logo
Amal Clooney Teases the Strict Cannes Dress Code in an Archival John Galliano for Dior Gown

Amal Clooney Teases the Strict Cannes Dress Code in an Archival John Galliano for Dior Gown

Yahoo02-06-2025
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Cannes Film Festival's new dress code is likely to catch out a plethora of attendees, but Amal Clooney isn't one of them. Kristen Stewart subtly challenged the "decency" dress code in a sheer skirt and Eva Longoria's sequin dress appeared to ignore any naked dress rules. Clooney, however, ensured she wouldn't be turned away from the red carpet by wearing a jaw-dropping, floor-length gown, albeit with a low-cut neckline and beautiful train.
On Friday, May 16, Clooney made an unexpected solo appearance on the Cannes Film Festival red carpet ahead of a screening of Bono: Stories of Surrender. For the prestigious occasion, the decorated lawyer wore an archival John Galliano-era Christian Dior off-the-shoulder gown featuring a sumptuous train. She completed the sophisticated outfit with Cartier jewelry, including a pair of sparkling diamond drop earrings.
While Clooney's gown appeared to abide by the festival's new dress code, the off-the-shoulder element of her outfit, and relatively low neckline, perhaps skirted the strict rules. Her John Galliano for Dior gown also featured an impressive train, which may have contravened Cannes Film Festival's new instructions. "Voluminous outfits, in particular those with a large train, that hinder the proper flow of traffic of guests and complicate seating in the theater are not permitted," the Cannes Film Festival FAQ reads.
Following the screening, Clooney changed into a gold mini dress, which was adorned with flowers, sequins, and crystals for an after-party with Bono.
Clooney previously attended Cannes Film Festival in 2016, where she supported husband George Clooney at the premiere of Money Monster.
As usual, Amal outshone her famous husband by wearing a lemon yellow, one-shoulder chiffon gown from Atelier Versace.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New on Netflix August 2-8: only four new shows and movies hit Netflix this week but one is huge
New on Netflix August 2-8: only four new shows and movies hit Netflix this week but one is huge

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

New on Netflix August 2-8: only four new shows and movies hit Netflix this week but one is huge

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. It happens to the best of us: most weeks Netflix has such a long list of new releases that I can only cover a fraction in this weekly round-up, but now and then, there's barely enough to populate a list. Between Saturday, August 2 and Friday, August 8, only four new releases are joining Netflix's library, so my usual list is going to be a little shorter than usual. I only include brand-new Netflix Originals, not third-party titles added to the service, as these programmes are available worldwide. Sometimes the Netflix Originals I include are worthy of our lists of the best Netflix shows and best Netflix movies, and one of the new releases this week is a hugely-anticipated sequel series, so there's definitely going to be something to watch. So let's find you something worth watching on Netflix this week... Beyond the Bar Starting the week off (on a Saturday, which is rare for Netflix) is the new Korean drama series Beyond the Bar. This seems to have a strange release schedule which mirrors its Korean release: an episode every Saturday and Sunday for several weeks. Beyond the Bar is set in Korea's legal word, and it's about a young rookie lawyer who starts to work for a big law firm. He finds his strong sense of justice challenged by the intricacies and moral gray areas of the work he has to do. Premieres on Saturday, August 2 SEC Football: Any Given Saturday Netflix subscribers are no stranger to sports documentary series, with a new one landing every other week, and this time around there's SEC Football: Any Given Saturday which releases on Tuesday, August 5. This series follows college footballers in the South Eastern Conference (hence, SEC) over the course of their 2024 season. You'll get to see players on the pitch and relaxing between games behind-the-scenes, to see what it's like being a college football player. Releases on Tuesday, August 5 Wednesday season 2 The smash-hit TV show returns when Wednesday season 2 releases; the first four episodes release on Thursday, August 6 and the last four on Thursday, September 3. This Addams Family prequel follows young Wednesday Addams as she attends the Nevermore Academy and season 2 sees her attend another year of school. She also has to solve a mystery along the way. A long list of new faces join her along the way, with many recognizable celebrity actors joining the cast. Part 1 releases on Wednesday, August 6 Stolen: Heist of the Century The second Netflix documentary this year about a jewel theft, Stolen: Heist of the Century is a doc movie about a well-known noughties crime that releases on Friday, August 8. Stolen: Heist of the Century looks at a 2003 robbery in Antwerp which saw hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of diamonds stolen in a surprisingly capable heist. No-one's ever been sure how the crime was actually committed but according to Netflix, that's finally going to change with the movie revealing it for the first time. As you can imagine, not a single diamond was ever recovered from the heist. Releases on Friday, August 8 Solve the daily Crossword

Stranger Things season 5: everything we know so far about the hit Netflix show's final entry (release date, trailer, cast, plot, and more)
Stranger Things season 5: everything we know so far about the hit Netflix show's final entry (release date, trailer, cast, plot, and more)

