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IMDbPro
Nicole Kidman in Dogville (2003)

News

Dogville

UK DVD and Blu-ray release dates confirmed: release list well into 2025
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A glimpse at upcoming UK DVD and Blu-ray release dates well into 2025: here’s what’s coming to disc and when.

Here, then, are a few of the upcoming dates for new movies on DVD and Blu-ray that may not yet have been officially announced. Note that all dates are for the UK.

Also: We’ve started adding affiliate links. If you click on those, we benefit, and can spend more money paying more people to write more things for this website. No pressure, just hugely obliged.

Obviously in the current climate everything is subject to change, of course…

Just released

First Time On UK Blu-ray: No Way Out (Film Stories Blu-ray #2)

First Time On UK Blu-ray: Bull Durham (Film Stories Blu-ray #3)

Scroll to the bottom of the this list for more releases over the last few weeks.

Last two weeks

26th May: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

26th May: Terror...
See full article at Film Stories
  • 6/2/2025
  • by Simon Brew
  • Film Stories
‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 Cast and Character Guide | Photos
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Nicole Kidman’s Masha Dmitrichenko is back for another somewhat shady wellness retreat in “Nine Perfect Strangers” Season 2.

After Season 1 featured stars like Samara Weaving and Melissa McCarthy at Tranquillum, Masha moves her practice to an Austrian wellness center in Season 2, which is graced by the likes of Annie Murphy, Henry Golding, Christine Baranski, and King Princess, who makes their TV acting debut.

Keep on reading for a full breakdown of the new all-star cast in “Nine Perfect Strangers” Season 2.

Nicole Kidman in “Nine Perfect Strangers” (Disney/Reiner Bajo)

Nicole Kidman as Masha Dmitrichenko

Nicole Kidman reprises her role as Masha Dmitrichenko, who embraces psilocybin (a.k.a. magic mushrooms) as a way to help her guests heal from past traumas. She also self-prescribes the psychedelics to herself, as she overcomes the loss of her daughter.

Kidman is best known for starring in movies like “Moulin Rouge!” “The Hours” and...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 5/22/2025
  • by Loree Seitz
  • The Wrap
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Nicole Kidman Gives Update on ‘Practical Magic’ Sequel With Sandra Bullock: “It’s Fun and Witchy”
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More than eight years ago, Nicole Kidman made a commitment to herself, and to the careers of women behind the camera, that she would work with a female director every 18 months. In the years since, Kidman blew the original mission far and away and has since worked with 27.

“I was going to make it possible,” Kidman said of the lofty ambition during a headlining conversation on Sunday as part of Kering’s Women in Motion talks at the Majestic Hotel during the Cannes Film Festival. “For me, at this stage of my life, to have that purpose and to have that commitment is something that pulls me through as well. Because as much as I’m an actor and I’m looking for great roles, I’m also looking to experiment. I don’t want to be contained and I don’t want to be safe, so constantly looking for...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 5/18/2025
  • by Chris Gardner
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Chloë Sevigny: “Jimmy Choo”
Actress Chloë Sevigny (“Bonjour Tristesse”) poses for fashion designer Jimmy Choo‘s Spring/Summer 2025 campaign, photographed by Ezra Petronio:

Known for her work in indie films, Sevigny is the recipient of a ‘Golden Globe’ Award, as well as a nomination for an ‘Academy Award’.

Sevigny started work as a model, and appeared in music videos for “Sonic Youth” and “The Lemonheads”.

In 1995, she made her film debut in “Kids” and became a prominent performer in the indie film scene throughout the late 1990’s…

…with roles in films including “Trees Lounge” (1996).

Sevigny rose to prominence with her portrayal of ‘Lana Tisdel’ in the drama feature “Boys Don't Cry” (1999)….

…receiving an ‘Oscar’ nomination for ‘Best Supporting Actress’.

Sevigny appeared in supporting parts in numerous indie features including “American Psycho” (2000), “Demonlover” (2002), “Party Monster” and “Dogville” (both 2003) and “The Brown Bunny” (2004).

From 2006 to 2011, Sevigny portrayed ‘Nicolette Grant’ on the HBO series “Big Love”, winning...
See full article at SneakPeek
  • 5/6/2025
  • by Unknown
  • SneakPeek
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Jeonju 2025 Review: Sea Tiger, Lo-Fi Experiment Boldly Tackles Sewol Tragedy
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Eight years after Warriors of the Dawn, director Jung Yoon-chul returns with a far more intimate project that is all the more powerful and impressive due to its small scale. Recalling Lars Von Trier's Dogville, Sea Tiger takes place almost entirely on a barebones sound stage. Initially feeling like a filmed play, it steadily becomes an immersive and richly cinematic experience as the engrossing and emotional story takes hold. The story, drawn from Kim Tak-hwan's novel 'Sea of Lies', recounts the experiences of divers who risked their lives to retrieve the bodies of the victims of the Sewol Ferry Sinking in 2014. Centered around diver Na Kyung-soo (Lee Ji-hoon), the action is split between the months after the tragedy, as divers searched the wreckage, and...

[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
See full article at Screen Anarchy
  • 5/5/2025
  • Screen Anarchy
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Nicole Kidman to Receive Milestone Women in Motion Award During Cannes Film Festival
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Nicole Kidman will soon be in motion heading back to Cannes.

The Oscar winning actress — coming off a dizzying 2024 that included screen outings in Babygirl, Holland, Lioness, The Perfect Couple, A Family Affair and Expats — has been confirmed to receive the next Women in Motion Award. The honor, presented during the Cannes Film Festival from the fest itself and longtime partner Kering, will be doled out May 18 during a glamorous gala, which is typically attended by the Cannes jury, A-list stars, auteurs and industry insiders.

