[go: up one dir, main page]

    Release calendarTop 250 moviesMost popular moviesBrowse movies by genreTop box officeShowtimes & ticketsMovie newsIndia movie spotlight
    What's on TV & streamingTop 250 TV showsMost popular TV showsBrowse TV shows by genreTV news
    What to watchLatest trailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily entertainment guideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalIMDb Stars to WatchSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll events
    Born todayMost popular celebsCelebrity news
    Help centerContributor zonePolls
For industry professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign in
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
Back
  • Biography
  • Trivia
IMDbPro
Dario Yazbek Bernal

News

Dario Yazbek Bernal

50 Most Compelling Apple TV+ Shows Ranked Worst to Best
Image
Apple TV+ is now a significant player in the streaming industry and has successfully competed against established legacy studios like Disney and Warner Bros. Its success can be attributed to its backing of original content across a wide range of genres. From sci-fi dramas like Severance to heartfelt comedies like Ted Lasso and sprawling epic galactic sagas like Foundation, the streamer has dipped its toes in it all.

Since 2019, Apple TV+’s original library has only grown, and that’s great for the subscribers who want to watch gripping new and original shows. However, that’s not so great for us as we have to curate the top 50 amazing Apple TV+ original shows based on audience reception, critical acclaim, originality, and storytelling quality. But it’s an interesting task to undertake.

So, whether you’re a newcomer seeking to catch some binge-worthy shows or a hardcore fan looking to revisit...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 8/7/2025
  • by Ishita Chatterjee
  • FandomWire
Magellan Review: Bernal’s Brooding Masterpiece
Image
Lav Diaz’s Magellan unfolds across 156 brooding minutes in a classic 4:3 frame, a chamber for souls and corpses alike. Here, Gael García Bernal embodies the infamous Portuguese navigator with a haunted restraint, his beard and bearing betraying the toll of obsession.

Opposite him, Ângela Azevedo’s Beatriz drifts through the periphery—her silent resilience a counterpoint to Magellan’s fevered purpose. Set against the humid jungles and windswept coasts of early 16th-century Southeast Asia, the film charts two great voyages: Magellan’s campaign in Malacca and his Spanish-backed quest for the Spice Islands, ending in the Philippines.

Diaz’s pacing is deliberate, each long take lingering on aftermath rather than spectacle, while bursts of tighter editing snap us from ritual chants to the washed-up bodies of a nameless battle. This is a film about ambition’s hunger—and the human toll left in its wake.

Currents of Time

Time...
See full article at Gazettely
  • 5/19/2025
  • by Naser Nahandian
  • Gazettely
'Pet Shop Days' Review: A Dreadful Film That's Practically Unwatchable
Image
Spoiled Gen Z rich kids have a destructive queer romance while partying, doing drugs, and committing ludicrous crimes in the insufferable Pet Shop Days, which ticks every box on the checklist for terrible films. It's hard to believe that Hollywood stalwarts Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, and Maribel Verdú play supporting roles in this dreck. There had to be a massive disconnect between the scripted material and what was filmed (multiple years ago) and then clumsily cobbled together in post-production. Pet Shop Days achieves that rare feat of having nothing positive to write about. The story, acting, and filmmaking on display are abysmal. MovieWeb doesn't have a tier for zero stars, but Pet Shop Days comes close.

In Mexico City, Alejandro (Darío Yazbek Bernal) lies in bed with his mother, Karla (Maribel Verdú) — insert ewww here — before an important family dinner. Neither wants to attend a birthday celebration for Alejandro's father,...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 3/14/2025
  • by Julian Roman
  • MovieWeb
Pet Shop Days Review: An Admirably Abrasive Film With a Blistering Hero at the Helm
Image
Pet Shop Days, written by Jack Irv, Olmo Schnabel, and Galen Core and directed by Schnabel in his debut, features a protagonist so unlikable, so emotionally ugly it’s almost to be admired. Alejandro (Darío Yazbek Bernal) is a rich Mexican kid and poster child for Freud: he hates his father (Jordi Mollà) and loves his mother (Maribel Verdú). There’s very little subtext in this film. The themes are as abrasive as the neon lights in any one of the many, many scenes set in strip clubs and underground drug dens hidden in the shadowy parts of New York City.

When Alejandro makes a deeply irrational mistake that nearly kills his mother, he runs to the United States, living off dwindling credit and short-term scams. He befriends Jack (Jack Irv), a gullible, aloof young man who quickly falls for Alejandro’s marginal charm. Jack’s parents (Emmanuelle Seigner...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 3/14/2025
  • by Dan Mecca
  • The Film Stage
Martin Scorsese Picks the Best New York Movies for New Roxy Cinema Series: Read His List of 32 Must-Watch NYC Titles
Image
New York icon Martin Scorsese is revealing his go-to films set in the Big Apple.

