2025秋季电影节:20部重磅新片

2025秋季电影节:20部重磅新片

2025-08-29Entertainment
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雷总
早上好 kb9, 我是雷总,这是为你专属打造的 Goose Pod。今天是8月30日,星期六,早上7点05分。
董小姐
我是董小姐。今天我们来聊聊备受瞩目的2025年秋季电影节,看看有哪些不容错过的重磅新片。
雷总
我们这就开始吧!今年的片单,说实话,太强了!我最期待的是吉尔莫·德尔·托罗的《科学怪人》。他的视觉风格,那种巴洛克式的华丽,绝对能把这个经典故事拍出新花样。想象一下,那会是多么震撼的银幕体验!
董小姐
视觉震撼固然重要,但我更关注导演的功力。凯瑟琳·毕格罗时隔八年终于回归,带来了核战题材的惊悚片《炸药屋》。她可是第一位奥斯卡最佳女导演,叙事节奏和悬念营造的能力,无人能及,这才是真本事。
雷总
没错没错,毕格罗的电影充满了那种技术性的紧张感,让人喘不过气。另外,诺亚·鲍姆巴赫的新片《杰伊·凯利》,还有卢卡·瓜达尼诺的《狩猎之后》,都集结了顶级阵容,看来今年的颁奖季会神仙打架。
董小姐
神仙打架才好看,有竞争才有进步。这些电影扎堆出现,也说明了秋季电影节,尤其是威尼斯电影节,现在的重要性非同一般。它不仅仅是个电影展,更是一个没有硝烟的战场,是通往奥斯卡的第一个重要关口。
雷总
说到威尼斯,它的历史可太悠久了。1932年创办,是世界上第一个国际电影节。你想想,那时候我们还在做什么?它就已经在 Lido 岛上放电影了。从一个艺术展览的附属活动,发展到今天的规模,真不简单。
董小姐
不简单的背后,是它抓住了核心竞争力。从战后重生,到上世纪六七十年代的变革,虽然也经历过低谷,甚至停发过金狮奖,但它总能调整方向。尤其在1979年,卡洛·利扎尼的改革让它重获新生。
雷总
对,我给您梳理一下这个逻辑啊。进入21世纪,特别是阿尔贝托·巴贝拉担任主席后,威尼斯就精准地把自己定位成了“奥斯卡孵化器”。你看,从《地心引力》到《鸟人》,再到后来的《爱乐之城》,全是威尼斯首映。
董小姐
这还不算完,《水形物语》、《罗马》、《小丑》,哪一部不是从威尼斯走向奥斯卡领奖台的?它用一部部作品证明了自己的眼光和行业地位。所以现在好莱坞的大制作,都抢着去威尼斯做全球首映。
雷总
这形成了一个完美的商业闭环。电影在威尼斯获得口碑,然后一路高歌猛进,直到拿下奥斯卡。这种影响力,就是它最宝贵的无形资产。就像我们的产品,用户口碑才是核心!今年的片单,肯定也有冲着这个目标来的。
雷总
说到目标,有些电影的目标可能不仅仅是拿奖,更是要引发讨论。比如奥利维耶·阿萨亚斯的那部《克里姆林宫的巫师》,直接把镜头对准了普京政府的内部,听说裘德·洛演普京,这话题度直接拉满了。
董小姐
政治题材向来敏感,但敢于触碰现实,才是电影的力量所在。就像另一部电影《狩猎之后》,虽然是惊悚片,但内核是#MeToo故事,探讨校园伦理争议。这背后反映的社会问题,比电影本身更值得我们深思。
雷总
是的,尤其是朱莉娅·罗伯茨来演这个角色,一位教授被指控与学生有不正当关系。她很少接这种暗黑风格的片子,但每次出手都非常惊艳。这种反差感,让大家对电影的期待值又高了一层,不知道会揭露些什么。
董小姐
无论是揭露政治内幕还是社会伤疤,这些电影都承担了风险,也展现了创作者的勇气。它们可能会引发巨大的争议,甚至批评,但这恰恰是艺术的价值——促使人们去思考和辩论,而不是仅仅提供娱乐。
雷总
确实,这些电影的影响力,加上整个行业的复苏,让2025年变得特别关键。经历了前几年的停摆和罢工,整个好莱坞的生产线现在才算慢慢恢复正常。我看到有预测说,明年北美票房有望接近90亿美元。
董小姐
90亿?听起来不错,但离疫情前还是有差距。现在电影院面临流媒体的竞争,日子并不好过。不过,我注意到一个好现象,就是像A24这样的“微型巨头”正在崛起,它们专注于中低成本的原创故事,反而杀出了一条血路。
雷总
对!A24的《内战》预算五千万,票房过亿,非常成功。这说明观众不只爱看续集和超级英雄,他们也渴望新鲜、有创意的故事。这给整个行业带来了新的活力,让电影文化本身变得更多元化了。
雷总
而且,电影节的玩法也在进化。您发现没?现在的戛纳电影节,已经开始为第二年的奥斯卡布局了。五月份的电影,通过一整年的持续宣传和发酵,到年底颁奖季正好达到热度顶峰,这个策略太高明了。
董小姐
这就是看得远。把电影节当作一个长线战略的起点,而不是终点。提前锁定口碑,然后精细化运营,步步为营。这种打法,无论在哪个行业,都是制胜的关键。看来未来的竞争,会更早开始。
雷总
今天的讨论就到这里。感谢收听 Goose Pod,我们明天再见。
董小姐
明天见。

