| | What's news: Everything Everywhere All at Once completes its sweep of the guild awards' top prizes. Seth Rogen reveals the big-name Ninja Turtles cast. Rachael Ray will sign off after 17 seasons. Robert De Niro is among those paying tribute to Tom Sizemore. — Ryan Gajewski |
🏆 Spirit Awards 2023 🏆 ►Everything Everywhere cleans up. At the 38th annual Film Independent Spirit Awards on Saturday, Everything Everywhere All at Once nabbed a whopping seven awards, including best feature. Among those winning for the film were performers Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Stephanie Hsu. On the TV side, The Bear and Abbott Elementary notched key wins. The winners. —Tár nearly goes home empty-handed. Everything Everywhere's dominance meant that numerous films up for multiple awards were shut out — including three-time nominee Bones and All, starring Timothée Chalamet — while Tár won just one of the seven prizes for which it was nominated. The biggest snubs. —Everything the cameras missed. From hot dog fingers to a chance meeting between Mia Goth and Sharon Horgan, THR's Chris Gardner and Kirsten Chuba recap all the memorable moments that the telecast's cameras didn't catch. The story. |
🏆 Round-Up of the Weekend's Other Awards 🏆 ►WGA Awards. The winners at the 2023 Writers Guild Awards included Everything Everywhere All at Once prevailing for original screenplay and completing a historic sweep of the top prizes at the guild awards. Also triumphant were Women Talking, The Bear, Severance, The White Lotus, Better Call Saul and Hacks. The winners. —ACE Eddie Awards. American Cinema Editors named Top Gun: Maverick as the best edited dramatic feature, while Everything Everywhere All at Once was honored in the comedy category. The winners. —Cinema Audio Society Awards. The teams from Top Gun: Maverick, Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio and Moonage Daydream were among those to collect awards for sound mixing. The winners. —Guild of Music Supervisors Awards. Prize recipients included Elvis, Stranger Things and the Oscar-nominated original song "This Is a Life" from Everything Everywhere all at Once. The winners. —USC Scripter Awards. Women Talking and Slow Horses won the top honors. The winners. —Kids' Choice Awards. Wednesday and Sonic the Hedgehog 2 were big winners at Nickelodeon's annual slime-filled ceremony. The winners. |
'Creed III' Wins Title With Historic Opening ►A box office champ. THR's Pamela McClintock reports that Michael B. Jordan's Creed III opened to a better-than-expected $58.6 million domestically in a big win for MGM. Jordan marks his feature directorial debut and also returns in the role of Adonis Creed, a character first introduced in Ryan Coogler's 2015 film Creed, which revived the legendary Rocky franchise. The threequel not only scored a series-best debut, but boasts the biggest sports film opening in history, according to MGM. The box office report. —Known for Heat, Natural Born Killers and Black Hawk Down. Tom Sizemore, who faced legal troubles and drug addiction amid a career that saw him star as Sgt. Mike Horvath in Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan and portray cops, crooks and psychopaths with the best of them, died Friday. Robert De Niro was among those paying tribute to Sizemore, who was 61. The obituary. —"Designed to further incentivize Company employees." Warner Bros. Discovery is shifting its corporate focus to generating free cash flow and reducing its debt load, and it wants its top executives on the same page. The company said it will be tweaking its compensation packages for key execs, offering bonuses in the form of performance stock units based on their success in generating cash and helping the company reduce its leverage. The story. —Turtle power. Seth Rogen, who is producing a CG-animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles feature, unveiled his star-studded voice cast at the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards. Among the big names taking part in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, set for release this summer, are Paul Rudd, Ice Cube, John Cena and Ayo Edebiri, with Jackie Chan as wise rat mentor Splinter. The story. |
TV Review: 'Chris Rock: Selective Outrage' ►"This was live, but it felt canned." THR's chief TV critic Daniel Fienberg reviews Netflix's first live comedy special, Chris Rock: Selective Outrage. The comic addressed Will Smith and wokeness in the hour-long program, which included both a pre-show and post-show. The review. —"I'm not a victim, baby." Chris Rock's Selective Outrage special covered a variety of topics — from Meghan Markle to Elon Musk to abortion — but the part everyone was presumably waiting for was his take on the 2022 Oscars slap. Rock did not hold back and had plenty to say about Will Smith and his wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. The recap. —"A rewarding, but undeniably tough, little show." Daniel also reviews HBO's new half-hour dramedy Rain Dogs. Series creator Cash Carraway's series follows a single mother (Daisy May Cooper), her daughter (Fleur Tashjian) and their mismatched friends on a search for a home and family. The review. |
