Blog

  • Louis Theroux on Capturing Reality of Israeli Settlements in ‘The Settlers’: ‘I’d Never Seen Something Like This Unfold in the Open With No Shame’

    Louis Theroux on Capturing Reality of Israeli Settlements in ‘The Settlers’: ‘I’d Never Seen Something Like This Unfold in the Open With No Shame’

    In 2010, British journalist Louis Theroux went to Israel to interview ultra-nationalist Jewish settlers who believed it was their religious and political obligation to populate the West Bank for the BBC doc “Ultra Zionists.” Last year, over a decade and a half later, the broadcaster returned to the region to investigate how the Israeli settler movement has escalated following October 7th with “The Settlers.” 

    Speaking at CPH:DOX following a sold-out screening of the documentary, the British author said he mostly remembers the “intensity” of being in the occupied region during wartime. Asked about what drew him to the subject, Theroux said the throughline in his work is “human weirdness” and the ways in which “human beings self-sabotage or behave in ways that maybe seem illogical, immoral or controversial.”

    He added, “Here you have a religious nationalist ideology being imposed in an area that’s been turned into a kind of prison in cahoots with a vast military apparatus. I’d never seen that sort of thing unfold out in the open and with no shame.”

    The Israeli interviewees in Theroux’s documentary are portrayed as boisterous and open about their plans to fully occupy the West Bank and promote Palestinian relocation. The documentary’s most striking subject is Daniella Weiss, an Israeli politician who founded Nachala, a settler and far-right organization. Over the last three decades, Weiss has directly helped establish dozens of Israeli outposts – settlements in the West Bank built without legal authorization. 

    Throughout the documentary, Weiss can be seen fiercely defending Israelis’ rights to occupy the West Bank, and saying things such as: “We do for the government what they cannot do for themselves,” before boasting she has a direct line to Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. At one point, the elderly woman claims “there is no such thing as settler violence,” implying videos widely shared online are edited and manipulated snippets portraying the settlers’ reactions to provocations.

    Louis Theroux at CPH:DOX

    Theroux said of the hardline approach of Weiss, who he called “the godmother of the settler movement,” toward Palestinians, “There’s just a kind of joy that pours out of her, a joy in her sense of mission that she has for this select group of people she prefers to represent.”

    Asked about the motivation of Weiss for taking part in the documentary, the Brit said, “Anyone who enters into a documentary [has] a reason for doing it,” he added. “It might be narcissism, might be the need for publicity, might be because they’re trying to bring converts… With her, it’s a hard one to call. I suspect she must think that there’s something in having a profile. She relies on the communities internationally to support her work and maybe she’s thinking that this helps with her profile.”

    Theroux noted that, since the documentary first went live on the BBC last year, Weiss has become “sort of a scratching post for Western media.” “I think Piers Morgan interviewed her afterwards. She seems to enjoy putting it out there.” This, one might say, feeds into a general criticism that some of Theroux’s work platforms voices that should not be spotlighted in the wider media. Prodded about that, the journalist said he does not like the term “platforming.”

    “It feels so broad, as though having someone on a live podcast is the same as spending weeks attempting to interview someone in an appropriate way and then shaping the story in a way that feels truthful and responsible,” he noted. “Those are two very different things. I have a podcast and my approach on the podcast is very different to the one I take when I’m making a documentary.”

    With “The Settlers,” Theroux was especially concerned with “doing a good job” of portraying the complexities of the subject he was approaching onscreen, thanks to how important the subject matter was to his creative team. Different from recent work like his Netflix hit “Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere,” the author said he was “more on my front foot in this one.”

    “One of my frustrations in making the film was being aware that we weren’t able to document the very worst of what was going on,” he said. “I’m doing stories about crazy people in America and porn movies and some subjects that are more obviously mainstream. Here, I am on something that people might perceive as less clearly for the mass market. The idea of me [pointing] my kind of documentary lens on the story… [My team] imposed on me how important it was that we did a good job.”

    As for the criticism that might arise from the fact “The Settlers” largely focuses on the Israelis on the West Bank, with only brief interludes following Palestinians in the region, Theroux said he “understands” how that could be viewed.

