Tag: Entertainment-Variety

  • Drew Goddard on Adapting ‘Project Hail Mary,’ Directing ‘The Matrix 5’ and How His ‘Spider-Man’ Movie Got Caught Up in the Sony Hack

    Drew Goddard on Adapting ‘Project Hail Mary,’ Directing ‘The Matrix 5’ and How His ‘Spider-Man’ Movie Got Caught Up in the Sony Hack

    The last time Drew Goddard adapted one of Andy Weir’s books, it earned him an Oscar nomination. Plus, “The Martian,” the film that Goddard wrote, was a blockbuster hit. But when he got the call to handle screenplay duties on “Project Hail Mary,” Weir’s bestselling story of a science teacher on a mission to save humanity with the help of a crab-like alien, he hesitated.

    “‘The Martian’ was such a magical experience, but there’s something about going back to the well,” Goddard said. “You worry you’re just trying to do an imitation of a previous movie. But then I read the book and loved it. It was much more challenging to adapt, because the scope was much bigger. And it’s got this deep, emotional story about a human and an alien that I couldn’t resist.”

    Goddard is in a Manhattan hotel room, three days removed from the world premiere of “Project Hail Mary.” The $200 million science-fiction epic stars Ryan Gosling and was directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the team behind “21 Jump Street” and the “Spider-Verse” animated franchise. Critics have widely embraced the space epic, praising its humor and heart, and the film is expected to dominate the box office this weekend. But Goddard, one of Hollywood’s most in-demand filmmakers and writers, won’t be checking the grosses.

    “I’ve been working on this film for six years — we had COVID and the strikes — so it took a really long time,” Goddard says. “It’s enjoyable to have people finally discovering it, but looking at the box office results is like checking out your old graduation photos. It seems so long ago. I’m just grateful that we got to make it.”

    Goddard has plenty of other things keeping him busy. “High Potential,” a crime series he created for ABC, recently got picked up for a third season, and he’s executive producing Netflix’s “Pagans,” a supernatural drama from “Say Nothing” creator Joshua Zetumer. Then he’s entering “The Matrix” and taking over writing and directing duties from the Wachowskis on a reboot of the iconic sci-fi series.

    Why were you drawn to “Project Hail Mary”?

    Andy really wanted to do something different with this alien. He doesn’t speak our language. He doesn’t even have a face. He doesn’t have expressive features. He can’t exist in the same atmosphere. That sounds good when you read it, but then you go, how are we going to dramatize this? It scared me to death, and that’s where I like to live.

    Beyond creating a believable alien character, what other challenges did you face in adapting “Project Hail Mary”?

    So much of the story takes place from the protagonist’s point of view and Ryan’s character doesn’t know what’s happening initially. He’s trying to figure out why he’s in space. And for half of the movie, he doesn’t have anyone to talk to. So how do you make that work for a movie? Let’s be honest, most scenes in movies are people talking. Ryan really wanted to be true to what the character was going through. In early drafts, I used some of my old crutches from “The Martian,” where Matt Damon is talking to camera, because scientists document their work. But Ryan rightfully pointed out that his character is a high school teacher who finds himself in space. He’s not going to take the time to document everything. He’s just trying to survive. As soon as he said it, I knew he was right.

    This is based on a preexisting text, but were there movies you looked to for inspiration?

    It was all rooted in Andy. When I look back, however, I see James Cameron’s influence on structure. He from my point of view, for big event movies, there’s nobody better at structure. If you look at something like “Titanic,” we meet two kids, they fall in love, we root for them, the ship hits the iceberg, right? If you look at “The Abyss,” there’s a couple trying to put their marriage back together when the encounter this fantastic thing. Both these movies are about two individuals dealing with these big emotional things in the middle of wildly complicated situations.

    That’s interesting because I feel like James Cameron’s writing gets knocked a lot.

    It does, but unfairly. If you look at “The Terminator,” it’s a profoundly emotional film. It’s not just about a robot who shows up to kill people. It’s about this woman and how she deals with this chaos.

    How did Christopher Miller and Phil Lord’s approach differ from “The Martian” director Ridley Scott’s?

