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10 Greatest Hard Sci-Fi Movie Masterpieces of All Time

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Two men looking at a machine in Primer

We all love a good old-fashioned space romp, or at least that’s the assumption we’re going to make for the purposes of this list. A grand adventure set out amongst the stars that tells physics and all other forms of science to hit the intergalactic highway, soft sci-fi has been one of the most predominant forms of science fiction since the genre began. As much fun as those soft kinds of sci-fi movies can be, though, there’s something special about their harder siblings.

Hard sci-fi is defined by its attention to detail and fidelity to accuracy. Now, no sci-fi movie is 100% scientifically accurate; in fact, it could be argued that many of the films that will make up this list barely cross the halfway point in terms of realism, but here we award points for trying. These are the movies that at least attempt to get the science right, just as long as it doesn’t get in the way of telling a good story. These are the ten greatest hard sci-fi movie masterpieces of all time, offering grounded takes on the genre that feel ambitious but refreshingly real.











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Collider Exclusive · Sci-Fi Survival Quiz
Which Sci-Fi World Would You Survive?
The Matrix · Mad Max · Blade Runner · Dune · Star Wars
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Five universes. Five completely different ways the future went wrong — or sideways, or up in flames. Only one of them is the world your instincts were built for. Eight questions will figure out which dystopia, galaxy, or desert wasteland you’d actually make it out of alive.

💊The Matrix

🔥Mad Max

🌧️Blade Runner

🏜️Dune

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🚀Star Wars

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01

You sense something is deeply wrong with the world around you. What do you do?
The first instinct is often the truest one.





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02

In a world of scarcity, what resource do you guard most fiercely?
What we protect reveals what we believe survival actually requires.





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03

What kind of threat keeps you up at night?
Fear is useful data — if you’re honest about what you’re actually afraid of.





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04

How do you deal with authority you don’t trust?
Every dystopia has a power structure. Your approach to it determines everything.





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05

Which environment could you actually endure long-term?
Survival isn’t just tactical — it’s physical, psychological, and very much about where you are.





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06

Who do you want in your corner when things fall apart?
The company you keep is the clearest signal of who you actually are.





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07

Where do you draw the line — if you draw one at all?
Every survivor eventually faces a moment that tests what they’re actually made of.





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08

What would actually make survival worth it?
Staying alive is one thing. Having a reason to is another.





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Your Fate Has Been Calculated
You’d Survive In…

Your answers point to the world your instincts were built for. This is the universe your temperament, your survival instincts, and your particular brand of stubbornness were made for.

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The Resistance, Zion

The Matrix

You took the red pill a long time ago — probably before anyone offered it to you. You’re a systems thinker who can’t help but notice the seams in things.

  • You’re drawn to understanding how the system works before figuring out how to break it.
  • You’d find the Resistance, or it would find you — your instinct for spotting constructed realities is the machines’ worst nightmare.
  • You function best when you have access to information and the freedom to act on it.
  • The Matrix built an airtight prison. You’d be the one probing the walls for the door.

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The Wasteland

Mad Max

The wasteland doesn’t reward the clever or the well-connected — it rewards those who are hard to kill and harder to break. That’s you.

  • You don’t need comfort, community, or a cause larger than the next horizon.
  • You need a vehicle, a clear threat, and enough fuel to outrun it — and you’re good at all three.
  • You are unsentimental enough to survive that world, and decent enough — just barely — to be something more than another raider.
  • In the wasteland, that distinction is everything.

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Los Angeles, 2049

Blade Runner

You’d survive here because you know how to exist in moral grey areas without losing yourself completely.

  • You read people accurately, keep your circle small, and ask the questions others prefer not to answer.
  • In a city where humanity is a legal designation rather than a feeling, you hold onto something that keeps you functional.
  • You’re not a hero. But you’re not lost, either.
  • In Blade Runner’s world, that distinction is everything.

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Arrakis

Dune

Arrakis is the most hostile environment in the known universe — and you are precisely the kind of person it rewards.

