When it comes to the wild success of the film industry in Hungary, which is the largest production hub in continental Europe and second in Europe only to the U.K., film commissioner Csaba Káel is quick to credit a rich cinematic legacy dating back more than 100 years. “There is a huge tradition,” he said. “We have a special film DNA in Hungary.”
The industry’s ongoing success, however, as well as its hopes for the future, is just as reliant on sound policy and investment from the country’s National Film Institute, along with a deep pool of world-class talent that is the envy of industries twice its size.
Those were among the takeaways of a panel during the Cannes Film Festival’s Marché du Film that included Káel, Hungarian producer Ildikó Kemény (“Poor Things”), Hungarian-born and Canadian-based producer Robert Lantos (“Crimes of the Future”), and the U.K.
The industry’s ongoing success, however, as well as its hopes for the future, is just as reliant on sound policy and investment from the country’s National Film Institute, along with a deep pool of world-class talent that is the envy of industries twice its size.
Those were among the takeaways of a panel during the Cannes Film Festival’s Marché du Film that included Káel, Hungarian producer Ildikó Kemény (“Poor Things”), Hungarian-born and Canadian-based producer Robert Lantos (“Crimes of the Future”), and the U.K.
- 5/22/2024
- by Christopher Vourlias
- Variety Film + TV
The Hollywood Reporter has landed 44 nominations for the 66th annual SoCal Journalism Awards, including print journalist of the year for Rebecca Keegan and best website.
Other nominations were bestowed upon THR’s Songwriter Roundtable, podcasts Awards Chatter and It Happened in Hollywood, and the Live Feed and Heat Vision blogs, in addition to THR’s original photography, videos, criticism and social media posts.
The awards are handed out by the Los Angeles Press Club, which noted that more than 2,300 entries were submitted this year. The winners will be announced at an awards dinner gala June 23 at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles.
Below is a list of THR’s nominations. See a full list of noms.
Journalist Of The Year
Print, over 50,000 circulation
Rebecca Keegan
All Media Platforms — Print, Radio, Podcast, TV or Online
Multimedia Package
Mesfin Fekadu, THR Photo Team, THR Video Team,, “The Hit Squad: Billie Eilish,...
Other nominations were bestowed upon THR’s Songwriter Roundtable, podcasts Awards Chatter and It Happened in Hollywood, and the Live Feed and Heat Vision blogs, in addition to THR’s original photography, videos, criticism and social media posts.
The awards are handed out by the Los Angeles Press Club, which noted that more than 2,300 entries were submitted this year. The winners will be announced at an awards dinner gala June 23 at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles.
Below is a list of THR’s nominations. See a full list of noms.
Journalist Of The Year
Print, over 50,000 circulation
Rebecca Keegan
All Media Platforms — Print, Radio, Podcast, TV or Online
Multimedia Package
Mesfin Fekadu, THR Photo Team, THR Video Team,, “The Hit Squad: Billie Eilish,...
- 5/9/2024
- by Kimberly Nordyke
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Despite the popularity of Disney’s “Star Wars” franchise, Daisy Ridley says her career stalled when she finished her run leading the film trilogy with 2019’s “The Rise of Skywalker.”
“There weren’t that many offers coming in,” Ridley said during a Sunday panel at SXSW in Austin. “It’s not that there wasn’t any… I remember finishing and thinking, ‘Oh, it’s quiet and strange.'”
According to Ridley, she didn’t feel fully comfortable leading the latest “Star Wars” trilogy until she had reached the final movie, “The Rise of Skywalker.” “It took, honestly, making the third film till I felt like ‘Ok, I’m good. I deserve to be here,'” she said.
And then, after eight years of playing Rey, Ridley and the rest of the world went into lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and the entire film and TV industry shut down. During that time,...
“There weren’t that many offers coming in,” Ridley said during a Sunday panel at SXSW in Austin. “It’s not that there wasn’t any… I remember finishing and thinking, ‘Oh, it’s quiet and strange.'”
According to Ridley, she didn’t feel fully comfortable leading the latest “Star Wars” trilogy until she had reached the final movie, “The Rise of Skywalker.” “It took, honestly, making the third film till I felt like ‘Ok, I’m good. I deserve to be here,'” she said.
And then, after eight years of playing Rey, Ridley and the rest of the world went into lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and the entire film and TV industry shut down. During that time,...
- 3/10/2024
- by Jennifer Maas
- Variety Film + TV
The second of two panels hosted by The Hollywood Reporter at the Palm Springs International Feature Film featured a breadth of official Oscar submissions from around the world. The discussion, moderated by The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo, highlighted how these films varied greatly in both tone and scope.
One such film is Germany’s entry, The Teacher’s Lounge, directed by İlker Çatak, which focuses on a teacher caught between wanting to help a student accused of theft and the rigidity of her own school’s rules. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Mstyslav Chernov’s 20 Days in Mariupol, Ukraine’s official Oscars entry, is a documentary about the Russian invasion within the besieged city of Mariupol. Michael A. Goorjian directs Amerikatsi, Armenia’s selection, a comedy-drama about an Armenian-American locked up in a Soviet prison.
Other films featured include Kaouther Ben Hania’s Four Daughters, from Tunisia, a documentary about...
One such film is Germany’s entry, The Teacher’s Lounge, directed by İlker Çatak, which focuses on a teacher caught between wanting to help a student accused of theft and the rigidity of her own school’s rules. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Mstyslav Chernov’s 20 Days in Mariupol, Ukraine’s official Oscars entry, is a documentary about the Russian invasion within the besieged city of Mariupol. Michael A. Goorjian directs Amerikatsi, Armenia’s selection, a comedy-drama about an Armenian-American locked up in a Soviet prison.
Other films featured include Kaouther Ben Hania’s Four Daughters, from Tunisia, a documentary about...
- 1/24/2024
- by Hilton Dresden
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SundanceTV is airing two new episodes of Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter this weekend.
THR partnered with AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and AMC+ for the new TV series, which premiered Dec. 31. THR’s Roundtables, which have become a hallmark of career achievement for stars and awards contenders, will be reimagined for broadcast, offering a fresh perspective on a classic, showcasing the collective brilliance of the entertainment industry’s finest and funniest minds as never before.
