may become a location for long-term financial transparency once a new governance mechanism is established.
Initial records
As of April 19, the portal lists two executed records, covering 280,000 $NEO and 1 $GAS, drawn from the single disclosed address.
The first is a 1 $GAS administrative transfer described as “1 $GAS used to activate the temporary committee account, as transfers cannot be executed without $GAS.”
The second is a 280,000 $NEO disbursement categorized as Payroll & Operations. It is described as operating expenses and staff salaries covering the period from October 2025 to April 2026.
The seven-month coverage period coincides with Zhang’s earlier public statement that NF staff, community members, and his own compensation had gone unpaid for an extended period before the committee’s formation. The portal does not break down the 280,000 $NEO figure by recipient or role. The make up of the committee has not been disclosed.
Context
The launch arrives amid an unresolved governance dispute between Zhang and Neo co-founder Da Hongfei, each of whom has published NF reform proposals.
The temporary NF committee established by Zhang is expected to be dissolved once the community accepts a new governance mechanism. Until then, new records on the NF financial transparency website will document how the committee uses funds during the interim.
Zhang noted, “Financial transparency cannot remain at the level of statements. It must be reflected in public records that are verifiable, traceable, and continuously updated.”
The full announcement can be found at the link below: https://x.com/erikzhang/status/2045434833825042652
LayerZero, in its statement regarding the Kelp DAO attack worth approximately $290 million, stated that the root cause of the incident was vulnerabilities in Kelp’s security architecture.
The company highlighted that the liquid restaking protocol Kelp DAO uses a single-verifier system instead of a multi-verifier system, despite prior warnings.
According to LayerZero, the attackers used a new method that focused on the infrastructure layer instead of targeting the protocol code. The statement indicated that the attack was most likely carried out by the North Korea-linked Lazarus Group and its subgroup, TraderTraitor. The attackers reportedly compromised two RPC nodes used in the verification process, making fraudulent transactions appear as if they had been verified.
However, the attackers manipulated the system by launching distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against other intact RPC nodes. This ensured that the validator system only received data from the compromised nodes, and 116,500 rsETH fell under the attackers’ control via the bridge.
LayerZero emphasized that the incident was only possible due to Kelp’s “1-of-1” validator configuration. The company stated that such an attack would not be successful in systems using multiple validators. They also noted that other applications running on the protocol were not affected and that there was no overall system vulnerability.
According to experts, this incident highlights the importance of infrastructure security in the DeFi ecosystem and points to increasingly sophisticated methods being developed by attacker groups.
Rep. Sheri Biggs (R-SC) disclosed on Friday that she purchased up to $250,000 worth of BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) last month.
The U.S. lawmaker “strongly supports crypto,” according to the Stand With Crypto Alliance, a grassroots advocacy group launched by Coinbase.
Biggs also bet on Bitcoin last July, disclosing another IBIT purchase that was valued at up to $250,000.
Rep. Sheri Biggs (R-SC) disclosed on Friday that she purchased up to $250,000 worth of BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) last month, marking the conservative House member’s latest bet on the leading digital asset by market capitalization.
The purchase could have been as little as $100,000, Unusual Whales data showed, because U.S. lawmakers are only required to disclose the value of trades within a broad range.
Around the time that she scooped up Wall Street’s most popular vehicle for Bitcoin exposure, Biggs purchased shares in a private credit fund offered by asset manager Apollo. Meanwhile, the representative sold a similar product established by Apollo competitor Oaktree.
Biggs’ latest IBIT purchase was made on March 4, a few days after the U.S.-Israel war with Iran broke out. At the time, Bitcoin was valued as low as $67,800, according to CoinGecko. Bitcoin’s price has jumped around 14% since that nadir.
Over time, investments associated with digital assets have become commonplace among U.S. lawmakers, from meme coins to shares in Strategy (MSTR), the Bitcoin-buying behemoth. Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) was the last politician to disclose a purchase of BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF last November that was valued between $1,000 and $15,000.
Although Biggs’ official congressional homepage is devoid of language associated with digital assets, the representative is viewed as someone who “strongly supports crypto” by the Stand With Crypto Alliance, a grassroots advocacy group launched by Coinbase.
The advocacy group says Biggs has voted for three pro-crypto bills in the House: the CLARITY Act, the GENIUS Act, and H.J. Res 25, a resolution enacted last year that nullified tax reporting requirements for decentralized finance projects, viewed by some lawmakers as “burdensome.”
The congresswoman, who was sworn in as a representative of South Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District last January, appears to have previously violated the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act, or Stock Act, per an analysis by NOTUS.
