Jurassic adventure, a deadly doll and body horror: What to see at the movies now
There's also a shipwrecked family we follow through a mostly separate series of adventures on the island, alternately gaping in awe and gasping in terror at the dinosaurs, some of which are mutants that evoke the Alien films.
Along the way, Dad (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) has to come to terms with the slacker boyfriend (David Iacono) of his eldest daughter (Luna Blaise), while his younger daughter (Audrina Miranda) finds a miniature friend of her own. But all of this again is routine to the point of laziness, and doesn't suggest that Koepp or anyone involved has had a great deal to do with young people lately.
Going by his whole career, Edwards' strength is much more in special effects than in storytelling. But some of his strategies pay off, such as the use of 35mm film and natural light, shooting on location in Malta and Thailand: the jungle looks real, which makes it far easier to believe in the reality of the dinosaurs, brought to life using animatronics as well as digital effects.
There are moments when the envisaged sense of wonder does kick in, notably a mating dance between two titanosaurs in an open field, their long whiplike tails whirring around them.
But Jurassic World Rebirth can only be recommended for a specific age group, roughly between 10 and 14. Any younger, and the set pieces might be too intense; any older, and they're likely to see this material as so familiar it hardly needs reviving.
Reviewed by Jake Wilson
M3GAN 2.0
★★★
M, 119 minutes
Conspiracy theorists might make something of the fact that M3GAN, a film about a sinister artificially intelligent talking doll, had its US premiere in December 2022, a week or so after ChatGPT was unleashed on the public.
Since then, AI fatigue has set in to the point where the prudent choice for filmmakers would be to avoid the subject altogether, especially as M3GAN 's real-life equivalents don't threaten to take over the world so much as drown us in a sea of cliches.
But a hit is a hit, and so Gerard Johnstone, the talented New Zealand director of the original, is back for another round with the clumsily titled M3GAN 2.0, this time working from his own script, even if this isn't the version of Hollywood success he might have mapped out for himself in his dreams.
Voiced by YouTube personality Jenna Davis and embodied by the young dancer Amie Donald in an animatronic mask, M3GAN started out as a caramel-haired waif about the same size as her orphaned eight-year-old owner Cady (Violet McGraw), but with considerably more adult poise.
Since her body was destroyed at the end of the first film, for a while she's reduced to a ghost in the machine, haunting Cady's aunt Gemma (Allison Williams), the tightly-wound roboticist who came up with the idea for a high-tech doll in the first place.
Before long M3GAN is back on the earthly plane in a new form – but the changes aren't just physical. In the first film, she was a classic case of good intentions gone wrong, programmed to keep Cady safe at all costs, and racking up a significant kill count in the process.
Somewhere along the line, though, Johnstone or his overseers have decided that a cool-eyed, stylish, outwardly demure killing machine prone to quips such as 'Hang onto your vaginas' is simply too fabulous to be treated as a simple villain.
Where the first M3GAN was a campy horror movie, this one is more of a campy techno-thriller, with a dash of sub-Spielbergian fantasies of the 1980s such as Short Circuit (Johnstone, born in 1976, knows his vintage pop culture: the climax should gratify fans of B-grade 1990s action films).
Much as Terminator 2 made Arnold Schwarzenegger the good guy facing off against a liquid metal antagonist, here there's a new killer robot on the scene, AMELIA (Ivanna Sakhno) – a military asset gone rogue, created using the same technology that brought M3GAN to life, but with bigger goals than being a blend of bodyguard and nanny.
M3GAN 2.0 is an oddity: overlong, not entirely suited to either children or adults, and probably too much of a departure from the original to satisfy whatever dedicated cult exists.
There aren't even as many classic M3GAN moments as might be anticipated, despite one outlandish scene all too visibly designed for the Internet. But unlike much of what's currently in multiplexes, it does feel like a film made by a human being, willing to go off-script as no AI ever would.
Reviewed by Jake Wilson
THE SHROUDS
★★★★
MA, 120 mins
Going by recent reports, The Shrouds may be the last film from 82-year-old David Cronenberg, Canada's onetime king of 'body horror'. If so, it's an apt farewell – typically morbid, perverse and self-mocking, but also emotionally direct in the manner of some of his most durable classics, such as The Dead Zone and The Fly.