## Fall Film Festival Season 2025: A Preview of Promising New Projects **Report Provider:** Vanity Fair **Authors:** Rebecca Ford, David Canfield, Richard Lawson **Publication Date:** August 26, 2025 **Topic:** Entertainment (Movies) **Keywords:** Venice Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival This report from Vanity Fair provides a comprehensive preview of the most anticipated films set to debut at the 2025 fall film festival season, encompassing the Venice International Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), and the New York Film Festival. The season is highlighted as a significant event for Oscar enthusiasts, featuring new projects from numerous previously Oscar-nominated filmmakers. ### Key Highlights and Trends: * **Return of Acclaimed Filmmakers:** The season marks the return of established directors such as Kathryn Bigelow (her first film since 2017's *Detroit*), Yorgos Lanthimos, Paul Greengrass, Noah Baumbach, and Bradley Cooper, who are all presenting new, often personal, projects. * **Star-Studded Casts:** Many of the featured films boast impressive ensemble casts, including Julia Roberts, Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Greta Lee, Kaitlyn Dever, Paul Dano, Jude Law, Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, Lee Byung-hun, Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Laura Dern, Cate Blanchett, Adam Driver, Dwayne Johnson, Bill Skarsgård, Paul Mescal, Jessie Buckley, Colin Farrell, Sydney Sweeney, Tessa Thompson, Nina Hoss, Matthew McConaughey, Ralph Fiennes, Ian McKellen, Michaela Coel, Jessica Gunning, Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, Will Arnett, Jeremy Allen White, and Jeremy Strong. * **Diverse Genres and Themes:** The selected films span a wide range of genres and themes, from thrillers and dramas to biopics and adaptations of classic literature. Topics include campus ethics, political thrillers, sci-fi, crime, sports, and historical events. * **Anticipation for Oscar Contenders:** Many of these films are already generating buzz as potential Oscar contenders, particularly for acting and directing categories. ### Notable Films and Their Festival Appearances: The report highlights **20 promising films** debuting across the four major fall festivals: **Premiering at Venice International Film Festival 2025, Telluride Film Festival 2025, Toronto International Film Festival 2025, and New York Film Festival 2025:** * **After the Hunt** (Venice, New York): Luca Guadagnino's thriller-drama about a college professor accused of impropriety, starring Andrew Garfield and Julia Roberts. Touted as a #MeToo movie. * **A House of Dynamite** (Venice, New York): Kathryn Bigelow's film about an American presidential administration facing a missile attack, featuring Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Greta Lee, and Kaitlyn Dever. Early buzz suggests it's an Oscar contender. * **The Wizard of the Kremlin** (Venice, Toronto): Olivier Assayas's adaptation of a novel about a reality TV producer turned Putin government official, starring Paul Dano as the producer and Jude Law as Putin. Expected to stir controversy. * **Frankenstein** (Venice, Toronto): Guillermo del Toro's take on Mary Shelley's novel, with Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein and Jacob Elordi as the monster. Early trailers suggest an action-focused approach. * **No Other Choice** (Venice, Toronto, New York): Park Chan-wook's latest, based on Donald Westlake's novel "The Ax," about a man seeking revenge on job competitors. Stars Lee Byung-hun and is expected to be an international film Oscar contender. **Premiering at Venice Film Festival 2025:** * **Bugonia** (Venice): Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with Emma Stone for an English-language remake of a South Korean film, about two men who kidnap a CEO. Features Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis. * **Jay Kelly** (Venice, New York): Noah Baumbach's personal project starring George Clooney as a fictional movie star, with Adam Sandler and Laura Dern. Described as a love letter to filmmaking. * **Father Mother Sister Brother** (Venice): Jim Jarmusch's anthology film, marking his longest gap between features, starring Cate Blanchett and Adam Driver. * **The Smashing Machine** (Venice, Toronto): Benny Safdie's solo feature directorial debut, starring Dwayne Johnson as MMA champion Mark Kerr. Described as Johnson's most transformative work. * **Dead Man’s Wire** (Venice, Toronto): Gus Van Sant's first film in seven years, a '70s hostage saga starring Bill Skarsgård. * **Ballad of a Small Player** (likely Telluride, Toronto): Edward Berger's film starring Colin Farrell as a gambling addict in Macau, based on Lawrence Osborne's novel. Expected to premiere at Telluride before TIFF. **Premiering at Telluride Film Festival 2025 and Toronto International Film Festival 2025:** * **Hamnet** (likely Telluride, Toronto): Chloé Zhao directs this adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s novel, produced by Steven Spielberg and Sam Mendes, starring Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley as William and Agnes Shakespeare. Buckley is receiving early best-actress buzz. **Premiering at Toronto International Film Festival 2025:** * **Christy** (Toronto): David Michôd's film starring Sydney Sweeney as boxer Christy Martin, based on a true story. * **Hedda** (Toronto): Nia DaCosta's adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler," starring Tessa Thompson in the titular role. * **The Lost Bus** (Toronto): Paul Greengrass's film, compared to "Captain Phillips," about a man rescuing elementary school children from a fire, starring Matthew McConaughey. Based on the Camp Fire in Northern California. * **The Choral** (Toronto): A WW I film about a choir director helping a veteran, starring Ralph Fiennes and written by Alan Bennett. * **The Christophers** (Toronto): Steven Soderbergh's crime comedy about art forgery, starring Ian McKellen, Michaela Coel, and Jessica Gunning. **Premiering at New York Film Festival 2025:** * **Anemone** (New York): Daniel Day-Lewis's return to acting, marking the directorial debut of his son Ronan, and starring Sean Bean. * **Is This Thing On?** (New York): Bradley Cooper's comedic drama, closing the NYFF, starring Will Arnett as a comedian. * **Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere** (New York): Scott Cooper's biopic about Bruce Springsteen's early career, starring Jeremy Allen White as Springsteen and Jeremy Strong as his manager. The article also includes a list of other related content from Vanity Fair, such as articles on Taylor Swift, Woody Allen, Prince William and Kate Middleton, and Michael Caine, but these are not directly related to the film festival preview.