Kidman will be the milestone 10th Women in Motion recipient, joining a roster of honorees that includes NBCUniversal chief Donna Langley, Jane Fonda, Isabelle Huppert, Patty Jenkins, Geena Davis, Susan Sarandon, Viola Davis, Michelle Yeoh, Gong Li and Salma Hayek Pinault. The award is designed to honor “female artists who, through their career and commitment, advance the place of women in cinema and in society.
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 4/29/2025
  • by Chris Gardner
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
'Magic Farm' Stars Rank Chloë Sevigny Movies
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Chloë Sevigny has been a truly significant figure in American cinema throughout the past few decades. She burst through the gates, making her mark on numerous masterpieces, all within five years of each other — The Last Days of Disco, Boys Don't Cry, Julien Donkey-Boy, American Psycho, Demonlover, Party Monster, and Dogville. Maybe you enjoyed her chemistry opposite Jake Gyllenhaal in Zodiac (2007), or perhaps you liked seeing her deal with crazy boss Patrick Bateman in American Psycho (2000). Whatever the role, Sevignybrings a signature commitment to every role in the vast array of commercial and indie projects she's graced, including her latest Mubi feature that's now playing in select theaters.

Magic Farm sees her as the leader of a bumbling film crew that tries and virtually fails to make TV gold in a small Argentine town. Sevigny's co-stars include Alex Wolff (Oppenheimer), Joe Apollonio (Hacks) and Amalia Ulman (El Planeta) — who also wrote and directed Magic Farm.
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 4/27/2025
  • by Will Sayre
  • MovieWeb
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5 Movies Actors Were Tricked Into Making
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Once you reach a certain level in Hollywood, you have your pick of projects. You’ve paid your dues, proven your worth and don’t have to play the best friend in D+ rom-coms anymore. That’s all the more incentive, however, for others to convince you to do so, occasionally through sneaky maneuvers ranging from slightly underhanded to out and out fraud. That’s how A-listers ended up unwittingly signing onto…

5 X-Men: The Last Stand

The trap that ensnared Halle Berry is actually what convinced director Matthew Vaughn to quit the third X-Men movie. According to Vaughn, before Berry committed to filming, he noticed a script that was “a lot fatter” in an executive’s office than the one he’d previously seen. When he asked about it, he was told it was intended for Berry because “this is what she wants it to be, and once she signs up,...
See full article at Cracked
  • 4/18/2025
  • Cracked
“Dogville Barkies”
From 1929 to 1931, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer produced a series of nine short "Dogville" comedy films aka 'barkies' (instead of 'talkies'),

starring trained canines, voice-dubbed by actors, directed by Zion Myers and Jules White, who later worked on "The Three Stooges" comedy shorts:

Films included, "College Hounds", "Hot Dog"...

..."Who Killed Rover?" aka "The Dogville Murder Case"...

..."The Dogway Melody", So Quiet on The Canine Front", "The Big Dog House"...

..."Love-Tails of Morocco"...

..."The Two Barks Brothers"...

...and "Trader Hound".

Click the images to enlarge...
See full article at SneakPeek
  • 4/15/2025
  • by Unknown
  • SneakPeek
Nicole Kidman at an event for Paperboy (2012)
The 10 Best Nicole Kidman Movie Performances
Nicole Kidman at an event for Paperboy (2012)
Nicole Kidman came to our attention in the 1990s, first in supporting roles with her then-husband Tom Cruise and then as a striking, distinctive leading lady in some of the era’s most enduring cult classics. In the new millennium, the Academy Awards came calling to give some long-overdue recognition to her skillset (she won for “The Hours” in 2002). Anyone would forgive her for resting on her laurels thereafter as she approached middle age, but not Nicole.

A year later, she appeared in Lars von Trier’s avant-garde drama “Dogville,” and from there, has continued to make it a mission statement to work with some of the most fascinating filmmakers in the world – Jonathan Glazer, Park Chan-wook, Yorgos Lanthimos; at the height of her fame, she took a year out to work with Stanley Kubrick. That’s before we even mention her fruitful and admirably frequent collaborations with female directors,...
See full article at High on Films
  • 4/11/2025
  • by Elliott Kendal
  • High on Films
‘Magic Farm’ Trailer: Chloë Sevigny Is an Exploitative Documentarian in Cutting Satire of Colonialism
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Chloë Sevigny is a chameleon onscreen, and her latest turn in satire “Magic Farm” is no exception. In the film, the actress stars as a Vice News-esque documentarian who leads a film crew traveling to Argentina to expose the effects of pesticides on people. “Magic Farm” is written and directed by Amalia Ulman, with Alex Wolff, Joe Apollonio, Camila del Campo, and Simon Rex co-starring.

The official synopsis reads: “Fake it ‘til you make it. When a misguided American documentary crew in search of their next viral segment ends up in the wrong town in rural Argentina, chaos ensues. As they collaborate with locals to fake a new music trend, unexpected relationships form and an unfolding health crisis becomes apparent.”

The feature had its world premiere at Sundance earlier this year and also played at the 2025 Berlinale. “Magic Farm” will be among the previews for Mubi Fest, too.

Ulman said...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 4/2/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
Do we need a Star Wars: Visions sequel?
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Star Wars: Visions premiered a month ago on Wednesday, Sept. 22. Despite all nine short films dropping at once, the anime anthology series has stayed in the pop culture consciousness with more and more viewers falling in love with these disparate stories that reside in the same universe. If you’ve watched the series of films, it’s not hard to see why.

There’s an innovation to Visions, a creativity that has challenged the traditional canon of the Star Wars franchise and pushed the audience to want even more from this ever-expanding world.

Each film differs in style, tone, and storytelling, but they are united in their themes of family, generational power shifts, legacy, and stepping into the destiny one has chosen for themselves.

It’s no wonder there have been calls for a sequel to the series. Though opinions on what that should look like change from fan to fan.
See full article at https://dorksideoftheforce.com/
  • 3/18/2025
  • by Sabrina Reed
  • https://dorksideoftheforce.com/
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‘Ghost Boy’ Review: A Haunting Look at One Man’s Long, Devastating Struggle to Come Out of His Shell
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Director Rodney Ascher’s obsession with horror and mysterious phenomena takes a tragic real turn in Ghost Boy, which is based on the book of the same title by South African author, speaker and miraculous locked-in syndrome survivor Martin Pistorius.

Pistorius’ harrowing true story may be known to those who have read his autobiography, seen his TEDx Talk or listened to an episode of NPR’s Invisibilia that received some attention back in 2015. But for most of us, including this reviewer, what happens in Ghost Boy is an altogether new and unsettling experience to witness.