Vincent Cassel, who stars as an eccentric tech entrepreneur named Karsh, is a generation younger than Cronenberg but here bears an unmistakable resemblance to his director, with slicked-back white hair, a long bony face that lends itself to dramatic lighting, and the detached verve of a scientist who enjoys the process of dissection.
He also recalls some of Cronenberg's earlier eccentric leading men, such as Christopher Walken as a troubled psychic in The Dead Zone, especially when he's flashing a disconcerting grin. Like Walken, Cassel has a knack for throwing us off-balance through his speech rhythms, though in Cassel's case this is partly the consequence of being a native French speaker acting in English.
Karsh, like Cronenberg, has 'made a career out of bodies,' in a very literal way. His ventures include a cemetery where the tombstones come equipped with screens, allowing you to log in and watch the corpse of your loved one rotting in real time. Naturally, there's an app for this, known as GraveTech (there's also a restaurant adjacent to the cemetery, encouraging visitors to make a day of it).
How many takers there would be for the scheme in real life is hard to say. But this is Cronenberg world, although we're nominally in something resembling present-day Toronto. In any case Karsh is his own most enthusiastic client, maintaining an ongoing relationship with the body of his wife Becca (Diane Kruger) years after her early death from cancer.
Understandably, his reluctance to let go is something of an obstacle to his parallel desire to find a new partner among the living. Still, there are several women in his life, among them the blind Soo-Min (Sandrine Holt), who wants a plot in the cemetery for her dying husband, and Becca's identical twin Terry (Kruger again) who works as a dog groomer.
Becca has yet another double in the form of a virtual assistant who pops up on Karsh's phone, the creation of Terry's perpetually unshaven ex-husband Maury (Guy Pearce), a 'schmuck' whose jittery manner counterpoints Karsh's suavity: both men are in seemingly permanent mourning, even if the woman Maury loves isn't literally dead.
The Shrouds began as a TV show Cronenberg pitched unsuccessfully to Netflix, and the plot is superficially complex, involving sexual jealousy, activist groups who favour cremation over burial, and the possibility of Karsh's high-tech tombs being hacked by foreign spies. But much of this happens offscreen, leaving room for doubt over whether it's really happening at all (Terry, we learn, finds conspiracy theories a turn-on).
Again typically for Cronenberg, The Shrouds isn't exactly a thriller, still less a horror film. In the tradition of Luis Bunuel, it's a work of charged yet calm surrealism, contemplating the mysteries of life and death with open eyes – in particular, the mystery of what it means to connect with another person, whether physically or from a distance.
In a sense, The Shrouds contains nothing to interpret or decode. The bodies here are bodies, not metaphors for something else, whether they're living or dead, real or virtual. Nonetheless, this is a film designed to sit in the mind and have its effect gradually: days or weeks later, you may find yourself realising that your own world is nearer to Cronenberg's than you'd guessed.
Reviewed by Jake Wilson
THE WOLVES ALWAYS COME AT NIGHT
★★★
PG, 97 mins
While Berlin-based Australian filmmaker Gabrielle Brady is currently developing her first fully fictional feature, The Wolves Always Come At Night marks her second foray into what she calls 'docu-feature', a hybrid storytelling form that merges observational documentary with elements of fiction, driven by the subjects of the film.
Her first was Island of the Hungry Ghosts, which was set on Christmas Island and used the visually arresting annual migration of land crabs as a metaphor for the journeys of asylum seekers across the world. A counsellor called Poh Lin Lee served as a kind of focal point in that movie, helping give individual human shape to stories of mass movement.
Lee is involved in the new film too, credited as 'narrative therapy consultant'. Also returning is Aaron Cupples, whose work on the ethereal land- and windscape-inspired score is just as impressive as it was on the earlier film, and cinematographer Michael Latham, whose images are once again stunning.
Set in Mongolia, The Wolves… focuses on the hard-scrabble existence of goat herder Davaa (Davaasuren Dagvasuren) and his wife Zaya (Otgonzaya Dashzeveg). They are raising four young kids in their ger (circular tent), surrounded by animals and occasionally interacting with neighbours in a far-off community hall, where the conversation revolves around the weather and the birthing of livestock. 'How has your spring been?' 'Good.' That sort of thing.