    They couldn’t be more different. Ridley is very formal in his approach. He storyboards himself, so he knows every shot of the movie six weeks out. Phil and Chris come from animation, which is more of an iterative process where they’re constantly trying and trying things. Neither approach is wrong. You just have to do what’s right for the movie. In “Project Hail Mary” the main character is a fish out of water. You need it to feel rough around the edges, even a little sloppy. We don’t want to feel like he’s a perfect astronaut. And then there’s the character of Rocky. I don’t know anyone else who could have realized the logistics of making that rock crab come to life. In their animation, Phil and Chris thrive in finding the humanity inside of these crazy characters. That’s what this film required.

    Do Phil and Chris encourage a lot of improvisation?

    Oh yeah. They are improvisation masters, and I’ve never seen anyone better at it than Ryan.

    This project was greenlit before MGM was sold to Amazon. Were you worried that it might not survive the merger?

    Absolutely. The sad truth is that over the course of my career, I’ve had projects at studios that have been bought by other studios so many times. Often they don’t get made. But Amazon loved what we were doing.

    What are some of the films that got scrapped that you’ve worked on?

    I had a big Spider-Man movie about the Sinister Six go down because of the Sony hack. My office was right on the lot, and I saw the FBI swarm in and the helicopters fly over the studio. I was sad about it, but there was literally nothing I could do to change the course of events. I suppose it was better than if they hadn’t liked the script.

    You’ve been tapped to write and direct “The Matrix 5.” What’s your take on it?

    I can’t say too much, because we’re still in the stage of writing it. I need to give myself space to find the best story. I think the approach will be the way I approach anything, which is, do I love it? And I love what Lana and Lilly Wachowski did with those movies. They mean so much to me and I feel like they’ve had a profound impact on my creative voice. I take this responsibility very seriously. I feel the weight of wanting to do right by the fans, wanting to do right by the creators and wanting to do right for myself as a fan.

    Will Keanu Reeves and the original cast return?

    I can’t speak to that.

    Why do you think the fourth “Matrix” didn’t resonate as strongly at the box office?

    I don’t know. It certainly resonated with me. When I watched the movie, I was deeply moved. It may be the most emotional of the of the four. I know it got caught up in the COVID times and it was when Warner Bros. was putting everything on streaming.

    What’s your writing process?

    I’ve sort of honed a very chaotic process, which came from my TV training, because we would have to generate 60 pages in eight days over and over. The way you would do it is you focus really intently on the story. I’m not a person that wants to do 18 drafts to find the story. I’ll do 50 drafts of outlines, then when it’s time to write, I put all that away and handwrite every script. That goes back to college where a writing teacher said, “If you work on your computer, try handwriting, because unleashing your creativity is about tricking your brain to think you’re not working.” I took that to heart. I sit outside when I write. I try to make it feel playful.

    What’s a movie that you’ve seen recently and really admired for its writing?

    There’s so many, but I’d have to say “Weapons.” Zach Cregger’s script is extraordinary. There was a point in “Weapons,” like an hour in, where I realized I couldn’t even blink because I was afraid to look away from the screen. I didn’t know what was about to happen. It was thrilling. And I felt the same way about “Sinners” and “Sentimental Value.”

    When Obama recently said there were aliens, did you think what great marketing for “Project Hail Mary”?

    I probably should have, but I didn’t. I grew up in New Mexico, so I’m well versed in alien lore. Mostly, I was excited about him mentioning it because I thought it might mean we’re gonna get new information. Andy Weir takes this seriously. He comes from a reality-based approach to science fiction. He’s thinking, if a first contact situation were to happen, what would it look like? This is his answer.

  • Leyla Bouzid’s ‘In a Whisper’ Wins Best Emerging Filmmaker at Rendez-Vous With French Cinema Showcase in New York

    Leyla Bouzid’s ‘In a Whisper’ Wins Best Emerging Filmmaker at Rendez-Vous With French Cinema Showcase in New York

    Leyla Bouzid’s “In a Whisper” and Cédric Klapisch’s “Colors of Time” were the top winners at the 31st edition of Unifrance and Film at Lincoln Center’s Rendez-Vous With French Cinema.

    “In a Whisper,” which premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival, took the Best Emerging Filmmaker Award at the New York showcase. Bouzid’s third film, following “A Tale of Love and Desire” and “As I Open My Eyes,” “In a Whisper” stars Eya Bouteraa (“Red Path”) as Lilia, a woman who returns to Tunisia for her uncle’s funeral and uncovers revelations about his life that echo secrets within her own family. Bouteraa stars opposite Hiam Abbass in the drama. Strand Releasing acquired it for U.S. distribution in Berlin.