It begins when Pistorius is 12 and living a normal suburban life with his parents and siblings in Johannesburg. He has a certain knack for electronics but otherwise seems like your typical good-natured kid. Then one day he gets a sore throat, and from there things spiral downward until he becomes both paralyzed and entirely shut off from the world.
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 3/8/2025
  • by Jordan Mintzer
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Chloë Sevigny: “Jimmy Choo”
Oscar-nominated actress Chloë Sevigny (“Boys Don’t Cry”), poses for the Jimmy Choo Spring 2025 footwear campaign, photographed by Ezra Petronio:

Sevigny started acting for indie films throughout the 1990’s, then was nominated for an Oscar for her portrayal of ‘Lana Tisdel’ in the drama feature “Boys Don't Cry”(1999).

She then appeared in “American Psycho” (2000), “Demonlover” (2002), “Party Monster”, “Dogville” (both 2003) and “The Brown Bunny” (2004).

From 2006 to 2011, Sevigny portrayed ‘Nicolette Grant’ on the HBO series “Big Love” earning a ‘Golden Globe Award’ for ‘Best Supporting Actress’ (2010).

She also appeared in mainstream films including David Fincher's “Zodiac” (2007) and starred in numerous TV projects, including the Brit series “Hit & Miss” (2012)…

…and a supporting role in “Portlandia” (2013).

Click the images to enlarge…...
See full article at SneakPeek
  • 2/14/2025
  • by Unknown
  • SneakPeek
Alex Wolff Was ‘Nervous’ to Be Acting Opposite Icon Chloë Sevigny for Satirical Indie ‘Magic Farm’
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Alex Wolff is praising his “Magic Farm” co-star Chloë Sevigny for setting the tone for the satirical feature.

Wolff, who stars alongside Sevigny, Simon Rex, Camila del Campo, and Joe Apollonio in the film, said during the IndieWire Studio at Sundance, presented by Dropbox, that Sevigny is one of his acting inspirations. Thus, he understandably was “nervous” to act opposite her on the indie.

“Magic Farm” centers on a Vice News-esque documentary film crew led by Sevigny’s character. The crew travels to Argentina to expose the effects of pesticides on people; Amalia Ulman wrote and directed the film.

When asked by IndieWire’s editorial director Kate Erbland how the two onscreen generations, represented by Sevigny and Rex’s respective characters and del Campo and Wolff’s roles, impacted the making of the film, Wolff credited Sevigny’s three decades in Hollywood as key to making “Magic Farm” work.

“Chloë,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 1/30/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson and Kate Erbland
  • Indiewire
Denis Villeneuve Names His Favorite Films of 2024
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Dune: Part II has shown up on many critics' lists of the best films of 2024, including MovieWeb's list. It's an epic film from a great director who has been expanding our notions of what science-fiction films can be since Arrival and then Blade Runner 2049, and Denis Villeneuve had made tense masterpieces even before then. While he's too humble to include his own film, Villeneuve has revealed his own picks for the best movies of 2024.

Villeneuve's picks are fairly standard awards fare — they're neither too international or arthouse nor big blockbusters. He has chosen an historical epic that will likely sweep the Oscars (The Brutalist), a beautifully poetic indie about the lives of two Black men (Nickel Boys), a star-studded drama about religion and power (Conclave), a boundary-pushing adaptation with a subversive lead performance (Queer), and a controversial French film about a transgender crime lord (Emilia Pérez). Villeneuve told Total...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 1/15/2025
  • by Matt Mahler
  • MovieWeb
Babygirl
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Nicole Kidman has never been a risk-averse actor. For every commercial notch in her body of work, be it Bewitched or Moulin Rouge!, there’s a Birth or Dogville: films that mine the darker depths of humanity, often to the extreme. Babygirl may not linger in those shadowy corners for quite as long, but is nonetheless a reminder of Kidman’s gutsy choices and no-holds-barred approach to performing.

In this film, directed by actor-turned-filmmaker Halina Reijn (who made 2022’s excellent Gen-z murder-mystery Bodies Bodies Bodies), Kidman plays high-powered tech- executive Romy, who we immediately meet in the final throes of leg-buckling sex with Jacob (Antonio Banderas), her husband of nearly 20 years. Moments later, she steals away to another part of their family home and secretly climaxes to the flickering glow of submissive porn on her laptop.

Dickinson is impeccable; as Samuel he brings an elusive yet calming presence with a slow half-smile.
See full article at Empire - Movies
  • 1/7/2025
  • by Beth Webb
  • Empire - Movies
Nicole Kidman Names "Overlooked" Horror Movie With 84% Rt Score As The Role She'd Most Like To Revisit
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Nicole Kidman names an "overlooked" horror movie with an 84% Rotten Tomatoes score as the role she would like to revisit the most. The Australian actress is known for her contributions to both film and television across various genres. Kidman's achievements include an Academy Award for The Hours in 2002, two Primetime Emmy Awards for Big Little Lies in 2017, and a whopping six Golden Globe wins for Moulin Rogue! in 2001, Being the Ricardos in 2021, and more.

Known for movies across many genres, Kidman has naturally starred in a few horror films throughout her career. A few of these examples are independent films that often explore dark and tragic themes, such as Lars Van Trier's avant-garde thriller Dogville, Jonathan Glazer's psychological drama Birth, Yorgos Lanthimos' The Killing of a Sacred Deer, and Sofia Coppola's gothic thriller The Beguiled. However, one of Kidman's best horror movies has been "overlooked," according to the actress.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/7/2025
  • by Adam Bentz
  • ScreenRant
“I didn’t want to wear…”: Ridiculous Reason Nicole Kidman Turned Down a Role For Is One of Her Biggest Regrets
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Nicole Kidman has seen the height of fame and success. She has worked with some of the best and become one of the best, spending years to create the reputation she enjoys today. With this in mind, one would assume that she has done it all and regrets very few. However, what about the opportunities she let pass her by?

Nicole Kidman in Babygirl | Credit: A24

It would seem that when Kidman was a kid herself, she ended up letting go of a role. This would end up being one of the biggest regrets of her career because of who was directing the project.