The first shot of Davaa is on horseback, riding hard across the Gobi desert on his stocky pony. The film ends with him and his horse together again. But in between, it's all about the forces that are moving man and beast apart – motorisation, urbanisation, exploitation of the land for minerals, and above all, climate change.
Davaa and Zaya are stoic presences, not given to great slabs of articulation, and not especially expressive. Dagvasuren and Dashzeveg are credited as co-writers here, but I hope they weren't paid by the word.
To be frank, not a lot happens in The Wolves… If you were feeling mean-spirited, you might say it is exactly the sort of film Marg Downey so brilliantly sent up on Fast Forward 30-plus years ago as 'the SBS woman'.
An example, from 1991: 'Ahead in the orgy of superior entertainment on SBS tonight we present the next in our series of films by Turkish director Yilmaz Hobeglu. Kemal and the Weevil tells the heartbreaking story of a boy who befriends an orphaned weevil only to have it cruelly snatched from him by the secret police.'
The Wolves… has grander aspirations than that, to be sure. It follows Davaa as he watches over his goats, helps them give birth to their kids, loads their corpses into his flat-bed truck after a sandstorm wipes out half the flock, sells his beloved stallion to help make ends meet, moves the family to the city, and takes a job as an excavator driver at a quarry. They are monumental shifts in a life, but the hands-off approach to scripting means their dramatic import isn't always conveyed as fully as it might have been.
Brady lived in Mongolia years ago, and her embrace of this form of hybrid storytelling is clearly designed to afford agency to its subjects, for whom she has palpable empathy. It makes for some beautiful images, some subtly moving moments, and a patina of truth.
That's all to be applauded. I just wish there was a little more connective tissue on those narrative bones.

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Sydney Morning Herald
11 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
From a fun idea at 16, now Amelia Dimoldenberg has millions of fans worldwide
This story is part of the July 6 edition of Sunday Life. See all 13 stories. Amelia Dimoldenberg has just got back from a hard-earned break in Brazil. 'Most places I go now on holiday I'll get recognised by different people, which is kind of amazing,' says the born-and-bred Londoner. 'My parents always think it's so crazy that people come up to me and ask me for photos.' The trajectory of Dimoldenberg's career is, indeed, crazy. It's now more than 10 years since she launched Chicken Shop Date, the wildly popular YouTube series in which she interviews A-list actors and pop icons in fast-food chicken shops. In fact, nowadays she is often more famous than the people she's grilling over nuggets, thanks in part to her other gig – being flown around the world to deploy her blunt interviewing style on the red carpet. Think of her as a sort of quirky, more socially awkward Joan Rivers. When we meet, she has recently hosted red-carpet interviews at the Oscars, the Brits and Saturday Night Live 's 50th anniversary event in New York, where she rubbed shoulders with everyone from Kristen Wiig to Bad Bunny. 'It was just an amazing experience for so many of my comedy heroes to come up to me and be like, 'I'm such a fan of your show,' ' she says of the Saturday Night Live gig. The 31-year-old is squeezing our interview into a tight work schedule. 'I set myself up in … I don't want to say in prison because it's not prison, but I'm in some kind of cage of my own making,' she says, sipping tea and dressed down in jeans and a Wallace & Gromit T-shirt ('I love Wallace & Gromit 's awkward charm,' she explains). 'I'm just always working a million miles an hour, but there are so many things I want to do.' It all started with Chicken Shop Date. Her idea to interview UK rappers in a date scenario initially began as a column in a youth club magazine called The Cut when she was 16. From there it morphed into short videos shot in harshly lit fried-chicken shops while she was also studying fashion journalism. In 2014 her first on-screen interview was with the rapper Ghetts in a branch of Chicken Cottage. Since then, her dates have become more starry: Cher, Jennifer Lawrence, Harris Dickinson, Sabrina Carpenter, Billie Eilish. Her 2022 date with Louis Theroux has more than 12 million views; American rapper Jack Harlow has pulled in over 19 million. To have an original idea as a teenager (and not even a media nepo-baby teenager) and then pull it off so spectacularly is astonishing. 