This Sunday, the 8 a.m. Et episode will feature the Director Roundtable, presented by Neom. The conversation, moderated by THR senior film editor Rebecca Keegan, includes Blitz Bazawule (The Color Purple), Bradley Cooper (Maestro), Ava DuVernay (Origin), Todd Haynes (May December), Greta Gerwig (Barbie) and Michael Mann (Ferrari).
At 9 a.m. Et, the episode will feature the Actor Roundtable, moderated by Scott Feinberg, THR’s executive editor, awards. The panel features Robert Downey Jr. (Oppenheimer...
THR partnered with AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and AMC+ for the new TV series, which premiered Dec. 31. THR’s Roundtables, which have become a hallmark of career achievement for stars and awards contenders, will be reimagined for broadcast, offering a fresh perspective on a classic, showcasing the collective brilliance of the entertainment industry’s finest and funniest minds as never before.
This Sunday, the 8 a.m. Et episode will feature the Director Roundtable, presented by Neom. The conversation, moderated by THR senior film editor Rebecca Keegan, includes Blitz Bazawule (The Color Purple), Bradley Cooper (Maestro), Ava DuVernay (Origin), Todd Haynes (May December), Greta Gerwig (Barbie) and Michael Mann (Ferrari).
At 9 a.m. Et, the episode will feature the Actor Roundtable, moderated by Scott Feinberg, THR’s executive editor, awards. The panel features Robert Downey Jr. (Oppenheimer...
- 1/4/2024
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter has once again gathered A-list talent for its famed Roundtables, and you can watch them on TV starting this weekend.
THR partnered with AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and AMC+ for the new TV series Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter, which kicks off Sunday. THR’s Roundtables, which have become a hallmark of career achievement for stars and awards contenders, will be reimagined for broadcast, offering a fresh perspective on a classic, showcasing the collective brilliance of the entertainment industry’s finest and funniest minds as never before.
The series, hosted by Emmy-nominated actress and comedian Yvonne Orji, debuts Dec. 31 with the songwriter conversation moderated by THR senior music editor Mesfin Fekadu, airing at 8 a.m. Et, followed by a conversation moderated by THR senior film editor Rebecca Keegan, with some of awards-season’s most-talked-about actresses, airing at 9 a.m. Et. The series will be available to stream on AMC+ starting Mar.
THR partnered with AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and AMC+ for the new TV series Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter, which kicks off Sunday. THR’s Roundtables, which have become a hallmark of career achievement for stars and awards contenders, will be reimagined for broadcast, offering a fresh perspective on a classic, showcasing the collective brilliance of the entertainment industry’s finest and funniest minds as never before.
The series, hosted by Emmy-nominated actress and comedian Yvonne Orji, debuts Dec. 31 with the songwriter conversation moderated by THR senior music editor Mesfin Fekadu, airing at 8 a.m. Et, followed by a conversation moderated by THR senior film editor Rebecca Keegan, with some of awards-season’s most-talked-about actresses, airing at 9 a.m. Et. The series will be available to stream on AMC+ starting Mar.
- 12/30/2023
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter won best entertainment website, Rebecca Keegan was named print journalist of the year and Daniel Fienberg was named best TV critic at the 16th annual National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards on Sunday night.
Overall, THR took home a total of 11 wins at the awards, which are handed out annually by the Los Angeles Press Club. Presenters at the event said this year featured the most submissions ever for the Naej Awards.
Also during the event, the Los Angeles Press Club celebrated several honorees with special awards. They included Ava DuVernay (Visionary Award for humanitarian work), Barbara Eden (Legend Award for lifetime achievements and contributions to society), Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Luminary Award for career achievement), LeVar Burton (Distinguished Storyteller Award, Literacy, for excellence in storytelling outside journalism) and Roger Corman (Distinguished Storyteller Award, Film, for excellence in storytelling outside journalism).
Sunday night’s gala was held at...
Overall, THR took home a total of 11 wins at the awards, which are handed out annually by the Los Angeles Press Club. Presenters at the event said this year featured the most submissions ever for the Naej Awards.
Also during the event, the Los Angeles Press Club celebrated several honorees with special awards. They included Ava DuVernay (Visionary Award for humanitarian work), Barbara Eden (Legend Award for lifetime achievements and contributions to society), Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Luminary Award for career achievement), LeVar Burton (Distinguished Storyteller Award, Literacy, for excellence in storytelling outside journalism) and Roger Corman (Distinguished Storyteller Award, Film, for excellence in storytelling outside journalism).
Sunday night’s gala was held at...
- 12/4/2023
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday announced a partnership with AMC Networks’ SundanceTV and AMC+ for the new TV series Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter. THR’s famed Roundtables, which have become a hallmark of career achievement for A-list talent from Jennifer Lawrence and Pedro Pascal to Martin Scorsese and Lady Gaga, will be reimagined for broadcast, offering a fresh perspective on a classic, showcasing the collective brilliance of the entertainment industry’s finest and funniest minds as never before.
“This series will celebrate the rich history and legacy of THR’s Roundtable conversations,” said Elisabeth D. Rabishaw, executive producer and publisher of The Hollywood Reporter. “We’re thrilled to be taking this journey with AMC Networks to bring Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter to life in a visually captivating and compelling format.”
“We’re overjoyed to introduce Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter. It’s an opportunity for...
“This series will celebrate the rich history and legacy of THR’s Roundtable conversations,” said Elisabeth D. Rabishaw, executive producer and publisher of The Hollywood Reporter. “We’re thrilled to be taking this journey with AMC Networks to bring Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter to life in a visually captivating and compelling format.”
“We’re overjoyed to introduce Off Script With The Hollywood Reporter. It’s an opportunity for...
- 11/15/2023
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter has landed 46 nominations for the 16th National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards, including best entertainment publication and best website.
In addition, Rebecca Keegan was nominated for print journalist of the year, Katie Kilkenny online journalist of the year, Daniel Fienberg for best television critic and Mesfin Fekadu for best online columnist.