The publication reported last October that Biggs apparently failed to meet a 45-day deadline while disclosing more than 170 trades made by her and her husband, which included another investment in BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF of up to $250,000 last July.
The representative’s latest IBIT purchase, made on March 4, indicated that Biggs had one day left under the law to make the trade’s details publicly available.
Decrypt has reached out to Biggs’ office for comment.
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The United States military seized an Iranian container ship near the Gulf in the early hours of Monday, sending tensions spiralling hours before Washington is due to send negotiators to Pakistan for talks aimed at ending their war.
The US Central Command (CENTCOM) and President Donald Trump claimed the Touska was hit after it refused to follow US orders to withdraw from its planned passage through the Strait of Hormuz. The US has been imposing a naval blockade since last Monday
Iran has responded by describing the attack and hijack as an act of “piracy”, and threatened retribution. On Monday, hours after the attack and capture, Iran said it had no plans to send its negotiators for talks with the US in Islamabad.
This is the first non-military Iranian ship that US forces are known to have hit during the current war, and the first Iranian cargo vessel that the American military has captured since the start of its week-long naval blockade.
Here’s what we know about the capture of the ship, and why it matters:
What happened?
A little after midnight in Iran, CENTCOM announced that its guided-missile destroyer, the USS Spruance, had fired its 5-inch (127 mm) MK 45 gun at the ship’s engine room and disabled it.
According to the US military, the Touska was attempting to cross from the Arabian Sea through the Strait of Hormuz and was headed to the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas.
Since April 13, the US military has enforced a naval blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, in response to Iran blocking the passage of most vessels through the narrow waterway — except ships belonging to nations that have struck deals with Tehran.
Under its blockade, the US military is barring any ships belonging to Iran, or travelling to or from Iranian ports, from passing through the strait. In effect, this is blocking Iran’s own ships from exporting the country’s oil to other countries: According to Al Jazeera’s calculations, Iran earned nearly $5 billion in revenue from the export of oil in the month leading up to the US blockade.
According to the CENTCOM, “American forces issued multiple warnings and informed the Iranian-flagged vessel [the Touska] it was in violation of the US blockade”.
“After Touska’s crew failed to comply with repeated warnings over a six-hour period, Spruance directed the vessel to evacuate its engine room,” the CENTCOM statement said, before the American destroyer fired at the Iranian ship.
Subsequently, US Marines from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit clambered onto the Touska, and captured the ship. In a grainy video released by CENTCOM, US troops can be seen flying from the USS Tripoli on helicopters, then using ropes to climb down to the Touska.
What do we know about the Touska?
The container ship flies under the Iranian flag. It is 294m (965 feet) long – only a little shorter than the US aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln at 332.8m (1092 feet) long.
The Touska is 32.25m (105.8 feet) wide.
The vessel and its owners have been under sanctions issued by the US Treasury Department and the US Office of Foreign Assets Control. They are accused of helping Iran break sanctions.
It is unclear what the Touska was carrying. Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that American troops are “seeing what’s on board”.
What has Iran said about the ship capture?
Early on Monday morning, Iran called the capture of the Touska an act of “piracy”.
Hours later, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei told reporters that Tehran had no plans to send its negotiators to Islamabad for a round of talks that Pakistan is trying to host as early as Tuesday. The US has said that its negotiators, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, are going to Islamabad on Monday for talks.
Baghaei accused the US of “violating the ceasefire” that has largely held between the US and Iran since April 9.
“Iran does not trust Washington,” he said. Asked about the US negotiators expected to travel to Islamabad, the Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson said: “There are indications from the American side that there is no seriousness on the side of the US to walk down the path of diplomacy”.
Separately, the Iranian military has said that it will hit back against the US for the ship’s seizure.
“We warn that the armed forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran will soon respond and retaliate against this armed piracy by the US military,” said a spokesperson for Khatam al-Anbiya, Iran’s joint military command.
Brazil’s development and training hub BrLab has announced the winners of its 15th edition, with Miami-based FiGa Films acquiring the sales rights to Val Hidalgo and Alice Stamato’s prizewinning drama “Ninho Tinto” (Red Nest).
The film from the Brazilian duo was among 12 projects selected for the annual event, which hosts producers, directors and writers from across Latin America, Spain and Portugal for a week of workshops, labs, mentorship and industry programming in São Paulo. A series of satellite events also take place in Brasília and Recife through early May.
Since its first edition in 2011, BrLab has grown from a small workshop for regional filmmakers into a key player in the development of independent cinema in Brazil, Latin America and the wider Ibero-American region, with projects from over 15 countries invited to take part this year.