'I've always believed in the idea, I've always thought it's going to be great. It was just a matter of getting people to watch it,' says the woman now living the Gen Z dream of turning a YouTube channel into both fame and a full-time, highly lucrative career. MrBeast, the world's most popular YouTuber, for instance, reportedly earned about $US1.1 billion ($1.7 billion) last year. Dimoldenberg may not be in that league but her annual social media income is estimated at £4 million ($8.36 million), thanks in part to the lucrative advertising lured in by the 3.1 million followers she has on YouTube, four million on TikTok and 2.6 million on Instagram. The show's recipe, tweaked and honed over the years, is carefully balanced: awkward tone, unexpected questions ('If you were an ice-cream cone, would you rather be licked or bitten?' she asked a pink-cheeked Eilish) and a ruthless edit down to about eight minutes. Her sister, Zoe, who is 18 months younger, is sent the edited version to give feedback. 'She doesn't like to indulge me,' Dimoldenberg says. 'There'll be bits where I'll be like, 'Oh, I love it,' because the guest is complimenting me loads. She's like, 'It's unnecessary, you can take that out.' ' Zoe was on the Brazil holiday too, and the pair are close. 'We're kind of twin vibe because we have the same friends, we hang out socially, we work together, we used to live together – but now we don't because we were too co-dependent,' adds Dimoldenberg, who currently lives alone in east London. 'I'm very lucky to have someone who is so similar to me.' Dimoldenberg grew up in central London with her mum, Linda, a retired librarian, and dad, Paul, who is a Labour councillor at Westminster City Council. Initially, being funny was just a way to make friends – at her girls-only state school she cottoned on that making people laugh would get her on the invite list. Years later, she partly credits her single-sex education for her self-confidence: 'When you're at a girls' school, you are not competing with male voices. I hung out with guys as a young person and they dictate the dynamic of the friendship group.' In Andrew Garfield's chicken shop date he asks: 'Do you think this has f---ed up the fact that we could have actually gone on a date at some point maybe?' We get on to her hottest dates. In 2023, she met Cher in a chicken shop in Paris (2.3 million YouTube views). What was the legend like off camera? 'Amazing, so nice, talking to all the crew. Literally, we couldn't get her out of the shop. She was chatting to everyone.' Jennifer Lawrence (9.2 million views) was one of her favourites. 'It's amazing when they're going toe-to-toe for you, and they're funny and charming,' Dimoldenberg says. 'She literally did one piece of press [promoting a rom-com] in the UK and it was my show.' As an interview subject, Dimoldenberg is polite and engaged but has a slight frostiness that I fail to melt. She seems unimpressed when I ask about Andrew Garfield, for instance, the Spider-Man actor with whom she's had famously fizzing chemistry on the red carpet, first at British GQ 's Men of the Year party in 2022 and at the 2023 Golden Globes. Cue fans clamouring for real-life romance to blossom. In Garfield's chicken shop date last year (11 minutes of nonstop flirting that's had 11 million views), he asks: 'Do you think this has f---ed up the fact that we could have actually gone on a date at some point maybe?' What's the latest on their flirtationship, then? 'We're friends. I saw him at the Oscars and he's a great guy, a great person,' she says, professional hat firmly on, although she admits: 'We've got such a great dynamic.' She relishes it when her chicken shop encounters blur the boundaries between what's real and what's not. Matty Healy, the lead singer of UK band the 1975 and Taylor Swift's one-time bad-boy squeeze, tried to kiss Dimoldenberg at the end of their YouTube date in 2022 (5.9 million views). She ended up pecking the musician's forehead instead. 'He was definitely down to kiss me,' she says, grinning. Despite her numerous chicken shop dates, Dimoldenberg is happily single. 'I've got my whole life to be settling down with someone. My life is very fast-paced. I'm going travelling, I'm working away, I'm doing all these different things. I feel like I'm really glad to be single at this moment.' Whenever he comes along, her ideal man is 'kind, thoughtful, intelligent', has self-confidence and, obviously, a solid sense of humour. Does Chicken Shop Date get in the way of real-life romance? 'I feel like it depends. Obviously, the guys who I'm dating need to be confident in themselves for many different reasons. I also just feel like maybe my work gets in the way of dating more broadly. I definitely want to create space in my life to meet someone but, at the same time, I don't want it to be the focus of everything.' Right now, her focus is clearly her career. She is developing a romantic comedy film in which she'll take on the lead role ('It's me playing myself'), and another project, a drama series that Dimoldenberg wrote, is in the early development stage at the BBC. She has other acting ambitions too: 'Playing versions of myself, or in comedic roles. I don't necessarily, at this point, have an ambition to do a dramatic reading of Shakespeare.' Going into auditions has forced her inner monologue to shift from telling herself that she definitely won't get the role to telling herself that she will get it. 