The auteur curated the screening series “Living, Breathing New York” for the Roxy Cinema, which features screenings of four of his favorite NYC movies out of a full list of Scorsese’s 32 favorite New York movies he’s created and which IndieWire is proud to share below.

“Living, Breathing New York” is curated by Scorsese in celebration of the new release of Olmo Schnabel’s NYC-set thriller, “Pet Shop Days,” which Scorsese executive produced. The film premieres March 15 at the Roxy Cinema in New York, and stars Dario Yazbek Bernal and Jack Irv as two lovers whose whirlwind romance sends them down a rabbit hole of drugs and depravity in Manhattan’s underworld. Willem Dafoe (who starred in Olmo Schnabel‘s father Julian Schnabel’s Vincent Van Gogh biopic “At Eternity’s Gate”), Emmanuelle Seigner, Peter Sarsgaard,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 3/13/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
Image
Full Trailer for Olmo Schnabel's 'Pet Shop Days' Feat. Willem Dafoe
Image
"Captures a street-level realism." Utopia has unveiled an official trailer for a grainy, experimental indie film creation called Pet Shop Days, marking the feature directorial debut of young filmmaker / producer Olmo Schnabel. Yes he just so happens to be artist / filmmaker Julian Schnabel's son. This premiered at the 2023 Venice Film Festival, and it also played at SXSW & Santa Barbara last year, and is finally being released in NY & LA cinemas this March. For anyone intrigued. Impulsive black sheep Alejandro and pet store worker Jack, enter a whirlwind romance that sends them deep down the rabbit hole of depravity in Manhattan's underworld. It's executive produced & presented by Martin Scorsese, Michel Franco and Jeremy O. Harris, starring Jack Irv & Dario Yazbek Bernal, alongside Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, Emmanuelle Seigner, and more. This is sort of an NYC drama, sort of an old school vibe film, and sort of just a strange crime thriller.
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 2/21/2025
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
‘Pet Shop Days’ Trailer: Olmo Schnabel’s Directorial Debut Is a Queer, Reckless Romance Through Manhattan
Image
“Pet Shop Days” captures those reckless nights where it feels like anything can happen — and quite often, anything and everything does.

Olmo Schnabel’s directorial debut premiered at the 2024 Venice Film Festival, and has a star-studded cast to boot. Schnabel, the son of artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel, co-wrote the film with lead star Jack Irv and Galen Core.

The official synopsis reads: “In an act of desperation, impulsive black sheep Alejandro (Dario Yazbek Bernal) flees his home in Mexico. On the run from his unforgiving father, Alejandro finds himself in New York City, where he meets Jack (Jack Irv), a college-age pet store employee with similar parental baggage. Together the two enter a whirlwind romance sending them down the rabbit hole of drugs and depravity in Manhattan’s underworld. When Alejandro’s past threatens to catch up with him, Jack is forced to choose between his family and a life on the run.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 2/20/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
Pet Shop Days Trailer: Olmo Schnabel’s Martin Scorsese-Backed Directorial Debut is Coming to Theaters This March
Image
Premiering back at the 2023 Venice Film Festival, Olmo Schnabel’s directorial debut Pet Shop Days went on to play at Chicago International Festival, SXSW, and more. The drama, which is backed by Martin Scorsese, Jeremy O. Harris, Michel Franco, and more as executive producers, will now finally come to theaters next month courtesy of Utopia. Ahead of screenings in NYC at Roxy Cinema on March 15 and in Los Angeles at Now Instant Image Hall on March 28, the new trailer and poster arrived for the film starring Dario Yazbek Bernal, Jack Irv, Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, Maribel Verdú, Jordi Mollà, Camille Rowe, Emmanuelle Seigner, and Louis Cancelmi.

Here’s the synopsis: “In an act of desperation, impulsive black sheep Alejandro flees his home in Mexico. On the run from his unforgiving father, Alejandro finds himself in New York City where he meets Jack, a college age pet store employee with similar parental baggage.
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 2/20/2025
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
Sex, Drugs and Siberian Huskies Run Amok in First Trailer for Venice Player ‘Pet Shop Days’
Image
Olmo Schnabel’s feature directorial debut “Pet Shop Days” has an official first trailer, and it’s as scandalous as initial festival runs promised in 2024.

Indie distributor Utopia acquired the film last March, after a successful premiere at the Venice Film Festival and the Texas-based SXSW. Led by Jack Irv and Dario Yazbek Bernal, “Pet Shop Days” costars Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard and Emmanuelle Seigner. The project boasts a powerful bench of executive producers in Martin Scorsese, Jeremy O. Harris and Michel Franco (“New Order”).