  • Patience, discipline, and political awareness are your core strengths — and on Arrakis, they’re survival tools.
  • You understand that the long game matters more than any single victory.
  • Others come to Dune and are consumed by it. You’d learn its logic and earn its respect.
  • In time, you wouldn’t just survive Arrakis — you’d begin to reshape it.

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A Galaxy Far, Far Away

Star Wars

The galaxy far, far away is vast, loud, and in a constant state of violent political upheaval — and you wouldn’t have it any other way.

  • You find meaning in being part of something larger than yourself — a cause, a crew, a rebellion.
  • You’d gravitate toward the Rebellion, or the fringes, or whatever pocket of the galaxy still believes the Empire’s grip can be broken.
  • You fight — not because you have to, but because standing aside isn’t something you’re capable of.
  • In Star Wars, that willingness is what makes all the difference.
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10

‘Primer’ (2004)

Two men looking at a machine in Primer
Two young scientists experiment with a device.
Image via THINKFilm
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Shane Carruth’s low-budget sci-fi film Primer is about as grounded as a film about time travel can get. While the central concept is still a fantastical invention, it is surrounded by realistic and highly technical scientific details that inform the grounded setting. Primer doesn’t have elaborate lab sets or depict time travel with any kind of elaborate CGI. It’s just two guys in a garage with a metal box.

In addition to writing and directing, Carruth also stars as Aaron, one-half of the duo who discovers the ability to travel back in time. Together, Aaron and Abe (David Sullivan) begin to experiment with time travel, going back in time and using future knowledge to their benefit. It doesn’t take long for the timelines to get complicated, and the men and their doppelgängers begin to turn on each other. Primer is a thought-provoking and intelligent sci-fi movie that far surpasses its limited budget with true ingenuity.

A shot of Jodie Foster inside a spaceship looking at the camera in Contact.
A shot of Jodie Foster inside a spaceship looking at the camera in Contact.
Image via Warner Bros.
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Robert Zemeckis is still one of the most technically proficient directors in Hollywood. His experience and innovation of cutting-edge technology have produced classics like the Back to the Future trilogy, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and Death Becomes Her. Starting with Forrest Gump, Zemeckis began to find ways to integrate his technological interests into more grounded dramas. The underrated Contact, based on the novel by Carl Sagan, preceded the hard sci-fi trend in Hollywood by over a decade and allowed Zemeckis his first opportunity to tell a more grounded science-fiction story.

The film adaptation focuses on Dr. Ellie Arroway (Jodie Foster), who works for the SETI program. After she discovers a signal coming from the star Vega, Arroway finds herself in the middle of a mission to build a machine that will allow her to travel through wormholes in the hopes of making contact with those who sent the signal. Contact spends an inordinate amount of time dealing with the science of its story and the impact of discovering alien life has on civilization. It’s a more cerebral first contact film than something like Steven Spielberg‘s more fanciful Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which packs a more satisfying emotional punch.

8

‘Gattaca’ (1997)

Vincent Freeman walking down a hall in Gattaca.
Vincent Freeman walking down a hall in Gattaca.
Image via Sony Pictures Releasing
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The social divisions we’ve created in our current society get an upgrade in Andrew Niccol‘s Gattaca, set in a near future where discrimination has been turned into a science thanks to widespread use of eugenics. Divisions are created not so much by race or economic status as they are between those born naturally and those designed to be genetically perfect. It’s a fascinating film filled with more ideas in single scenes than many Hollywood sci-fi films manage across their entire runtimes. Though it takes a more one-sided approach to the more complex bioethical issues at play, it’s undeniably compelling and accurate in its assumption that our technological capabilities will always outpace our morality.

Ethan Hawke plays Vincent, conceived naturally and thus considered an in-valid, preventing him from pursuing a career in space travel. He finds his way around his perceived genetic inferiority by using the genetic material of another man to receive a position on an upcoming spaceflight. While the social themes are given as much weight as the science behind them, Gattaca advances the conversation about the conflict where scientific advancement and social order meet. It’s only become more relevant as the fight to provide protection and prevent discrimination based on genetic conditions is in constant flux in the political system.