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Stranger Things season 5: everything we know so far about the hit Netflix show's final entry (release date, trailer, cast, plot, and more)

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Stranger Things season 5: key information - Will be the main show's final entry- Launching in three parts- First volume arrives in late November- Volumes 2 and 3 arrive in December 2025 and January 2026- First trailer released in mid-July- Core cast set to return- Major characters could die- Episode titles revealed in November 2024- Will answer big questions about the Upside Down- Animated spin-off's title revealed in June Stranger Things season 5 is still four months away (at the time of this article's latest update) from being released. Despite having to wait so long for the incredibly popular Netflix show's final entry, though, we've finally been given a trailer to pore over as we count down the weeks to its November 26/27 release on the world's best streaming service. You'll need to read this guide's trailer section to learn more about it, though. There's plenty more to read about below, too. Indeed, from Stranger Things' fifth and final season's trio of release dates and confirmed cast, to plot details and the franchise's future, our expert (i.e. me) has combed the web to bring you the biggest and latest news about one of the best Netflix shows' final hurrah. Full spoilers follow for Stranger Things season 4. Possible spoilers for season 5 are on the way, too. Stranger Things season 5 release date Stranger Things season 5's release dates were revealed at Netflix Tudum 2025. It'll launch in three parts, too, with volume 1 (episodes 1 through 4) out on November 26 in the US, and November 27 in the UK and Australia. You can see when the volumes 2 and 3 will arrive in the above X/Twitter post. Previously, Netflix only confirmed Stranger Things 5 would debut sometime in 2025. That came as a relief as we were worried that season 5 wouldn't arrive until 2026. That was in spite of principal photography wrapping on Stranger Things 5 in December 2024, too. Stranger Things season 5 trailer At long last, Stranger Things season 5's first official trailer was released on July 16. Netflix confirmed Stranger Things 5's teaser launch date one day earlier, so we knew it'd arrive ahead of time. For more in-depth analysis and updates on the teaser, which you can view above, read my Stranger Things season 5 trailer launch blog. Missed the first round of season 5 footage, which debuted at Netflix Tudum 2025 as part of a Stranger Things legacy teaser? Check it out below: Ahead of that teaser's debut, Netflix released a behind-the-scenes look at season 5 in mid-2024. The video represented our first proper look at Stranger Things season 5 – one that revealed new characters, fan-favorite team-ups, and a possible time jump, but didn't feature any actual footage. Stranger Things season 5 cast: confirmed and rumored Major spoilers follow for Stranger Things season 4. Here's the confirmed cast for Stranger Things season 5 as of July 2025: Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers David Harbour as Jim Hopper Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair Noah Schnapp as Will Byers Sadie Sink as Max Mayfield Natalie Dyer as Nancy Wheeler Charlie Heaton as Jonathan Byers Joe Keery as Steve Harrington Maya Hawke as Robin Buckley Priah Ferguson as Erica Sinclair Brett Gelman as Murray Bauman Jamie Campbell-Bower as Vecna Cara Buono as Karen Wheeler Amybeth McNulty as Vickie Nell Fisher as Holly Wheeler Jake Connelly as Derek Turnbow Alex Breaux as Lieutenant Akers Linda Hamilton as Doctor Kay Established cast members notwithstanding, the biggest news is that Terminator star Linda Hamilton has joined the Stranger Things 5 ranks. She'll play a gun-toting scientist called Doctor Kay. She isn't the only cast addition. July 2024's behind-the-scenes teaser confirmed by Fisher (Evil Dead Rise), Breaux (Waco: The Aftermath), and up-and-comer Connelly are also part of proceedings. Fisher will play Holly Wheeler, aka Mike and Nancy's younger sibling, while Connelly and Breaux have been cast as Derek and Lieutenant Akers. I suspect supporting characters from past seasons migh show up, too. Ted Wheeler (Joe Chrest), Lieutenant Colonel Jack Sullivan (Sherman Augustus), and Suzie (Gabriella Pizzolo) should be back. Meanwhile, Doctor Sam Owens' (Paul Reiser) fate is unknown after he was left handcuffed to a pipe in the subterranean Nina Project in season 4. However, I'd be surprised if he doesn't feature. Lastly, Eduardo Franco has confirmed (per IGN) he didn't receive the call to reprise his role as fan-favorite season 4 character Argyle. Joseph Quinn's Eddie Munson won't be back, either, following his death in last season's finale. Other season 4 characters in Dmitri Antonov (Tom Wlaschiha) and Yuri Ismaylov (Nikola Duricko) are unlikely to appear as well. Stranger Things season 5 story synopsis and speculation Full spoilers follow for Stranger Things season 4. Potential season 5 spoilers are also discussed. Here's Stranger Things season 5's story synopsis: "The fall of 1987. Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna. But, he has vanished – his whereabouts and plans unknown. "Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding. As the anniversary of Will's disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread. The final battle is looming – and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they've faced before. To end this nightmare, they'll need everyone – the full party – standing together, one last time." Given this season marks the end of one of Netflix's biggest TV Originals, it's set to go out with a bang. For one, Stranger Things 5 will test our runtime limits, with Maya Hawke revealing that "basically, eight movies" have been filmed. Season 5's 12-month shoot yielded 650-plus hours of footage, too, which has been whittled down for its "blockbuster movie" episodes, according to co-creators Matt and Ross Duffer. Furthermore, we know what this season's episode titles are. The season 5 premiere title, aka 'The Crawl', was unveiled in mid-2022 – here are four big theories on what Stranger Things 5's first episode title could mean – while the others were unveiled last November. Episode 1 – The Crawl Episode 2 – The Vanishing Of [Redacted] Episode 3 – The Turnbow Trap Episode 4 – Sorcerer Episode 5 – Shock Jock Episode 6 – Escape From Camazotz Episode 7 – The Bridge Episode 8 – The Rightside Up Interestingly, the Duffers confirmed they rewrote parts of season 5 (per Netflix Tudum) based on fan feedback, which means the show will end in a different way than they originally intended. Thankfully, nothing about season 5's concluding chapter has appeared online, even after