Bernal (Netflix’s “House of Flowers”) stars as Alejandro, the son of a Mexican crime lord on the run from his past in New York City. There he meets Jack (Irv), a 20-something living with upper-class parents Francis (Dafoe) and Diana (Seigner) while working in the titular pet shop. In a haze of drugs and sex, Alejandro seduces Jack and drags him into the city’s criminal underbelly.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 2/19/2025
  • by Matt Donnelly
  • Variety Film + TV
The Accident and the 6 best Mexican Netflix series to watch right now
Image
One of Netflix's top shows at the moment is the Mexican drama series The Accident. Many people are calling it one of the saddest shows they've ever watched, which given the plot, makes sense. It's a 10-part series revolving around the aftermath of a children's birthday party gone wrong. When a gush of wind sweeps up a bouncy house filled with kids at a birthday party, it causes the death of three children. This tragic accident changes the lives of a close-knit community forever.

Klych López and Gracia Querejeta directed the episodes for the show from scripts written by Leonardo Padrón. You might recognize some of the cast from previous projects, such as Alberto Guerra, who is best known for starring as Darío Sepúlveda in the Netflix crime drama series Griselda. Ana Claudia Talancón, Sebastian Martínez, Eréndira Ibarra, Shaní Lozano, Silverio Palacios, Erick Elías, Erik Hayser, Valentina Acosta, Macarena García Romero,...
See full article at Netflix Life
  • 8/31/2024
  • by Crystal George
  • Netflix Life
‘Pet Shop Days’ Director Olmo Schnabel Signs With WME, Black Bear
Image
Heatseeking filmmaker Olmo Schnabel has signed for representation with WME, and with Black Bear for management.

Schnabel’s breakout directorial effort “Pet Shop Days” played both the Venice International Film Festival and SXSW this cycle, scoring distribution from Utopia for a 2024 theatrical release. Starring Jack Irv, Darío Yazbek Bernal, Willem Dafoe and Peter Sarsgaard, the film tells of a drug lord scion on the run from his powerful family. Slumming it in New York in a haze of sex and drugs, he seduces an equally lost young man and pulls him into the city’s underbelly.

The provocative debut also hit festivals in Chicago, Montclair, Morelia, Santa Barbara and Sarasota. Schnabel was also awarded the Leffest Lisboa Film Festival’s Tap Revelation Award.

Schnabel just wrapped “In the Hand of Dante” for production shop Twin, which stars Oscar Isaac, Jason Momoa, Gerard Butler and Gal Gadot. The film is a...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 4/5/2024
  • by Matt Donnelly
  • Variety Film + TV
SXSW: Olmo Schnabel’s Provocative Feature Debut ‘Pet Shop Days’ Acquired by Utopia (Exclusive)
Image
“Pet Shop Days,” the directorial debut from Hollywood scion Olmo Schnabel, has been acquired by Utopia for theatrical distribution in North America.

A Venice Film Festival premiere that just lit up SXSW, the provocative coming-of-age film stars stars Jack Irv, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard and Emmanuelle Seigner. Martin Scorsese, Jeremy O. Harris and Michel Franco (“New Order”) all serve as executive producers.

Bernal (Netflix’s “House of Flowers”) stars as Alejandro, the son of a Mexican crime lord on the run from his past in New York City. There he meets Jack (Irv), a 20-something living with his wealthy parents Francis (Dafoe) and Diana (Seigner) while working in a pet shop. In a haze of drugs and sex, Alejandro seduces Jack and drags him into the city’s criminal underbelly.

Shot on 35mm film by Hunter Zimny, the film generated buzz out of Venice for its daring lead performances.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 3/14/2024
  • by Matt Donnelly
  • Variety Film + TV
Mexico’s Santiago Mohar Volkow Talks Madcap Rotterdam Title  ‘A History of Love & War’: ‘Comedy Is Always Challenging Because It’s Constantly Risking Ridicule’
Image
Far-out cineaste Santiago Mohar Volkow (“Los Muertos”) will deliver his fourth feature “A History of Love & War” (“Una Historia de Amor y de Guerra”) to audiences at the 53rd edition of the International Film Festival Rotterdam.

A viscally ludicrous examination of Mexico’s colonial history and the duplicitous nature of high-wealth, the film screens as part of the Harbor strand, dedicated to a wide range of contemporary narratives.

The plot opens on insufferably spoilt and corrupt real estate mogul Pepe Sanzhez Campo (Andrew Leland Rogers) as his mega-mall development plans roil on and an engagement offer to his affluent love interest Constanza (Lucía Gómez Robledo) proves a success.