The 20 Most Promising Movies at the 2025 Fall Film Festivals

Read original at Vanity Fair

Bradley Cooper, Kathryn Bigelow, Yorgos Lanthimos, and Paul Greengrass are among the Oscar-nominated filmmakers debuting star-studded new projects at Venice, Telluride, TIFF, and New York.Photos from the Everett Collection.We’re just one day away from the kickoff of fall-film-festival season—considered the most wonderful time of year for Oscar obsessives like us.

This year’s crop is full of promise, with a slew of previously Oscar-nominated filmmakers debuting new projects. Some are making much-anticipated returns, like Kathryn Bigelow, who hasn’t released a film since 2017. Others are finally bringing to life long-awaited passion projects, like Guillermo del Toro with Frankenstein.

Noah Baumbach and Bradley Cooper are both back in the mix with personal projects, and Yorgos Lanthimos and Paul Greengrass are also aiming to surprise audiences with their new films.Basically, there’s something for everyone. Here, Vanity Fair rounds up the 20 most promising films debuting at the Venice International Film Festival 2025, the Telluride Film Festival 2025, the Toronto International Film Festival 2025, and the New York Film Festival 2025.

After the Hunt (Venice, New York)The ever productive Luca Guadagnino returns with a thriller-drama about a college professor caught in a controversy of campus ethics. After the Hunt, with a buzzy script by Nora Garrett, has been touted as a #MeToo movie—Andrew Garfield plays a professor accused of some kind of impropriety with a student.

But knowing Guadagnino, it’s likely that the film will venture into some less obvious corners too. And while that all sounds intriguing enough, it’s the presence of Julia Roberts that really has us curious. Roberts, one of the last great movie stars, doesn’t go dark like this very often. But it’s typically a thrill when she does.