    The award was decided by a six-member student jury composed of New York City college students selected by partner universities. The jury praised the film’s cinematography, “noting how it elevates every aspect of the work and contributes to a seamless blend of emotion, storytelling and visual artistry.”

    Cédric Klapisch’s “Colors of Time,” meanwhile, won the Audience Award. The Studiocanal movie, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, unfolds between Normandy and Paris and follows four distant cousins who reunite at a family home and retrace the journey of a 19th-century ancestor. The ensemble-driven narrative explores themes of family legacy and generational ties with a cast led by Suzanne Lindon, Abraham Wapler, Vincent Macaigne and Julia Piaton.

    This year’s edition saw an uptick in participation as ticket sales climbed 23% compared with 2025, with 10,500 tickets issued across the event. Featuring 10 films directed by women and seven helmed by first- or second-time filmmakers, the event also welcomed 897 students to free screenings and hosted talks attended by more than 50 participants.

    The Rendez-Vous kicked off on March 5 with the New York premiere of François Ozon’s adaptation of Albert Camus’ novel “The Stranger” and wrapped with Julia Ducournau’s “Alpha.”

    Other films that premiered at the showcase include Pauline Loquès’ “Nino;” Olivier Assayas’s Venice-premiering political drama “The Wizard of the Kremlin,” starring Jude Law as a fictionalized Vladimir Putin opposite Paul Dano; Dominik Moll’s procedural “Case 137,” set during the Yellow Vests protests and starring Léa Drucker; Valérie Donzelli’s “At Work”; Arnaud Desplechin’s melodrama “Two Pianos”; Stéphane Demoustier’s historical epic “The Great Arch,” Hafsia Herzi’s coming-of-age drama “The Little Sister;” and Jean-Paul Salomé’s “L’Affaire Bojarski,” among others.

    Some of the highlights included a masterclass hosted by Assayas discussing “The Wizard of the Kremlin” at Columbia University; as well as a Q&A with Assayas after a screening of his 2002 film “Demonlover.” Industry events also included a panel that brought together producers Julie Billy (‘The Little Sister’), Leah Chen Baker (‘The President’s Cake’) and Stephanie Roush (‘Union County’).

  • ‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ Censored in India Amid Fears Theatrical Release ‘Would Break Up the India-Israel Relationship’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    ‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ Censored in India Amid Fears Theatrical Release ‘Would Break Up the India-Israel Relationship’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    The Indian theatrical release of Kaouther Ben Hania’s Oscar-nominated feature “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” which was planned for this month, is being blocked by the country’s Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) for political reasons, according to the film’s local distributor.

    “The Voice of Hind Rajab” — which tells the story of a real 5-year-old Palestinian girl who was trapped inside a car attacked by Israeli forces in Gaza and later found dead — is being censored by the CBFC because “the film is very sensitive,” distributor Manoj Nandwana, who heads Mumbai-based Jai Viratra Entertainment, tells Variety.

    Nadawana said he screened “The Voice of Hind Rajab” for the CBFC in February, when he submitted the film for censorship approval, and was planning a March 6 Indian release “because we thought it was a good date ahead of the March 16 Oscars.” Instead, the film has not been cleared for release and he was told by a CBFC member that “if it gets released it would break up the India-Israel relationship,” Nadawana said.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi traveled to Israel in late February, where he received a warm welcome, marking the first visit by an Indian premier in the 25 years since the two countries established full diplomatic relations. The visit, which aimed to strengthen economic and technological ties between the two countries, underscored a shift in Israel-India relations under Modi, whose embrace of Israel marks a departure from India’s foreign policy that has historically supported the Palestinians.

    “I told them: the India-Israel relationship is so strong that it’s idiotic to think this movie will break it,” Nadawana added, further noting that “The Voice of Hind Rajab” has been released “in the U.S., U.K., Italy, France and many other countries that have a relationship with Israel.”

    “But they want to censor it anyway,” the distributor said.

    The CBFC did not respond to a request for comment from Variety.

    In September, “The Voice of Hind Rajab” elicited more than 20 minutes of thunderous applause when it world premiered at the Venice Film Festival and then went on to win the fest’s Silver Lion. The film has been released in the U.S. by Willa, the production partner’s distribution arm, after other U.S. distributors passed.