7

‘Interstellar’ (2014)

Matthew McConaughey as Joseph Cooper in Interstellar
Matthew McConaughey as Joseph Cooper in Interstellar
Image via Paramount Pictures
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Originally developed by Steven Spielberg, based on an idea by theoretical physicist Kip Thorne in collaboration with producer Lynda Obst, Interstellar changed hands over to Christopher Nolan, who brought his ability to blend a blockbuster sensibility with more cerebral cinema to its sci-fi story of astronauts in search of a planet to replace Earth. The film finds balance in its human and scientific themes but, like much of Nolan’s directorial work, is at its best as a work of spectacle, much of which is grounded in hard sci-fi concepts.

In a future where Earth is suffering from major blights, and humanity is under threat of extinction, NASA sends Matthew McConaughey‘s Cooper on a mission to investigate the viability of several planets found through a wormhole. The mission takes on some thrilling twists and turns as Cooper and his crew face mile-high waves on one planet and human betrayal on another. Reviews at the time of release were slightly less enthused about the film’s attempts to combine its scientific craft thematically with its emotional character development, but it remains a sci-fi spectacle with few to rival it.

6

‘Gravity’ (2013)

Dr. Stone (Sandra Bullock) is tangled in a parachute cord. She holds a broken tether as she watches her colleague float away
Dr. Stone is tangled in a parachute cord. She holds a broken tether as she watches her colleague float away in Gravity – 2013
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures
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Alfonso Cuarón‘s greatest sci-fi masterpiece is the dystopic thriller Children of Men, which is far more concerned with the social implications of its infertility plot than the scientific, but right behind it is the orbital survival thriller Gravity. With astounding visual effects and an adherence to depicting its space environment with a higher level of realism, the film captures the dichotomy between space’s inherent beauty and imminent danger. As with any hard sci-fi movie, Gravity diverts from reality in many instances in order to tell a more engaging story, but it is far from the fantastical visions of space Hollywood is known for.

Sandra Bullock and George Clooney co-star as two astronauts in orbit servicing the Hubble telescope, when some space debris comes hurtling toward them. With their shuttle destroyed, they must embark on a mission to reach the International Space Station in order to return to Earth safely. It’s a survival story of resilience and persistence, and Bullock anchors the film with her emotionally tethered lead performance. It’s all the more impressive considering the constraints of filming with so many visual effects. Almost all the environments in the movie are rendered with CGI, with the actors placed in complex rigs to simulate zero gravity and the lighting of space. It’s a technical masterpiece and one of the most enthralling hard sci-fi movies ever made.

5

‘Moon’ (2009)

Sam Rockwell in a white spacesuit standing on the moon's surface, with a gray mining vehicle behind him, looking up at the stars, in Moon
Sam Rockwell in a white spacesuit standing on the moon’s surface, with a gray mining vehicle behind him, looking up at the stars, in Moon
Image via Sony Pictures Classics
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A small-scale film made with a much lower budget than many of its hard sci-fi contemporaries, Duncan JonesMoon is no less thematically dense or technically impressive. Set on the shoulders of lead actor Sam Rockwell, who spends a great deal of the time alone, the film is a lunar ser character study of humanity and identity. It’s a lesser-known film than many of its bigger-budget studio brethren and deserves a large audience to appreciate its unique mystery elements.

Rockwell plays Sam, the sole worker of a helium-3 mining facility on the moon. He’s nearing the end of his three-year contract when an accident leads to an unsettling discovery about himself and the work he’s been doing. It’s a twist that is only the beginning of the film’s existential nightmare created by corporate greed, giving Rockwell a fair amount of emotional real estate to work with in his performance. Moon is proof that amazing hard sci-fi movies can be made with modest budgets if they have good actors and clever concepts.