Nicole Kidman was a very big theater buff

With the release of her recent film, Babygirl, Nicole Kidman gave an interview with W Magazine. Here, she was asked when she decided to become an actress and if she ever went into theater as a child. The actress revealed that she was,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 1/4/2025
  • by Ananya Godboley
  • FandomWire
The Secret to Harris Dickinson’s Seductive ‘Babygirl’ Performance? Pretending He Didn’t Know Anything About Co-Star Nicole Kidman
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When Harris Dickinson first appears in Halina Reijn’s sexy, slippery “Babygirl,” he’s got a dog treat in his hand and a nervous twinkle in his eye. As he charms an angry pup, a terrified and slightly thrilled Nicole Kidman watches just down the street, now safe from the snapping maw of the previously out-of-control canine. The implication is clear: here is someone who can soothe even the wildest of creatures. Perhaps that can extend to Kidman’s Romy?

She — and the audience — find out the answer soon enough. In Reijn’s erotic thriller, Romy’s tightly controlled existence as both a high-powered CEO and a loving wife and mother is thrown into complete disarray by the arrival of alluring intern Samuel (Dickinson). As the pair embark on a kinky, sex-positive Bdsm relationship, both of them open themselves to just about everything: pleasure, pain, ruin, George Michael dance parties,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 12/19/2024
  • by Kate Erbland
  • Indiewire
Walter Koenig's Favorite Star Trek Episode Is A Low-Budget Classic
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In the "Star Trek" episode "Spectre of the Gun", the U.S.S. Enterprise is ordered to the planet Melkot to make contact with the reclusive, xenophobic species that lives there. The Melkotians are small, floating heads with powerful psychic abilities, and an unhealthy, angry suspicion of outsiders. When Kirk (William Shatner), Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Chekov (Walter Koenig), and Scotty (James Doohan) beam down to the surface, a Melkotian immediately announces that they are to be executed for their transgression of trespassing. 

The Melkotian, as a means of execution, reaches into Kirk's brain and psychically creates the town of Tombstone, Arizona, circa 1881, shortly before the infamous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. They are expected to be shot to death by psychic versions of the Earp brothers. Their phasers magically become 19th-century six-shooters, and everyone refers to them as key players in the notorious gunfight. Kirk is Ike Clanton. Chekov is Billy Claiborne.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 12/10/2024
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
Nicole Kidman: ‘That was not me’ on Her Infamous Tom Cruise Divorce Photo That Has Been a Lie for 23 Straight Years
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Nicole Kidman’s relationship with Tom Cruise was one of the most talked-about moments in the actress’s personal life. Considering they were two high-profile actors involved with each other and married for eleven years, it is not surprising that the world was interested in the ins and outs of their relationship.

Credits: Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise in Eyes Wide Shut | Credit: Warner Bros.

While there were many iconic moments for the pair when they were together, there is one picture that went viral after they got divorced. The picture was turned into a meme; however, the origins of it were believed to be due to her divorce from Cruise.

During a recent interview, the actress addressed this picture, and what she had to say may shock many of her most devoted fans.

Nicole Kidman’s Iconic Meme

Many years ago, a picture of Nicole Kidman went viral on the internet.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 11/21/2024
  • by Ananya Godboley
  • FandomWire
“I’m crazy about her”: Practical Magic 2 Sounds Promising After Nicole Kidman Gushes Over Sandra Bullock as Her Witch Co-Star
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Nicole Kidman is an icon in the world of Hollywood for a reason. Bringing a layer of mystery to her roles while simultaneously seeming like the most welcoming person in any cast, the actress is almost paradoxical with her acting. From recent works like Babygirl to older classic projects like Moulin Rouge, she is ingrained into the very fabric of the film industry.

Nicole Kidman in Dogville | Credit: Columbia Pictures

While there are more than a few iconic works that Kidman has starred in her career, there is one film that caters to a completely different audience. In 1998, she starred in Practical Magic alongside Sandra Bullock. The film was so iconic that it is currently getting a sequel.

However, this is not surprising considering the rare dynamic that Kidman and Bullock shared.

Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock Were Actually Like Sisters

Nicole Kidman recently gave an interview with British GQ,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 11/20/2024
  • by Ananya Godboley
  • FandomWire
‘Babygirl’ Director Halina Reijn: Watching Nicole Kidman Act Is Like Witnessing an ‘Exorcism’
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Nicole Kidman transcended the physical realm for her critically acclaimed turn in “Babygirl,” according to writer/director Halina Reijn.

Kidman, who also produces the feature, stars as a CEO who begins a psychosexual relationship with an intern (Harris Dickinson). Reijn told GQ UK that Kidman’s performance changed her mind, body, and soul.

“Seeing her act for me is like an exorcism,” Reijn said. “She goes beyond ego, beyond sanity and beyond fear… It’s not that she’s not afraid, you know, she’s super afraid, but she still goes there.”

Kidman added that she didn’t want to hold anything back when literally baring herself naked onscreen.

“I’m in the whole film [in ‘Babygirl’],” Kidman said. “There are so many close-ups. It’s a full stripping of me.”

She continued, “You can absolutely tell when people are phoning something in. For me, that doesn’t work. I’m not moved by that.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 11/18/2024
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
We Love Martin Scorsese But Nicole Kidman Maybe Right About His Biggest Criticism: ‘I want to work with him, if he does a film with women’
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While Martin Scorsese had fun exploring the criminal underbelly of New York City through the eyes of powerful men, Nicole Kidman always had the best female representation in her films. From Eyes Wide Shut to Dogville, every Kidman film has been about the complex layers that shroud a woman and the societal expectations she rallies against, whether as a witch (Practical Magic) or a submissive (Babygirl).

Nicole Kidman in Dogville [Credit: Lionsgate, Columbia Pictures]

Martin Scorsese, on the other hand, has been busy celebrating the shades of grey where the men of crime operate in the seedy streets of Brooklyn, Vegas, or Manhattan. Renowned as one of the greatest directors of gangster films over the decades, it is rare for Scorsese to paint a picture where a female arc takes precedence over the male in his films.