'Saying I'm not going to get something is a negative mindset and I feel like often the voice in my head is so negative and critical,' she says. 'It's a good exercise to start talking to yourself positively.' Dimoldenberg acknowledges that it's not easy being on the red carpet alongside mostly pin-thin women. 'The self-confidence thing, in terms of body image, is hard when you're having to have your photo taken, and you're literally in a line-up next to professional models, for example,' she says. Yet she vows never to have cosmetic surgery, which she believes has become normalised: 'That'd be very revolutionary of me, a celebrity, to have no surgery.' Due to her series' near-blanket exposure over social media, endless celebrities are lining up to be her guests, but Dimoldenberg is discerning: 'Just because you're famous, you're not going to get an interview.' She knows who she wants to lure, though: Harry Styles, Beyoncé, Timothée Chalamet, Kendrick Lamar, the UK rapper Giggs and Philomena Cunk (aka the comedian Diane Morgan). Loading Politicians of any stripe or level of global fame need not apply, however. At one point, Joe Biden's team reportedly reached out, as the Americans would say, but it came to nothing. 'The politics of my show is that we have a diverse range of people who are from different backgrounds and their views I appreciate,' the presenter says. 'I'm being political in the sense of the people I choose to not have on the show.' Acting, writing, developing and chicken shop dating aside, Dimoldenberg also wants to one day launch her own youth academy to help people from varied backgrounds forge careers in creative industries. 'I hope my legacy is that I'm able to open doors or create confidence in young people and level the playing field in some way.' Her advice to up-and-comers? Crack on with your bright idea sharpish. 'I always tell them, go and do the thing.'

The Age
11 hours ago
- The Age
From a fun idea at 16, now Amelia Dimoldenberg has millions of fans worldwide
This story is part of the July 6 edition of Sunday Life. See all 13 stories. Amelia Dimoldenberg has just got back from a hard-earned break in Brazil. 'Most places I go now on holiday I'll get recognised by different people, which is kind of amazing,' says the born-and-bred Londoner. 'My parents always think it's so crazy that people come up to me and ask me for photos.' The trajectory of Dimoldenberg's career is, indeed, crazy. It's now more than 10 years since she launched Chicken Shop Date, the wildly popular YouTube series in which she interviews A-list actors and pop icons in fast-food chicken shops. In fact, nowadays she is often more famous than the people she's grilling over nuggets, thanks in part to her other gig – being flown around the world to deploy her blunt interviewing style on the red carpet. Think of her as a sort of quirky, more socially awkward Joan Rivers. When we meet, she has recently hosted red-carpet interviews at the Oscars, the Brits and Saturday Night Live 's 50th anniversary event in New York, where she rubbed shoulders with everyone from Kristen Wiig to Bad Bunny. 'It was just an amazing experience for so many of my comedy heroes to come up to me and be like, 'I'm such a fan of your show,' ' she says of the Saturday Night Live gig. The 31-year-old is squeezing our interview into a tight work schedule. 'I set myself up in … I don't want to say in prison because it's not prison, but I'm in some kind of cage of my own making,' she says, sipping tea and dressed down in jeans and a Wallace & Gromit T-shirt ('I love Wallace & Gromit 's awkward charm,' she explains). 'I'm just always working a million miles an hour, but there are so many things I want to do.' It all started with Chicken Shop Date. Her idea to interview UK rappers in a date scenario initially began as a column in a youth club magazine called The Cut when she was 16. From there it morphed into short videos shot in harshly lit fried-chicken shops while she was also studying fashion journalism. In 2014 her first on-screen interview was with the rapper Ghetts in a branch of Chicken Cottage. Since then, her dates have become more starry: Cher, Jennifer Lawrence, Harris Dickinson, Sabrina Carpenter, Billie Eilish. Her 2022 date with Louis Theroux has more than 12 million views; American rapper Jack Harlow has pulled in over 19 million. To have an original idea as a teenager (and not even a media nepo-baby teenager) and then pull it off so spectacularly is astonishing. 