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Top stars and directors head to Venice for high-powered 2025 festival
Top stars and directors head to Venice for high-powered 2025 festival

Khaleej Times

time23-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Top stars and directors head to Venice for high-powered 2025 festival

Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season. Running from August 27 to September 6, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions. Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett and Amanda Seyfried. Netflix returns A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and Laszlo Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi. Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein, a new take on the classic horror tale starring Isaac, Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth. Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring Clooney, Adam Sandler and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate, alongside the geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, with Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker. Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers and directors alike. In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024. Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia. One film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a 5-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces. "I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully (won't be) controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie.

Emmy Snubs and Surprises: Diego Luna and ‘Squid Game' Shut Out, Nathan Fielder, ‘Black Mirror' In
Emmy Snubs and Surprises: Diego Luna and ‘Squid Game' Shut Out, Nathan Fielder, ‘Black Mirror' In

Yahoo

time15-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Emmy Snubs and Surprises: Diego Luna and ‘Squid Game' Shut Out, Nathan Fielder, ‘Black Mirror' In

Just when you thought awards season was over, it's time for the Emmys. Nominations for TV's highest honor were announced Tuesday morning, sparking a race that's been heating up for months. Only one of last year's nominees for Best Drama Series remains eligible in 2025, which makes securing a nod (and snagging the trophy) that much more valuable. (Breaking through at the Emmys is critical for shows eyeing to return, season after season.) The Best Comedy Series race is a toss-up, with last year's surprise victor 'Hacks' going toe-to-toe with the one-time favorite, 'The Bear,' and strong newcomers like 'The Studio.' As for Best Limited Series, 'Adolescence' seems primed to rack up trophies, but the race can change at any time and being recognized really is an honor unto itself. With 600 programs submitted in the Best Series categories — only 14 fewer than last year — there is still far too much TV for any voter to watch in the time allotted, which means… there will be snubs. Yes, it's time to talk about the snubs and surprises of 2025, but before we get into it, please remember: More from IndieWire How to Watch the 2025 Emmy Nominations Announced Live 2025 Emmy Predictions: Who Will Win at the Primetime Emmy Awards? 'Andor' Writer Beau Willimon Breaks Down Saw Gerrera's 'Absolutely Wackadoodle' Rhydo Speech Here at IndieWire, a 'snub' is just industry shorthand for a series or individual who was expected to be nominated, thought to be deserving of a nomination, or both, and yet — for whatever reason — they did not receive recognition for their work. (Not today, anyway — there's always the fall awards!) Labeling any such program or person a 'snub' does not convey intent; it does't mean their peers had it out for them, or voters purposefully shunned one potential nominee in favor of another. On the other end of the spectrum, anything dubbed a 'surprise' is a series or individual who was thought to be out of the running before nominations were announced; something or someone who was written off too early, whether it was because they didn't mount much of a campaign, didn't match up well in their category, or simply didn't get the typical plaudits heaped upon your standard Emmy nominee. By and large, it's best if you remember, dear readers, that the very nature of competition means not everyone can win (or, in this case, be nominated), and it's only human for those invested in television to react with shock and awe, admiration and anger, to the TV Academy's picks for the season's best shows. So, without further ado, let's dig in: (OK, there's just one more little bit of to-do: Voting for the 2025 Emmy winners will begin August 18 and end August 27 at 10 p.m. PT. The 77th annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set for Sunday, September 14 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.) With additional reporting by Proma Khosla. Best of IndieWire 2023 Emmy Predictions: Who Will Win at the Primetime Emmy Awards? 2023 Emmy Predictions: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special 2023 Emmy Predictions: Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series

Golden Globes unveils nominations, voting deadlines for 2026 ceremony
Golden Globes unveils nominations, voting deadlines for 2026 ceremony

Khaleej Times

time19-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Golden Globes unveils nominations, voting deadlines for 2026 ceremony

