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Entertainment

Venice Movie Pageant 2022: What to Watch For

Though Sundance debuted last year’s Academy Award best-picture winner, “CODA,” and Cannes can be counted on to launch major international films like “Parasite” and “Drive My Car,” when it comes to the real kickoff for Oscar season — the mad crush of prestige films, A-list cocktail parties and awards show buzz that churns all fall and winter — it’s the Venice Film Festival that fires the starting pistol.

On Wednesday, as stars begin to land on the Lido (and Hollywood’s Aperol Spritz consumption increases tenfold), Venice’s 79th edition will officially get underway, and a jury led by Julianne Moore will begin watching some of the most anticipated films of the year. During the week and a half that Venice is in progress, major film festivals in Telluride and Toronto will commence, too; by the time these three fests are over, nearly every prestigious film meant to bow in late 2022 will have been screened.

Venice can certainly be counted on to provide its fair share of memorable, meme-able moments: When Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain nuzzled on a Venice red carpet last year, or Lady Gaga perched atop a speedboat styled like a retro siren, those images ricocheted around the world because of the romantic, old-world glamor Venice delivers. (It’s no wonder that Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez chose Venice to make their public debut as a couple last year.) Still, its real value is as an awards-season launchpad where best-picture winners like “Nomadland,” “The Shape of Water” and “Birdman” first found their footing.

The festival’s opening-night movie is the dark comedy “White Noise,” which stars Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig and was adapted from the Don DeLillo novel by the writer-director Noah Baumbach, whose previous film, “Marriage Story,” scored a best -picture nomination and a supporting-actress Oscar win for Laura Dern. But Baumbach is far from the only auteur on the Lido this year to have directed a performer to Oscar glory.

Darren Aronofsky, who opened Venice in 2010 with his feverish Natalie Portman thriller “Black Swan,” will be back with “The Whale,” starring Brendan Fraser as an obese man attempting to reconnect with his teenage daughter. There’s also “The Banshees of Inisherin,” starring Colin Farrell, the writer-director Martin McDonagh’s follow-up to the Oscar-laureled “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”

Alejandro González Iñárritu, who scored back-to-back best director wins for “The Revenant” and “Birdman,” is returning to Venice with the mystical drama “Bardo.” And after director Florian Zeller pushed Anthony Hopkins to a best-actor win for “The Father,” pundits will be eager to take the measure of Hugh Jackman in Zeller’s latest family drama, “The Son.”

This year’s Venice lineup is also filled with major female-led films, and since Penélope Cruz won the Volpi Cup for best actress at Venice last year — a victory that pushed her “Parallel Mothers” performance into Oscar’s final-five — the Lido could provide an auspicious debut for several of the actresses expected to attend.

Among those anticipated films are “Tar,” which casts Cate Blanchett as a conductor facing controversy; Netflix’s drama “Blonde,” featuring Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe; Luca Guadagnino’s “Bones and All,” with “Waves” breakout Taylor Russell in a cannibal romance with Timothée Chalamet; and the Tilda Swinton vehicle “The Eternal Daughter.”

And then there’s the thriller “Don’t Worry Darling,” which has already been earning headlines for director Olivia Wilde’s romance with star Harry Styles, a casting controversy involving Shia LaBeouf — Wilde said he was fired from the film, while LaBeouf claimed he quit — and the notably minimal press participation of lead Florence Pugh, who is rumored to be limiting her Venice promotion to a red-carpet appearance at the film’s premiere. After Venice, will Wilde’s worries cease or multiply? We’ll know soon.

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Entertainment

12 Reveals and Motion pictures to Watch on Netflix Earlier than They Expire in September

Tony-winning playwright and Oscar-nominated screenwriter John Logan created this brilliant Showtime series that mixes a delicious stew of Victorian-era monsters, mythology and literary flourishes. Eva Green is a wonder – creepy, funny, entertainingly self-confident – as a monster hunter, her adventures in London in the late 19th century Jekyll and Mr. Hyde “as well as various gunslingers, werewolves and aliens. Those who know the characters and the books they live in will eagerly devour the references and overlap, but even newbies can easily cling to the show’s dark humor, intricate narrative, and copious gore.

Stream here.

Mainstream audiences who discovered the charismatic Hong Kong actor Tony Leung Chiu-wai through Marvel’s “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” would be well advised to watch this martial arts drama from 2013, one of the actor’s many collaborations with the dazzling one Director Wong Kar-wai. Leung plays Ip Man, master of the South China Kung Fu style known as Wing Chun, who trained a young Bruce Lee. But Wong’s film is less of a biopic than a Lee-style adventure, filled with breathtakingly photographed battle sequences and action set pieces. Netflix is ​​streaming the US version of the film, which is shorter and simplified but less impressive. Still, “The Grandmaster” is an overwhelming experience even in this abbreviated form.