    “I can see that would be frustrating,” he admitted. “At the same time, this isn’t the only film about the situation in the West Bank. It’s the film I made and it sits in a body of work in which I’ve tried to reach large audiences with a way of telling stories that do justice to situations that have moral urgency. And, in the end, the people with agency are the ones with the guns, right? They’re the ones who, for more than 60 years, have kept a region in which more than 3 million Palestinians live under military occupation.”

    Lastly, asked about the impact of working so close to the tragedies and devastation of war, the British presenter emphasized that “part of telling documentaries is the regrettable privilege you have of moving on,” adding that “you can’t become too attached to the idea of changing the world.”

    “I have a great family, a wonderful wife, three amazing boys. I feel very blessed,” he went on. “I have the luxury of leaving. I don’t suffer. I’m not a war correspondent who comes home and either goes traumatized or thinks, ‘I have to get back out there.’ I enjoy doing the work and there’s a real sense of pride and purpose that goes with documenting something you feel deserves to be documented.”

  • Majority Stake in Tina Turner Catalog Acquired by Pophouse

    Majority Stake in Tina Turner Catalog Acquired by Pophouse

    Pophouse Entertainment, the Sweden-based company co-founded by ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus, has completed a transaction that sees Pophouse becoming an owner alongside BMG in “the music interests of the music catalogue” of the late, legendary R&B singer-songwriter Tina Turner. According to the unusually worded announcement, the transaction sees Pophouse becoming the majority owner in the music interests of Turner, who died in 2023 at the age of 83.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed. In 2021, Turner sold her shares of her solo recordings, publishing assets, and name and likeness rights to BMG for a reported $50 million.

    Turner’s career spanned six decades and several record labels, although her biggest-selling titles, such as “What’s Love Got to Do With It” and “The Best,” were originally released by Capitol-EMI and are currently under Universal Music’s Parlophone imprint.

    Turner was inducted twice into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (as a solo artist, and as half of the Ike & Tina Turner duo with her former husband) and won 12 Grammy Awards, including a Lifetime Achievement Award, and is one of the top-selling female artists of all time.

    According to the announcement, Pophouse, alongside BMG and the Tina Turner Estate, “will focus on long-term stewardship and contribute creative ideas that respect and laud Tina Turner’s artistry, to continue to elevate her work and legacy among existing fans as well as new ones.”

    Other catalogs acquired by Pophouse include Kiss, Cyndi Lauper, Avicii and Swedish House Mafia.

    Pophouse CEO Jessica Koravos said “I am thrilled to welcome Tina Turner’s iconic catalogue to the Pophouse family. We will now set in motion a series of creative projects to celebrate Tina Turner’s remarkable music and persona and secure her legacy as the Queen of Rock n’ Roll.”  

    Alistair Norbury, BMG’s president, UK, Continental Europe & APAC, said: “Tina Turner’s voice and spirit shaped modern music and popular culture. Our responsibility, alongside Pophouse and the Estate, is to ensure her work continues to resonate with audiences around the world, while remaining true to the strength, independence and originality that defined her career.”

  • Senator Lummis Announced Good News Regarding the Clarity Act, a Highly Critical Cryptocurrency Bill

    Senator Lummis Announced Good News Regarding the Clarity Act, a Highly Critical Cryptocurrency Bill

    As comprehensive regulatory efforts targeting the cryptocurrency market in the US gain momentum, Senator Cynthia Lummis made important statements. Lummis, the architect of the “Bitcoin Strategic Reserve Act” bill, stated that this critical legislation, known publicly as the CLARITY Act, will be finalized by the end of the year.

    Speaking at the DC Blockchain Summit in Washington D.C., Lummis stated that the Senate Banking Committee will consider the bill in the second half of April, following the Easter break. The committee is expected to make changes to the bill before submitting it for a vote. Lummis clarified the timeline, saying, “In April, after the Easter break, we will markup the bill.”

    This regulation is critical to establishing the legal framework for the cryptocurrency market in the US. The bill aims to clarify the boundaries of authority between the CFTC and the SEC, define the conditions under which digital assets are considered securities or commodities, and introduce new transparency obligations.