    This is not the first recent instance of India’s CBFC blocking a release when they deem a film to be politically sensitive. Last year, they halted the release of Indian director Sandya Suri’s Oscar-shortlisted “Santosh” despite the fact that the police procedural — which is set in a fictitious northern Indian state and has Indian caste and religion politics deeply baked into it — had previously secured script approval to shoot in India and tapped into Indian government production incentives.

  • ‘What Happens at Night’ First Look: Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawerence Reunite in Martin Scorsese’s Marriage Horror Story

    ‘What Happens at Night’ First Look: Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawerence Reunite in Martin Scorsese’s Marriage Horror Story

    Anyone wondering why Leonardo DiCaprio was sporting a mustache at the 2026 Oscars has their answer courtesy of the first look at Martin Scorsese‘s “What Happens at Night,” a haunted marriage drama that is likely to have the Oscar-winning filmmaker back in “Shutter Island” psychological horror mode. DiCaprio headlines the film in a reunion with his “Don’t Look Up” co-star Jennifer Lawrence.

    DiCaprio and Scorsese jointly shared a first-look photo from “What Happens at Night” on social media. The image shows DiCaprio and Lawrence’s married couple walking hand in hand amid a chilling wintery landscape. Production on the film is now underway. The supporting cast includes Mads Mikkelsen, Patricia Clarkson and Jared Harris.

    “What Happens at Night” is adapted from the novel of the same name by Peter Cameron. The story centers on a married American couple who travel to a European small town to adopt a baby. Per a book synopsis: “Nothing is as it seems in this baffling, frozen world, and the more the couple struggles to claim their baby, the less they seem to know about their marriage, themselves and life itself.”

    While DiCaprio has a storied career being directed by Scorsese in movies such as “The Aviator,” “Gangs of New York,” “The World of Wall Street,” “Shutter Island” and more, this new movie will mark the first time Jennifer Lawrence is directed by the “Taxi Driver” and “Goodfellas” icon. During a conversation for Variety‘s “Actors on Actors,” Lawrence asked DiCaprio what she should know about Scorsese as a director.

    “It’s a great thing, and he’s going to give you a lot of film references,” DiCaprio told her. “They usually come in the form of a DVD. And if you don’t have a DVD player, get one… he’ll have screenings sometimes for just one sequence in a movie. If there’s something that he wants you to capture from an old film or the pacing of something, you might have a screening of a whole film just for a specific scene that he wants to see. We might see some Japanese ghost films for reference, just to get the tone of it. You’re going to have an amazing time.”

    Apple is backing “What Happens at Night,” just as it did Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.” No release date has been set yet.

  • ‘Stranger Things: The Complete Series’ to Release on Blu-Ray and 4K UHD in July

    ‘Stranger Things: The Complete Series’ to Release on Blu-Ray and 4K UHD in July

    Stranger Things” fans will soon be able to return to Hawkins through a whole new medium. Arrow Films and Netflix have teamed up to release “Stranger Things: The Complete Series” for Blu-Ray and 4K UHD, available for pre-order now.

    Releasing on July 27 in the UK and July 28 in the U.S. and Canada, the box-set will include all episodes of the Netflix hit’s five seasons. The compilation will be available at all major in-store and online retailers.

    Special and deluxe editions of “Stranger Things: The Complete Series” will also be available for purchase, featuring exclusive bonus content such as bloopers, interviews with the cast and crew and a look behind-the-scenes. The deluxe edition will also feature newly commissioned artwork, alongside a 148-page artbook, exclusive art cards, a Hellfire Club patch and dice, double-sided posters for each season and more “Stranger Things” specific tokens.

    Created by the Duffer Brothers, “Stranger Things” follows a young boy’s disappearance and his friends’ determination to uncover what happened to him, encountering secret experiments, supernatural forces and a girl with mysterious telekinesis powers.

    The show’s fifth and final season premiered in November 2025, with an average of 32.86 million viewers, becoming Netflix’s sixth-most popular English-language series of all time.

    Dean Lawson, Arrow Films’ Director of Sales and Marketing, said: “Working with the Netflix team and the Duffer Brothers to bring the definitive physical media release of ‘Stranger Things’ to fans has been a phenomenal project for Arrow to be a part of. The show is colossal in influence and scale, is beloved globally, has transcended generations, and has been a huge part of the cultural conversation for nearly 10 years now. We at Arrow are thrilled to play a part in bringing this landmark show to physical media and believe we’ve created a box set that fans will be delighted to own, packed with bonus features, curios, and memorabilia from the world of ‘Stranger Things.’”