It is only fair for an actress like Nicole Kidman to air out that...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 11/16/2024
  • by Diya Majumdar
  • FandomWire
Nicole Kidman Nearly Starred In One Of David Fincher's Most Underrated Movies
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Australian actress Nicole Kidman began her professional career in 1983 with an appearance in the holiday film "Bush Christmas," and followed it immediately with Brian Trenchard-Smith's very watchable teens-rule actioner "BMX Bandits." She was 16 at the time. Kidman was a striking screen presence, however, and she immediately began a busy career that hasn't slowed since. For six years, Kidman was all over Aussie TV and cinema, with the actress finally breaking into Hollywood in 1989 with her role in the taut thriller "Dead Calm." In 1990, she was cast opposite Tom Cruise in Tony Scott's "Days of Thunder," and her superstar status was cemented. She also began dating Cruise that year, and they married in 1990, staying one of Hollywood's most visible power couples for a decade. 

Kidman was drawn to a great variety of projects, appearing in costume dramas, comedies, FX-based blockbusters, Oscar bait nonsense, and bonkers experiments like "Dogville," "Fur,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 10/14/2024
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
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Lauren Bacall movies: 15 greatest films ranked worst to best
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Hollywood icon Lauren Bacall made her feature debut with Howard Hawks‘ adventure yarn “To Have and Have Not” (1945). The film was a landmark for the actress in both her career and her life, since it was how she met her future husband Humphrey Bogart. The two would become a legendary couple off-screen and on, making three subsequent features together: “The Big Sleep” (1946), “Dark Passage” (1947) and “Key Largo” (1948).

Despite her hefty filmography, Bacall received just one Oscar nomination in her career: Best Supporting Actress for “The Mirror Has Two Faces” (1996), in which she played Barbra Streisand‘s domineering mother. After victories at the Golden Globes and SAG, Bacall looked like a shoo-in to finally clinch an Academy Award, yet lost to Juliette Binoche (“The English Patient”).

Bacall also had a successful stage career, winning two Tonys as Best Actress in a Musical (“Applause” in 1970 and “Woman of the Year” in 1981″). Her...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 9/12/2024
  • by Zach Laws and Chris Beachum
  • Gold Derby
‘Harvest’ Review: Athina Rachel Tsangari Sublimates Her Voice in Gorgeous, Overlong Period Fable
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With her small but delicious body of directorial work, Greek New Waver Athina Rachel Tsangari has amassed a loyal fanbase. Her debut “Attenberg” (2010) announced a talent capable of balancing absurdist humor with an infectious warmth for human weirdness. Where lauded contemporary Yorgos Lanthimos makes his characters suffer to drive existential points home, Tsangari uses deadpan observations as a way to affectionately deepen her psychological portraits. Crucially, her creations care about each other, even if they are often hamstrung by certain weaknesses.

The announcement of a third feature, “Harvest,” world premiering at Venice, nine years on from “Chevalier,” was cause for genuine excitement among Tsangari heads. Forays into a TV miniseries (“Trigonometry” in 2020) and regular producing gigs have been no substitute for a feature film brewed in her singular mind palace. So, how does “Harvest” stack up?

At first glance, it seems like Tsangari has totally switched things up. Her first...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/3/2024
  • by Sophie Monks Kaufman
  • Indiewire
Nicole Kidman’s 30 Best Film and TV Performances, Ranked
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[Editor’s note: this list was originally published in April 2024. It has since been updated with new performances from Kidman.]

Nicole Kidman is the rare actress in the 21st century who, like the stars of Hollywood’s golden years, doesn’t disappear into roles so much as elevate films by her mere presence.

She’s certainly swung big at mainstream blockbusters (think: the “Aquaman” films) that might feel out of her step with her character-driven work elsewhere (like most of the films on the list that follows). But that’s because the Australian icon is unafraid of any role, whether stripping down her post-Oscar, A-lister veneer to film Lars von Trier’s Brechtian “Dogville” in Sweden, slipping into a bathtub with the 10-year-old possible reincarnation of her dead husband in Jonathan Glazer’s “Birth,” or, yes, donning a fake nose to play a suicidal Virginia Woolf for her Oscar-winning turn in “The Hours.”

On April 27 in Los Angeles, Nicole Kidman received the 49th AFI Life Achievement Award, joining the ranks of Jane Fonda,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 8/29/2024
  • by Ryan Lattanzio
  • Indiewire
A 2014 Cult Horror Film Marks Its 10th Anniversary with a Theatrical Re-Release
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Horror fans can re-experience 2014's cult film The Babadook when it re-launches with exclusive content. Director Jennifer Kent's indie classic marks its 10th anniversary this year with a limited theatrical run across the U.S.

The 2010s saw mainstream and indie horror flicks break out at the box office; horror fans were spoiled for choice coming up with their shortlist of favorites. Notable titles include Hereditary, Get Out, Frozen, and The Wailing, but one film that redefined the genre was The Babadook, based on the 2005 short film Monster by Jennifer Kent. The Babadook earned critical acclaim when it was released in theaters in 2014, and it has since become a modern horror classic. IFC Films announced The Babadook is getting a second run in theaters starting Sept. 19, 2024, in celebration of its 10th anniversary. The upcoming screening will feature an exclusive Q&a with Kent, who will also be available for select interviews.
See full article at CBR
  • 8/8/2024
  • by Manuel Demegillo
  • CBR
“It appears that Nicole has undergone a facelift”: 57-Year-Old Nicole Kidman Still Looks Drop-Dead Gorgeous But Doctor Believes She Had to Undergo Surgery For Her Looks
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Nicole Kidman stuns the crowd every time she walks in, not only because of her towering height but also because of her radiant beauty. The 57-year-old actress appeared in the trailer of her new mini-series, The Perfect Couple, and fans have suspected since then that she had perhaps undergone plastic surgery.

Nicole Kidman in The Perfect Couple / Netflix

A professional surgeon reveals his observation of the Moulin Rouge star’s appearance and discerns if she actually went under the knife.

Expert Weighs In On Nicole Kidman’s Alleged Plastic Surgery

In an exclusive interview with Life & Style, Anthony Youn, M.D., F.A.C.S., shares what he thinks of Nicole Kidman’s new look.