    Last year, the House of Representatives passed a similar bill, the CLARITY Act, with bipartisan support. However, the process was more difficult in the Senate. In January, the Senate Agriculture Committee passed its version with only Republican votes, while the Democrats did not support the bill.

    On the other hand, the critical hearing that the Senate Banking Committee had planned to hold in January was canceled at the last minute after cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase withdrew its support.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Attention: The 13-Year-Old Ancient Whale Who Bought Bitcoin (BTC) for Only $332 Has Made a Move! Here’s the Huge Profit It Made!

    An “ancient whale” who bought 5,000 $BTC in November 2013 when Bitcoin was only $332, has started selling Bitcoin ($BTC) almost 13 years later.

    According to onchain data released by the cryptocurrency platform Lookonchain, this whale first started selling Bitcoin in November 2024.

    The whale, which awoke from its slumber in November 2024, has so far transferred 3,500 $BTC to Binance at an average price of $94,786. And it has made a significant profit of approximately $330 million from these $BTC sales.

    According to Arkham Intelligence data, this ancient whale also sold another 1,000 $BTC about seven hours ago, earning approximately $71.57 million.

    The balance of 1,500 $BTC, worth approximately $106 million at current prices, is still in the whale’s wallet.

    Bitcoin is currently trading around $70,840 after experiencing a 4.8% drop in the last 24 hours.

    A #BitcoinOG with 5K $BTC($356M) sold another 1,000 $BTC($71.57M) 8 hours ago.

    This OG received 5K $BTC(cost $1.66M) at $332 12 years ago, and started selling $BTC on Nov 26, 2024, selling a total of 3,500 $BTC($337M) at ~$96,262.

    Total profit: $442M — a 266x return.… pic.twitter.com/oErv0KccjN

    — Lookonchain (@lookonchain) March 19, 2026

    *This is not investment advice.

  • ‘They Will Kill You’ Cast Joined Under One Condition: “Please Don’t Make It Camp”

    ‘They Will Kill You’ Cast Joined Under One Condition: “Please Don’t Make It Camp”

    The team behind They Will Kill You had a very clear vision in mind for how to make sure that viewers will enjoy their stay with the horror-comedy feature.

    Writer-director Kirill Sokolov’s film premiered at SXSW on Tuesday ahead of Warner Bros. releasing it in theaters March 27. Stars Zazie Beetz, Myha’la, Paterson Joseph, Tom Felton, Heather Graham and Patricia Arquette were among those taking part in an onstage conversation after the screening, along with co-writer Alex Litvak and producers Andy Muschietti and Barbara Muschietti.

    They Will Kill You centers on a newly hired housekeeper (Beetz) at a mysterious New York City hotel known as the Virgil. She soon learns that the building is the headquarters for a satanic cult, with the members having chosen to murder her as a sacrifice.

    “This movie is very different,” Sokolov told the crowd as he thanked the studio for believing in the film. “It’s very crazy, and it’s very original.”

    Indeed, the gory and action-packed film has plenty of absurdist flair, including a severed body part getting a surprising spotlight at various points in the movie. That said, Sokolov was dead set on making sure things didn’t get overly outlandish.

    “Every single person I talked [to] about this script, our first conversation was, ‘Please, just don’t make it camp. I hope it won’t be campy,’” said the filmmaker known for the 2021 Russian feature No Looking Back. “And I promised everyone it won’t be, and guys, you can judge.”

    That led Arquette to clarify, “I love camp,” spurring a burst of applause from the audience.

    Beetz praised the screenplay as one that she just could not put down. “Sometimes, it can take me a long time to get through something, but this one was just written with such humor and such pace,” she said. “I was laughing and just engaged the entire time.”

    For her part, Graham noted her appreciation that They Will Kill You allows its female characters to hold their own in the limb-detaching battles.

    “Actually, I want to shout out Kirill because usually there’s a bunch of guys in the movie, and there’s one female character,” the actress said. “You wrote a lot of great female characters in this movie, so thank you.”