'I've always believed in the idea, I've always thought it's going to be great. It was just a matter of getting people to watch it,' says the woman now living the Gen Z dream of turning a YouTube channel into both fame and a full-time, highly lucrative career. MrBeast, the world's most popular YouTuber, for instance, reportedly earned about $US1.1 billion ($1.7 billion) last year. Dimoldenberg may not be in that league but her annual social media income is estimated at £4 million ($8.36 million), thanks in part to the lucrative advertising lured in by the 3.1 million followers she has on YouTube, four million on TikTok and 2.6 million on Instagram. The show's recipe, tweaked and honed over the years, is carefully balanced: awkward tone, unexpected questions ('If you were an ice-cream cone, would you rather be licked or bitten?' she asked a pink-cheeked Eilish) and a ruthless edit down to about eight minutes. Her sister, Zoe, who is 18 months younger, is sent the edited version to give feedback. 'She doesn't like to indulge me,' Dimoldenberg says. 'There'll be bits where I'll be like, 'Oh, I love it,' because the guest is complimenting me loads. She's like, 'It's unnecessary, you can take that out.' ' Zoe was on the Brazil holiday too, and the pair are close. 'We're kind of twin vibe because we have the same friends, we hang out socially, we work together, we used to live together – but now we don't because we were too co-dependent,' adds Dimoldenberg, who currently lives alone in east London. 'I'm very lucky to have someone who is so similar to me.' Dimoldenberg grew up in central London with her mum, Linda, a retired librarian, and dad, Paul, who is a Labour councillor at Westminster City Council. Initially, being funny was just a way to make friends – at her girls-only state school she cottoned on that making people laugh would get her on the invite list. Years later, she partly credits her single-sex education for her self-confidence: 'When you're at a girls' school, you are not competing with male voices. I hung out with guys as a young person and they dictate the dynamic of the friendship group.' In Andrew Garfield's chicken shop date he asks: 'Do you think this has f---ed up the fact that we could have actually gone on a date at some point maybe?' We get on to her hottest dates. In 2023, she met Cher in a chicken shop in Paris (2.3 million YouTube views). What was the legend like off camera? 'Amazing, so nice, talking to all the crew. Literally, we couldn't get her out of the shop. She was chatting to everyone.' Jennifer Lawrence (9.2 million views) was one of her favourites. 'It's amazing when they're going toe-to-toe for you, and they're funny and charming,' Dimoldenberg says. 'She literally did one piece of press [promoting a rom-com] in the UK and it was my show.' As an interview subject, Dimoldenberg is polite and engaged but has a slight frostiness that I fail to melt. She seems unimpressed when I ask about Andrew Garfield, for instance, the Spider-Man actor with whom she's had famously fizzing chemistry on the red carpet, first at British GQ 's Men of the Year party in 2022 and at the 2023 Golden Globes. Cue fans clamouring for real-life romance to blossom. In Garfield's chicken shop date last year (11 minutes of nonstop flirting that's had 11 million views), he asks: 'Do you think this has f---ed up the fact that we could have actually gone on a date at some point maybe?' What's the latest on their flirtationship, then? 'We're friends. I saw him at the Oscars and he's a great guy, a great person,' she says, professional hat firmly on, although she admits: 'We've got such a great dynamic.' She relishes it when her chicken shop encounters blur the boundaries between what's real and what's not. Matty Healy, the lead singer of UK band the 1975 and Taylor Swift's one-time bad-boy squeeze, tried to kiss Dimoldenberg at the end of their YouTube date in 2022 (5.9 million views). She ended up pecking the musician's forehead instead. 'He was definitely down to kiss me,' she says, grinning. Despite her numerous chicken shop dates, Dimoldenberg is happily single. 'I've got my whole life to be settling down with someone. My life is very fast-paced. I'm going travelling, I'm working away, I'm doing all these different things. I feel like I'm really glad to be single at this moment.' Whenever he comes along, her ideal man is 'kind, thoughtful, intelligent', has self-confidence and, obviously, a solid sense of humour. Does Chicken Shop Date get in the way of real-life romance? 'I feel like it depends. Obviously, the guys who I'm dating need to be confident in themselves for many different reasons. I also just feel like maybe my work gets in the way of dating more broadly. I definitely want to create space in my life to meet someone but, at the same time, I don't want it to be the focus of everything.' Right now, her focus is clearly her career. She is developing a romantic comedy film in which she'll take on the lead role ('It's me playing myself'), and another project, a drama series that Dimoldenberg wrote, is in the early development stage at the BBC. She has other acting ambitions too: 'Playing versions of myself, or in comedic roles. I don't necessarily, at this point, have an ambition to do a dramatic reading of Shakespeare.' Going into auditions has forced her inner monologue to shift from telling herself that she definitely won't get the role to telling herself that she will get it. 