| Adam Demos Talks 'Sex/Life' Season 2 ►"It was a wild ride." THR's Christy Piña interviews Adam Demos about the return of Netflix's steamy Sex/Life. The actor discusses working alongside his real-life partner Sarah Shahi, the viral reaction to his role and what comes next for the series' key characters. The interview. —"I just started bawling." THR's Brian Davids spoke with two-time Emmy nominee Rhea Seehorn, known for her role as Kim Wexler on AMC's Better Call Saul. Seehorn chats about starring opposite Jim Gaffigan in director Colin West's new film Linoleum and her emotional reaction to reuniting with Saul co-creator Vince Gilligan on an upcoming Apple TV+ series. The interview. —"I really do feel invited to be a co-author of Bianca." Brian also talks with Tessa Thompson about returning to play Bianca opposite Michael B. Jordan's Adonis "Donnie" Creed in Creed III. Among the topics covered are the one word she refused to say in the new film, Sylvester Stallone's absence and the future of the franchise. The interview. |
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Oscar Projections as Final Voting Gets Underway ►Down to the wire! THR awards expert Scott Feinberg updates his assessment of all 23 categories for the 2023 Academy Awards as the March 12 ceremony nears. The latest forecast. —"It just goes to show how great preparation is." For THR's Awards Chatter podcast, Scott interviews Elvis star Austin Butler in front of students at Chapman University. Butler recalls breaking into the business as a pre-teen and then stepping away from it after the death of his mother, working with both Denzel Washington and Quentin Tarantino, and the years of ups, downs and tireless work that went into his Oscar-nominated portrayal of Elvis Presley. The podcast. —"Hang on to whatever it is that really got you excited." Scott also sits down with Brendan Fraser at Chapman University for the Awards Chatter podcast. The star of 1990s films like Airheads and The Mummy reflects on his path to acting, why he receded from the spotlight for several years and what went into his Oscar-nominated comeback performance for The Whale. The podcast. —"I am really excited to be in the company of such incredible people." And one more: Scott conducts an Awards Chatter conversation with activist Malala Yousafzai, executive producer of the Oscar-nominated documentary short Stranger at the Gate. Yousafzai reveals that she'll be attending the Academy Awards and discusses what she hopes to achieve with an increased presence in Hollywood. The podcast. —"It was a massive dance we did." For a new episode of THR's Behind the Screen podcast, Carolyn Giardina interviews veteran rerecording mixer Andy Nelson, who received his 23rd and 24th Academy Award nominations this season for Elvis and The Batman. Nelson describes Baz Luhrmann as a "creative tornado" and also reflects on working with Matt Reeves and Steven Spielberg. The podcast. In other news... —Rachael Ray daytime talk show to end after 17 seasons —Daisy Jones & the Six showrunner on song switches, fake/real concerts and shutting down the Sunset Strip —Donald Glover jokes about Chevy Chase using the N-word —Jay Weston, Lady Sings the Blues producer, dies at 93 —Fede Alvarez's Alien movie rounds out cast —Rupert Murdoch, Fox Corp. sued for sharing Biden's presidential ads before they aired —Judy Heumann, disability rights activist and Crip Camp star, dies at 75 —Gary Rossington, last surviving original member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, dies at 71 What else we're reading... —Alex Abad-Santos looks at the Easter egg-ification of the Hollywood feud [Vox] —Jaya Saxena talks to those in the restaurant industry about the problems with brunch [Eater] —Isabelle Kohn and Rebecca Onion write that Sex/Life's second season has some very peculiar ideas about the male anatomy [Slate] —Lora Kelley explores how workplace TikToks have evolved amid layoffs [NYT Mag] —Ben Child asks if it's time to bring The Mandalorian to multiplexes [Guardian] Today... ...in 1998, the Coen brothers unleashed The Big Lebowski in theaters, where it would become a cult hit and gross $46 million globally. Jeff Bridges stars as an L.A. loafer named "The Dude," with John Goodman and Steve Buscemi as his Stooge-like sidekicks. The original review. Today's birthdays: Connie Britton (56), Rob Reiner (76), Shaquille O'Neal (51), D.L. Hughley (60), Amy Pietz (54), Moira Kelly (55), James Saito (68), Martin Kove (77), Rosie Day (28), Millicent Simmonds (20), Alisha Boe (26), Yael Stone (38), Tyler, The Creator (32), Jacob Bertrand (23), Shaun Evans (43) |
| Ted Donaldson, who starred as Bud Anderson on the original radio version of Father Knows Best and as Neely Nolan in the beloved family drama A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, the first feature directed by Elia Kazan, has died. He was 89. The obituary. |
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