    Fans can pre-order “Stranger Things: The Complete Series” on the Arrow Video website.

    Special and Deluxe Edition prices are as follows:

    Deluxe UHD Edition: $269.99 / £219.99

    Deluxe Blu-ray™ Edition: $249.99 / £199.99

    Special UHD Edition: $219.99 /£159.99

    Special Blu-ray™ Edition: $199.99 / £149.99

  • Yariv Mozer Doc ‘Blood Brothers,’ About Rival Iranian and Israeli Olympians, in the Works at Sipur Studios, Fox Entertainment Studios and Fulwell

    Yariv Mozer Doc ‘Blood Brothers,’ About Rival Iranian and Israeli Olympians, in the Works at Sipur Studios, Fox Entertainment Studios and Fulwell

    Sipur (“Bad Boy”), Fox Entertainment Studios and Bitachon365, a Fulwell Entertainment company (“The Kardashians”) are set to co-produce “Blood Brothers,” a new feature documentary from Emmy-winning filmmaker Yariv Mozer, the director of the Oct. 7 Nova music festival doc “We Will Dance Again.”

    Described as a gripping documentary, “Blood Brothers” tells the extraordinary story of Iranian judoka Saeid Mollaei and Israeli rival Sagi Muki – both Olympic medalists and world champions — whose relationship unfolds against what the filmmakers describe as a climactic chapter of a 47-year war between their nations.

    Mollaei made global headlines after defying pressure from Iranian authorities to avoid competing against Israeli athletes, an act punishable by death under the regime of Iran’s Supreme Ayatollahs, ultimately risking everything to face Muki on the world stage..

    The project was developed by Mozer and executive produced by Steve Stark (“The Handmaid’s Tale,” “Wednesday”), alongside commissioning Israeli broadcaster Reshet 13.

    “‘Blood Brothers’ originated from an extraordinary friendship between two courageous athletes who dared to break through walls of fear, ideology and hatred in a reality where regimes and borders try to dictate who is an enemy and who is a friend,” said Sipur Studios CEO Emilio Schenker. “Especially now, as tensions between Israel, the U.S. and Iran reach a peak, the friendship between Saeid and Sagi reminds us of the power of an individual to stand bravely against a regime, even at the risk of his life, and his power to create light and hope amid chaos.”

    Mollaei said, “My birthplace, my personal story, the history of my country and the education I received all seemed to dictate a different destiny. I was expected to follow a certain path. Yet I chose to step out of line, because above all I am an athlete, a free man guided by deep human values, a man who could not accept a road imposed upon him.”

    “In judo we say that friendship is the purest of human feelings. Beyond sporting rivalry, Sagi and I are building something that many once believed impossible and that is more important than ever now amid what is currently happening,” Mollaei continued.

    Muki added, “We have formed a bond of true brotherhood — we value each other first as human beings, and only then as world champions. Today, as we lecture together on global stages, I am proud that ‘Blood Brothers’ will share our message of unity and acceptance.”

    “In a time of war,” Muki said, “our story shows that sports can bridge divides between communities and nations, and that the ultimate victory is not a medal, but the choice to embrace brotherhood and humanity.”

    “Blood Brothers” marks the latest collaboration between Sipur, Mozer and Stark, whose documentary work also includes “The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes.” The studio recently entered a first-look deal with Mozer for documentaries and his first scripted project.

  • Taylor Swift Set to Appear on iHeartRadio Music Awards Show

    Taylor Swift Set to Appear on iHeartRadio Music Awards Show

    Taylor Swift will make an in-person appearance on the 2026 iHeartRadio Music Awards program, iHeartMedia and host network Fox announced Wednesday.

    Although she will not be taking part in a performing capacity, any live participation by the world’s biggest music star is a noteworthy catch for the broadcast, given that Swift has been laying low on public appearances since promoting a pair of Disney+ specials in early December. (She didn’t turn up at this year’s Grammys, although she had no official reason to, since her latest work post-dated that show’s eligibility period.)

    The awards show will be broadcast on Fox from the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood March 26 , airing live 8-10 p.m. ET, and running tape-delayed in the same time slot on the west coast. It’ll also go out live on iHeartRadio stations and on the iHeartRadio app. 

    At the iHeartRadio Music Awards, Swift has a leading nine nominations, mostly for her “The Fate of Ophelia” single but also her “The Eras Tour | The End of an Era” streaming special. These include artist of the year, song of the year, pop song of the year, favorite TikTok dance, best lyrics, best music video, favorite on screen and favorite tour style.