4

‘Ex Machina’ (2015)

Artificial Intelligence is on everyone’s mind right now, but it’s a concept that has been at the forefront of dozens of different sci-fi stories and films. As with any developing technology, much of the discourse surrounding A.I. in film has been of a skeptical and fearful nature, but some films have engaged with it in a more thoughtful manner, such as Alex Garland‘s directorial debut, Ex Machina. A moody chamber piece featuring only a handful of characters, Garland’s film questions not only the nature of consciousness and autonomy, but also the ethical implications of creation and control.

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Domhnall Gleeson plays a socially-awkward programmer who has been chosen for a secretive visit to the home of his tech company’s CEO, played by Oscar Isaac. The CEO has developed and built an artificial lifeform named Ava (Alicia Vikander), whom he wants the programmer to interact with to determine if she is truly capable of independent thought. The dynamics between all three characters become increasingly strained as the CEO’s true colors begin to show, and Ava expresses a desire to be free of her captivity. Ex Machina explores profound ideas that only become more inescapably relevant as technology advances.

3

‘The Martian’ (2015)

Matt Damon walking alone in Mars weating a space suit in The Martian
Matt Damon in The Martian
Image via 20th Century Studios

Based on the acclaimed sci-fi novel by Andy Weir, The Martian is an incredibly entertaining film made all the more exciting by its reasonably realistic approach, which showcases the triumph of science and human collaboration. What could be dense explanations of highly technical information are made palatable for a general audience thanks to a sharp script by Drew Goddard and a talented cast led by a never more affable Matt Damon. Director Ridley Scott had previously helmed two of the greatest sci-fi films of all time, Alien and Blade Runner. With The Martian, he found an exciting new world to explore with a more emotional and humorous storyline grounded in believable science.

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Damon plays astronaut and botanist Mark Watney, stranded on Mars after a destructive storm caused an evacuation of his team, who presumed he was dead after being struck by equipment. His survival then becomes dependent on ingenuity and persistence, as well as the combined efforts of NASA scientists back on Earth. The Martian quite faithfully adapts Weir’s funny and informative novel, and both aspects elevate each other instead of being incongruous. Along with the equally entertaining Project Hail Mary, Weir is two for two in having his novels adapted into hard sci-fi masterpieces.

2

‘Arrival’ (2016)

Amy Adams as Dr. Banks stands in mist as two large aliens with spider-like limbs release a ring of black smoke around her in Arrival.
Amy Adams as Dr. Banks stands in mist as two large aliens with spider-like limbs release a ring of black smoke around her in Arrival.
Image via Paramount Pictures

Like Scott, director Denis Villeneuve has explored sci-fi from several different angles, having helmed the impressive follow-up to Scott’s sci-fi noir in the legacy sequel Blade Runner 2049, and delivered epic space fantasies in his Dune adaptations. Before both of those, he directed the more grounded approach to humanity’s first contact with aliens in Arrival. It’s a sophisticated sci-fi that explores the perceptions of communication, the concepts of fate and determinism, and the intersection of love and grief. It’s a stellar example of ideas and emotions driving a sci-fi narrative over technology or action.

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Based on the novella Story of Your Life by Ted Chiang, the film follows a linguist, played by Amy Adams, who is enlisted by the United States military to study and make contact with extraterrestrial lifeforms who have recently landed on Earth. The sudden appearance of these lifeforms around the world has caused international unease, with tensions rising over whether the use of preemptive force is warranted. The film focuses on the science of linguistics, and, according to several academics, does a reasonable job of accurately portraying it, emphasizing the importance and power of language through its impactful sci-fi storytelling.

1

‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ (1968)

Keir Dullea in a red spacesuit walking through well-lit space pod in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Keir Dullea in a red spacesuit walking through well-lit space pod in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Image via Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

What other film could be the best of hard sci-fi than Stanley Kubrick‘s monumental, and monumentally influential, masterpiece 2001: A Space Odyssey? It’s the film that made quantum leaps forward in visual effects technology, presented a plausible vision of space travel on film a year before anyone had even landed on the Moon and which almost every sci-fi film since, soft or hard, owes a tremendous debt to. It was a Herculean effort by Kubrick and his crew, and the result still awes and astounds more than five decades after its release.