When militant forces challenge his land rights and an otherwise cliche bachelor party turns sour after his fiancé’s lover Teo (Darío Yazbek Bernal) sets off a rip-roaring tide change, Pepe’s left with a reckoning that derails his privileged future.

Providing...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 1/26/2024
  • by Holly Jones
  • Variety Film + TV
Jose Solís’ Top 10 Films of 2023
Image
Following The Film Stage’s collective top 50 films of 2023, as part of our year-end coverage, our contributors are sharing their personal top 10 lists.

Last year was my first as an official resident of Madrid (where I’m wrapping up my Ma in Cultural Theory and Criticism) and I’m happy to report the most extraordinary thing occurred: I fell in love with going to the movies again. I left New York City before movie theaters reopened in 2021, and the brief, in-between, time I spent in Honduras (one of the most dangerous countries in the world) made me even more of a movie recluse (insert Leo on the couch meme). Just when I felt like a jaded noir detective who’d fully embraced screening links, Madrid’s cinephile offerings slowly seduced me.

I saw 2022 gems like Aftersun inside a repurposed porn theater complete with velvet tapestry and a dog who sat...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 1/4/2024
  • by Jose Solís
  • The Film Stage
‘I Don’t Expect Anyone To Believe Me’ Ending Explained & Spoilers: What Happens To Juan Pablo?
Image
The film I Don’t Expect Anyone to Believe Me, puts the audiences in a dilemma as to whether it is a real-life incident or just a work of fiction. Juan Pablo Villalobos, the Mexican author, is the protagonist in his own autobiographical fiction novel. The story centers around a Ph.D. candidate who travels from Mexico to Barcelona to complete his thesis paper and gets tangled up with a dangerous drug racket. The film stars actors like Natalia Solian, Anna Castillo, Dario Yazbek Bernal, and others. The life-like narration of Juan Pablo puts us in a catch-22 situation, as we keep wondering if the incidents are real or fictional. He has explored real-life issues in his other novels, like ‘The Other Side’, where he has highlighted the issue of illegal immigration. Nonetheless, coming back to I Don’t Expect Anyone to Believe Me, will the protagonist be able to survive the harsh situations in Barcelona?...
See full article at Film Fugitives
  • 11/23/2023
  • by Debjyoti Dey
  • Film Fugitives
‘I Don’t Expect Anyone To Believe Me’ Review: Netflix’s Mexican Satire Movie Isn’t For Everyone
Image
This is the second Mexican film I’ve seen within the span of a month, and it’s yet another adaptation of a body of work that is deeply culturally significant. If Hurricane Season was raw and gritty, I Don’t Expect Anyone to Believe Me is absurd and humorous. The film follows a young man, Juan Pablo Villalobos (also the author of the actual novel), as he moves from Mexico to Barcelona on a scholarship, only to be sucked into a vicious world of crime and illogicality. Interestingly, the thugs (of said crime world) are playing around with the man’s little heart in order to catch a big fish. I do feel that if I reveal anything further, we’d be in spoiler territory, so that’s where I’m going to leave the summary. Personally, I watched this film with no prior information, not even having seen the trailer,...
See full article at Film Fugitives
  • 11/22/2023
  • by Ruchika Bhat
  • Film Fugitives
Image
CIFF23 Podtalk: Director Olmo Schnabel’s Debut ‘Pet Shop Days’
Image
Chicago – The director debut is the flourishing element of any film festival, and the Chicago International Film Festival (Ciff) has always been a nurturing place for the latest cinema talent. “Pet Shop Days” is the debut of director and co-writer Olmo Schnabel, and screened at the 59th Ciff. The film continues on the fest circuit, as its currently at the Montclair (New Jersey) Film Festival.

When Alejandro (Dario Yazbek Bernal) flees Mexico after an impulsive act of violence, he lands in New York City on a mission to live life on his own terms. After befriending Jack (Jack Irv), who spends his days and nights getting high and sleeping with whomever he wants, the pair embark down a rabbit hole of vice, coming together and breaking apart … with a magnetic and obsessive attraction that will change their lives forever. Like an impulsive Butch and Sundance, the journey of the duo leads to an inevitable destination.
See full article at HollywoodChicago.com
  • 10/28/2023
  • by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
  • HollywoodChicago.com
Darío Yazbek Bernal Signs With Gersh
Image
Exclusive: Darío Yazbek Bernal, star of the hit Netflix series La Casa De Las Flores, has signed with Gersh.

Besides La Casa De Las Flores, he was most recently seen opposite Willem Dafoe in Olmo Schnabel’s Pet Shop Days, which earned rave reviews when it premiered at this year’s Venice Film Festival.

He can be seen as a series lead in the Apple show, Now and Then. He also starred in the Neon feature New Order for director Michel Franco, which won the Grand Jury Prize at Venice Film Festival in 2020.