In the celebrity investigation category, Kim Masters was nominated for her exposé “What Really Happened With Fred Savage on the Wonder Years” and Lacey Rose and Kilkenny for their industry-shaking story “Inside the Implosion of Justin Roiland’s Animation Empire.”
Two THR stories were nominated in the entertainment industry/arts investigative category, with Gary Baum nominated for “How Les Moonves and His CBS Loyalists Worked to Discredit Accuser: ‘It Was Sort of a Mafia Culture’”; and Samuel Braslow and Kim Masters nominated for “‘Hiding in Plain Sight’: After Being Fired From ‘Scrubs’ for Misconduct, Alleged Rapist Eric Weinberg Kept Working.
In addition, Rebecca Keegan was nominated for print journalist of the year, Katie Kilkenny online journalist of the year, Daniel Fienberg for best television critic and Mesfin Fekadu for best online columnist.
In the celebrity investigation category, Kim Masters was nominated for her exposé “What Really Happened With Fred Savage on the Wonder Years” and Lacey Rose and Kilkenny for their industry-shaking story “Inside the Implosion of Justin Roiland’s Animation Empire.”
Two THR stories were nominated in the entertainment industry/arts investigative category, with Gary Baum nominated for “How Les Moonves and His CBS Loyalists Worked to Discredit Accuser: ‘It Was Sort of a Mafia Culture’”; and Samuel Braslow and Kim Masters nominated for “‘Hiding in Plain Sight’: After Being Fired From ‘Scrubs’ for Misconduct, Alleged Rapist Eric Weinberg Kept Working.
- 11/2/2023
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Their jobs were never easy — buy they’re certainly never boring, either. Meet THR’s Power Business Managers, the financial minds tasked with keeping things calm amid the chaos.
Profiles written by Winston Cho, Kirsten Chuba, Aaron Couch, Mia Galuppo, Erik Hayden, Caitlin Huston, Katie Kilkenny, Sydney Odman Etan Vlessing and Alex Weprin.
Belva Anakwenze Belva Anakwenze with Jay Ellis
Abacus Financial
“The strikes have taught our clients significantly more than the Covid-19 pandemic,” Anakwenze — whose clients include Insecure’s Jay Ellis and Entertainment Tonight’s Kevin Frazier — says of the past five months, explaining that back then, “the government provided large safety nets to bolster businesses and keep individuals flush with cash.” Without such relief, she says, “Planning for a rainy day is more than just having cash reserves. It is essential to have assets available for sale and lines of credit open.”
It’s never too late to … “Choose yourself.
Profiles written by Winston Cho, Kirsten Chuba, Aaron Couch, Mia Galuppo, Erik Hayden, Caitlin Huston, Katie Kilkenny, Sydney Odman Etan Vlessing and Alex Weprin.
Belva Anakwenze Belva Anakwenze with Jay Ellis
Abacus Financial
“The strikes have taught our clients significantly more than the Covid-19 pandemic,” Anakwenze — whose clients include Insecure’s Jay Ellis and Entertainment Tonight’s Kevin Frazier — says of the past five months, explaining that back then, “the government provided large safety nets to bolster businesses and keep individuals flush with cash.” Without such relief, she says, “Planning for a rainy day is more than just having cash reserves. It is essential to have assets available for sale and lines of credit open.”
It’s never too late to … “Choose yourself.
- 10/25/2023
- by Edited by Ashley Cullins
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Whether it’s defending against criminal charges, negotiating a prenup or suing an employer, having a top-notch lawyer is a must. But when you’re famous and living under the microscope of public scrutiny, it takes a specialist who can navigate the law and the media. Enter The Troubleshooters, the lawyers Hollywood calls when it’s time to hope for the best and plan for the worst.
Much of their work is under the radar by design, and many of them won’t so much as confirm a client — even if it’s already publicized. But, thanks to word of mouth from industry insiders, public documents and other research, The Hollywood Reporter has compiled a list of the 25 attorneys the entertainment elite have on speed dial for death, divorce and other disasters.
Profiles by Winston Cho, Mia Galuppo and Chris Gardner.
Family Law From left: Emily Ratajkowski, Britney Spears (pictured...
Much of their work is under the radar by design, and many of them won’t so much as confirm a client — even if it’s already publicized. But, thanks to word of mouth from industry insiders, public documents and other research, The Hollywood Reporter has compiled a list of the 25 attorneys the entertainment elite have on speed dial for death, divorce and other disasters.
Profiles by Winston Cho, Mia Galuppo and Chris Gardner.
Family Law From left: Emily Ratajkowski, Britney Spears (pictured...
- 9/22/2023
- by Ashley Cullins, Editor
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Two Emmy-nominated directors talk about their approaches and the risks they took. For Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie, Davis Guggenheim explains how broke the conventional documentary rules he typically follows for the Apple TV+ movie — a risk that paid off with seven Emmy noms. And Emmy nominee Peter Hoar looks back on “Long, Long Time,” the episode of HBO’s drama series The Last of Us that took a major narrative risk to depict a romantic connection rarely seen on television.
‘Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie’ Director Talks His Approach to the Celebrity Biodoc: “I’m Always Looking for a Very Intimate Connection”
Oscar winner Davis Guggenheim is no stranger to bold-faced names, having worked with the likes of Al Gore, Barack Obama and Malala Yousafzai. But some three years ago, he found himself, as he says, “stuck.”
“I wanted to do something different. I wanted to find joy in my work.
‘Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie’ Director Talks His Approach to the Celebrity Biodoc: “I’m Always Looking for a Very Intimate Connection”
Oscar winner Davis Guggenheim is no stranger to bold-faced names, having worked with the likes of Al Gore, Barack Obama and Malala Yousafzai. But some three years ago, he found himself, as he says, “stuck.”
“I wanted to do something different. I wanted to find joy in my work.
