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Is ‘The Bear' season 5 happening? What we know after the finale
Is ‘The Bear' season 5 happening? What we know after the finale

Tom's Guide

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Tom's Guide

Is ‘The Bear' season 5 happening? What we know after the finale

FX on Hulu's dramedy "The Bear" returned for its fourth season with a feast of ten brand-new episodes on Thursday, June 25, and it left fans of the acclaimed hit on a bit of a cliffhanger — can The Bear (the restaurant) go on without the Bear (the chef)? Yes, the final episode of season four (it goes without saying, but spoilers ahead, folks!) saw Jeremy Allen White's Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto — the perpetually brooding but preternaturally talented chef at the help of the show's chaotic but ambitious restaurant — announced his decision to step away from The Bear, leaving it in the hands of its capable chef de cuisine Sydney Adamu (Ayo Edebiri). To the shock of both Sydney, Cousin Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) and sister Natalie (Abby Elliot), Carmy reveals that he's lost his joy for cooking and is happy to transfer his ownership stake in the restaurant to the three of them. It's a decision that's been brewing all season, but while it provides much-needed catharsis for Carmy, it does seemingly leave the future of not only The Bear, the restaurant, but "The Bear," the show, up in the air. Will we get more "The Bear" or, as Uncle Jimmy's (Oliver Platt) clock menacingly counted down all season long, has time run out? As of press time, FX on Hulu has not announced a fifth-season pick-up of the Emmy-winning show. (For reference, seasons 3 and 4 were filmed back-to-back, with the fourth installment greenlit while the third was already in production.) Back in July 2024, FX chairman John Landgraf spoke about the show's post-season 4 future, saying: "We really don't know," per Variety. "These decisions are really creative decisions," he continued. "It's about how much more story does [creator Christopher Storer] have to tell? I mean, obviously, I'm hoping he has more ... You just have to follow the creative." That does sound positive, with Storer getting new episodes should he want them, but the real question is how the powers that be are going to wrangle its increasingly booked-and-busy cast members for a fifth installment of the show. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Jeremy Allen White will, of course, play Bruce Springsteen in the upcoming biopic "Deliver Me From Nowhere." Ebon Moss-Bachrach is going the superhero route, making his Marvel debut as Ben Grimm, aka The Thing, in "The Fantastic Four: First Steps." And Ayo Edebiri has a live-action "Barney" movie, an Apple TV Plus rom-com series ("Prodigies") and a Luca Guadagnino film, "After the Hunt," with Julia Roberts. It's quite a packed calendar for "The Bear" cast. However, the principal actors are contractually obligated to return, should a fifth season get announced. Tom's Guide will keep you posted on all things related to the future of "The Bear," including whether it returns for a fifth edition or not. In the meantime, you can catch up on all of the kitchen drama by streaming the first four seasons of the show on Hulu.

Jeremy Allen White 'felt under pressure playing Bruce Springsteen'
Jeremy Allen White 'felt under pressure playing Bruce Springsteen'

Perth Now

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Jeremy Allen White 'felt under pressure playing Bruce Springsteen'

Jeremy Allen White has felt the "pressure" playing Bruce Springsteen in Deliver Me From Nowhere. The 34-year-old actor plays the music icon in the upcoming biopic film, and Jeremy has admitted to feeling under pressure before the first trailer was released. During an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the actor explained: "Getting that out, it was so much pressure. "You're playing a real person — nevermind Bruce Springsteen — and I was really touched [when] the trailer came out. I had more texts than when I blacked out and won that Golden Globe [for The Bear]." Jeremy admitted to being surprised by the level of interest in the trailer. The actor - who also played Phillip 'Lip' Gallagher in Shameless, the hit comedy-drama series, from 2011 until 2021 - said: "I didn't realise trailers were that big of a thing." Earlier this month, Bruce observed that Jeremy was "very tolerant" of him on the set of the biopic. The rock legend revealed that Jeremy was gracious during his visits to the film's set. Springsteen, 75 - who is one of the best-selling artists of all time - told Rolling Stone magazine: "Jeremy Allen White was very, very tolerant of me the days that I would appear on the set. "I said to him, 'Look, anytime I'm in the way, just give me the look and I'm on my way home.' So the days that I got out there, he was wonderfully tolerant with me being there. And it was just fun. It was enjoyable." The new movie explores "some of the most painful days" of Springsteen's life. And the chart-topping star actually made a conscious effort to avoid the film's set on certain days. He explained: "I mean, there's some unusualness to it because the movie involves, in some ways, some of the most painful days of my life. "If there was a scene coming up that was sometimes really deeply personal, I wanted the actors to feel completely free, and I didn't want to get in the way, and so I would just stay at home."

Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life
Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life

Bruce Springsteen is revealing what it was like to watch Jeremy Allen White portray him in his forthcoming biopic, Deliver Me From Nowhere. The film, hailing from writer-director Scott Cooper, stars White as the legendary artist, centering on the time period when he made his 1982 record Nebraska. The album is deeply personal, and Springsteen told Rolling Stone that there was 'some unusualness' to watching the project be filmed because it touches on 'some of the most painful days of my life.' More from The Hollywood Reporter James Blake Brings 'Sinners' Song to Cannes Lions Will Drake Kill the Diss Track? 'Godfather of Harlem' Maestro Swizz Beatz Shares His Formula 'I mean, there's some unusualness to it because the movie involves, in some ways, some of the most painful days of my life,' he said, adding that he would take time away from set 'if there was a scene coming up that was sometimes really deeply personal.' 'Well, some of the scenes I wasn't at,' he said. 'I wanted the actors to feel completely free, and I didn't want to get in the way, and so I would just stay at home. If Scott Cooper, the director, wanted or needed me there for something, I would try to make it. But I was on tour in Canada for the whole first month or so of the filming, and so I was really out on the road quite a bit and working at that time.' The first footage from Deliver Me From Nowhere debuted earlier this year at CinemaCon, and the official trailer dropped Wednesday, giving audiences a first look at The Bear star's depiction of Springsteen, including his performance of his beloved 1975 single, 'Born to Run.' It's no secret that Springsteen and his longtime manager and record producer Jon Landau (played by Jeremy Strong) were involved in Deliver Me From Nowhere. The 'Dancing in the Dark' singer would often visit the film's set, and when asked what it was like watching White play him, the 20-time Grammy Award winner joked, 'I'm sure it's much worse for the actor than for me.' 'Jeremy Allen White was very, very tolerant of me the days that I would appear on the set. I said to him, 'Look, anytime I'm in the way, just give me the look and I'm on my way home,'' Springsteen added. 'So the days that I got out there, he was wonderfully tolerant with me being there. And it was just fun. It was enjoyable.' The film is adapted from Warren Zanes' 2023 book of the same name and will hit theaters late this year on Oct. 24. Alongside White and Landau, the cast includes Stephen Graham, Odessa Young, Paul Walter Hauser, Gaby Hoffmann, Johnny Cannizzaro, Harrison Gilbertson, Marc Maron, David Krumholtz and Chris Jaymes. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT

ADRIAN THRILLS reviews Tracks II: The Lost Albums: Bruce Springsteen releases 83 monumental and magnificent unheard tracks
ADRIAN THRILLS reviews Tracks II: The Lost Albums: Bruce Springsteen releases 83 monumental and magnificent unheard tracks

Daily Mail​

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

ADRIAN THRILLS reviews Tracks II: The Lost Albums: Bruce Springsteen releases 83 monumental and magnificent unheard tracks