  • Matthias Schoenaerts, Makita Samba, Marton Csokas Join Halle Berry in ‘Fleur’

    Matthias Schoenaerts, Makita Samba, Marton Csokas Join Halle Berry in ‘Fleur’

    Matthias Schoenaerts (Rust and Bone), Makita Samba (Paris, 13th District) and Marton Csokas (The Equalizer) have joined the cast of the Halle Berry drama Fleur.

    Berry stars in the feature from Our Father, the Devil director Ellie Foumbi, playing a New York housewife who flees her husband, and America, to reinvent herself in Paris a Fleur, an high-end escort and dominatrix. Csokas will play her husband.

    Fleur has begun shooting on location in Paris.

    Christine Vachon (Materialists, May December) is producing through her Killer Films banner, together with Berry and Holly Jeter for HalleHolly, and Gabriel Mayers of Plot Twist Pictures. Stuart Ford’s AGC Studios will finance and co-produce the feature.

    Victor Hadida’s Davis Films has acquired French rights and will distribute there through Metropolitan Filmexport.

    AGC’s Ford, Miguel Palos and Zach Garrett are executive producing together with Hadida, Killer Films’ Pam Koffler, and Lorelle Lynch. AGC International are handling international sales on the film, and co-repping U.S. rights with UTA Independent Film Group and WME Independent.

    Fombi’s feature debut Our Father, The Devil, was a breakout at the Tribeca film festival in 2022. The psychological thriller revolves around a woman living a quiet life in a small French town is is forced to confront past traumas.

    Belgian star Schoenaerts, last seen in the Netflix feature The Old Guard 2, is co-starring alongside Milly Alcock in Craig Gillespie’s Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow and in Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s French drama Violette. Csokas, known for playing baddies in The Equalizer (2014), The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014), and Sleeping Dogs (2024), will be seen next in Mel Gibson’s upcoming The Passion of the Christ sequel Resurrection. French actor Samba is best known for his starring roll in Jacques Audiard’s Paris, 13th District (2021), which earned him a César Award Nomination for Most Promising Actor. He recently starred in Alexe Poukine’s Kika (2025) which premiered in Cannes’ Critics’ Week sidebar last year.

    Matthias Schoenaerts is repped by Rosalie Cimino, CAA, Agence Adequat and Apex PR; Makita Samba is repped by Zelig; Marton Csokas is repped by Independent Talent Group, Sue Barnett and Associates, and Mosaic; and Anant Tamirisa negotiated on behalf of AGC Studios.

  • Dolores Huerta, sexual violence survivors speak out against Cesar Chavez

    Dolores Huerta, sexual violence survivors speak out against Cesar Chavez

    Content note: This story contains details of sexual violence. 

    Civil rights icon Dolores Huerta is one of several women in the United States speaking out against the sexual violence they say they endured at the hands of labour leader Cesar Chavez.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    In a statement on Wednesday, Huerta said she was motivated to speak out after being contacted for an investigation by The New York Times, which revealed that children as young as age 12 were abused by Chavez.

    “I am nearly 96 years old, and for the last 60 years have kept a secret because I believed that exposing the truth would hurt the farmworker movement I have spent my entire life fighting for,” Huerta wrote.

    “Following the New York Times’ multi-year investigation into sexual misconduct by Cesar Chavez, I can no longer stay silent and must share my own experiences.”

    Chavez, who died in 1993, co-founded the National Farm Workers Association alongside Huerta and other advocates. They rose to fame during the US civil rights movement of the 1960s, practising nonviolent protest techniques similar to those of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.

    Together, Chavez, Huerta and other advocates drew attention to the abuses facing vulnerable immigrant farmworkers, particularly in the Hispanic and Filipino American communities.

    Some of the slogans from the movement continue to have resonance in the US political sphere.

    The Spanish phrase “si, se puede” — or, in English, “yes, we can” — was adopted as the campaign slogan for President Barack Obama, while the Tagalog phrase “isang bagsak” continues to be a rallying cry for collective organising.

    The fight for equality and fair labour practices that Huerta and Chavez led would be remembered as one of the defining moments of the 1960s.

    But it was out of fear of denting the burgeoning civil rights movement that Huerta and other women say they stayed silent about Chavez’s abuse.