- 8/21/2023
- by Mia Galuppo and Carita Rizzo
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Written by Seth Abramovitch, Gary Baum, Kirsten Chuba, Mia Galuppo, Chris Gardner, James Hibberd, Caitlin Huston, Rebecca Keegan, Mikey O’Connell, Sydney Odman, Lacey Rose, Julian Sancton, Alex Weprin and Abbey White. Additional reporting by J. Clara Chan.
It is the best of times and the worst of times for podcasting. In 2023, the industry put the brakes on a period of lavish spending and nine-digit megadeals and — much as its streaming counterparts did last year — followed largesse with austerity. Facing challenges surrounding the advertising model, macroeconomic concerns and a post-pandemic slowdown, some of the biggest players, including Spotify, Vox Media and NPR, announced mass layoffs. Many others — like SiriusXM and Amazon — cut their podcast budgets significantly. And yet, unlike in other struggling segments of the entertainment business, audiences are continuing to grow with no ceiling in sight. According to an analysis by Edison Research, “Podcasting is ‘back,’ reaching the highest numbers ever,...
It is the best of times and the worst of times for podcasting. In 2023, the industry put the brakes on a period of lavish spending and nine-digit megadeals and — much as its streaming counterparts did last year — followed largesse with austerity. Facing challenges surrounding the advertising model, macroeconomic concerns and a post-pandemic slowdown, some of the biggest players, including Spotify, Vox Media and NPR, announced mass layoffs. Many others — like SiriusXM and Amazon — cut their podcast budgets significantly. And yet, unlike in other struggling segments of the entertainment business, audiences are continuing to grow with no ceiling in sight. According to an analysis by Edison Research, “Podcasting is ‘back,’ reaching the highest numbers ever,...
- 8/21/2023
- by Julian Sancton, Editor
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Do you know the next Donna Langley or Kevin Feige? Submit them for The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Next Generation issue — our definitive list of the year’s 35 best and brightest individuals age 35 and under.
THR is now accepting online submissions for the 30th edition of the Next Gen list, which is slated to publish Nov. 15 and will identify 35 standouts who one day will run the entertainment industry. Candidates should be submitted in one of the following categories: agents, managers, film, TV, digital and legal. When submitting, please make clear the candidate’s projects or clients, listing them as specifically as possible.
Nominees must be 35 or younger on Nov. 15, 2023. The deadline for submissions is Sept. 1.
Log your submissions here. (Note: One strong nomination is much more effective than several copy and paste submissions.)
Contact Ashley Cullins (ashley.cullins@thr.com) or Mia Galuppo (mia.galuppo@thr.com) with questions.
THR is now accepting online submissions for the 30th edition of the Next Gen list, which is slated to publish Nov. 15 and will identify 35 standouts who one day will run the entertainment industry. Candidates should be submitted in one of the following categories: agents, managers, film, TV, digital and legal. When submitting, please make clear the candidate’s projects or clients, listing them as specifically as possible.
Nominees must be 35 or younger on Nov. 15, 2023. The deadline for submissions is Sept. 1.
Log your submissions here. (Note: One strong nomination is much more effective than several copy and paste submissions.)
Contact Ashley Cullins (ashley.cullins@thr.com) or Mia Galuppo (mia.galuppo@thr.com) with questions.
- 8/3/2023
- by Mia Galuppo
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Rev. Stephen Pieters, the influential HIV/AIDS activist and survivor whose televised interview with Tammy Faye Bakker in 1985 transformed him into a national spokesperson in the battle against the disease, has died. He was 70.
Pieters died Saturday in Los Angeles after being hospitalized two weeks earlier with an infection, publicist Harlan Boll announced.
Pieters had been diagnosed with AIDS-related complex in 1982 and Kaposi sarcoma and Stage 4 lymphoma in 1984 when he appeared via satellite on the Bakker-hosted Tammy’s House Party, seen by millions of evangelical Christians throughout the southeastern U.S. on the Ptl Network.
“She wanted to be the first televangelist to interview a gay man with AIDS,” Pieters told People magazine two years ago. “It was a very scary time, and there was still a lot of fear about AIDS and about being around a person with AIDS. And I thought the opportunity to reach an audience that...
Pieters died Saturday in Los Angeles after being hospitalized two weeks earlier with an infection, publicist Harlan Boll announced.
Pieters had been diagnosed with AIDS-related complex in 1982 and Kaposi sarcoma and Stage 4 lymphoma in 1984 when he appeared via satellite on the Bakker-hosted Tammy’s House Party, seen by millions of evangelical Christians throughout the southeastern U.S. on the Ptl Network.
“She wanted to be the first televangelist to interview a gay man with AIDS,” Pieters told People magazine two years ago. “It was a very scary time, and there was still a lot of fear about AIDS and about being around a person with AIDS. And I thought the opportunity to reach an audience that...
- 7/10/2023
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
In terms of the sheer number of entertainment options, there’s never been a better time to be a kid. But it’s also never been more work.
The average 8-year-old in 2013 could turn on one of a few TV channels and park there for an hour or two, and maybe watch a few movies or shows on Netflix or Hulu (in the not-very-likely event their families had an account). YouTube was for teenagers and adults.
A decade later, an 8-year-old can choose from hundreds of titles across a host of streaming platforms and thousands of YouTube channels — as well as an age-protected YouTube Kids app — to say nothing of TikTok and other social media. The shift to streaming is even more pronounced among kids and teenagers than it is in adults: Where a popular network or cable show can still draw maybe half a million adults ages 18-34, no...
The average 8-year-old in 2013 could turn on one of a few TV channels and park there for an hour or two, and maybe watch a few movies or shows on Netflix or Hulu (in the not-very-likely event their families had an account). YouTube was for teenagers and adults.
A decade later, an 8-year-old can choose from hundreds of titles across a host of streaming platforms and thousands of YouTube channels — as well as an age-protected YouTube Kids app — to say nothing of TikTok and other social media. The shift to streaming is even more pronounced among kids and teenagers than it is in adults: Where a popular network or cable show can still draw maybe half a million adults ages 18-34, no...