—Richard LawsonA House of Dynamite (Venice, New York)The first woman to win a best-director Oscar hasn’t released a film in eight years. Kathryn Bigelow’s last effort, Detroit, was a bleak and controversial drama that very few people saw. Here’s hoping her latest, about an American presidential administration dealing with an impending (and likely nuclear) missile attack, restores Bigelow as one of the premier purveyors of procedural, technical suspense.

A House of Dynamite also sports a, well, dynamite cast: Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Greta Lee, and Kaitlyn Dever are among the reliable names. Early buzz for this one is strong enough to suggest that the film is not only a jangly fall thriller, but also a true Oscar contender. —R.L.The Wizard of the Kremlin (Venice, Toronto)Journeyman oddball filmmaker Olivier Assayas takes aim at Russia in his new film, an adaptation of a novel about a reality TV producer turned highly connected official in Vladimir Putin’s government.

Paul Dano plays the calculating master of misinformation, while Jude Law takes the Putin role. Assayas is not the most obvious pick for material like this—his films tend to have an idiosyncratic tempo that feels like an ill fit for a political process movie—but maybe his dash of Euro madness is just what a story about an almost absurd real-world government requires.

Good or bad, the movie is sure to stoke controversy when it premieres in Italy. —R.L.Frankenstein (Venice, Toronto)Guillermo del Toro takes a crack at Mary Shelley’s sci-fi ur-monster novel, going for baroque as usual. Oscar Isaac plays misguided resurrectionist Victor Frankenstein, while Jacob Elordi, one of the pretty boys du jour, plays Frankenstein’s monster.

An early trailer suggests something focused more on action than on gothic considerations of the Industrial Revolution, which is probably fine. A visually ravishing del Toro spectacular is never unwelcome, even if this film does not initially appear to be the serious, high-minded take on a classic text for which some had hoped.

—R.L.No Other Choice (Venice, Toronto, New York)Korean master Park Chan-wook’s latest film was assumed to be a Cannes premiere, but ended up conspicuously absent from that festival’s lineup in May. No matter; the film will instead play three of the biggies this fall, where it’s sure to become a major contender for, at the very least, the international-film Oscar.

Based on an old Donald Westlake novel called The Ax, No Other Choice has a grimly compelling premise: a man laid off from a long-term job decides to kill the other candidates for a new position he’s hoping to land. That sounds like a plot right up Park’s alley, as well as an apt fit for star Lee Byung-hun—so memorably ruthless on Squid Game.

—R.L.Bugonia (Venice)Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with muse Emma Stone (The Favourite, Poor Things) for this English-language remake of Jang Joon-hwan’s 2003 South Korean film, Save the Green Planet! Following two young men (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis) who kidnap a powerful CEO (Stone), the film is said to be a major acting showcase for Plemons, who plays a conspiracist beekeeper.

Though Lanthimos’s films range in their accessibility, he always delivers a singular point of view, presented in a world that only he could dream up. We’re ready for another trip. —Rebecca FordJay Kelly (Venice, New York)The latest from Noah Baumbach stars movie star George Clooney as movie star Jay Kelly, a fictional creation played with rich memoiristic undertones.

Crafted by Baumbach as a love letter to the medium to which he’s dedicated his life, the film costars returning collaborators like Adam Sandler and Laura Dern and is expected to be a return to form for the director, following his divisive 2022 literary adaptation, White Noise. The project certainly felt that way to Baumbach: “It’s about falling back in love with what you do, and falling back in love with yourself,” he recently told me.

—David CanfieldFather Mother Sister Brother (Venice)Believe it or not, the past several years have marked the longest gap between features in the history of Jim Jarmusch’s career, going all the way back to his 1980 debut, Permanent Vacation. (His last film, the star-studded zombie comedy The Dead Don’t Die, was released in 2019.

) Described as an anthology film, Father Mother Sister Brother has assembled a murderers’ row of talent for the art house darling’s long-awaited return, including awards favorites Cate Blanchett and Adam Driver. —D.C.The Smashing Machine (Venice, Toronto)By the end of this year, A24 will have released two movies directed by one Safdie brother apiece.

Josh’s Marty Supreme hits theaters this Christmas; before that, we have Benny’s The Smashing Machine. Exploring the life of MMA champion Mark Kerr, the film marks not only its director’s solo feature debut behind the camera, but also the most ambitious and transformative work in the acting career of Dwayne Johnson.