    “I carried this secret for as long as I did because building the movement and securing farmworker rights was my life’s work,” Huerta said in her statement.

    “I wasn’t going to let Cesar or anyone else get in the way. I channeled everything I had into advocating on behalf of millions of farmworkers and others who were suffering and deserved equal rights.”

    Huerta explained that the first time she had sex with Chavez, she was “manipulated and pressured” into submitting to his advances while on a trip to San Juan Capistrano.

    “I didn’t feel I could say no because he was someone that I admired, my boss and the leader of the movement I had already devoted years of my life to,” she said.

    The second time, she said she was “forced, against my will”. The New York Times investigation includes a summary of what Huerta says happened: She was in a car that Chavez was driving when he parked in an isolated grape field and raped her.

    Both instances resulted in pregnancies, which Huerta says she kept secret. The children were ultimately given to other families to raise.

    “I had experienced abuse and sexual violence before, and I convinced myself these were incidents that I had to endure alone and in secret,” she said.

    Her story was echoed by the accounts of other women featured in The New York Times investigation.

    One of the interviewees, Ana Murguia, said she was 13 when a 45-year-old Chavez kissed her, took off her clothes and tried to have sex with her in his locked office.

    He had known her since she was eight years old, and the abuse at his hands prompted her to attempt suicide.

    Debra Rojas, meanwhile, was 12 years old when Chavez began groping her. She described being 15 when she was raped by him at a motel near Stockton, California.

    A third woman, Esmeralda Lopez, said she was 19 when Chavez tried to pressure her to have sex with him while they were alone on a tour, offering to use his influence to get something named in her honour.

    Lopez said she refused his advances, and her mother, a fellow activist, corroborated her account, based on conversations they had at the time.

    The women explained that they grappled with whether to come forward and whether they would be believed, given Chavez’s rise to fame as a civil rights hero.

    In response to the widening scandal on Wednesday, United Farm Workers — the group that emerged from the National Farm Workers Association — announced it would not participate in any events on Cesar Chavez Day, a federal commemoration that falls on the late leader’s birthday.

    The group denied receiving any direct reports of abuse, but it pledged to create a pathway for reports to be submitted.

    “Over the coming weeks, in partnership with experts in these kinds of processes, we are working to establish an external, confidential, independent channel for those who may have experienced harm caused by Cesar Chavez,” United Farm Workers wrote in a statement.

    “These allegations have been profoundly shocking. We need some time to get this right, including to ensure robust, trauma-informed services are available to those who may need it.”

    Lawmakers across the political spectrum, from Texas Governor Greg Abbott to New Mexico Representative Ben Ray Lujan, also called for Chavez’s name to be stripped from public buildings, roads and other places of honour.

    Lujan called the revelations in Wednesday’s New York Times report “horrific” and a “betrayal of the values that Latino leaders have championed for generations”.

    “His name should be removed from landmarks, institutions, and honors,” Lujan said of Chavez. “We cannot celebrate someone who carried out such disturbing harm.”

    Huerta, meanwhile, said that, in the wake of the investigation, community advocacy was more important than ever.

    “I have kept this secret long enough,” she wrote. “My silence ends here.”

  • Pudgy Penguins Launched A New Game. Crypto Scammers Made A Fake Version

    Pudgy Penguins Launched A New Game. Crypto Scammers Made A Fake Version

    In brief

    • A fake site is impersonating the newly launched Pudgy World game.
    • The attack mimics real crypto wallet interfaces to steal passwords.
    • Phishing is a major cybercrime vector, with over 193,000 FBI complaints in 2024.

    A fake website impersonating Pudgy Penguins’ newly launched Pudgy World browser game is attempting to steal cryptocurrency wallet passwords, cybersecurity firm Malwarebytes Labs warned Tuesday.

    In a report, Malwarebytes said the phishing operation, pudgypengu-gamegifts[.]live, uses highly convincing replicas of crypto wallet interfaces to deceive users. “Some features are tied to digital collectibles and in-game items stored in cryptocurrency wallets. That means the official game sometimes asks players to connect a crypto wallet to verify ownership of items or unlock additional features,” Stefan Dasic, senior malware research engineer and report author said.