He also starred in a lead role in the Netflix miniseries, The Search. Other noteworthy credits include Daniel and Ana and Los Paisajes.

He is repped by Anonymous Content.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 10/23/2023
  • by Justin Kroll
  • Deadline Film + TV
Image
Fernando Frias' New Film 'I Don't Expect Anyone to Believe Me' Trailer
Image
"Who do you think you're working with, buddy?" Netflix has revealed an official trailer for a crime thriller from Mexico titled I Don't Expect Anyone to Believe Me, which sounds much more like a film for a sci-fi or supernatural horror than a drama like this. It's the latest film from the acclaimed filmmaker Fernando Frias of the sensational Mexican drama I'm No Longer Here from a few years ago (which is also on Netflix to watch). In this film, Juan Pablo Villalobos travels with his girlfriend to study for a PhD in Literature in Barcelona. But before he leaves Mexico, he gets involved in a criminal network, which inspires him to write the novel of his dreams (called "I Don't Expect Anyone to Believe Me"), while his life takes many absurd & sinister turns. Based on the novel by Juan Pablo Villalobos, this stars Darío Yazbek with Natalia Solián, Alexis Ayala,...
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 10/22/2023
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
Image
‘Pet Shop Days’ Review: Two Young Men Fall in Love and Do Drugs in Olmo Schnabel’s Grating Directorial Debut
Image
There is a grand tradition of messy but glorious films about couples who bring out the crazy in one another and end up doing all manner of bad stuff. Sadly, Pet Shop Days, a directorial debut for writer-producer Olmo Schnabel (son of Julian Schnabel), is just messy and never glorious.

Even with the built-in advantage of Willem Dafoe and Emmanuelle Seigner taking major roles (neither at their best), cameos from Peter Sarsgaard and Maribel Verdu, and a mass list of executive producers who should have known better (including Michel Franco and Martin Scorsese), this poorly paced crime drama is afflicted with terrible dialogue and weak lead performances from Jack Irv (also a co-screenwriter, along with Schnabel and Galen Core) and Dario Yazbek Bernal as two repellent, entitled brats in love.

The opening sequence introduces us to Alejandro (Dario Yazbek Bernal, half brother of Gael Garcia Bernal), a young man in his 20s,...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 9/10/2023
  • by Leslie Felperin
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
‘Pet Shop Days’ Review: Julian Schnabel’s Son Chases the Spirit of Gregg Araki in a Sexy Queer NYC Romance
Image
From the mind of Olmo Schnabel — yes, he’s the son of artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel — comes one of the most frustrating protagonists to grace an indie film screen this year. The impulsive black sheep of his family, Alejandro is played in the queer romance “Pet Shop Days” by Dario Yazbek Bernal. And if your nepo baby light wasn’t already blinking at the name Schnabel, Dario Yazbek Bernal is also the brother of Gael García Bernal.

After almost killing his mother in a car accident, Alejandro flees the scene of his mobster family’s moneyed party, thrashing his way through the lives of everyone else he encounters in the aftermath while on the run. That includes Jack (Jack Irv), a pet shop worker in crisis with his dying mother (Emmanuelle Seigner) and philandering father (Willem Dafoe), with whom he lives in a pricy Manhattan penthouse. Jack and Alejandro...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/8/2023
  • by Ryan Lattanzio
  • Indiewire
‘Pet Shop Days’ Review: Two Men With Daddy Issues Attract One Another, and Trouble, in Promising Nepo Debut
Image
A scrappy urban tale of misspent young adulthood, Olmo Schnabel’s “Pet Shop Days” evokes the blown-out, stolen-shot 16mm character studies of 1990s independent cinema, as well as the bohemian oeuvre of painter and filmmaker Julian Schnabel, his father. This isn’t attributable merely to the fact that the younger Schnabel includes a scene in which his characters watch Julian’s 1996 “Basquiat,” whose themes and aloof tone — not to mention the events of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s actual life — would seem an obvious inspiration for his first feature. But in a contemporary absence of true New York stories told by filmmakers with seemingly more moxie than money, newcomer Schnabel distinguishes himself with a debut that feels tactile, real and suitably off-putting as he attempts to capture the sensibilities (if not always common sense) of twentysomethings.

Dario Yazbek Bernal (of Netflix’s “House of Flowers”) plays Alejandro, a spoiled, rebellious young adult...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/3/2023
  • by Todd Gilchrist
  • Variety Film + TV
Image
Venice Hot List: Jessica Chastain, Travis Scott and the Last Film From William Friedkin Will Tempt Buyers on the Lido
Image
With no official film market and a more laid-back attitude than Cannes, Berlin or Toronto, Venice has never been the go-to festival for movie deals.