- 6/8/2023
- by Edited by Julian Sancton
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Profiles by Seth Abramovitch, Gary Baum, Evan Nicole Brown, Tyler Coates, Kirsten Chuba, Aaron Couch, Scott Feinberg, Mesfin Fekadu, Mia Galuppo, James Hibberd, Rebecca Keegan, Sydney Odman, Rick Porter, Lacey Rose, Julian Sancton, Rebecca Sun and Beatrice Verhoeven
Cris Abrego & Karla Pita Loor Cris Abrego and Karla Pita Loor
Banijay Americas
Abrego is one of the top-ranking Latino execs in English-language media, and Pita Loor is the board chair of the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, a major conduit for industry players who are invested in improving inclusion. Under their leadership, Banijay Americas has stepped up initiatives to help people from historically excluded backgrounds break into entertainment. “This work has both financial and cultural bottom lines, and those are not only equally important but also inextricably connected,” says Abrego of the content business. “Success requires attention to both.”
I’m excited about …
Abrego “Mindy Kaling is just laugh-out-loud funny...
Cris Abrego & Karla Pita Loor Cris Abrego and Karla Pita Loor
Banijay Americas
Abrego is one of the top-ranking Latino execs in English-language media, and Pita Loor is the board chair of the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, a major conduit for industry players who are invested in improving inclusion. Under their leadership, Banijay Americas has stepped up initiatives to help people from historically excluded backgrounds break into entertainment. “This work has both financial and cultural bottom lines, and those are not only equally important but also inextricably connected,” says Abrego of the content business. “Success requires attention to both.”
I’m excited about …
Abrego “Mindy Kaling is just laugh-out-loud funny...
- 5/31/2023
- by Ashley Cullins, Editor and Mikey O'Connell, Editor
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter has received 47 nominations for the 65th Annual SoCal Journalism Awards, including best website, best investigative story and best cover art.
Rebecca Keegan is also nominated for journalist of the year in the print (over 50,000 circulation) category.
In addition, Seth Abramovitch, Samuel Braslow, Kim Masters and Scott Roxborough all received nominations for best investigative story in a magazine. Daniel Fienberg and Angie Han are among those nominated in the criticism of TV category, as well as David Rooney in the criticism of film category.
Heat Vision, THR, Esq. and The Live Feed also received nominations for best blog by a group.
The SoCal Journalism Awards gala will be held June 25 at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles.
A complete list of THR’s nominations follows. See the full list of noms here.
Journalist Of The Year
Print, over 50,000 circulation
Rebecca Keegan
All Media Platforms – Print, Radio, Podcast,...
Rebecca Keegan is also nominated for journalist of the year in the print (over 50,000 circulation) category.
In addition, Seth Abramovitch, Samuel Braslow, Kim Masters and Scott Roxborough all received nominations for best investigative story in a magazine. Daniel Fienberg and Angie Han are among those nominated in the criticism of TV category, as well as David Rooney in the criticism of film category.
Heat Vision, THR, Esq. and The Live Feed also received nominations for best blog by a group.
The SoCal Journalism Awards gala will be held June 25 at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles.
A complete list of THR’s nominations follows. See the full list of noms here.
Journalist Of The Year
Print, over 50,000 circulation
Rebecca Keegan
All Media Platforms – Print, Radio, Podcast,...
- 5/13/2023
- by Carly Thomas
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Jonathan Majors’ Magazine Dreams was a no-show at CinemaCon.
Searchlight and Disney steered clear of any mention of the film during Disney’s presentation at the annual gathering of theater owners in Las Vegas as Majors awaits a May 8 court date in New York on assault charges. Normally, the powerhouse specialty would have used CinemaCon to promote the movie, which is scheduled for a Dec. 8 release in theaters, during the heart of awards season.
The movie’s premise — an aspiring bodybuilder who flies into bouts of rage and violence — is a complicating factor given the allegations of assault against the actor, who has denied wrongdoing. One scene features his character on a date with a woman who becomes so uncomfortable she flees the restaurant. Majors is already experiencing career blowback, with Entertainment 360 and PR firm The Lede Company dropping him.
Majors’ rise from Yale Drama School to Hollywood star has been meteoric.
Searchlight and Disney steered clear of any mention of the film during Disney’s presentation at the annual gathering of theater owners in Las Vegas as Majors awaits a May 8 court date in New York on assault charges. Normally, the powerhouse specialty would have used CinemaCon to promote the movie, which is scheduled for a Dec. 8 release in theaters, during the heart of awards season.
The movie’s premise — an aspiring bodybuilder who flies into bouts of rage and violence — is a complicating factor given the allegations of assault against the actor, who has denied wrongdoing. One scene features his character on a date with a woman who becomes so uncomfortable she flees the restaurant. Majors is already experiencing career blowback, with Entertainment 360 and PR firm The Lede Company dropping him.
Majors’ rise from Yale Drama School to Hollywood star has been meteoric.
- 4/26/2023
- by Pamela McClintock
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter’s first panel of international directors at this year’s Palm Springs Film Festival features movies with atypical lead actors. Jerzy Skolimowski’s Eo, starring several camera-ready Sardinian donkeys, stands out as perhaps the most unlikely casting choice. Projects such as Pan Nalin’s The Last Film Show and Colm Bairéad’s The Quiet Girl both feature young child actors in lead roles, which necessitated extensive nationwide talent scouting and rigid scheduling to accommodate child labor laws.
The breadth of different tones and kinds of stories included in these Oscar-shortlisted international films is evidenced by the varying genres represented on the panel: Tarik Saleh’s Cairo Conspiracy is a thriller centering around the eponymous Egyptian city’s religious and political elites. Joyland, Saim Sadiq’s feature debut, is a family drama that tackles issues of gender, sexuality and lineage. And Ali Abbasi’s Holy Spider is based...
The breadth of different tones and kinds of stories included in these Oscar-shortlisted international films is evidenced by the varying genres represented on the panel: Tarik Saleh’s Cairo Conspiracy is a thriller centering around the eponymous Egyptian city’s religious and political elites. Joyland, Saim Sadiq’s feature debut, is a family drama that tackles issues of gender, sexuality and lineage. And Ali Abbasi’s Holy Spider is based...