Stream here.

“Get off my plane!” growled Harrison Ford in this 1997 action extravaganza that is simply “Die Hard” on the President’s plane. Ford plays President James Marshall, who is on his way from Moscow to the White House when a group of terrorists kidnap Air Force One and take his family and employees hostage. But Marshall is a combat vet and decides to back up his “no negotiating with terrorists” rhetoric with action. Director Wolfgang Petersen knows how to direct claustrophobic action (his breakthrough film was “Das Boot”), and Ford is a strong anchor who maintains credibility even in the silly moments of the script. Meanwhile, Gary Oldman has a lot of fun and eats a lot of landscape as the leader of the kidnappers.

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With season two of this supernatural drama migrating from CBS to Paramount +, it’s not too surprising that the first year is leaving Netflix to join it. Katja Herbers, Mike Colter and Aasif Mandvi play as three “assessors” for the Roman Catholic Church, almost like a Ghostbusters team for properties that are sent to check the validity of such encounters. But “Evil” isn’t just another “exorcist” rip-off; It has a classic pedigree penned by Robert and Michelle King, the team behind “The Good Wife” and “The Good Fight”. It is lifted by its unusually intelligent dialogues and pointed characterizations – and then it delivers the genre goods.

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It’s forgivable to assume that this 2008 family favorite was DreamWorks’ transparent attempt to recreate the success of Shrek: a potentially franchise starter, computer-animated feature film full of pop culture references and all about the personality of a comic book superstar. And these assumptions are not wrong. But “Kung Fu Panda” is fun despite its unmistakable formula, especially because of the unmistakable charisma of its star Jack Black; he is at the same time funny, cuddly, personable and inspiring like a slapstick-prone panda who has to fulfill his destiny as a “dragon warrior”. (The first sequel will also leave Netflix on September 30.)

Stream here.

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Entertainment

Watch a Scary Story Come to Life in ‘Candyman’

In “Anatomy of a Scene,” we ask directors to reveal the secrets that go into making key scenes in their movies. See new episodes in the series on Fridays. You can also watch our collection of more than 150 videos on YouTube and subscribe to our YouTube channel.

“Want to hear a scary story?”

That enticing question (or horrifying one, depending on your point of view) begins this scene from the new “Candyman” (now in theaters), which is both a continuation and a reimagining of Bernard Rose’s 1992 horror film.

The update is directed by Nia DaCosta and co-written by Jordan Peele (with DaCosta and Win Rosenfield). It still involves the menacing figure who comes after you if you say his name five times in front of a mirror, but this scene reaches back to the story of the original film.

Brianna (Teyonah Parris) and her brother, Troy (Nathan Stewart-Jarrett), are both hanging out one evening with their boyfriends when Troy turns down the lights and turns up the dread to tell a story. It concerns Helen Lyle, one of the main characters (played by Virginia Madsen) from the earlier film, and how one day she just “snaps.” Killings and snow angels in blood ensue.

Troy’s story retraces the steps of the earlier film’s narrative, with some embellishments. Rather than flashing back to footage from the 1992 movie, moments are depicted with shadow puppetry. Narrating the sequence, DaCosta said that she wanted each shadow puppet segment to “be specific to the teller” because she saw it as “someone’s way of thinking about the story. It’s not necessarily the truth.” In this scene, hands move the puppets to convey a sense of how the storyteller, Troy, is also manipulating his tale.

Read the 2021 “Candyman” review.

Read the review of the 1992 film.

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Entertainment

Watch Normani Shock Jordan Chiles With a Video Message

Jordan Chiles is really living his dream. Just a few weeks after winning the silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics, the 20-year-old gymnast received a warm video message from Normani. At an appearance Access dailyJordan reflected on her stormy life since the Summer Games and mentioned a recent Instagram comment she received from the pop superstar. That then prompted the hosts to pull up the surprise video.

“I’m really trying to keep my composure because I’m actually a superfan and I’m really proud of your trip. Congratulations on winning the silver in Tokyo. I see you girls. Keep up the good work,” said Normani. “Keep working hard, keep emitting black girl magic because you make me very, very proud. I live through you because I used to be a gymnast, but sister, I knew I wouldn’t go to the Olympics. “Jordan held back tears and said,” I wasn’t expecting that at all. ” Check out the sweet surprise at 2:51 in the video above.

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Politics

Ohio Home Races: What to Watch For

But who wins, and their margin of victory, could tell us a little bit about what Democratic voters think as the party seeks to capitalize on its tight control of Washington and prepares for a tough challenge for halftime in 2022.