The Golden Globe Awards, one of the most anticipated events in the entertainment industry, has officially unveiled its timeline, eligibility rules, and award guidelines for the 83rd annual ceremony, slated to take place on January 11, 2026. The official social media handle of the Golden Globes has confirmed that the event, hosted by comedian and television personality Nikki Glaser, will be broadcast live from the Beverly Hilton Hotel on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. Save the date ð���ï¸� @NikkiGlaser returns to host the #GoldenGlobes - LIVE Sunday, January 11, 2026 on @CBS and @paramountplus! Nominations announced â�� Monday, December 8, 2025 — Golden Globes (@goldenglobes) April 24, 2025 As the Golden Globes retains its traditional role as the curtain raiser for the major awards season leading up to the Academy Awards, the 2026 Golden Globes will mark the start of an exciting awards season with the Oscars to follow on March 15, 2026. In a bid to reflect the changing landscape of entertainment, the Golden Globes has added a Best Podcast Award to its growing list of categories for the 2026 ceremony. According to the updated eligibility rules, the top 25 podcasts will be considered for nominations, and the final selection will consist of six final nominees for the category, as per Deadline. The data and insights company Luminate will play a pivotal role in determining which podcasts will qualify for consideration. In the past, the Golden Globes have mainly focused on motion picture and television awards, but with the rapidly expanding popularity of podcasts, this new category marks a significant step toward recognising new media in the realm of entertainment. The eligibility guidelines for this category can be found on the official Golden Globes submission platform. The 2026 Golden Globes ceremony will follow a detailed and tightly scheduled timeline leading up to the big night. Below is a breakdown of the key dates for submissions, nominations, and voting: August 1, 2025: Submission website opens for Motion Picture and Television entries for the 2026 Golden Globes. October 1, 2025: Submission website opens for Podcast entries. October 31, 2025: Deadline for Motion Picture, Television, and Podcast submissions. All entries must be completed online at the official Golden Globes submission platform. November 17, 2025: Deadline for Television and Podcast nomination ballots to be sent to all voters. November 23, 2025: Final date for Television and Podcast press conferences, and final date for programs to be uploaded to the official Golden Globes screening platform. November 24, 2025, by 5 pm PST: Deadline for the receipt of Television and Podcast nomination ballots. November 25, 2025: Deadline for Motion Picture and Cinematic and Box Office Achievement nomination ballots to be sent to voters. December 3, 2025: Final date for Motion Picture and Box Office Achievement press conferences, and final date for films to be uploaded to the screening platform. December 4, 2025, by 5 pm PST: Deadline for the receipt of Motion Picture and Cinematic and Box Office Achievement nomination ballots. December 8, 2025, at 5 am PST: Announcement of nominations for the 83rd Annual Golden Globes. December 19, 2025: Final ballots sent to all voters. January 3, 2026, by 5 pm PST: Deadline for the receipt of final ballots. January 11, 2026, at 5 pm PST: 83rd Annual Golden Globes ceremony.

This museum has been named England's best
This museum has been named England's best

Telegraph

time15-06-2025

  • Telegraph

This museum has been named England's best

A cynic might suggest that, far from being a brief moment in the calendar, 'awards season' never ends. If it is not the film industry doling out statuettes, then it is time for sporting tributes, art accolades, or the shiny gongs that draw pop stars to black-tie events. So it should be no surprise that the travel world has been wearing its fanciest outfits in the last few days – via the Visit England Awards for Excellence. As the name suggests, this yearly ceremony beams a light onto this country's big achievers in the tourism sector. The winners' list offered hat-tips to everything from major sites like the Royal Crescent in Bath and the National Space Centre in Leicester to self-catering cottages in Cornwall, country pubs in Derbyshire and Devon – and the Ad Gefrin distillery in Northumberland. Yet tucked among these many plaudits was a triumph that some might argue was overdue. The winner in the 'Large Visitor Attraction of the Year' category was the Black Country Living Museum (BCLM); an institution that can hardly be described as 'new' – but which has long done splendid work as a treasure trove of British heritage. It arrived on the map in 1978, but its remit looks back even further, into the mists of the 19th century. Technically, the Black Country Living Museum covers a 300-year chunk of history, but its focus is mainly on the window of time between 1850 and 1950, when the Industrial Revolution had prompted a period of almost unprecedented productivity, sweat and toil in this corner of the West Midlands. There is no precise geographical definition of 'the Black Country', but its boundaries are generally deemed to encompass Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall and Wolverhampton (while stopping just short of Birmingham). Academic opinion varies on whether its moniker refers to the rich coal seam that was mined in the area, or the high levels of soot that haunted its air (and with it, its residents' faces) in the 19th century – but the connection to heavy industry is implicit. The museum in Dudley digs into the epoch almost as effectively as colliers' pickaxes once clawed at the prized materials buried in the ground. Unlike many of Britain's industrial landmarks, which have been refurbished to a 'higher' purpose – the one-time Bankside and Battersea Power Stations in London, reinvented as Tate Modern and a retail and restaurant complex, respectively; the former Baltic Flour Mill in Gateshead, now repurposed as a contemporary art gallery – the BCLM revels in the dirt underneath its fingernails. An impressive 26 acres in scope, it makes use of a site which incorporates many of the essential elements of Britain's industrial era – a railway goods yard, coal pits, lime kilns, a section of the Dudley Canal. Although many of the buildings have been transposed to the site, they have been brought in – and in many cases, spared from demolition – from the surrounding area. Thus there is an 1860s brass foundry from Walsall, an 1880s nail forge from Halesowen, and a 1920s rolling mill from Oldbury. All of them contribute to a pleasing clamour and clang. Visitors can watch links being fired at a chainmaker's smithy, or take a narrowboat ride into the (somewhat claustrophobic) confines of the Dudley Tunnel. And there are stores which remember a more innocent everyday commerce: a turn-of-the-century sweet shop, a Victorian pharmacy, a gentlemen's outfitters preserved as it would have looked in 1935. There are trams and trolleybuses too, and a collection of cars – from makers as lost to view as Sunbeam, Clyno, AJS and Star – that drove these streets in the 1910s and 1920s. If all this sounds like a dreary vision from a particularly rainy school trip, then, as a relatively biased witness – I grew up in the area – I can happily vouch for the BCLM as an entirely welcome alternative to a day in a 1980s classroom. It seems to have retained its charm in the 21st century too. When I took my primary-school-aged son to visit it a few summers ago, he spent most of a sunny afternoon learning to hoop-roll down one of the site's steeper cobbled lanes. Simple pleasures and all that. There is one element of newness to a museum whose whole ethos is its avowed refusal to keep up with the times – the recent £30million redevelopment that has stretched its reference points into the living memory of the 1960s, with all the music, burgeoning technology and rapidly changing fashions that such time-travel entails. This 'update' is one of the reasons for the BCLM's success at the Visit England Awards – although would-be day-trippers can be assured that the museum remains defiantly stuck in the past.