- 1/13/2023
- by Hilton Dresden
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Click here to read the full article.
On Nov. 7, the Writers Guild of America unveiled its negotiating committee for its upcoming 2023 contract talks, a list that combines longtime union leaders with prominent members and writers working across genres. But so far, without a general membership meeting or “pattern of demands” released, guild members have been left guessing about whether the union might mount a credible strike threat in the spring or table harder-hitting talks for a more economically stable time.
While top execs are preparing for a strike they are sure is coming after the WGA’s contract expires May 1 — and the WGA leadership has been nettled by the Directors Guild of America initiating informal talks with employers — the writers themselves are less certain.
Amid restructurings at such companies as Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery and the threat of a potential recession that writers say is hurting both the showrunner and workaday writer class,...
On Nov. 7, the Writers Guild of America unveiled its negotiating committee for its upcoming 2023 contract talks, a list that combines longtime union leaders with prominent members and writers working across genres. But so far, without a general membership meeting or “pattern of demands” released, guild members have been left guessing about whether the union might mount a credible strike threat in the spring or table harder-hitting talks for a more economically stable time.
While top execs are preparing for a strike they are sure is coming after the WGA’s contract expires May 1 — and the WGA leadership has been nettled by the Directors Guild of America initiating informal talks with employers — the writers themselves are less certain.
Amid restructurings at such companies as Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery and the threat of a potential recession that writers say is hurting both the showrunner and workaday writer class,...
- 12/16/2022
- by Katie Kilkenny
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Click here to read the full article.
The blowup of crypto exchange Ftx and the fall from grace of its founder Sam Bankman-Fried (also known as Sbf) is going to be the subject of a new documentary feature in the works from Vice Media and the tech business publication The Information.
The doc, Sbf and the End of Silicon Valley, will be delivered in Q2 2023 and will feature reporting from The Information‘s crypto and venture capital teams, and Vice’s Motherboard team. Ftx’s inexperienced leadership, the role of VCs and Bankman-Fried’s obsession with “effective altruism” will all be dissected in the doc.
Vice Distribution will sell the project in all territories.
The project is the first documentary effort for The Information, which was founded by veteran business journalist Jessica Lessin in 2013.
“There are so many people involved in this story who should have known better, and did know better,...
The blowup of crypto exchange Ftx and the fall from grace of its founder Sam Bankman-Fried (also known as Sbf) is going to be the subject of a new documentary feature in the works from Vice Media and the tech business publication The Information.
The doc, Sbf and the End of Silicon Valley, will be delivered in Q2 2023 and will feature reporting from The Information‘s crypto and venture capital teams, and Vice’s Motherboard team. Ftx’s inexperienced leadership, the role of VCs and Bankman-Fried’s obsession with “effective altruism” will all be dissected in the doc.
Vice Distribution will sell the project in all territories.
The project is the first documentary effort for The Information, which was founded by veteran business journalist Jessica Lessin in 2013.
“There are so many people involved in this story who should have known better, and did know better,...
- 11/17/2022
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSKing Lear.Jean-Luc Godard, groundbreaking French-Swiss filmmaker across six decades, died last week at age 91. In the week since, a number of tributes have been shared: among them, Blair McClendon in n+1, J. Hoberman in The Nation, Manohla Dargis in the New York Times, and Richard Hell in Screen Slate. Alternatively, you can find a 2002 essay on Godard by filmmaker and theorist Peter Wollen on Verso's blog, watch a 1988 conversation between Godard and critic Serge Daney, or read this list Godard contributed to the British film journal Afterimage in 1970. Shadow and Act founder Tambay Obenson is fundraising to launch Akoroko, a new platform devoted to African film and television. The platform intends to combine film journalism with “consultation, cataloging, and curated film streaming.”Two posters (below) for the 61st New York Film Festival feature photographs taken by Nan Goldin.
- 9/20/2022
- MUBI
Click here to read the full article.
Thanks for checking out the first installment of The Hollywood Reporter’s Weekend Awards Brief! This Friday week-in-review newsletter will be prepared by THR’s awards team and will feature a rundown of (a) key pieces we’ve written; (b) memorable things we’ve attended; (c) interesting rumblings we’ve heard; (d) things we encourage you to check out; and (e) things we’d like to know.
The authors of each item are identified by the following initials: awards editor Tyler Coates [Tc], executive editor of awards Scott Feinberg [Sf], film writer Mia Galuppo [Mg], senior staff writer Chris Gardner [CGa], tech editor Carolyn Giardina [CGi], senior editor of film Rebecca Keegan [Rk] and deputy awards editor Beatrice Verhoeven [Bv].
* * *
What we’re producing…
A rundown of key pieces we’ve written
TV Academy encouraging nominees to pre-submit thank-you names to appear on-screen —Sf Hollywood Critics Association in turmoil as numerous members resign,...
Thanks for checking out the first installment of The Hollywood Reporter’s Weekend Awards Brief! This Friday week-in-review newsletter will be prepared by THR’s awards team and will feature a rundown of (a) key pieces we’ve written; (b) memorable things we’ve attended; (c) interesting rumblings we’ve heard; (d) things we encourage you to check out; and (e) things we’d like to know.
The authors of each item are identified by the following initials: awards editor Tyler Coates [Tc], executive editor of awards Scott Feinberg [Sf], film writer Mia Galuppo [Mg], senior staff writer Chris Gardner [CGa], tech editor Carolyn Giardina [CGi], senior editor of film Rebecca Keegan [Rk] and deputy awards editor Beatrice Verhoeven [Bv].
* * *
What we’re producing…
A rundown of key pieces we’ve written
TV Academy encouraging nominees to pre-submit thank-you names to appear on-screen —Sf Hollywood Critics Association in turmoil as numerous members resign,...
- 9/3/2022
- by THR Awards Team
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Click here to read the full article.
Over nearly three decades, The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Next Generation issue — our definitive list of the year’s 35 best and brightest individuals age 35 and under — has featured industry leaders like Marvel’s Kevin Feige, Netflix’s Bela Bajaria and Universal’s Donna Langley when they were upstart execs.