“You have to be willing to tap into all the stuff that you’ve gone through, and this was stuff that I had not explored on camera or otherwise,” Johnson told me. “I’m not a big therapy person, even though I’m an advocate for whatever it is you need. I found it so scary, but also, so nourishing and freeing.

I ripped it open.” —D.C.Dead Man’s Wire (Venice, Toronto)Between his Oscar-winning smashes, Good Will Hunting and Milk, Gus Van Sant was once a mainstay on the prestige circuit. But he hasn’t made a ton of noise with his movies of late, despite attracting high-profile actors and splashy festival bows.

Still, his most recent project—Van Sant directed the majority of Feud: Capote vs. the Swans—resulted in a well-deserved Emmy nomination for directing. Now he’s back with his first movie in seven years, revisiting a harrowing ’70s true hostage saga with Bill Skarsgård in the lead. Here’s hoping Van Sant stays on the rebound.

—D.C.Hamnet (likely Telluride, Toronto)The ingredients are too good to ignore for this one: an adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s award-winning 2020 novel, directed by Oscar winner Chloé Zhao, produced by Oscar winners Steven Spielberg and Sam Mendes, and starring Oscar nominees Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley as William Shakespeare and his spirited wife, Agnes, respectively.

Buckley actually centers this drama, which imagines the couple’s love story, from their initial courtship to the grief that follows the death of their son. She’s already being trailed by serious best-actress buzz. “It was the most fluid, creative, immediate film experience I’ve had,” Buckley recently told me.

While not confirmed for Telluride, the “Canadian premiere” language on Hamnet’s TIFF bow suggests that the Colorado fest will be the film’s first stop on the festival circuit. —D.C.Ballad of a Small Player (likely Telluride, Toronto)Though officially announced for the Toronto International Film Festival, Ballad of a Small Player—starring Colin Farrell as a gambling addict hiding out in Macau—is expected to first head to the mountains of Colorado, based on the way its premiere is described in the TIFF announcement.

The film is based on Lawrence Osborne’s 2014 novel, and its first trailer teases a visually playful and intense journey into the Vegas of the East. Edward Berger’s last two film adaptations, All Quiet on the Western Front and Conclave, were Oscar darlings, so we’ll see if he can strike gold once again.

—R.F.Christy (Toronto)Throughout Sydney Sweeney’s meteoric rise to stardom, we’ve seen her do a lot of things—like have bathroom breakdowns on Euphoria and participate in flirty hijinks in Anyone but You. But we’ve never quite seen her pull off something like this: a transformation into a real-life person for a physically demanding role in a film that follows her character over decades.

Christy, helmed by David Michôd, is based on the true story of Christy Martin, a barrier-breaking female boxer who rose to prominence in the ’90s. We’re hoping Sweeney delivers a knockout performance. —R.F.Hedda (Toronto)Hedda Gabler is one of the most iconic—and elusive—characters in stage history.

Filmmaker Nia DaCosta will put her own spin on the classic Henrik Ibsen text with a bold adaptation that stars Tessa Thompson in the titular role. Following the troublesome Hedda Gabler over one night as she wreaks havoc at a party, Hedda is primed to deliver big performances from Thompson and Nina Hoss, who plays Hedda’s former lover, now back to stir up a tempest of trouble.

—R.F.The Lost Bus (Toronto)Though they’re set in completely different times and places, director Paul Greengrass compares The Lost Bus to his previous Oscar-nominated film Captain Phillips. In both, the drama takes place in a very contained area: Captain Phillips unfolds largely on a boat, while The Lost Bus mostly takes place on a school bus being driven by a man (Matthew McConaughey) who is trying to rescue elementary school kids from a deadly fire.

Based on the devastating Camp Fire in Northern California, The Lost Bus is sure to be an emotional experience for Los Angeles residents who are still recovering from the blazes that ravaged the city in January. But even if it doesn’t hit close to home for everyone, Greengrass knows how to balance large-scale action and gripping personal stories in the same movie.

—R.F.The Choral (Toronto)No fall-festival season would be complete without at least one feel-good drama about British people making things, preferably set in or around wartime. This year we have our eye on The Choral, a WW I movie about a choir director helping a wounded, shell-shocked veteran find his voice again.

Ralph Fiennes, possessed of such sonorous speaking tone, plays the choirmaster tasked with inspiring a downtrodden, war-weary town with a performance of Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius. Fiennes is not the only classy person involved: History Boys scribe Alan Bennett wrote the script, with History Boys (and, perhaps more importantly, Object of My Affection) director Nicholas Hytner taking the reins behind the camera.