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The film deals with artificial intelligence, human evolution, alien contact and space exploration in an epic journey across the stars as a group of astronauts investigates an alien monolith whose appearance has recurred through thousands of years of human history. That journey is placed in peril by HAL 9000, still the most iconic A.I. antagonist in film history, whose inability to reconcile its programming with the concept of deception causes it to become homicidal. After the defeat of HAL, the final surviving astronaut reaches the monolith and is shown the very fabric of the space-time continuum before experiencing a rapid evolution to a higher form of existence. Few sci-fi films have been able to properly contend with even one of the major ideas with as much complexity as Kubrick’s gem, and fewer still have been able to pull off as convincing a depiction of space travel with more advanced visual effects technology or higher budgets. It’s why it’s the greatest hard sci-fi masterpiece ever made.

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Rob Reiner's son Jake says it's 'almost too impossible to process' having brother Nick at center of parents' death

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Rob and Michele Reiner were found dead in their Brentwood home in December 2025. Nick has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.

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The Last-Minute Editing Change That Completely Transformed the Ending of ‘Original Sound’

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Greg Jbara, David Lambert, Sarah Brandes, and David Youse pose for a photo at the Original Sound Q&A.

Summary

  • Collider’s Steve Weintraub talks with the team behind Original Sound.
  • First-time director Gregory Jbara, David Youse, Sarah Brandes, and David Lambert discuss adapting an Off-Broadway play to the big screen.
  • They discuss casting, crafting the music, on and off-set chemistry, their filmmaking family, and more.

The creative team behind Original Sound are more than collaborators, they tell Collider’s Steve Weintraub during an exclusive Q&A conversation — they’re family. It takes a strong bond to take an Off-Broadway play from the stage to the big screen with an independent film budget and less than a month to shoot, and for actor and first-time director Gregory Jbara, producer David Youse, cinematographer Sarah Brandes, and star David Lambert, it was an exercise in collaboration, instinct, and most importantly, trust.

Playwright, screenwriter, and associate producer Adam Seidel adapted his 90-minute stage play Original Sound into a motion picture when a reviewer pointed out the on-screen potential of the story. In the movie, Lambert plays Danny Solis, a beat maker whose music is inspired by the rhythm of Brooklyn and Queens. He’s a struggling artist, hoping to be discovered, when rising pop star Ryan Reed (Laura Marano) lifts his track and uses it as her own. To avoid consequences, Ryan’s manager strikes a deal with Danny: Collaborate officially with Reed on a few of her songs. This could be Danny’s big break, but when his life begins to intertwine with Ryan’s, he realizes there’s a flipside to fame. Original Sound also stars Eric Stoltz, Bridget Moynahan, Constantine Maroulis, and Ted King.

After an advanced screening, the team hit the stage for a wide-ranging interview discussing the evolution from stage to screen, the unique casting process, and the realities of low-budget filmmaking that required their crew to think outside the box. They also share how they crafted the music for the film, the innovative tricks and techniques used for cinematography on a budget, and how they shaped the film in the edit.

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Filmmaking Isn’t Always What Audiences Believe It To Be

The Original Sound crew pulls back the curtain on producing, directing, and acting.

Greg Jbara, David Lambert, Sarah Brandes, and David Youse pose for a photo at the Original Sound Q&A.
Greg Jbara, David Lambert, Sarah Brandes, and David Youse pose for a photo at the Original Sound Q&A.
Image via Le Studio Photography

COLLIDER: Before we get started, I like throwing a few fun questions. So the first one is for each of you. Have you ever asked for someone’s autograph?

GREGORY JBARA: Oh, sure. Probably Bozo the Clown when I was a kid in Detroit, Michigan.

DAVID LAMBERT: Yeah. I went to a WWE, WWF event back in the day, and I got some of the old guys’ signatures, like Triple H, Undertaker, and those guys. So that comes to mind first, and then Mickey Mouse at Disney World, and things like that.

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DAVID YOUSE: When I was younger, my first concert my parents took me to was John Denver, and we had the opportunity to meet John Denver, and I actually asked for his autograph.