THR is now accepting online submissions for the 29th edition of the Next Gen list, which is slated to publish Nov. 16, and will identify 35 standouts who one day will run the entertainment industry. Candidates should be submitted in one of the following categories: agents, managers, film, TV, digital and legal. When submitting, please make clear the candidate’s projects or clients, listing them as specifically as possible.
The deadline for submissions will be Sept. 2. (To be considered, nominees must be 35 or younger on Nov. 16, 2022.)
Log your submissions here.
Contact Ashley Cullins (ashley.cullins@thr.
Over nearly three decades, The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Next Generation issue — our definitive list of the year’s 35 best and brightest individuals age 35 and under — has featured industry leaders like Marvel’s Kevin Feige, Netflix’s Bela Bajaria and Universal’s Donna Langley when they were upstart execs.
THR is now accepting online submissions for the 29th edition of the Next Gen list, which is slated to publish Nov. 16, and will identify 35 standouts who one day will run the entertainment industry. Candidates should be submitted in one of the following categories: agents, managers, film, TV, digital and legal. When submitting, please make clear the candidate’s projects or clients, listing them as specifically as possible.
The deadline for submissions will be Sept. 2. (To be considered, nominees must be 35 or younger on Nov. 16, 2022.)
Log your submissions here.
Contact Ashley Cullins (ashley.cullins@thr.
- 8/1/2022
- by Ashley Cullins and Mia Galuppo
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Profiles written by J. Clara Chan, Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Mia Galuppo, Carolyn Giardina, Lesley Goldberg, Rebecca Keegan, Borys Kit, Pamela McClintock, Mikey O’Connell, Lacey Rose, Tatiana Siegel and Rebecca Sun
Pamela Abdy Emily Malan Pamela Abdy
President, MGM Motion Picture Group
On a hot streak with both Ridley Scott’s House of Gucci and Paul Thomas Anderson’s art house hit Licorice Pizza as early awards contenders, Abdy also saw Daniel Craig’s final Bond entry, No Time to Die, roll out (finally!) to solid numbers. More than a year into the job, and ahead of a pending Amazon acquisition, Abdy has helped fortify the studio with a slate ...
Pamela Abdy Emily Malan Pamela Abdy
President, MGM Motion Picture Group
On a hot streak with both Ridley Scott’s House of Gucci and Paul Thomas Anderson’s art house hit Licorice Pizza as early awards contenders, Abdy also saw Daniel Craig’s final Bond entry, No Time to Die, roll out (finally!) to solid numbers. More than a year into the job, and ahead of a pending Amazon acquisition, Abdy has helped fortify the studio with a slate ...
- 12/8/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Profiles written by J. Clara Chan, Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Mia Galuppo, Carolyn Giardina, Lesley Goldberg, Rebecca Keegan, Borys Kit, Pamela McClintock, Mikey O’Connell, Lacey Rose, Tatiana Siegel and Rebecca Sun
Pamela Abdy Emily Malan Pamela Abdy
President, MGM Motion Picture Group
On a hot streak with both Ridley Scott’s House of Gucci and Paul Thomas Anderson’s art house hit Licorice Pizza as early awards contenders, Abdy also saw Daniel Craig’s final Bond entry, No Time to Die, roll out (finally!) to solid numbers. More than a year into the job, and ahead of a pending Amazon acquisition, Abdy has helped fortify the studio with a slate ...
Pamela Abdy Emily Malan Pamela Abdy
President, MGM Motion Picture Group
On a hot streak with both Ridley Scott’s House of Gucci and Paul Thomas Anderson’s art house hit Licorice Pizza as early awards contenders, Abdy also saw Daniel Craig’s final Bond entry, No Time to Die, roll out (finally!) to solid numbers. More than a year into the job, and ahead of a pending Amazon acquisition, Abdy has helped fortify the studio with a slate ...
- 12/8/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with director Lee Isaac Chung, editor Harry Yoon and composer Emile Mosseri to discuss their A24 film, Minari, in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Mosseri was brought in by producer Christina Oh, the two having worked together on The Last Black Man in San Francisco. “It felt like being set up on a date,” he says of meeting Chung for the first time at Last Black Man’s Los Angeles premiere. After reading the Minari script, Mosseri immediately began to write music, months prior to the film’s production start in Oklahoma.
“We knew what we didn’t want ...
Mosseri was brought in by producer Christina Oh, the two having worked together on The Last Black Man in San Francisco. “It felt like being set up on a date,” he says of meeting Chung for the first time at Last Black Man’s Los Angeles premiere. After reading the Minari script, Mosseri immediately began to write music, months prior to the film’s production start in Oklahoma.
“We knew what we didn’t want ...
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with director Lee Isaac Chung, editor Harry Yoon and composer Emile Mosseri to discuss their A24 film, Minari, in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Mosseri was brought in by producer Christina Oh, the two having worked together on The Last Black Man in San Francisco. “It felt like being set up on a date,” he says of meeting Chung for the first time at Last Black Man’s Los Angeles premiere. After reading the Minari script, Mosseri immediately began to write music, months prior to the film’s production start in Oklahoma.
“We knew what we didn’t want ...
Mosseri was brought in by producer Christina Oh, the two having worked together on The Last Black Man in San Francisco. “It felt like being set up on a date,” he says of meeting Chung for the first time at Last Black Man’s Los Angeles premiere. After reading the Minari script, Mosseri immediately began to write music, months prior to the film’s production start in Oklahoma.
“We knew what we didn’t want ...
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with directors Joe and Anthony Russo, and stars Tom Holland and Ciara Bravo to discuss their Apple TV+ film Cherry in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Having spent the better half of the last decade on massive soundstages and in front of greenscreens due to their work on Marvel films like Avengers: Endgame, it was important for the Russo brothers that they filmed their latest project, Cherry, on location in the Midwest.
“There is a lot of detail we can bring to the film about our experience growing up there,” explained Joe Russo. Set ...
Having spent the better half of the last decade on massive soundstages and in front of greenscreens due to their work on Marvel films like Avengers: Endgame, it was important for the Russo brothers that they filmed their latest project, Cherry, on location in the Midwest.