It appears that Nicole has undergone a facelift, which has removed any drooping skin on her face. She also may have undergone an endoscopic brow lift. This is a minimally invasive operation that lifts the brows higher without visible scars.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 7/25/2024
  • by Ariane Cruz
  • FandomWire
Nicole Kidman Honored with Career Retrospective at Nashville’s Belcourt Theatre
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In honor of her receiving this year’s AFI Life Achievement Award, Nicole Kidman is being celebrated with a career retrospective at Nashville’s non-profit film center, The Belcourt, starting next week. Having undergone extensive renovations and preservations in 2016, The Belcourt is now one of Nashville’s most beloved homes for the arts, attracting audiences from all over Tennessee and the Southeast region, as well as visitors from across the country and globe. The theater programs over 300 films a year across 4,500 screenings, some of which feature Q&As with filmmakers and scholars.

Born in Hawaii, but raised in Australia, Kidman made her feature acting debut at the age of 16 and has been working steadily ever since. During her speech at the AFI ceremony, Kidman said, “It is a privilege to make films. And glorious to have made films and television with these storytellers who allowed me to run wild and...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 6/19/2024
  • by Harrison Richlin
  • Indiewire
Nicole Kidman Tribute: Birth (2004)
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by Cláudio Alves

After her Oscar win for The Hours, Nicole Kidman's career went through some interesting somersaults. 2003 saw her bow the avant-garde cruelty of Dogville at Cannes, while Hollywood bore witness to two prestige projects whose success is debatable. The Human Stain is one of those classic "This Had Oscar Buzz" case studies, while Cold Mountain is most interesting for how it didn't secure a Best Actress nomination despite AMPAS' affection. Then came 2004, when von Trier's Brechtian film finally reached the States, and Kidman faced critical lashings as a response to her risk-taking. If not for Dogville, then for a derided broad comedy we'll discuss later in the series. And, of course, for today's subject – Birth.

Jonathan Glazer's sophomore feature was a resounding bomb with audiences and critics back in 2004, and only the Golden Globes seemed willing to recognize the genius in Nicole Kidman's work. Twenty years later,...
See full article at FilmExperience
  • 6/9/2024
  • by Cláudio Alves
  • FilmExperience
Julio Torres’ Fantastical ‘Fantasmas’ Found Joy in the Loneliness
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Looking at the bright colors, elaborate costumes and lush sets of “Fantasmas,” you would be forgiven for thinking the inspiration for Julio Torres‘ latest HBO comedy is more joyful than it actually is.

“Thinking about the world and thinking about the kinds of people I wanted to have in the show, this common thread of feeling alienated and feeling a little lonely kept coming up,” Torres told TheWrap. “I wrote down all of the stories I wanted to tell, saw the common denominator and allowed that to inform the through-line of the story and the overarching world of it.”

Torres originally sold his latest comedy in 2020. However, thanks to the “bottleneck of the pandemic” and the creator’s work on other projects such as his film “Problemista” — which he wrote and directed — the series was delayed.

“I feel like doing work in this industry feels like a burst,” Torres said.
See full article at The Wrap
  • 6/8/2024
  • by Kayla Cobb
  • The Wrap
Nicole Kidman Tribute: Dogville (2003)
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by Eric Blume

If you’ve never seen Dogville, Lars von Trier’s 2003 masterpiece(?) that gives our Nicole three full hours’ worth of very tricky acting, watch it. Or at least, try to watch it. You may find it absolutely insufferable, and turn it off even before Nicole appears, twelve minutes in. This is the definition of a movie not meant for everyone, and perhaps even a movie for almost nobody except a small sliver of people. But I suppose am one of those people for whom the film was made, and I think it’s fantastic. And it’s one of my all-time favorite performances by one of cinema’s greatest actresses...
See full article at FilmExperience
  • 6/6/2024
  • by EricB
  • FilmExperience
John Mulaney on Whether He Will Make More ‘Everybody’s in L.A.,’ Return for ‘The Bear’ Season 3 or Host the Oscars
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We can’t get enough of John Mulaney these days.

After winning his third Emmy last year for writing his Netflix stand-up special “Baby J,” where he spoke candidly (and hilariously) about his stint in rehab for addiction, the former “Saturday Night Live” writer has risen from the ashes like a comically witty Phoenix.

In the Emmy race once again this year in multiple categories, most notably for guest comedy actor for his performance in the brilliant episode “Fishes” from FX’s second season of “The Bear” and outstanding talk series for the Netflix live smash “Everybody’s in L.A.”

On this episode of the award-winning Variety Awards Circuit Podcast, Mulaney discusses his experience and perspectives on Los Angeles’ identity, his creative processes, and whether he’ll host the Oscars. Listen below!

Mulaney surprised everyone as the host of the 14th annual Governors Awards, where he killed in the...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 6/6/2024
  • by Clayton Davis
  • Variety Film + TV
AFI Life Achievement Award Honors Nicole Kidman’s Career: From ‘Expats’ to Those AMC Ads
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Nicole Kidman has been an international treasure going on four decades. Whether you’re tracking her many wigs (“The Undoing” is our favorite), admiring her textured and committed performances, or just standing up and saluting before every AMC Theatres showing, you’re probably honoring her in some way.

While five best actress Oscar nominations and one win (for “The Hours”) have been adequate markers of her success and endurance, conversations have been brewing for years about a lack of recognition for her remarkable artistic consistency.

“How many times does Nicole Kidman have to prove herself?” asked author Anne Helen Peterson in a 2017 essay for BuzzFeed, one that examined how esteem is or isn’t doled out to women in Hollywood, using Kidman as a template.

“While male actors coast on the brilliance of a single performance for years, female stars have to reapply for greatness on a yearly basis, fighting...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 4/27/2024
  • by Matt Donnelly
  • Variety Film + TV
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Nicole Kidman says she craves for extremes: 'I definitely had an extreme life'
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Los Angeles, April 27 (Ians) Hollywood star Nicole Kidman, who is known for ‘Dogville’, ‘Eyes Wide Shut’, ‘Days of Thunder’, ‘The Invasion’, among others, has said that she “craves” the extremes.

The 56-year-old actress has worked across a variety of genres and says she loves pushing herself to try new things, reports ‘Female First UK’.