Netflix reportedly suffered a major Stranger Things 5 leak in February. For now, then, its biggest secrets are still being kept under wraps. Before the end credits roll for the final time, our heroes must join forces to try to stop Vecna – the show's primary antagonist – for good. "Our characters are going after Vecna from minute one," Ross Duffer told Stranger Things season 4 volume 2 unlocked episode in July 2022. "We have a lot to do, in terms of a few more revelations, and also we need to make sure we give our characters time to make these final arcs." So, what happened in the season 4 finale? Vecna was severely injured by Nancy, Steve, and Robin at Creel House but, when they go looking for Vecna's body, it's gone. The series' main villain appears to crawled away to recover from his wounds, then. He was technically victorious in season 4, though. Max, his final victim, died for a whole minute after he attacked her, thereby causing four rifts to the Upside Down to open in the center of Hawkins. Based on season 5's first trailer, the two realities will clash as Vecna tries to finish what he started – i.e. destroying everything that our heroes hold dear. To put a stop to his world-ending plan, the show's main characters are already assembled in Hawkins so, while they'll break into smaller groups to cover as much ground as possible, they're still effectively working together. Speaking on the Happy Sad Confused podcast, Matt Duffer said that was an intentional creative decision, adding: "We want to go back to a lot things we did in season 1 and a lot of the original groupings and pairings that we had." But back to Max. She's in a medically-induced coma following her near-fatal encounter with Vecna in the Stranger Things season 4 finale. When Eleven went searching for Max in the Void, though, she couldn't find her, so it's unclear if Max will ever wake up. Before filming on season 5 began, Sink said she was in the dark about Max's fate, but you can read our thoughts on how Max's story could go one of two ways in Stranger Things season 5. However, in images posted from the season 5 set (see the below Instagram post's third photograph), Ross Duffer teased Lucas will try to coax Max out of her unconscious state using music – and, in particular, her love to Kate Bush. Elsewhere Noah Schnapp, who plays Will Byers, dropped a big hint to Vogue about his season 5 character arc, saying: "There's a lot in store for Will. It ties back to where it begins, full circle. I'm excited for fans to see where we wrap his character. I think they'll be really pleased, but also shocked." Schnapp also told US magazine that Will is the "center point" of Stranger Things 5, before revealing (via Forbes) that the whole show "ends with Will". Based on the X/Twitter post below, it could begin with a flashback showing us a de-aged Will or, as seen in a video from Schnapp (post on Ross Duffer's X/Twitter account) showed, a present day Will revisiting Castle Byers, aka his self-erected childhood hideout. Ross Duffer corroborated Schnapp's comments in conversation with Variety, adding: "Will really takes center stage again. This emotional arc for him is what we feel is going to hopefully tie the whole series together. Will is used to being the young one, the introverted one, the one that's being protected. So part of his journey, it's not just sexuality – it's Will coming into his own as a young man." As for potential character deaths, Stranger Things season 5 sounds like it'll be the deadliest yet, which implies some main characters will perish. Place your bets on who'll make it out live now. Teasing what else fans can expect, Matt Duffer told the Happy Sad Confused podcast that the show's final few episodes will be like The Lord of the Rings in its design. "It [the season 5 finale] is going to be Return of the King-ish with eight endings," he said. "If you just watch Return of the King, it feels like too many endings. [But] if you watch all of them back-to-back, which I've done multiple times, it's exactly right. If it were any shorter, it would feel cheap and wrong." As for other subplots that need resolving, we should find out why the Upside Down is seemingly stuck in 1984. We still don't have all the answers – outside of what's revealed in prequel stage play Stranger Things: The First Shadow – about this realm. We're also in the dark about why it's spookier and more dingy than the realm Henry Creel first traveled to, or what The Mind Flayer is. Ross Duffer (per Stranger Things season 4 volume 2's unlocked episode) claims those queries will be answered. There's also the loose end concerning number eight – aka Kali Prasad. We haven't seen Kali since season 2 and, unlike every other test subject under Doctor Brenner's supervision (who had telekinetic abilities), she had different powers. Why was she the odd one out? And will we see her again? It's possible Stranger Things season 5 won't answer everything. After all, the Duffers have retconned some early season plot points in later instalments (via Variety). Maybe Kali's story is just one of those lingering mysteries we'll never get closure on. And what of the show's last-ever episode? We have no idea how it'll end, but Matarazzo told NME that fans can prepare to see a "satisfying" and "cathartic" final chapter, while Wolfhard told that he was "satisfied... confused... and sad" about it. David Harbour also told THR that the series' final episode is "the best episode they [the Duffers] have done" before teasing how tear-jerking it is. Have a box of tissues at the ready, everyone! The future of Stranger Things Season 5 of Stranger Things is the end of the mainline show, but there are other projects in the works at Upside Down Pictures, aka the Duffers' production company. The first of those – a stage play that's titled Stranger Things: The First Shadow – is set in 1959 and tells the tale of the Creel Family's arrival in Hawkins. It also shows us Jim Hopper, Henry Creel, and other notable characters in their teens. It's currently playing on Broadway, but it's a prequel that might mean Stranger Things season 5 hits the big Marvel and Star Wars problem. Based on a huge plot point it'll contain, The First Shadow's big lore reveal will need addressing in season 5 for anyone who doesn't get the chance to watch it. As for other projects, an animated spin-off called Stranger Things: Tales From '85 is due out on Netflix sometime in 2026. Attendees were treated to some first-look images at the series, which takes place between seasons 2 and 3, and will feature a new supernatural threat for Eleven and company to deal with. Everything else is being kept under wraps. For more Netflix-based coverage, read our guides on Bridgerton season 4, One Piece season 2, Wednesday season 2, and Avatar: The Last Airbender season 2.