“Reaching 15 years is both a celebration and a statement of persistence,” said BrLab founder, director and curator Rafael Sampaio. “Also, it’s a moment to evaluate and reaffirm our purposes and structures, considering all changes and challenges we’ve been facing in different countries in Latin America and everywhere.”
Sampaio noted that “this a region full of talents and creativity where producers and filmmakers constantly navigate instability — financial, political, institutional. In this international context, BrLab has become a regular solid event where projects are challenged and supported, experiencing this initial and fundamental moment in which a film is still only words and intentions.”
Along with its carefully curated line-up and hands-on approach to the development and support of each project, BrLab functions as a crucial bridge connecting filmmakers to both the regional and the international industry.
“Filmmakers and producers don’t just develop their films in isolation — they connect not only with themselves and tutors but also with co-producers, festivals and decision-makers that we bring to be part of each edition of BrLab, helping to position the curated projects internationally from an early stage,” said Sampaio. “In a context where structural support can be inconsistent, that mix of rigor, continuity and real access is what allows projects to move forward — not just as ideas, but as films that can exist and circulate.”
This year saw organizers introduce a raft of changes, including a shift from the event’s traditional October slot to early April, the launch of BrLab Kids, a new workshop dedicated to film and series projects for children and young audiences, and the introduction of a green initiative focused on sustainable industry practices in Latin America, backed by the event’s new presenting partner and lead sponsor, Petrobas.
“It is not about changing what already works — it’s about consolidating it and expanding its reach,” said Sampaio. “Rather than a shift in format, what we’ve done is to solidify the core of BrLab — the depth of the labs, the close mentorship, the international dialogue — while creating new layers around it. The idea is to strengthen the ecosystem that surrounds the projects, not just the projects themselves.”
One of the key additions this year was the Think Tank, which the lab developed in partnership with Petrobras and Cinema Verde. “It opens a space for broader, more strategic reflection on the Brazilian and Latin American industry — bringing together different players to discuss structural challenges, sustainability and the future of audiovisual production in Brazil and Latin America,” said Sampaio. “It’s less about immediate outcomes and more about long-term positioning.”
As of 2025, 62 feature films that participated in BrLab’s various sections have been produced and released, among them Diego Céspedes’ “The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo” (Chile), which won the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard section last year; Lila Halla’s “Levante” (Brazil), which screened in Cannes Critics’ Week in 2023; and “Légua,” by Portuguese filmmakers Filipa Reis and João Guerra, which premiered at Directors’ Fortnight the same year.
That track record is a tribute to the work that Sampaio and the organizing team continue to do to pursue their vision despite what he refers to as “institutional fragility,” particularly with funding for Brazil’s national film agency, Ancine, slashed under right-wing former president Jair Bolsonaro. Ancine was not among the supporters of the 15th edition of BrLab, which took place through partnerships with Programa Ibermedia, Spcine, Projeto Paradiso and Petrobras.
“The absence of Ancine was something unexpected that had an impact on the co-pro forum, but…our trajectory taught us we need to be more solid than our institutions,” Sampaio said. “The history of Latin American cinema and of BrLab reflects much more the struggle of professionals than institutions. It’s the effort of an international industry against the fragility of our politics and governments.”
Here’s a rundown of this year’s BrLab winners:
Vitrine Films Distribution Award: “Irmã Mais Velha” (The Older Sister) Director: Rafaela Camelo Producers: André Pereira, Mariana Muniz Screenwriters: Rafaela Camelo, André Pereira
Courtesy of BrLab
After her older sister dies tragically, 11-year-old Isabel is forced to live with her mother, Verônica, who hides a long-suppressed gift: the ability to channel the dead. Camelo, whose first feature, “The Nature of Invisible Things,” premiered at the Berlinale last year, noted: “I like to say that [my first film] shows how not every death has to be a tragedy. In ‘The Older Sister,’ the perspective on death changes radically. Here, death is inherently the tragedy that sets the story in motion. Isabel and Verônica must face this loss together, experience grief in its full intensity, and deal with the consequences it brings to their lives.”
Pop Up Film Residency Award: “El Umbral” (The Threshold) Director: Inti Jacanamijoy Producers: Jorge Forero, Inti Jacanamijoy Screenwriter: Inti Jacanamijoy, Óscar Adán
Courtesy of BrLab
A coming-of-age story about grief, memory and ancestral knowledge, “The Threshold” follows a young boy who returns to his family home after the death of his grandfather, a renowned shaman. When his grandmother also falls ill and prepares to cross the Kuriyako, the sacred place where her people go to die, an ancestral presence arrives in the house, blurring the boundary between the living and the dead. It’s a film that “connects a family story with the spiritual and metaphysical universe that inhabits our territories,” according to Forero, presenting “a cinematic proposal with the potential to become a standout film in today’s landscape.”