    “The phishing site abuses that step: When a visitor selects their wallet on this fake site, it shows what appears to be that wallet’s own unlock screen. To the user, it looks for all the world like the real crypto wallet software they already trust.”

    Phishing remains one of the most widespread forms of cybercrime. According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), phishing and spoofing scams accounted for 193,407 complaints in 2024, with reported losses exceeding $70 million. It is not known if anyone has fallen victim to this particular site.

    What is Pudgy World?

    The warning comes a week after the launch of Pudgy World, a free-to-play browser game tied to the Pudgy Penguins NFT brand. The game, which went live on March 10, allows players to explore a virtual world, customize penguin avatars and complete quests, with some features requiring users to connect cryptocurrency wallets.

    Pudgy Penguins has grown rapidly since being acquired by CEO Luca Netz in 2022, expanding from an NFT collection into a broader consumer brand with retail products, a mobile game and now a browser-based game. The collection has a floor price of 4.25 ETH ($9,500), according to CoinGecko, far below 88.3% its December 2024 high of 36.33 ETH.

    Dasic said the timing of the campaign appears deliberate, coinciding with the game’s launch and the influx of new users unfamiliar with crypto wallet security practices.

    “The range of wallets targeted is also significant. The campaign leaves almost no wallet blind spot,” he said. “Whether the victim holds Ethereum, Solana, or multi-chain assets, there is a convincing forgery waiting for them.”

    “Building 11 wallet-specific UI forgeries is not a trivial undertaking,” Dasic added, noting that it suggests either a “well-resourced threat actor” or the reuse of a commercial phishing kit built for this class of attack.

    Such tactics are common in crypto-related scams, where attackers register domains that closely resemble legitimate ones or manipulate search ads to appear authentic. For example, fraudsters may send out official-looking emails using a domain with “.qov” instead of “.gov” in the hopes people won’t notice the slight difference.

    Pudgy Penguins has previously been targeted by scammers using fake sites. In December 2024, blockchain security firm Scam Sniffer warned that attackers were using malicious Google ads to impersonate Pudgy Penguins platforms and trick users into connecting their wallets.

    Users are advised to access official sites only through trusted bookmarks, avoid clicking links from social media or direct messages, and remember that legitimate wallet password prompts do not appear inside webpage content. Malwarebytes also recommended changing wallet passwords immediately if credentials were entered on a suspicious site and considering moving funds to a new wallet if compromise is suspected.

    Pudgy Penguins has been approached for comment.

    Daily Debrief Newsletter

    Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.

  • Joko Anwar’s ‘Ghost in the Cell’ Racks Up Key Territory Sales Following Berlin Premiere (EXCLUSIVE)

    Joko Anwar’s ‘Ghost in the Cell’ Racks Up Key Territory Sales Following Berlin Premiere (EXCLUSIVE)

    Joko Anwar‘s horror comedy “Ghost in the Cell” has secured distribution across multiple key territories following its world premiere at the Berlin Film Festival, with Barunson E&A closing deals for Poland, the U.K., Ireland, France and Australasia.

    Media4fun picked up Poland for SVOD only, while Blue Finch Releasing acquired U.K., Ireland, Australia and New Zealand. Shadowz took France, Portugal and Portuguese-speaking Africa.

    Barunson E&A is in negotiations for additional multiple territories including Latin America, the company revealed at Hong Kong FilMart.

    The sales follow Barunson E&A’s previously announced deal with Plaion Pictures for German-speaking European rights, negotiated between Moritz Peters, director of acquisitions at Plaion Pictures, and Sylvie Kim, head of international business at Barunson E&A.

    The Indonesian prison thriller marks another collaboration between Barunson E&A and Plaion Pictures, following their partnership on Bong Joon-ho’s Oscar-winning “Parasite” and Kim Jee-woon’s Cannes title “Cobweb.”

    The film follows a quiet inmate arriving at a violent Indonesian prison with a supernatural entity that kills those with the darkest auras. As prisoners perform good deeds to survive, they realize unity offers their only chance against being eliminated one by one.