SARAH BRANDES: Mine was Tony Pagnotti, the local news anchor in Baltimore. He asked me what my favorite food was, and I said hot dogs.

Going down the line, what do audiences misunderstand most about your job?

JBARA: I don’t know that audiences misunderstand, but what I misunderstood about the job of a director, this being the first time I’ve ever done it, is I didn’t realize how easy it was. I’m being serious. When you have producers who hire the best people to be department heads, and you have a casting director who brings you the most gifted, amazing actors to work with, and you get to recollaborate with a DP who you worked with as an actor just two years before… I was never the actor who thought, “Oh, but I really want to direct!” Never. I always like being spoiled as an actor. I always thought directing was a selfless traffic cop who had to manage egos, and this was the furthest thing from that. Four hours of sleep every night, and I woke up every day literally tap dancing. I couldn’t believe how lucky I was to have this job.

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That is not the normal answer. You got very, very lucky.

JBARA: I did.

LAMBERT: One thing that stands out, I guess, in watching it this time, it stood out to me, and I think it’s something that’s pretty common knowledge, but locations and the way we shoot the movie, compared to what you guys see, is always so wild to me. We can condense every part of the movie that we need in one location, we can do it in a matter of one day or two days.

You’ll see that first scene at the beginning part of the movie, and then the second scene at the very end of the movie, but that was done in one day. Sometimes that’s kind of crazy for me to wrap my head around. This movie is a good example of that concept. So, I think the schedule. I would say the schedule is always a wild thing for us to be a part of, and then also to see how it all comes together.

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YOUSE: I think the audience thinks, when they hear the word “producer,” they just think money. They just think, “Oh, that’s the money person,” but it’s not. There’s the executive producers, who finance the film, but a producer, I always try to tell people who don’t understand it that it’s a wedding planner. So, you’ve got the dress, and you’ve got the groomsmen and the shoes, and the ties, and, “Oh, what if it rains?” And when people arrive, the appetizers are hot. And, “Oh, if it rains, do we have a canopy?” It’s literally everything. Just fixing everything and making sure it runs smoothly.

So, it’s not just the money part. There’s that, too, for many people, but a producer of a film is just the people that are making it all work. It’s a wedding planner to the ultimate, you know, in 21 days, get it done.

BRANDES: As the DP, people just assume, and probably the same for everybody’s job, but they just assume you have control, and you have no control. You’re just driving a car at 1,000 mph and trying to just pray that you can navigate your way through, and you’re just hoping that you can maintain some amount of control.

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The One Where Donny Osmond Hurts His Back

Actor and first-time director Greg Jbara shares tales from the sets of Blue Bloods and Friends.

The cast of Friends in a promotional image
The cast of Friends in a promotional image
Image via NBC

Greg, I definitely want to ask, you were on Blue Bloods for 14 seasons.

JBARA: Fifteen seasons, 14 years.

I’m very sorry. My math is off. What do you miss most about the job, besides the steady paycheck?

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JBARA: Well, you answered it for me.

BRANDES: Tom Selleck.

JBARA: [Laughs] Yeah. Kissing Tom Selleck and getting razor burn. That’s nice. What do I miss about it? I mean, acting? I’ve got a new bug. I would love to be able to act again. I haven’t had a new job since this film, and we wrapped this a year ago. And I’ve been going out there. I’m enjoying the auditioning because I think that’s really what actors do, but I would love someone to go, “Oh, yeah, we’ll hire you.” That’d be nice.

But I’m hoping that someone who hires directors sees this and goes, “Wait, that was a $1.5 million film?” And I go, “Yeah, our producers made it look that good.” But yes, we can make our film look spectacular and shoot it in… How many days did we do it in?

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YOUSE: I think it was 23. Five days a week. We worked Wednesday through Sunday so that Julie [Crosby] and I could fix things that happened on Monday and Tuesday. And also, it was better to get around New York City on Saturday and Sunday.

JBARA: Yeah, that was my answer.