But opportunistic buyers could spot a bargain this year, as many of the hottest titles arrive at the Lido without major distribution in place.

Just ahead of Venice, Sideshow and Janus Films picked up domestic rights to Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car follow-up Evil Does Not Exist, and Mubi snatched up Sophia Coppola’s Priscilla, an A24 release in the U.S., for several markets, including the U.K., Germany, Latin America and Turkey.

Here are some of the other prime targets for dealmakers in the 2023 Venice Film Festival lineup.

Aggro Dr1ft

Director Harmony Korine

Stars Travis Scott, Jordi Molla

Buzz Another slice of extreme avant-guard from Spring Beakers and Trash Humpers director Harmony Korine, this experimental action film — shot entirely in infrared...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 8/30/2023
  • by Scott Roxborough
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Willem Dafoe Confronts Lingerie Robber in ‘Pet Shop Days,’ First Look at Venice Debut From Olmo Schnabel (Exclusive)
Image
Sex, crime and fish tanks converge in the officially titled “Pet Shop Days,” Olmo Schnabel’s directorial debut which will play at this year’s Venice Film Festival.

Variety has an exclusive first look at the project starring Jack Irv, Dario Yazbek Bernal and Willem Dafoe. Schnabel, son of Oscar nominated director Julian Schnabel, tells the story of two young men falling down a rabbit hole of rebellious desire – one running from a traumatic incident and a bitter authoritarian father, the other a privileged drifter in search of himself.

Irv and Bernal take the leads, hustling their way through a punishing city. Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard and Emmanuelle Seigner are just a few of the hapless adults caught in their web.

“This is the perfect New York story in that anything can happen,” Schnabel said. “That’s how it was growing up. You meet a complete stranger, you’re enamored or infatuated with them,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 8/17/2023
  • by Matt Donnelly
  • Variety Film + TV
Netflix Mexico initiative unveils new work from Fernando Frias, Rodrigo Prieto
Image
#QueMéxicoSeVea designed to showcase work of local industry.

Netflix has announced the latest film from Fernando Frias and the feature directorial debut of cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto as it launches an initiative to raise the profile of local filmmakers in the run-up to Mexico’s national cinema day on Monday (August 15).

Under #QueMéxicoSeVea, which translates as Let Mexico Be Seen, Netflix will present the latest from Frias – I Don’t Expect Anyone To Believe Me (No Voy A Pedirle A Nadie Que Me Crea) – whose I’m No Longer Here was acquired by the streamer and represented Mexico in the international feature...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 8/13/2022
  • by Jeremy Kay
  • ScreenDaily
Netflix Touts New Pics from Mexico’s Rodrigo Prieto, Fernando Frias, Ernesto Contreras (Exclusive)
Image
Netflix has reaffirmed its 300 million commitment to Mexican cinema and series, announcing a slew of new movie projects to celebrate the country’s National Day of Cinema on Aug. 15 and as part of its #QueMéxicoSeVea initiative.

The year-old initiative, which can be roughly translated to “Let Mexico Be Seen” has the mission “to make visible the work of Mexican creators, screenwriters, writers, directors, actors and people who make national cinema possible,” as well as its wealth of original stories.

Leading the pack is the widely anticipated directorial debut of Oscar-nominated cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto who is helming an adaptation of Juan Rulfo’s seminal novel, “Pedro Paramo.” Produced by Redrum, the film’s crew includes Oscar-nominated production designer Eugenio Caballero and costume designer Anna Terrazas, whose notable credits include “Roma,” “Spectre” and “Bardo.”

“Our commitment to Mexican culture also includes adapting great Mexican works to the cinema, and ‘Pedro Páramo’ will...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 8/11/2022
  • by Anna Marie de la Fuente
  • Variety Film + TV
Now and Then (2022)
Now & Then Exclusive Clip: Will Marcos Leave With Sofia?
Now and Then (2022)
The mystery is intensifying, and there's much to unpack on Now & Then Season 1 Episode 7.

To whet your appetite for the shocking episode, TV Fanatic has an exclusive look ahead that certainly lives up to the show's namesake.

In the highly-anticipated seventh episode, titled “Elections,” Election Day arrives. Pedro (José María Yazpik) grapples with distrust," reads the logline.

"Sofía (Maribel Verdú) and Marcos (Manolo Cardona) form a plan.

Belinda (Ella Kweku) finds a clue."

The clip shows a younger Marcos telling Sofia he must leave town because the police have his fingerprints.

It's a shocking turn of events, and you can tell Sofia does not want to leave with him.

The clip features jump cuts, highlighting the roles reversing in the present as Sofia has to leave town, and it's clear she wants Marcos to accompany her.