She told The Hollywood Reporter: “I made ‘Dogville’ after ‘Moulin Rouge’! I went from lavish extremes. I’d come from sequins and trapezes, top hats, hundreds of people singing and dancing. And suddenly I was in Sweden for ‘Dogville’, completely in the dark. But then I went to Spain and made ‘The Others’ with Alejandro Amenebar, who didn’t speak English. I even worked here in Nashville on ‘Stoker’ with director Park Chan-wook, who also doesn’t speak English. I crave those extremes, those emotions. I’ve definitely had an extreme life.”

She revealed that...
See full article at GlamSham
  • 4/27/2024
  • by Agency News Desk
  • GlamSham
Nicole Kidman 'craves the extremes'
Nicole Kidman "craves the extremes".The 56-year-old actress has worked across a variety of genres and says she loves pushing herself to try new things.She told The Hollywood Reporter: "I made 'Dogville' after 'Moulin Rouge'! I went from lavish extremes to … I’d come from sequins and trapezes, top hats, hundreds of people singing and dancing. And suddenly I was in Sweden for 'Dogville', completely in the dark. But then I went to Spain and made 'The Others' with Alejandro Amenábar, who didn’t speak English. I even worked here in Nashville on 'Stoker' with director Park Chan-wook, who also doesn’t speak English. I crave those extremes, those emotions. I’ve definitely had an extreme life."And, Nicole revealed that she is always surprised by the reactions her movies elicit from fans.She said: "There are always surprises. I...
See full article at Bang Showbiz
  • 4/27/2024
  • by Colette Fahy 2
  • Bang Showbiz
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Nicole Kidman: “I’ve Definitely Had an Extreme Life”
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Four decades after her feature debut in 1983’s BMX Bandits, Oscar and two-time Emmy winner Nicole Kidman is set to receive a history-making honor: the AFI Life Achievement Award, which for the first time in 49 years will go to an Australian performer. But the (American-born) Kidman considers herself a part of world cinema, having worked with such renowned filmmakers as Stanley Kubrick (Eyes Wide Shut), Jane Campion (The Portrait of a Lady), Park Chan-wook (Stoker), Sofia Coppola (The Beguiled), Baz Luhrmann (Moulin Rouge!) and Jonathan Glazer (Birth). The actress and producer reflects on how the honor represents both a robust career and a life well traveled.

You’ve received many awards throughout your career. What is so special about this honor?

The list of honorees that have come before me. I’m floored, actually, because there are so few, and there are no Australians. I was overwhelmed by it.

Do...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 4/26/2024
  • by Tyler Coates
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Black Mirror (2011)
Post your questions for Bryce Dallas Howard
Black Mirror (2011)
The dinosaur-chasing actor will take your questions on her extraordinary range of stage, film and TV roles from Shakespeare to Black Mirror to Rocketman

The actor Bryce Dallas Howard may be best known to cinema audiences for walloping genetically modified dinosaurs, but she began in experimental theatre, then broke through on Broadway, playing Rosalind in a production of As You Like It. It was this which alerted M Night Shyalaman to her talent – he then cast her, without an audition, as the lead in 2004’s The Village, as a blind woman who lives as part of a curious sect in a remote community.

Ambitious choices continued, with a role in Lars von Trier’s Manderlay, playing the part originated by Nicole Kidman in Dogville, as an ally to slaves in rural Alabama. Then followed a reunion with Shyalaman for Lady in the Water, and a return to her roots, playing...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 4/16/2024
  • by Guardian Film
  • The Guardian - Film News
“There has to be a third”: Nicole Kidman’s Daughter Pushed Her for Big Little Lies Season 3 Despite Show Leaving Her Wrecked After an Extremely Violent Scene
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Hollywood actress Nicole Kidman has recently shared that not only fans but also her 15-year-old daughter Sunday Rose has been anticipating another season of the popular HBO drama Big Little Lies. The actress has earlier hinted at the possibility of a follow-up season during a fan event.

However, an official confirmation about Season 3 and the potential return of the show’s cast is uncertain so far. In her recent interview with Elle, the actress shared that her daughter played a crucial role in getting another season off the ground.

Big Little Lies

Nicole Kidman’s Daughter Wants Another Season of Big Little Lies

During a recent interview with Elle, Nicole Kidman shared that she and Reese Witherspoon have been discussing a potential third season for the HBO drama Big Little Lies. She also expressed that the timing feels right to revisit their character and explore the “next chapter” of their lives.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 3/20/2024
  • by Laxmi Rajput
  • FandomWire
One Of Dune: Part Two's Creepier Moments Was Improvised By Austin Butler
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Denis Villeneuve's new hit film "Dune: Part Two" sees the rise of a villain not glimpsed in "Dune: Part One." In the film, the evil Baron Vladimir Harkonnen (Stellan Skarsgård), having lost faith in his nephew Rabban (Dave Bautista) and his ability to exterminate the Fremen on Arrakis, turns to his far more sociopathic, aggressive nephew Feyd-Rautha (Austin Butler), a young man with no remorse and a murderous streak a mile wide. A large section of "Dune: Part Two" is devoted to describing Feyd's horrible evil, with several Bene Gesserit witches noting that he can only be controlled through flattery and sexuality, not conscience. Feyd is a violent, walking id, and the film ultimately culminates in a knife fight between him and the Messianic Paul Atreaides (Timothée Chalamet).

In David Lynch's eccentric 1984 "Dune" adaptation, rock star Sting played Feyd, and there is a notorious scene wherein Sting emerges from a bizarre,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 3/5/2024
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
Peter Garde Dies: Frequent Lars Von Trier & Thomas Vinterberg Collaborator And Zentropa Studios’ First Chief Financial Officer Was 67
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Peter Garde, European film financing vet and frequent collaborator of filmmakers like Lars Von Trier and Thomas Vinterberg, has died aged 67 in Fakse, Denmark, after a long battle with cancer. Garde’s wife, Nanna, confirmed the news to Deadline alongside his close associates, Peter Aalbæk Jensen and Anders Kjærhauge.

Garde began his education in finance in the small town of Store Heddinge in Denmark, where he was a student set to become a banker. He ultimately went on to start his own financial exchange company.

After the success of Lars Von Trier’s Breaking The Waves, Garde was convinced by his close friend producer Peter Aalbæk Jensen to join Zentropa and help manage all the money that was pouring into the studio, which ultimately became the beginning of Garde’s long career with Lars Von Trier and Zentropa Studios’ films. He joined the company in 1997.