Why Kylie Jenner has been wearing black when supporting BF Timothee Chalamet at public events
Why Kylie Jenner has been wearing black when supporting BF Timothee Chalamet at public events

Daily Mail​

time30-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Why Kylie Jenner has been wearing black when supporting BF Timothee Chalamet at public events

Fashion observers noted a striking trend with Kylie Jenner after she made her red carpet debut with her boyfriend Timothee Chalamet earlier this month - she almost always wears black when supporting him at public events. Prior to wearing a gorgeous black Schiaparelli gown at the 70th David Di Donatello Awards in Rome on May 7, she previously sported black ensembles at nearly every awards-season event that she accompanied the 29-year-old Oscar nominee to. And now Kylie has finally revealed why she goes monochrome so often when out with Timothee. The 27-year-old admitted to Harper's Bazaar in an article published on Wednesday that she opted for jet black so as not to distract from her boyfriend's achievements. 'Although these are the most beautiful, iconic gowns that I've been wearing, I think a black dress is also kind of like, not too attention grabbing in the best way,' she explained. 'You can never go wrong with a black dress,' Kylie added. Although the monochrome looks served an important function for her, she didn't set out to wear nothing but black throughout awards season. 'I think it just like happened that way,' she admitted. Prior to making her red carpet debut with Timothee in Italy, Kylie was thinking of trying out something more colorful. 'I can't wear another black dress,' she recalled thinking. 'And then of course the most perfect, gorgeous Schiaparelli black dress shows up.' The plunging gown ended up being the perfect way to highlight her curves, and it also drew attention to her sweet PDA with Timothee. He wrapped an arm around her and rested his hand on her midriff as she affectionately grasped his finger, and her patterned black dress created the ideal contrast to show off the hands. Timothee tended to favor more eye-catching outfits during awards season, including a yellow leather suit that he wore to the Oscars, but he matched Kylie in Rome with a chic double-breasted black velvet suit and a matching black shirt that he wore without a tie. Kylie flashed a bit more flesh at the 2025 Academy Awards ceremony when she wore a black bedazzled Miu Miu dress with a triangular cutout over her midriff and a plunging neckline that highlighted her cleavage. She was willing to steal a bit more attention at the Vanity Fair Oscars Party, whens he changed into a sheer corset-style dress from Ashi Studio that left little to the imagination. In the run-up to the Oscars, she stunned in a backless vintage John Galliano gown dating from 1995 that was decorated with shimmering tear drop–shaped spangles at the BAFTA Film Awards in February. Kylie's black pattern doesn't appear to have emerged until after the Golden Globes were held on January 5 of this year, as she wore a striking silver dress to that ceremony. Her turn toward black was also a return to tradition, as it is traditionally a more conservative, formal color. Although women attending awards shows often favor colorful ensembles to contrast men's more conservative attire, Kylie highlighted the more formal roots of the ceremonies with her black outfits. Her public appearances with Timothée were more limited in 2024, but she also favored a black outfit at the 2024 Golden Globes, though she wore a sheer patterned look that was far more risqué than many of her outfits this year She has also occasionally worn black at more casual events, such as the US Open in September 2023, when she wore a black T-shirt to match Timothee's black ensemble. However, the younger sister of Kim Kardashian has also shown that she's willing to stand out when the spotlights aren't as glaring. When she appeared with Timothee at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells, California, in March, Kylie stood out in a tied-off cropped red blouse covered in white stripes, which stood out against her love's white track suit. She and the Little Women star were first linked back in April of 2023.

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