If Mrs Turner wins, especially if she does so with ease, it would be a sign that the progressive energy of the upstart that drove Mr Sanders’ two presidential campaigns is not waning as the movement seeks out new national leaders gradually to succeed the 79-year old Mr. Sanders. And she would most likely send another high profile advocate to Congress for the left’s top priorities like universal health care and far-reaching climate action.

If Ms. Brown wins, especially if she does so by a wide margin, it would signal that Democratic voters would prefer a candidate more in line with the party’s flag-bearers in Washington and be careful about choosing someone who has those leaders in the past criticized. Or, as Sean McElwee, executive director of polling firm Data for Progress, put it, Democratic voters “are interested in voting for the person who will go to work and they will not have to think.” over again and again. “

In the Republican Race near Columbus, a crowded field of Republicans vies to piss off Mike Carey, an energy lobbyist who was backed by Mr. Trump. He was largely unknown until the former president threw his support for Mr. Carey in early June and all but made sure he would be the front runner.

But the race is fluid, with more than 10 candidates running for the Republican nomination. Some of Mr. Carey’s rivals also have a more established reputation in the district, the 15th Congress, as well as the support of prominent allies of Mr. Trump.

Those rivals include Bob Peterson, a state senator who also runs a 2,700 acre grain farm and is backed by Ohio Right to Life, the state’s leading anti-abortion group. There’s also Ruth Edmonds, who has a following among Christian Conservatives and has the support of Ken Blackwell, a prominent Conservative activist and Trump ally, and Debbie Meadows, an activist and wife of Mark Meadows, the last Chief of Staff to Mr. Trump in the White A house .

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World News

Asia-Pacific shares dip as buyers watch China tech shares in Hong Kong

SINGAPORE — Shares in Asia-Pacific were lower in Friday morning trade as investors monitor Chinese tech stocks in Hong Kong after regulatory concerns resurfaced.

South Korea’s Kospi sat below the flatline in early trade. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 shed 0.18%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan traded 0.07% lower.

Markets in Japan are closed on Friday for a holiday.

China tech stock watch

Investors will watch Chinese tech shares in Hong Kong after Bloomberg News reported that Beijing is considering harsh penalties on ride-hailing giant Didi. The penalties being planned range from a fine likely bigger than the record $2.8 billion Alibaba paid earlier this year to even a forced delisting after Didi’s IPO last month.

Shares of Didi stateside plunged more than 11% on Thursday. Earlier in July, the firm was forced to stop signing up new users and also had its app removed from Chinese app stores due to alleged collection and use of personal data.

That development came as Beijing continues its months-long crackdown on China’s tech behemoths, targeting issues from anti-trust to data regulation.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

Overnight stateside, the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged 25.35 points higher to 34,823.35 while the S&P 500 gained 0.2% to 4,367.48. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.36% to 14,684.60.

Currencies and oil

The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 92.805 — off levels above 93 seen earlier in the week.

The Japanese yen traded at 110.12 per dollar, weaker than levels below 109.6 seen against the greenback earlier this week. The Australian dollar changed hands at $0.738, above levels below $0.732 seen earlier in the trading week.

Oil prices were lower in the morning of Asia trading hours, with international benchmark Brent crude futures down 0.23% to $73.62 per barrel. U.S. crude futures slipped 0.24% to $71.74 per barrel.

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Entertainment

Watch The Kissing Sales space Three Trailer

Goodbyes are often bittersweet, and Elle Evans (Joey King) has a lot to do before she’s ready to say farewell to her friends in The Kissing Booth 3 trailer — a whole bucket list to complete, to be exact. The summer before she’s set to head off to college, Elle is faced with the hardest decision she’s ever made: fulfill her lifelong promise to go to college with her best friend Lee (Joel Courtney) or move across the country to be with her boyfriend Noah (Jacob Elordi). Either way, she only has a few months before she has to decide whose heart to break, and they’re not making it easy for her. “Maybe your choices have more to do with what other people want,” says Noah’s mom Mrs. Flynn (Molly Ringwald). “Maybe it’s time to think about what you want.”

During their last summer before college, Elle and Lee set out to take on a massive bucket list fit for the season, complete with a massive neon pool party at the Flynn family beach house, base jumping, sky diving, rock climbing, flash dances, and life-size sandcastles. Caught up in choosing between Lee and Noah and enjoying what’s left of her summer, Elle finds solace in confiding in Marco (Taylor Zakhar Perez), who helps her realize that “people pass through our lives. Some of them fade into memories, but a few become part of who you are.”

See the full trailer above and watch The Kissing Booth 3 on Netflix when it premieres on Aug. 11.