Garde was responsible for piecing...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 2/8/2024
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
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Chloë Sevigny Is So Over NYC’s Women Walking Their Dogs in Athleisure
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Who better to play a New York high society socialite than Chloë Sevigny, the former club kid turned fashionista who was profiled by Jay McInerney for The New Yorker at 19?

In 1995, one year after that infamous piece hit newsstands, Sevigny would star as a Manhattan teen who discovers she’s HIV positive in Kids, written by her pal Harmony Korine. The film was almost immediately cemented as a cult classic, sending her down an arthouse-cinema path that’s included Gummo, Boys Don’t Cry (earning her an Oscar nomination), American Psycho,...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 1/31/2024
  • by Marlow Stern
  • Rollingstone.com
Expats Cast & Character Guide
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Expats is a new drama series based on the book "The Expatriates" and follows the lives of American expatriates in Hong Kong. The series features a talented cast including Nicole Kidman, Ji-young Yoo, and Sarayu Blue. The characters' lives become intertwined, leading to drama and conflict as their perspectives are brought to the forefront.

Amazon Prime Video’s new drama Expats includes a cast of seasoned stars and talented newcomers, whose acting contributes to making the TV series an apt adaptation of the book it’s based on, 2016’s The Expatriates by Janice Y. K. Lee. Debuting on Amazon Prime Video in January 2024, Expats is directed by Lulu Wang, better known for the 2019 critically acclaimed The Farewell. Expats has Nicole Kidman among its producers, making it the eighth project in which the Australian-American star simultaneously covers the roles of actor and producer in the series.

Set in Hong Kong, Expats...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/25/2024
  • by Antonella Gugliersi
  • ScreenRant
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“I’m Made to Tell Stories”: Anthony Dod Mantle on Lars von Trier, Danny Boyle, and a Cinematographer’s Life
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Seeing Anthony Dod Mantle’s name on EnergaCAMERIMAGE’s guest list, I had some instinct we should talk. Few cinematographers in my (or yours or anyone’s) lifetime have rejigged what that job means, what it might do, and how people––in direct terms or on the most subconscious levels––think about it. Just a glance at his credits is dizzying: there’s the radical approach to visual storytelling in Thomas Vinterberg’s The Celebration, a movie people still try to even approach emulating; Harmony Korine’s Julien-Donkey Boy, which almost looks like The Celebration expect for the fact that it looks like literally nothing else; there’s mainstream cinema’s major introduction to digital images in 28 Days Later, the early stage of a Danny Boyle partnership that leads to Oscars for Slumdog Millionaire; somewhere along the way he shoots two Ron Howard films that suggest the director discovered experimental cinema; and,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 12/19/2023
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
Nicole Kidman at an event for Paperboy (2012)
Nicole Kidman AFI Life Achievement Award Rescheduled for 2024
Nicole Kidman at an event for Paperboy (2012)
Originally scheduled for last June, the AFI Gala celebrating Nicole Kidman will now take place on April 27, 2024, according to an announcement by the American Film Institute.

The annual gala, now in its 49th edition, was postponed due to the WGA writer’s strike, which was resolved in September after five months. The actor’s strike also ended last week, clearing the way for this rescheduled event.

“Both a powerhouse performer, spellbinding movie star and accomplished producer, Nicole Kidman has captured the imaginations of audiences throughout her prolific career, delivering complex and versatile performances onscreen,” said the AFI in an official statement.

Kidman, 56, a five-time Oscar nominee (she won Best Actress for 2002’s “The Hours”), is the first Australian to receive the AFI honor. Recent honorees have included Denzel Washington, Tom Hanks, Meryl Streep, Steven Spielberg, Jane Fonda and Julie Andrews.

Her many credits in film, television, and theater have included “Dead Calm,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 11/13/2023
  • by Joe McGovern
  • The Wrap
Nicole Kidman: "Perfect"
Take a look at actress Nicole Kidman ("Special Ops: Lioness") posing for "Perfect" magazine, photographed by Zhong Lin:

Kidman started her acting career in Australia with the 1983 films "Bush Christmas" and "BMX" Bandits. 

Her breakthrough came in 1989 with the thriller "Dead Calm" and the television miniseries "Bangkok Hilton". In 1990, she co-starred in the racing film "Days of Thunder", followed by roles in "Far and Away" (1992), "Batman Forever" (1995), "To Die For" (1995) and "Eyes Wide Shut" (1999).

She then received two consecutive nominations for the 'Academy Award' for 'Best Actress' in "Moulin Rouge!" (2001) and "The Hours" (2002), winning for "The Hours".

Kidman has since starred in "The Others" (2001), "Cold Mountain" (2003), "Dogville" (2003), "Birth" (2004), "Australia" (2008), "The Paperboy" (2012), "Stoker" (2013), "Paddington" (2014), "The Beguiled" (2017), "Boy Erased" and "Destroyer" (2018.

In 2012, Kidman received her first 'Primetime Emmy Award' nomination for 'Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie' for her role in the HBO film "Hemingway & Gellhorn"...

...and...
See full article at SneakPeek
  • 11/11/2023
  • by Unknown
  • SneakPeek
Stellan Skarsgård Compares Making ‘Mamma Mia!’ to a Lars Von Trier Film: Both Are So ‘Relaxed’ on Set
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Stellan Skarsgård is finding the “Melancholia” in fellow marriage film “Mamma Mia!”

Skarsgård compared filming the beloved 2008 Abba-centric musical movie to starring in a Lars Von Trier film as “Mamma Mia!” echoed the same “relaxed” feeling as leading a Von Trier film like “Nymphomaniac” or “Dogville.”

“I don’t think I’ve ever felt more relaxed on a movie set,” Skarsgård told Vogue of “Mamma Mia!,” adding, “except with Lars von Trier — which I know sounds strange. But his films are very arthouse, to where I always felt like I could take risks, and it was the same with ‘Mamma Mia!'”

He continued, “The thing you want to achieve in a film is real life, which is hard to capture and cannot be done without you feeling safe. You can be skilled and elegant, but the charm of the film is that we were all enjoying ourselves immensely.”

Skarsgård...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/15/2023
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
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