This seems like one of the guaranteed cries of the season. —R.L.The Christophers (Toronto)Steven Soderbergh’s third film this year is a crime comedy about art forgery, starring Ian McKellen, Michaela Coel, and Baby Reindeer breakout Jessica Gunning. Sounds great! —R.L.Anemone (New York)For weeks, little was known about this Focus Features release, beyond a few tantalizing details: It brought Daniel Day-Lewis out of retirement; marks the feature directorial debut of his son Ronan; and takes on the potent theme of fathers, sons, and brothers.

Then the studio released a trailer for the movie—which costars Sean Bean—unveiling a project that seems far more visually striking and tonally ambitious than some were expecting. Consider us intrigued. —D.C.Is This Thing On? (New York)It wasn’t clear for a while if director Bradley Cooper would finish his comedic drama in time for fall-festival season—but lucky for us, it’ll have its world premiere as the closing-night film of NYFF.

Starring Will Arnett as a man who’s facing a divorce and ends up stumbling into a career as a stand-up comic, the film seems lighter in tone than Cooper’s previous directorial efforts (A Star Is Born and Maestro), but it’s still chock-full of Cooper’s meticulous filmmaking style. Cooper and Arnett, who have been friends for 25 years, cowrote the script based on the true story of British comedian John Bishop, and Arnett spent weeks doing stand-up in character in order to prepare.

—R.F.Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere (New York)One of the season’s clumsiest titles is nonetheless one of its great awards hopefuls. The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White plays Bruce Springsteen in the early stages of his career, as he goes from good-times New Jersey guy to internationally lauded chronicler of the American working-class condition.

Writer-director Scott Cooper has done well with musicians in the past; his film Crazy Heart won Jeff Bridges a long-awaited best-actor Oscar. Perhaps that success will repeat here—unless audiences are tired of scruffy music biopics, with this one coming so soon after A Complete Unknown. Regardless of how the movie is received, we should probably never count out supporting player Jeremy Strong, who is beloved by awards voters and here gets the flashy, fun role of Springsteen’s manager.

—R.L.How a Death Row Murderer Exposed One of America’s Most Prolific Serial Killers (Part 1)How a Death Row Murderer Exposed One of America’s Most Prolific Serial Killers (Part 2)Why Grown Men Are Throwing Dildos At WNBA GamesHow Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams Went From Icy Rivals to “Sisters”24 TV Shows We Can’t Wait to See This FallA Mission Divided at the Chan Zuckerberg InitiativeRead MoreTaylor Swift Is Over Her Coy EraIt’s a love story, and baby, Taylor Swift just said yes.

Woody Allen Takes Part in Russian Film Festival, Infuriating Ukraine: “A Disgrace and an Insult”The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry condemned the filmmaker, saying, “Culture must never be used to whitewash crimes or serve as a propaganda tool.”By La rédaction de Vanity FairA Guide to Prince William and Kate Middleton's Many, Many HomesBefore the Prince and Princess of Wales relocate to Forest Lodge in Windsor Great Park, revisit their house-hopping ways, which first started when they were students at St.

Andrews University in Scotland.Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Are EngagedThe singer and the guy on the Chiefs are getting married.The 20 Most Promising Movies at the 2025 Fall Film FestivalsBradley Cooper, Kathryn Bigelow, Yorgos Lanthimos, and Paul Greengrass are among the Oscar-nominated filmmakers debuting star-studded new projects at Venice, Telluride, TIFF, and New York.

How Prince Philip's Advice Changed Kate Middleton's Relationship With the MediaThe Duke of Edinburgh's words made a lasting impact on the Princess of Wales.By Valentine Ulgu-ServantThe Bon Vivant: Michael Caine’s Pursuit of the Good LifeIn four effortlessly entertaining memoirs, the Oscar winner charts his journey from a South London slum to movie stardom.

When Steven Spielberg Met John Williams, “Everything Changed”In the first-ever biography of Williams, the composer and Spielberg tell Tim Greiving about the beginning of their beautiful partnership—and how it overlapped with the untimely death of Williams’s wife.Amanda Seyfried Sings—and Screams—in The Testament of Ann LeeThe star pushed herself like never before for Mona Fastvold’s innovative, epic portrait of the Shakers’ founding leader: “I was like, ‘So, basically, we can do whatever the fuck we want.

’”The Origin Story of Gavin Newsom’s Salty Online TrollingThe California governor is getting traction with his increasingly feisty tweets and maybe beating Donald Trump at his own game.

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