    Anwar has established himself internationally as a versatile filmmaker whose work spans comedy, thriller, horror and action. His films have premiered at Venice, Toronto, Sundance and Berlinale, with several becoming record-breaking hits domestically. He previously directed for HBO Asia and created the Netflix series “Joko Anwar’s Nightmares and Daydreams,” which entered the U.S. Top 10.

    “Ghost in the Cell” is produced by Come and See Pictures, Rapi Films, Barunson E&A and Legacy Pictures. Tia Hasibuan produces alongside Anwar, who also serves as executive producer with Hasibuan, Gope T. Samtani, Sunil G. Samtani, Sunar S. Samtani, Yoonhee Choi, Kim, Lisbeth Simarmata and Mina Hwang.

    The Indonesian theatrical release is scheduled for April.

  • Anthony Chen-Produced Malaysian Drama Explores Identity Through Tiger Mascot

    Anthony Chen-Produced Malaysian Drama Explores Identity Through Tiger Mascot

    Tan Ce Ding’s debut feature “Somewhere in the South” follows protagonist Boon, a restless young man in a forgotten Malaysian town who gets roped into wearing a political party’s tiger mascot suit during a sudden by-election, only to discover he’s losing himself inside.

    The film, produced by Cannes Camera d’Or winner Anthony Chen alongside Edward Lim and Yap Khai Soon through Giraffe Pictures, is one of 17 in-development projects selected for the 24th Hong Kong-Asia Film Financing Forum (HAF).

    The drama-suspense hybrid, filmed in Mandarin, Malaysian Cantonese, English and Malay, marks Chen’s latest producing venture following Berlinale title “We Are All Strangers,” which he also directed. Tan directed short “Please Hold the Line,” which premiered at Venice in 2022.

    “I’ve long admired Tan Ce Ding’s bold short films,” Chen said. “CD, as we fondly call him, is exactly the kind of exciting new voice we are seeing rise in Malaysian cinema. Our project at HAF, with its remarkable honesty and ambition, captures the growing confidence and urgency of this movement.”

    Chen noted that the collaboration has been a long time in the making. “Over the years, CD, Edward and I have bounced around ideas for his first feature. Singapore and Malaysia are close neighbors, and I’ve wanted to work on a Malaysian film for the longest time — so this feels like the perfect place to start. This one is special and I look forward to working with him to elevate ‘Somewhere in the South’ for the international stage.”

    Tan explained his affinity with the subject matter. “I’ve always been interested in people who exist on the margins of a system. In many declining small towns, young people grow up surrounded by a very clear reality: If you want a better life, you have to leave. But not everyone can leave, and many end up staying behind.”

    The director said the concept of a by-election provided a compelling framework. “When a by-election takes place in a small town, media, politicians and resources suddenly flood in, briefly turning a place that was once forgotten into the national spotlight. In many ways, it can even become a kind of absurd political spectacle.”

    He added: “I became curious about what that moment does to the people who have always lived there. For someone who has spent most of his life feeling insignificant, that sudden attention can easily create the illusion that his fate might finally be changing. That question eventually became the starting point of this film.”

    Tan described the narrative as exploring identity and belonging. “The protagonist, Boon, is an ordinary young man in a small town. But when he is asked to wear the campaign’s tiger mascot suit, he experiences something he has never felt before. For the first time, he feels needed. He feels noticed. The role gives him a new identity, and with it, a sense of purpose and power.

    “As the story unfolds, he slowly realizes that the system doesn’t really care about who he is. What it needs is simply the role itself. As long as someone is inside the suit, the system can continue to function,” the director said. “The feeling of finally being seen can be powerful, but it can also be fragile. The more he tries to hold on to that role, the further he drifts from his real self. In the end, he believes he has become the tiger, only to discover that he is merely the skin.”

    Producer Lim outlined the project’s international ambitions. “In today’s landscape, films can no longer depend on funding or distribution from a single market. By participating in HAF, we hope to bring the project to an international stage, meet new friends and collaborators, and explore meaningful partnerships. We believe the film has strong potential to incorporate international elements and connect with audiences beyond our region.”

    The project is seeking funds at the forum, where filmmakers will have opportunities for one-on-one meetings with investors, festival organizers and industry professionals.