There are box sets, deluxe editions... and Bruce Springsteen anthologies. Never a man to do things by half, The Boss this week releases seven previously unheard albums of songs recorded between 1983 and 2018. He once told us that everybody has a hungry heart, but even the most ravenous fan might baulk at the overwhelming Tracks II: The Lost Albums. There are 83 songs in total, with only nine of them having been out in any form before. Six of the seven LPs are also complete pieces of work, each with its own sound and themes. Available as a 9-LP vinyl box (£280), 7-CD set (£230) Tracks II isn't cheap (though it is available to stream). It's also, surely, the least TikTok-friendly release ever. But for those keen to investigate, it's a treasure trove. Springsteen – whose biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere, starring Jeremy Allen White and Stephen Graham, is out later this year – revisited these songs in lockdown. He's delved into the vaults before, notably on 1998's 4-disc Tracks, a rag-bag of unused material and out-takes. But the sheer quality and variety on display here puts Tracks II in a different league to that prequel. For those who fancy a new Springsteen album for every day of the week, here's my album-by-album guide to The Boss's magnificent seven. L.A. GARAGE SESSIONS '83 (1983) Rating: Billed as the missing link between 1982's stripped-down, wholly-solo Nebraska and 1984's Born In The USA (Springsteen's heartland rock classic), L.A. Garage Sessions kicks off the Bruce-athon. An 18-song album of lo-fi folk and 1950s-tinged rock and roll, it was made with just a guitar and a drum machine. Little Girl Like You is an affectionate Buddy Holly homage. Follow That Dream rewrites an old Elvis song as a declaration of faith. Amid out-takes from Born In The USA, there's also some warm-hearted pop that recalls 1980's The River. STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA SESSIONS (1993-94) Rating: When Springsteen released Streets Of Philadelphia as the haunting theme tune to Jonathan Demme's 1993 film about the AIDS crisis, it reached No.2 and gave him his biggest ever UK single. It's no great surprise that he made an entire album in the same vein, although quite why he decided not to release it until now is baffling. Built on drum loops and synths instead of guitars, it's dominated by dark, brooding love songs that slowly build in intensity. One highlight is Maybe I Don't Know You, a tale of a suspicious lover that explores similar themes to 1987's Brilliant Disguise. SOMEWHERE NORTH OF NASHVILLE (1995) Rating: The Boss goes country, and it's a hot-stepping hoot! Recorded at the same time as 1995's acoustic The Ghost Of Tom Joad – and originally due out at the same time – this is a hugely enjoyable collection of honky-tonk hoedowns and bar-room ballads, with pedal steel player Marty Rifkin and E Street Band violinist Soozie Tyrell part of Bruce's wrecking crew. Springsteen covers Johnny Rivers' 1960s weepie Poor Side Of Town, and belts out Repo Man and Detail Man, two feel-good rockers that are essentially the same song with different lyrics. Yee-haw! INYO (1996-97) Rating: Taking time out from The E Street Band to raise a young family with his wife Patti Scialfa, Bruce kept a lower-than-usual profile in the late 1990s. But he was still beavering away at home, making records and keeping them to himself. Inyo, rooted in tales of the Mexican diaspora in California and Texas, is another previously hidden gem. Sung in a weathered drawl, the songs are enhanced by brushed drums and mariachi horns. Adelita is a tragic love story set amid the Mexican War Of Independence, and Ciudad Juarez a tale of the cross-border drugs trade. Inyo could be the Hispanic Nebraska. PERFECT WORLD (1990s-2010s) Rating: Embracing a wider timeframe, Perfect World is the only one of these albums not intended as a stand-alone work. Instead, its songs are linked by their arena-ready nature, and the presence of many of Springsteen's E Street Band regulars, including drummer Max Weinberg, pianist Roy Bittan and bassist Garry Tallent. I'm Not Sleeping is a boisterous rocker, and If I Could Only Be Your Lover uses smalltown decay as a metaphor for lost love. Bruce's wife Patti and Steven Van Zandt add backing vocals on You Lifted Me Up. FAITHLESS (2005-06) Rating: Written as the soundtrack for a 'spiritual Western' film that was never made, Faithless is another absorbing deviation. Springsteen has touched on gospel before – My City Of Ruins and Land Of Hope And Dreams were sung with gospel fervour on his recent UK tour – but he's never explored sacred music quite like he does on All God's Children and God Sent You. His meditative score is enlivened by heavenly choirs and three short instrumentals that evoke the arid deserts of the American dust bowl. His sons Evan and Sam sing backing vocals on Where You Going, Where You From. TWILIGHT HOURS (2010-2018) Rating: If Faithless is an unexpected detour, Twilight Hours is even more surprising. Originally seen as a sister album to 2010's Western Stars (a record inspired by 1960s Californian pop), it's a sophisticated homage to the spirit of Bruce's fellow New Jersey legend Frank Sinatra. The Boss isn't a natural crooner, but these songs of doomed romance are all heartfelt and exquisitely crafted. Sunday Love is a Broadway-meets-Bacharach ballad set on the morning commute ('paper and coffee on the train'), while film composer Jon Brion adds guitar and vibraphone on the classy Two Of Us. Tracks II is out Friday June 27. A 20-song edition, Lost And Found: Selections From The Lost Albums, is available as a double vinyl LP and single CD.

Rock Legend Says His Kids 'Ignore' His Success
Rock Legend Says His Kids 'Ignore' His Success

Yahoo

time22-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Rock Legend Says His Kids 'Ignore' His Success

Rock Legend Says His Kids 'Ignore' His Success originally appeared on Parade. Bruce Springsteen is one of the most iconic musicians of all time - but his three kids are unphased by his success. In and interview with The Times published on Saturday, June 21, the legendary rocker shares that his three kids - Evan, 34, Jessica, 33, and Samuel, 31 - do not display his memorabilia in their New Jersey family home. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 "Except for a few guitars and a piano, you wouldn't know musicians lived here," Springsteen, 75, said of the home he shares with wife and fellow E Street Band member Patti Scialfa. "The kids grew up in another house in town, a midsized home not unlike the ones their friends lived in, and we tried to keep a very natural domestic existence for them. Anything else is a burden they don't need." Springsteen, who described himself as an "attention whore", also told The Times that his children couldn't care less about his musical success. "They ignore it," the Born in the U.S.A. singer said. "They might come to a show, bring their friends, but it's never been a central part of their lives." The interview comes shortly after Springsteen's biopic, Deliver Me From Nowhere, started making headlines. The film, which will star The Bear's Jeremy Allen White as the iconic rocker, will offer an intimate look at the making of Springsteen's album Nebraska, blending his rise to superstardom with a raw glimpse into his early life in Freehold, New Jersey. Deliver Me From Nowhere will be released in theaters on Oct. 24, 2025. Rock Legend Says His Kids 'Ignore' His Success first appeared on Parade on Jun 21, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 21, 2025, where it first appeared.

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