'Saying I'm not going to get something is a negative mindset and I feel like often the voice in my head is so negative and critical,' she says. 'It's a good exercise to start talking to yourself positively.' Dimoldenberg acknowledges that it's not easy being on the red carpet alongside mostly pin-thin women. 'The self-confidence thing, in terms of body image, is hard when you're having to have your photo taken, and you're literally in a line-up next to professional models, for example,' she says. Yet she vows never to have cosmetic surgery, which she believes has become normalised: 'That'd be very revolutionary of me, a celebrity, to have no surgery.' Due to her series' near-blanket exposure over social media, endless celebrities are lining up to be her guests, but Dimoldenberg is discerning: 'Just because you're famous, you're not going to get an interview.' She knows who she wants to lure, though: Harry Styles, Beyoncé, Timothée Chalamet, Kendrick Lamar, the UK rapper Giggs and Philomena Cunk (aka the comedian Diane Morgan). Loading Politicians of any stripe or level of global fame need not apply, however. At one point, Joe Biden's team reportedly reached out, as the Americans would say, but it came to nothing. 'The politics of my show is that we have a diverse range of people who are from different backgrounds and their views I appreciate,' the presenter says. 'I'm being political in the sense of the people I choose to not have on the show.' Acting, writing, developing and chicken shop dating aside, Dimoldenberg also wants to one day launch her own youth academy to help people from varied backgrounds forge careers in creative industries. 'I hope my legacy is that I'm able to open doors or create confidence in young people and level the playing field in some way.' Her advice to up-and-comers? Crack on with your bright idea sharpish. 'I always tell them, go and do the thing.'


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Old Guard 2 director Victoria Mahoney hails Charlize Theron's dedication
Charlize Theron dedicated "1,000 percent of herself" to the action scenes in The Old Guard 2. The 49-year-old actress teamed up with Victoria Mahoney to make The Old Guard 2, and Victoria has praised Charlize for her whole-hearted approach to the project. The director told Deadline: "The thing about Charlize is, she comes hard, and she dedicates 1,000 percent of herself to every sequence, whether it's trauma or action, and it's visible. "People know that, for many years we've all seen it, and we've witnessed it. But there is something really electrifying to see it up close in person, and she doesn't leave anything on the field, as we say." Victoria hailed Charlize as the "engine on the Old Guard franchise". The director also suggested that the Oscar-winning actress actually helped to lift the performance levels of the film's cast and crew. She explained: "I worked in pre-production for months with our fight choreographer, Georgi Manchev to make certain that the action throughout the movie had some sense of emotion. "Obviously, and specifically the alley fight between Charlize's Andromache character and Veronica Van's Quynh character. It was vital that it had levels and layers and grounding in the heart, and this is why I mention this, I was excited when Georgi told me that Charlize was really moved the first time they auditioned the alley fight for her. Because, you know, it isn't easy to make audiences feel when two people are fighting. My belief is, if audiences don't feel anything in a fight scene, then what are we doing? "So, what happens when someone like Charlize comes hard like that to any role is that everyone on the ground, you know, crew rises up to meet her and help make her dreams come true. And I'm really proud of what we all accomplished, and, let me tell you, Charlize is the engine on the Old Guard franchise – without a doubt." Meanwhile, Henry Golding recently hailed Charlize as a "rare commodity in Hollywood". The 38-year-old actor stars alongside Charlize in The Old Guard 2, and Henry lavished praise on his co-star, observing that Charlize is one of the most professional people he's worked with. Speaking to People, Henry explained: "You know what it is? She leads from the front. She's like a rare commodity in Hollywood. "She is the female counterpart to a Tom Cruise. She's the producer. She's on set first thing in the morning, last at night, and she's creating what she wants and she's in there with the action. She's in there with the choreography." Henry believes that Charlize and Tom are unique figures in the movie business. He said: "She and Tom Cruise are some of the last of the movie stars."