logo
Eva Longoria set to direct Anita De Monte Laughs Last

Eva Longoria set to direct Anita De Monte Laughs Last

Perth Nowa day ago
Eva Longoria is set to direct Anita De Monte Laughs Last.
The 50-year-old actress - who made her feature film directorial debut in 2023 with comedy drama Flamin' Hot - will once again team up with Searchlight Pictures on her next project.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, she will be at the helm of a big screen adaptation of Xochitl Gonzalez's novel of the same name.
The author will adapt her own work, which follows the stories of Raquel, who is a first generation Ivy League art student, who discovers the genius - but forgotten - work of artist Anita, who died decades earlier in suspicious circumstances.
Raquel realises that their lives share some surprising parallels.
The book explores themes of love, art and power, while delving into who is allowed to be remembered, or who gets shunned by the elite.
Longoria is also set to direct Paula Penn's upcoming Netflix comedy The Fifth Wheel.
However, she previously admitted she struggled to get financial support for Flamin' Hot after pitching the movie about Latino Richard Montañez, a factory janitor-turned-marketing executive who channelled his Mexican heritage into the launch of the Flamin' Hot Cheeto.
Last year, she told HELLO! magazine: "The biggest challenge in making any film is getting backing for it. No one has ever made a movie like this about Latinos, so it was important to me. It's based on the story of Richard Montañez, a Mexican caretaker who became one of PepsiCo's top executives, thanks, he says, to inventing Flamin' Hot Cheetos, a billion-dollar brand.
"Richard had very little education but he knew that his culture was a superpower."
Longoria previously recalled how there were 'no efforts' to include Latinos in films when she started her career.
The former Desperate Housewives star told The Hollywood Reporter: 'I'm like, 'Well, I made one film, and we have a long way to go. Imagine when we have two films. Imagine when we have three films!'
'It wasn't as big of a conversation as it is now. The word 'diversity' gets thrown around so much today. Back then, there were really no efforts or programs or initiatives.'
Meanwhile, Longoria admitted she was worried about being seen as a "dumb" actor as she started to make the move behind the camera.
She added: "The industry's definitely wary of an actor coming in (to direct.) For me, it was about overcoming that. It wasn't sexism or racism.
'It was like, 'Here comes a dumb actor.''
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Netflix boss doesn't regret The Residence axing despite Emmy nominations
Netflix boss doesn't regret The Residence axing despite Emmy nominations

Perth Now

time8 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Netflix boss doesn't regret The Residence axing despite Emmy nominations

Netflix boss Bela Bajaria doesn't regret cancelling The Residence despite its Emmy nominations. The streaming giant's chief content officer has reflected on her decision to scrap the murder mystery comedy - which starred Uzo Abuda as police consultant Cordelia Cupp - after the show received a number of nominations for this year's Primetime Emmy Awards. Asked if she has second guessed the decision to pull the plug, Bela told The Hollywood Reporter: "No, because I always knew she'd be recognised." Uzo was shortlisted in the Best Actress in a Comedy Series category, while the show's first episode The Fall of the House of Usher has been nominated for Outstanding Special Visual Effects In A Single Episode. The episode is also in the running for Outstanding Production Design For A Narrative Contemporary Program (One Hour Or More). Bela insisted she "loves" the series, and has no regrets about the news of its cancellation dropping two weeks before the Emmy nominations. She said: "No, I don't really look at when the news or not the news… I think was is great is — we love The Residence. We championed it, we made it. "Uzo [Aduba] has been part of the Netflix family for a long time and has been recognized before for awards. So, she gave an incredible performance. "Not surprised at all by her nom. We thought that she would and should absolutely get it. So, to me, that's great, that work. That work was completed and people loved it, and she was amazing and then gets recognised for it." She claimed the focus is more on how "great" the programme and Uzo both were. Bela also claimed Netflix will back cancelled shows in award season just as much as those on air. She added: "We're gonna support— yeah! I mean for her and the show, like, we did — of course. "Here's the thing: I think what people forget is, like I said before, we developed it, we championed it, we really marketed — we did all of the things. "And they're all people involved who we work with and continue to work with and will continue to — so we're always going to support that, for sure."