The beauty of Now & Then is its narrative structure. The series perfectly...
See full article at TVfanatic
  • 6/16/2022
  • by Paul Dailly
  • TVfanatic
Now & Then Exclusive Clip: We Got Them!
Now & Then
Will Flora's findings turn the case on its head?

Now & Then Season 1 Episode 4 drops on Apple TV+ Friday, and TV Fanatic has an exclusive look ahead.

In the clip for the highly-anticipated outing, we see Flora in the year 2000, armed with some evidence that could change things considerably.

Sullivan is shocked by her arrival at his home because it's his day off, but when you're trying to find all the evidence involved, is there such a thing as a day off?

Flora's tenacity shines through the clip.

She's livid that this case has been covered up, and is dead set on getting the answers to prove what happened the fateful night the other characters desperately want to forget.

Set in Miami and shot in both Spanish and English, Now & Then stars an exceptional ensemble cast, including Academy Award nominees Marina de Tavira and Rosie Perez, and Ariel Award winner José María Yazpik.
See full article at TVfanatic
  • 5/26/2022
  • by Paul Dailly
  • TVfanatic
First Trailer for Apple TV+'s Thriller Series 'Now & Then' Set in Miami
Now & Then
"What do I know? I haven't heard from you in 20 years." Apple has revealed an official trailer for a series titled Now & Then, a "multi-layered thriller" that will be streaming on Apple TV+ starting in late May next month. Set in Miami and shot in both Spanish and English, Now & Then stars an exceptional ensemble cast, including Academy Award nominees Marina de Tavira & Rosie Perez, Ariel Award winner José María Yazpik, multi-Goya Award winner Maribel Verdú, Manolo Cardona, Goya Award winner Soledad Villamil, Emmy Award winner Željko Ivanek, with Jorge López, Alicia Jaziz, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Alicia Sanz, Jack Duarte, and Miranda de la Serna. The lives of a group of college best friends are forever changed after a celebratory weekend ends up with one of them dead. 20 years later, the remaining five are reluctantly reunited by a threat that puts their seemingly perfect worlds at risk. This...
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 4/19/2022
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
‘Now & Then’ Trailer: Rosie Perez Gets Caught Up In Killer Drama And Everyone Is A Suspect
Image
Apple TV+ released the first trailer for its upcoming bilingual drama series Now & Then, starring Rosie Perez, Manolo Cardona, Marina de Tavira, José María Yazpik, Soledad Villamil, and Maribel Verdú, among others. Three of the 8 episodes will be released on May 20 with the remaining episodes dropping weekly every Friday through June 24.

Set in Miami, Now & Then follows a group of college best friends whose lives are forever changed after one of them ends up dead. Now, 20 years later, the remaining 5 are forced to reunite after a threat puts their seemingly perfect worlds at risk.

Perez portrays Flora, a detective obsessed with an unresolved case from 20 years ago, who will stop at nothing to discover the truth. Her partner Sullivan (Željko Ivanek) helps to keep Flora from getting into too much trouble.

The 6 original friends are played during their younger years by Jorge Lopez, Alicia Jaziz, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Alicia Sanz,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 4/19/2022
  • by Rosy Cordero
  • Deadline Film + TV
Rosie Perez Is Back on a 20-Year-Old Case in Apple’s ‘Now and Then’ Trailer (Video)
Now & Then
Apple TV+ released the trailer for the upcoming bilingual series “Now & Then” on Tuesday: The eight-episode thriller from Bambú Producciones is about a group of college friends who are being blackmailed over a death from 20 years before. It’s set to launch globally with three episodes on Friday, May 20, on Apple TV+, with new episodes weekly every Friday through June 24.

Set in Miami and shot in both Spanish and English, the series stars Rosie Perez as a cop eager to have a second chance to solve the mysterious death. The series also stars Marina de Tavira (“Roma”), José María Yazpik (“Narcos: Mexico”), Maribel Verdú (“Y tu mamá también”), Manolo Cardona (“Narcos”), Soledad Villamil (“The Secret in Their Eyes”), Jorge López (Netflix’s “Elite”), Alicia Jaziz (HBO’s “Love Spells”), Dario Yazbek Bernal (“The House of Flowers”), Alicia Sanz (Prime Video’s “El Cid”), Jack Duarte (“Ingobernable,”) and Miranda de la Serna...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 4/19/2022
  • by Sharon Knolle
  • The Wrap
Netflix to Premiere Ali Wong’s Lastest Comedy Special on Valentine’s Day (TV News Roundup)
Image
Netflix announced Tuesday that it will be premiering Ali Wong’s new comedy special, “Don Wong,” on Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14.

The special is Wong’s third with Netflix, following 2016’s “Ali Wong: Baby Cobra” and “Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife” in 2018. “Don Wong” was filmed at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in New Jersey in November 2021, and features Wong discussing her deepest fantasies, the challenges of monogamy and her feelings about single people.