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Entertainment

Watch the DMX Tribute Efficiency on the BET Awards | Video

RIP TO THE REALEST! Just rest X! 🙏🏾🙏🏾 #BETAwards #CulturesBiggestNight pic.twitter.com/wmvLO7q9sJ

– #BETAwards (@BETAwards) June 28, 2021

The BET Awards honored DMX with a special tribute on Sunday evening. During the awards show, Busta Rhymes, Method Man, Swizz Beatz and Griselda came together on stage as they performed some of the rapper’s biggest hits, including “Party Up (Up in Here),” “Ruff Ryders’ Anthem,” and “Grasp Me.” on, dog. ” Actor Michael K. Williams also made a special appearance during the number when he paid tribute to the late rapper.

DMX died on April 9th ​​at the age of 50 after a heart attack. “DMX inspired fans around the world with his signature gritty voice, the conveyance of raw emotions through his lyrics and performances, and his giving spirit,” said Connie Orlando, BET’s executive vice president of specials, music programming and music strategy, previously in a Statement too poster. “We are proud to pay our respects to a hip-hop legend on our biggest stage, the BET Awards.” Check out the special tribute to DMX above.

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Entertainment

Watch Jimmie Herrod’s America’s Received Expertise Audition | Video

“Talented, brilliant, incredible, amazing, showstopping, spectacular . . .” Lady Gaga’s viral string of compliments may have been originally intended for Ryan Murphy back in 2015, but they could absolutely be used to describe Jimmie Herrod, too. A 30-year-old singer from Portland, OR, Herrod auditioned for America’s Got Talent on Tuesday night and showed off quite the impressive superpower: the ability to change Simon Cowell’s opinion. Sounds damn-near impossible, but rest assured he made it happen.

Herrod chose to perform a rendition of “Tomorrow” from Annie, which Cowell described as the “worst song in the world” upon hearing the selection. Despite this, he stuck to his guns, belted out the joyous lyrics on stage, and wound up wowing all four judges and the entire crowd. “Wow, wow, wow. It’s not my worst song anymore,” Cowell admitted with a laugh after Herrod concluded. Meanwhile, Sofia Vergara initially pretended to be unimpressed by Herrod’s vocals, but soon relinquished her poker face and slammed the golden buzzer, sending metallic confetti flying through the air. Between Peter Rosalita, the Northwell Health Nurse Choir, and now Herrod, the competition is shaping up to be pretty darn fierce among the singers on AGT this season.

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Entertainment

Watch These 15 Titles Earlier than They Depart Netflix in June

Writer and director Mike Mills (“Beginners”) based this coming-of-age story in 2016 on his own teenage years and the single mother who raised him. In his film, it’s Dorothea (a great Annette Bening), who rents the guest rooms in her big, chaotic house to William, a handsome carpenter (Billy Crudup), and Abbie, a hip young photographer (Greta Gerwig). Hoping to raise her teenage son to be a sensitive young man, she turns to Abbie and her son’s best friend, Julie (Elle Fanning), for help. The late 1970s backdrop sets the stage for nostalgia, and the sunny Southern California setting promises plenty of good vibes. But Mills isn’t interested in sticking to what was before; this is a confused, complicated accounting.

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The television adaptations of Armistead Maupin’s richly textured series of San Francisco novels have appeared on a variety of networks for more than two decades, most recently with Netflix’s own revival in 2019. But it all started with that 1993 miniseries in the Mary Ann Singleton (Laura Linney) moves to San Francisco in the summer of 1976. However, she is just one of many fascinating characters in Maupin’s tapestry of Life in a Vibrant Time. Olympia Dukakis, Barbara Garrick, Mary Kay Place, Ian McKellen, Janeane Garofalo and Chloe Webb belong to the bulging ensemble.

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This 1977 World War II epic poem by Richard Attenborough is like the who’s who of the ’70s stars: Dirk Bogarde, James Caan, Michael Caine, Sean Connery, Elliot Gould, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Olivier, Ryan O’Neal, Robert Redford Red, and Liv Ullmann all show up, and even if few of them share scenes, indulging in the movie star’s sheer performance is still fun. Connery makes the most of his time as a major in the British Airborne Division realizing the seemingly tough mission may not be successful. But Hopkins quietly steals several scenes as a gentleman commanding officer, whose manners occasionally disrupt his mission.

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“This is Miss Bonnie Parker and I’m Clyde Barrow,” says Warren Beatty. “We’re robbing banks.” And they did so across the United States during the Great Depression, when the desperation of the time turned them from common criminals to folk heroes. This 1967 crime drama by Arthur Penn took that mythologization even further, filling the title roles with glamorous movie stars (Faye Dunaway plays Bonnie) and telling her story with a style and moral malleability borrowed from European art cinema. The results changed American filmmaking and spawned a new movement of intricate antihero and cinematic experimentation.

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