This is a follow-up for you. You did one episode of Friends in Season 10, which is when the show was incredibly popular. What do you remember about being on that, and do you have people who still want to talk to you about Friends?

JBARA: No. No one ever brings it up. Yeah, of course. Thank you for asking. Two things: Matt LeBlanc in character, but he’s not, but he actually is Joey, I show up to rehearsal, and he goes, “Hey, man, I know it can be intimidating. Don’t worry, I got your back. I’ll make sure I introduce you to everybody.” And this, you know, I’ve had a career already, and I thought, “Oh, how sweet that there’s that essence that he has.”

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What nobody knows is that we actually shot that $1,000 Pyramid on the actual soundstage where they shoot it in Sony. Donny Osmond, who really hosted that show, was used to being able to navigate that space without all of our camera equipment and cables from the Friends show. When he did the speed round, he leaves, and where he normally could safely, we had cables in his way. He forgot, tripped over, and really injured himself. He went down. It was to the point where we all gasped, and there was a studio audience. The whole thing came to a screeching halt, and he goes, “No, man,” pops right up, “I’m good. I’m totally good.” We went, “Really? Because that looked bad.” “No, I’m fine!” So we shot, then we took a little break, and he leans into Matt, and he goes, “I really messed up my back.” We went, “We gotta take care of that.” He goes, “No, I don’t want to be that guy. I want everything to go smoothly. I’ll be fine. I’ll make it through, but man, my back’s really messed up.”

So, Donny Osmond, no prima donna. A real team player. He was acting in pain in that entire speed round at the end. Love Donny Osmond.

David, I definitely have to ask you, you were on The Fosters for all 104 episodes, I believe.

LAMBERT: Yes, I believe so.

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What do you remember most about that show? When you’re working like that, you’re really learning a lot, so what did you take away from that process that informed you or helped you as an actor?

LAMBERT: Yeah, The Fosters was a big, big part of my career thus far, for sure. I still look back and take from those constant lessons all the time as an actor. Five years. It also lined up with the age that I would have been going to school anyway, for whatever I would have gone for besides acting, I suppose, so it became school. The Fosters was my school for five years. I had people like Teri Polo and Sherri Saum and Danny Nucci, and then a number of recurring, fantastic, seasoned veteran actors that would come through. A lot of people came through, and so I learned from every single one of them. Then, also, just the consistency of doing that day in, day out. It was fantastic training for me as a young actor, and I utilize that with anything going forward, for sure.

Teri Polo as Stef kissing Sherri Saum's Lena on the forehead in 'The Fosters.'


10 Years After Its Premiere, ‘The Fosters’ Is More Important Than Ever

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How an Off-Broadway Play Became a Feature Film

“I think it would make a better movie.”

Danny sits alone in his room at a laptop.
Danny sits alone in his room at a laptop.
Image via Cromono International

Jumping into why I get to talk to you guys. How did this get from Off-Broadway to being a movie?

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YOUSE: This started at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York. My producing partner, Julie Crosby, produced it. I was a board member of the training theater, having produced other plays there with Julie, but I was not on this particular project, and it got some really great reviews. But one reviewer did say, “I think it would make a better movie.”

So Kit, our executive producer, was one of my partners on the board of the Cherry Lane Theatre — we just left A24 about a year ago — so it’s family, and it’s our second film with Kit as the executive producer. Sarah was our DP on the first film that Julie and I produced, called Alien Intervention, starring Greg Jbara. So we’ve all worked together before. We just realized that you have to work with people that you like and who are nice.

But anyway, we talked to Adam [Seidel] about changing the screenplay. In the play, there was no music. This was a play, and so when someone listened to a song, they would put earphones on and they would listen to the music, but the audience never heard anything what anything was. So we really had to create music. We had to create “Sway” with three different versions — Father’s version, his version, the pop version, and then her little guitar version. So it’s pretty daunting in how it all came to be. We were like, “What do we do first? Do we do the music first? Do we do the screenplay?” So, that’s how it all came together.