Jennifer Love Hewitt admits to experiencing 'a loss of innocence'
Jennifer Love Hewitt admits to experiencing 'a loss of innocence'

Perth Now

time19 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Jennifer Love Hewitt admits to experiencing 'a loss of innocence'

Jennifer Love Hewitt has experienced a "loss of innocence" since filming I Know What You Did Last Summer in the mid-90s. The 46-year-old actress has reprised the role of Julie James for the new I Know What You Did Last Summer movie, and Jennifer admits that she can still relate to the teenage version of herself, even though she's experienced so much in her life. Asked if she still feels connected to the 18-year-old version of herself, Jennifer told The Hollywood Reporter: "Yeah, I do. Very much so. "It's interesting that you ask that. I've definitely had a loss of innocence and trauma in my life. Some of my friends don't [feel this way], but I still feel uniquely connected to my youth and who I was then. I carry her with me, and that's an important thing to do as you get older. "When you lose that, you lose something very drastic. So I still feel very connected to that part of my life, for sure." Jennifer has also confessed to being "a tad bit more paranoid" since reprising the role of Julie for the new horror movie. The Hollywood actress - who stars in the new film alongside the likes of Madelyn Cline, Chase Sui Wonders and Jonah Hauer-King - shared: "When we were filming the first movie, I was already terrified of horror movies, and I was very aware of the fact that I was actually filming in a real fishing village in Southport, North Carolina. "I was like, 'There's fishermen everywhere, and I've been running from one all day. And now I'm supposed to go home and go to sleep? How is that going to work out?' But since this movie has come back into my life, I'm a tad bit more paranoid." Jennifer admits that returning to the horror franchise after so many years away has made her "a little jumpier". The film star - who married actor Brian Hallisay in 2013 - said: "I left that behind for a while, and now I'm definitely like, 'What was that!?' I'm a little jumpier now that the movie is back in my life."

Jennifer Love Hewitt felt 'hesitant' towards I Know What You Did Last Summer
Jennifer Love Hewitt felt 'hesitant' towards I Know What You Did Last Summer

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Jennifer Love Hewitt felt 'hesitant' towards I Know What You Did Last Summer

Jennifer Love Hewitt was initially "hesitant" to commit to I Know What You Did Last Summer. The 46-year-old actress has reprised the role of Julie James for the long-awaited sequel, but Jennifer admits that she was initially sceptical about the project. The film star - who played Julie in 1997's I Know What You Did Last Summer and 1998's I Still Know What You Did Last Summer - told The Hollywood Reporter: "I was hesitant at first. I wanted to make sure that she fit into the movie in the right way and that there was a reason for her to come back besides just the '90s nostalgia moment. "I wanted her part in the movie to matter and for the audience to feel like they were proud of who she has become." Jennifer thinks the evolved version of her character "feels right". The actress explained: "She's exactly who I thought she would be and who I wanted her to be, honestly. "As weird as it sounds, it was really important for me to not see a Julie James that had healed her trauma. She needed to stay in trauma, and she would've stayed in trauma, so this version of her feels right." Despite this, Jennifer actually felt like she was playing a "new character" in the new movie. She reflected: "What's beautiful about this movie is that she feels like the same person from the original movie, but she also feels like a new character in some ways because of all the time that's gone by. "But I did rewatch [I Know What You Did Last Summer]. It was my kids' first horror movie. They really wanted to watch it together, and so I watched it with them, which was a total trip. So it was really fun and exciting and interesting to go back and watch that girl on the road that night." Jennifer also likened working with Freddie Prinze Jr on the new movie to a "high-school-reunion". Asked about reuniting with the 49-year-old actor, Jennifer shared: "Honestly, it was an out-of-body experience that I didn't totally process until after we were done with the first scene. That's when I was like, 'Oh my God, that's Freddie, and we just did that scene.' I was just so in my head about making sure that Julie and Ray felt like Julie and Ray, but also a totally new Julie and Ray. "I didn't get a normal high school experience in my life, but [reuniting with Freddie] was what I imagine a high-school-reunion feeling to be. You know a person, and while so much time has passed to where it's different, we still fit in with each other. We immediately felt like Julie and Ray, but obviously new versions of them."

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