A Letter to the Future
A Letter to the Future

New York Times

time10 hours ago

  • New York Times

A Letter to the Future

A few weeks ago, a reader of The Morning told me about a project she runs wherein people write letters to their future selves and send them to her. Five years later, she mails the letters back to them. She recently opened her own letter from 2020, written during lockdown, and was struck by how much she and the world had changed. A transmission across the years from younger you to older you: What would you say? What feels essential to report from this moment in time, about your life and the world? There's this scene in the 1992 Nora Ephron movie 'This Is My Life,' in which Julie Kavner, playing a mother, says goodbye to her young daughters before going on a trip. She gives them journals, encouraging them to take notes instead of writing letters. 'Letter writing is ridiculous,' she says. 'Nothing ever arrives within a week, and someone else ends up with what you should have: a record of your life.' I wondered, as I considered writing a letter to future me, why not just keep a journal and look back on what I've written five years from now? A letter is different from a journal entry, I reasoned. In a letter, you address another person. You're making sure your thoughts are legible to them, explaining things that you wouldn't need to explain to your journal. And a journal — or at least my journal — tends to be an exercise in immediacy, a way of getting down what happened today, what's on my mind in this instant. In a letter that attempted to capture my experience of being alive right now, I'd pull back, take a wide view and present the situation as more of an offering than a regurgitation. I'd try to convey something essential about who I am, what I believe and hold dear. I recall an assignment in sixth grade in which we were directed to make a list of 100 things we hoped to accomplish before we graduated high school. Our teacher promised to send them to us when we turned 18. I never received mine and have often wondered what I wrote. (I can only recollect that I put down that I wanted to dance with Patrick Swayze, and I believe I copied that lofty aspiration from my friend Tracy. Neither of us accomplished this.) I know that I would have feared that me at 18 would find me at 11 babyish. There's that same type of fear in writing to me five years from now: I want me in 2030 to look back and think my priorities and preoccupations worthwhile. I'm an adult now, and I want to believe that the gist of who I am is to some extent indelible, not so different from who I will be in the future, but there's a small part of me that hopes that future me is going to be wiser and more evolved, and it makes me almost embarrassed to be me today. My friend Sara writes a letter to herself every year on her birthday, but she doesn't open them. I asked her for advice. 'I tend to kind of graze over various areas of my life, internal and external,' she said. 'Who did I hang out with? Who did I wish I spent more time with? What was my favorite beverage? What smell couldn't I get enough of? What made me really sad? What lit me up?' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store