    Any participation by Swift in an awards program falls into the perennial “they need her more than she needs them” category. Nonetheless, Swift does have a topical reason to partner with iHeart at the moment: the fresh release of “Elizabeth Taylor” as the third single from her smash “The Life of a Showgirl” album. The song went out for radio adds earlier this month and made its debut on Billboard’s pop airplay charts this week.

    Following the No. 1 success of “Opalite” and “The Fate of Ophelia,” the release of “Elizabeth Taylor” to radio marks the first time Swift has officially released three singles from an album since she did the same with 2022’s “Midnights” project. “Elizabeth Taylor” previously peaked at No. 3 on the Hot 100 the week “Showgirl” came out, based solely on streaming.

    As previously announced, Ludacris will host this year’s show as well as receive the 2026 iHeartRadio Landmark Award. Other special honors include Miley Cyrus getting the iHeartRadio Innovator Award, Alex Warren receiving the iHeartRadio Breakthrough Artist of the Year Award, and John Mellencamp picking up the iHeartRadio Icon Award.

    Performers announced thus far for the show are Ludacris, Warren, Mellencamp, Lainey Wilson, Raye and the first-time teaming of TLC, Salt-N-Pepa and En Vogue. 

    Other personalities booked to make an appearance on the show include Olympic skater Alysa Liu, Sombr, Nicole Scherzinger of the newly semi-reformed Pussycat Dolls, Ne-Yo, Nikki Glaser and Weezer.

    Executive producers for the show are Jesse Collins, Dionne Harmon and Jeannaé Rouzan-Clay for Jesse Collins Entertainment, John Sykes, Tom Poleman and Bart Peters for iHeartMedia, and Fox Entertainment Studios. 

  • The Open Reel Swoops on Málaga WIP Winner ‘Little Tragedies’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    The Open Reel Swoops on Málaga WIP Winner ‘Little Tragedies’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Italy’s The Open Reel has picked up international sales rights to Daniel Nolasco’s Brazilian hybrid feature “Little Tragedies” (“Pequenas tragédias”), winner last week of the Malaga Festival’s WIP Ibero-América Award.

    The film collected a €5,000 ($5,752) cash prize at MAFIZ, Málaga’s industry hub, during the festival’s 29th edition, held March 6-15. Written and directed by Nolasco, “Pequenas tragédias” draws on an overtly personal premise to explore memory, distance and queer belonging.

    Set in 2011, the film begins when Nolasco leaves his small hometown of Catalão, in Brazil’s interior, for Rio de Janeiro to attend college. He is the first of a group of queer friends to leave. 10 years later, none of them remain there: some have died, while the others have moved away.

    The film unfolds as a personal story of memory, loss and belonging set in Catalão, a place everyone says is “too good to live in,” hinting at the tensions beneath the surface.

    Produced by Cecília Brito and Nolasco for Brazil’s Rensga Produções, with Brito also serving as executive producer, the feature arrived to Málaga at post-production stage, with the team finishing sound and seeking partners to complete color correction and image compositing. For The Open Reel, the pickup is in line with the Italian sales company’s focus on indie auteur cinema and its continued work with emerging and established filmmakers on the international festival circuit.

    “We have worked with Daniel Nolasco since his debut and know his filmography very well,” Open Reel CEO Cosimo Santoro told Variety, describing “Little Tragedies” as a film that weaves autobiographical elements with subtle irony and restraint.

    “The film also confirms Nolasco’s skill behind the camera and his mastery in working with actors, qualities already evident in his earlier features ‘Dry Wind’ and ‘Only Good Things,’ and which make him one of the most compelling voices in contemporary cinema,” he added.

    “The themes explored in this deeply personal film, together with the fascinating and erotic imagery through which they are expressed, give us every reason to believe it can post strong sales results, as happened with his previous work, in key territories across Europe, North America and Asia.”

    Nolasco broke out internationally with “Dry Wind,” which premiered in Berlin’s Panorama in 2020, following a run of shorts and nonfiction work. His more recent credits include the short “Pedro Had a Horse” and the 2025 feature “Only Good Things,” which played the Frameline San Francisco Intl. LGBTQ Film Festival.

    Behind the camera, Nolasco is joined by cinematographer Felipe Quintelas, who previously collaborated with him on “Dry Wind.”

  • 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.”