Cinéma en Développement + Projeto Paradiso Award: “Dentro do Rio” (Inside the River) Director/screenwriter: Bárbara Matias Kariri Producer: Maurício Macêdo
Courtesy of BrLab
When the construction of a dam threatens to submerge the indigenous community of Barro Vermelho, Lourdes, a teacher and single mother, is torn between accepting compensation and moving to the city or resisting alongside her family and community, for whom ancestry is a force of resistance and renewal. Matias Kariri said the story is “rooted in the Kariri cosmovision, bringing a perspective from Brazil’s deep interior with authenticity, imagination and a strong sense of authorship.” It uses a unique combination of animation with influences from theater and poetry to “reimagine trauma while opening space for other ways of being and understanding the world.”
Cesnik, Quintino, Salinas, Valerio and Fittipaldi Award: “A Última Cachorra” (The Last Dog on Earth) Director: Nina Kopko Producer: Letícia Friederich Screenwriters: Tainá Tokitaka, Nina Kopko
Courtesy of BrLab
Set in the very near future in São Paulo, where a new pandemic is thought to have eradicated the planet’s canine population, a rideshare driver is forced to decide if she’s going to stick to her plan to take her own life or find a way to protect what may be the last dog on earth. “Stories involving dogs create an immediate connection with a large part of the audience, due to the emotional place they occupy in our lives,” said the filmmakers. “Imagining a world where they are disappearing generates even more curiosity, especially as it takes place in the near future — both strange and familiar.”
The dystopian parody “Xoxa’s Show” is set in a world where Brazil’s most popular TV show stars are subjected to humiliations and violent challenges disguised as entertainment. When members of the crew begin to die, the line between spectacle and extermination starts to blur. Led by a trans crew and cast, “Xoxa’s Show” is “a celebration of the creativity of trans people,” said Dorneles. “Participating in BrLab is very important so that our careers, mine as a transvestite and Hilda’s as a non-binary person, are recognized and we can realize this work that plays with the collective imagination of the trans population with extreme intimacy.”
BrLab Rough Cut
Tanto Award: “Ninho Tinto” (Red Nest) Directors: Val Hidalgo, Alice Stamato Producer: Thiago Briglia
‘Red Nest’ (Courtesy of BrLab)
Set in northern Brazil, “Red Nest” follows a Venezuelan immigrant, Frangela, whose stable life is upended by the unexpected arrival of her 11-year-old son. With Alejandro’s arrival, both Frangela and her partner try to build an emotional bond with the boy as they attempt to create a new home. “What is a home?” the directors asked. While the word can mean many things, “there is something that always runs through it: the affections we weave around it, the people we form bonds with, and the small gestures through which we offer and share parts of ourselves,” they said. “Red Nest” offers “a sensitive portrait of how these bonds are rebuilt within a migratory context shaped by vulnerability. Yet it is also, above all, a gesture of resilience and an affirmation of life.”
Patrick Muldoon, an actor who starred in “Days of Our Lives” and “Melrose Place,” died on Sunday, his manager confirmed to Variety. He was 57.
From 1992 to 1995, Muldoon originated the role of Austin Reed on the daytime soap opera “Days of Our Lives.” He returned to the soap to reprise the role from 2011 to 2012.
He also had a recurring role as Jeffrey Hunter in the teen television series “Saved by the Bell” in 1991. Muldoon also starred on the primetime soap opera “Melrose Place” from 1995 to 1996, playing the villain Richard Hart.
In 1997, Muldoon played the role of Zander Barcalow in the film “Starship Troopers,” directed by Paul Verhoeven.
Muldoon was also an active producer, working on a slew of movies including “The Tribes of Palos Verdes,” “Arkansas,” “Marlowe,” “The Card Counter,” “The Dreadful” and “Riff Raff” through his Storyboard Productions. He was set to produce the upcoming feature “Kockroach,” starring Chris Hemsworth. Just two days ago, Muldoon posted on Instagram: “So excited to be a part of this amazing project KOCKROACH directed by Matt Ross starring Chris Hemsworth, Taron Edgerton, Zazzie Beetz and Alec Baldwin.” The production is currently filming in Australia.
His latest acting role was in “Dirty Hands,” a new crime thriller with Denise Richards and Michael Beach. The film is slated to be released later this month.
Muldoon is survived by his partner, Miriam Rothbart; parents Deanna and Patrick Muldoon, Sr.; sister and brother-in-law Shana and Ahmet Zappa, niece Halo and nephew Arrow Zappa.