The project is the latest addition to a slate of projects between Wong and Netflix, including the 2019 film “Always Be My Maybe” and the upcoming series “Beef.” Wong also voices characters on animated shows including Netflix’s “Ask the StoryBots,” “Ada Twist,” “Scientist” and the Emmy-winning adult comedy “Big Mouth.”

“Don Wong” is directed by Nahnatchka Khan, with Wong serving as executive producer alongside Ravi Nandan, Inman Young, Alli Reich and Corey Deckler for A24.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 2/1/2022
  • by Sasha Urban
  • Variety Film + TV
‘Now And Then’: Jorge López, Alicia Jaziz, Dario Yazbek Bernal & More Round Out Cast For Apple TV+ Bilingual Thriller
Image
Exclusive: AppleTV+’s bilingual thriller series Now and Then has added to its cast Jorge Lopez (Elite), Alicia Jaziz, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Alicia Sanz, Jack Duarte and Miranda de la Serna (Before Opening Night) .

The Spanish and English series hails from Bambú Producciones and creators Ramón Campos, Teresa Fernández-Valdés and Gema R. Neira, the team behind the Spanish series Velvet, Cable Girls and Gran Hotel. Gideon Raff will executive produce and direct the first two episodes.

Set in Miami, Now and Then explores the differences between youthful aspirations and the reality of adulthood, when the lives of a group of college best friends are forever changed after a celebratory weekend ends up with one of them dead. Now, 20 years later, the remaining five are reluctantly reunited by a threat that puts their seemingly perfect worlds at risk.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 6/11/2021
  • by Alexandra Del Rosario
  • Deadline Film + TV
New Order Trailer: Class Warfare & Revolution springs forth in Michel Franco’s 2020 Near-future Dystopia Movie
Image
New Order Trailer — Michel Franco‘s New Order / Nuevo orden (2020) movie trailer has been released by Neon. The New Order trailer stars Diego Boneta, Naian Gonzalez Norvind, Samantha Yazareth Anaya, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Patricia Bernal, Monica del Carmen, Fernando Cuautle, Roberto Medina, Lisa Owen, Enrique Singer, Eligio Melendez, and Gustavo Sanchez Parra. Crew Michel [...]

Continue reading: New Order Trailer: Class Warfare & Revolution springs forth in Michel Franco’s 2020 Near-future Dystopia Movie...
See full article at Film-Book
  • 4/25/2021
  • by Rollo Tomasi
  • Film-Book
U.S. Trailer for Michel Franco’s New Order Depicts a Violent Class Divide
Image
Igniting controversy upon its festival run at Venice and TIFF last fall, followed by its release in Mexico, Michel Franco’s New Order was criticized for its racial stereotypes as the story depicts a violent class divide at a wedding, with a darker-skinned lower class attacking a lighter-skinned upper class. With the director pushing back on the criticism––noting that “every country for its particular reality is facing something similar” and “people are very dissatisfied everywhere and I fear governments are seizing the opportunity to control in a stronger way”––a U.S. release is still moving forward.

The film was picked up by Neon for a May 21 theatrical debut. Ahead of the release, the first trailer has arrived, which is already stirring up its own attention online. With a hat tip to @jim_boehle, he noted that our mixed TIFF review by C.J. Prince closes out with the line,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 4/22/2021
  • by Leonard Pearce
  • The Film Stage
Dario Yazbek Bernal, Gael Garcia Bernal's Younger Brother, In 'Daniel Y Ana' (Photos, Info)
Dario Yazbek Bernal
Meet Dario Yazbek Bernal, Gael Garcia Bernal's 19-year-old half-brother. The curly-haired cutie makes his big-screen debut in the Mexican thriller 'Daniel y Ana,' which has made the festival rounds this year and will be screening at the 2010 Palm Springs International Festival and The Barbican next month. In the movie, which is based on actual events that happened in Mexico, Dario plays a teenager who is kidnapped along with his older sister. They are forced to do something deeply traumatic together then released to figure out how to reconstruct their lives and relationship. You can watch the trailer here. Photos: Get HuffPost Entertainment On Facebook and Twitter!...
See full article at Huffington Post
  • 12/31/2009
  • by Katy Hall
  • Huffington Post
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.

More from this person

More to explore

Recently viewed

Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
Get the IMDb App
Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
Follow IMDb on social
Get the IMDb App
For Android and iOS
Get the IMDb App
  • Help
  • Site Index
  • IMDbPro
  • Box Office Mojo
  • License IMDb Data
  • Press Room
  • Advertising
  • Jobs
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices
IMDb, an Amazon company

© 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.