“There is a lot of detail we can bring to the film about our experience growing up there,” explained Joe Russo. Set ...
- 2/19/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with directors Joe and Anthony Russo, and stars Tom Holland and Ciara Bravo to discuss their Apple TV+ film Cherry in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Having spent the better half of the last decade on massive soundstages and in front of greenscreens due to their work on Marvel films like Avengers: Endgame, it was important for the Russo brothers that they filmed their latest project, Cherry, on location in the Midwest.
“There is a lot of detail we can bring to the film about our experience growing up there,” explained Joe Russo. Set ...
Having spent the better half of the last decade on massive soundstages and in front of greenscreens due to their work on Marvel films like Avengers: Endgame, it was important for the Russo brothers that they filmed their latest project, Cherry, on location in the Midwest.
“There is a lot of detail we can bring to the film about our experience growing up there,” explained Joe Russo. Set ...
- 2/19/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with director Regina King, screenwriter Kemp Powers and stars Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge and Leslie Odom Jr. to discuss their Amazon Studios film, One Night in Miami, in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Powers’ stage play, on which the film is based, takes place strictly in a room at the Hampton House, the historic hotel in still-segregated 1960s Miami where Malcolm X and Cassius Clay stayed prior to the latter’s fight with Sonny Liston. While King’s film adaption expanded the story to include several other locations, like the hotel’s ...
Powers’ stage play, on which the film is based, takes place strictly in a room at the Hampton House, the historic hotel in still-segregated 1960s Miami where Malcolm X and Cassius Clay stayed prior to the latter’s fight with Sonny Liston. While King’s film adaption expanded the story to include several other locations, like the hotel’s ...
The Hollywood Reporter’s Mia Galuppo sat down with director Regina King, screenwriter Kemp Powers and stars Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge and Leslie Odom Jr. to discuss their Amazon Studios film, One Night in Miami, in a THR Presents Q&a powered by Vision Media.
Powers’ stage play, on which the film is based, takes place strictly in a room at the Hampton House, the historic hotel in still-segregated 1960s Miami where Malcolm X and Cassius Clay stayed prior to the latter’s fight with Sonny Liston. While King’s film adaption expanded the story to include several other locations, like the hotel’s ...
Powers’ stage play, on which the film is based, takes place strictly in a room at the Hampton House, the historic hotel in still-segregated 1960s Miami where Malcolm X and Cassius Clay stayed prior to the latter’s fight with Sonny Liston. While King’s film adaption expanded the story to include several other locations, like the hotel’s ...
Few places have been as hard hit by the novel coronavirus pandemic as New York City. Broadway is shuttered indefinitely and music acts won’t be filling stadiums anytime soon — but that doesn’t mean there’s been a shortage of work for New York’s Power Lawyers. The Hollywood Reporter is spotlighting 20 attorneys with specialties in theater, fashion, media and music litigation who’ve been tasked with creating new deals in an unsteady landscape (cue the live-capture craze) and fighting cutting-edge courtroom battles via Zoom.
Profiles by Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Sharareh Drury, Mia Galuppo, Eriq Gardner, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny and Tatiana ...
Profiles by Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Sharareh Drury, Mia Galuppo, Eriq Gardner, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny and Tatiana ...
- 12/9/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Few places have been as hard hit by the novel coronavirus pandemic as New York City. Broadway is shuttered indefinitely and music acts won’t be filling stadiums anytime soon — but that doesn’t mean there’s been a shortage of work for New York’s Power Lawyers. The Hollywood Reporter is spotlighting 20 attorneys with specialties in theater, fashion, media and music litigation who’ve been tasked with creating new deals in an unsteady landscape (cue the live-capture craze) and fighting cutting-edge courtroom battles via Zoom.
Profiles by Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Sharareh Drury, Mia Galuppo, Eriq Gardner, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny and Tatiana ...
Profiles by Kirsten Chuba, Ashley Cullins, Sharareh Drury, Mia Galuppo, Eriq Gardner, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny and Tatiana ...
- 12/9/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Each year, The Hollywood Reporter editors do intensive research to choose who should be highlighted as a Power Business Manager. It’s no small task, especially because many of the people on this list won’t confirm clients, let alone offer more information. So, in addition to digging through public records, THR surveys Hollywood insiders about who they trust most with their clients’ money. (Note: Ad sales have no bearing on who makes the cut.)
Profiles by Trilby Beresford, Kirsten Chuba, Mia Galuppo, Emily Hilton, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny, Bryn Elise Sandberg and Georg Szalai...
Profiles by Trilby Beresford, Kirsten Chuba, Mia Galuppo, Emily Hilton, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny, Bryn Elise Sandberg and Georg Szalai...
- 10/7/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Each year, The Hollywood Reporter editors do intensive research to choose who should be highlighted as a Power Business Manager. It’s no small task, especially because many of the people on this list won’t confirm clients, let alone offer more information. So, in addition to digging through public records, THR surveys Hollywood insiders about who they trust most with their clients’ money. (Note: Ad sales have no bearing on who makes the cut.)
Profiles by Trilby Beresford, Kirsten Chuba, Mia Galuppo, Emily Hilton, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny, Bryn Elise Sandberg and Georg Szalai...
Profiles by Trilby Beresford, Kirsten Chuba, Mia Galuppo, Emily Hilton, Natalie Jarvey, Katie Kilkenny, Bryn Elise Sandberg and Georg Szalai...
- 10/7/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
It’s kind of easy to get frustrated over things like this but just as easy to rein it back in since the movie Face/Off with John Travolta and Nicolas Cage was extremely entertaining. The problem is that bringing it back seems to indicate that it’s going to go the same way as a lot of movies and be a giant question mark until it’s released. Mia Galuppo of The Hollywood Reporter is just one of many that has locked onto this story and will no doubt be talking about it until the movie comes out, or at least until we
Face/Off is Getting a Reboot...
Face/Off is Getting a Reboot...
- 9/13/2019
- by Tom
- TVovermind.com
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.