Gregory, this is your directorial debut. How long ago did you realize, “Wait a minute, I want to take a crack at directing?” And what was it about this material that said I really want to do this?

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JBARA: So, never. I never wanted to take a crack at directing. Let me be clear: Never. Then during the strike, Kit and David and Julie said, “Hey, maybe you should be directing this project that we’re moving to the screen. Are we out of our minds?” And I thought as I read the email, “Yes, you’re out of your mind, but I’m going to be out of a job. Blue Bloods, we know when our closing day is.” And this was something that was literally handed to me by people who I had probably one of the most glorious experiences in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, the summer of ‘22. And I went, “Oh, thanks.” And I went, “I’d be stupid to say no.” I don’t know anything about this.

David said, it was in an email, “Don’t worry, we’ll take care of everything.” He didn’t really speak on that, but he really did. If anything went wrong, I never knew about it. All I had to deal with was the glory of every single day being successful. That’s all I had to deal with. So, that’s how it came along. I said, “Oh, I’d be foolish to not say yes,” because I never would have thought of this for myself, and I couldn’t be more grateful to have had the experience working with people who saw something in me I never saw for myself. And that’s how I ended up here.

I’m definitely curious about how you landed with David and Laura [Marano] for your two leads.

YOUSE: Well, Don Carroll, our casting director, is in the audience. I’ll start at the beginning of it. It was such an easy process. We did not have auditions. Don gave us a list of people for each character, two or three people, and we interviewed them on Zoom, and we saw all of their work online. “Who’s number one? Who’s number two? Well, let’s meet David. We know he can act. Let’s see your personality.” And we, again, go back to picking the nicest people that you want to work with. And I will say, all of us, Laura included, Eric Stoltz, it’s a family. They’re in New York tonight doing a screening. It’s a family.

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JBARA: I’d like to echo. All the people we hired on this film, Don did the vetting, and he goes, “Here are our best choices. Take a look. You guys decide.” David and Julie said, “We looked at everybody on paper who looks right for this for every creative department head,” and they said, “We’re going to meet them all. We’ll find the person who has the right sensibility, who’s going to lean into the project with us when something goes south. Somebody who isn’t going to make this about them, someone who doesn’t bring toxicity with them.” Everybody’s talented. We’ve got to hire the people that we, at the end of the day, went, “Oh, I want to hang out with them for a month or six months, depending on the job.” So, it was a luxurious experience.

Gregory Jbara and David Lambert speak on stage at an Original Sound Q&A.
Gregory Jbara and David Lambert speak on stage at an Original Sound Q&A.
Image via Le Studio Photography

David, what is it like for you the night before you’re going to be doing a Zoom meeting with what could be a project, and how much did you know that there was only a small number of people they were meeting with?

LAMBERT: In that situation, I wanted to know the least amount in terms of the stakes. I think that’s better. I think I operate better that way. For me, I wanted to go in knowing the story, and I wanted to know the general vibe, if you will, of the character. Then, yes, since it was the setting it was, since it was going to be this Zoom conversation with these guys, I also just wanted to feel what that was going to feel like in the Zoom. So, it was just a matter of me not psyching myself out, I guess.

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Then, also, in a way, doing my homework. I wanted to be knowledgeable about what this project was, that way we could really talk about it. Also, it was important for me to hone in on a version, at that point, of Danny. In the script especially, I felt like he blended these older sensibilities with the vinyl records and that kind of thing, and his mixing and deejaying, and so it was sort of old-meets-new, and I’m very that way in my own life. So that was kind of the beginning of me starting to identify what I thought Danny could be. I took that in with me to the Zoom, and that stuff kind of came up in the Zoom, and that was where we went with it from there.

LAMBERT: You may not remember, but in the Zoom meeting, because we didn’t do scenes, we really were like, “We would like Danny and Ryan to be singer-actor songwriters because we have tunes to write. David, is music part of your world? Do you have songs? Are there songs that you’ve written?” And he goes, “Oh yeah, hold on.” He goes, “But it’s going to take me a few minutes to set my gear up.” Without any preparation or warning, he was like, “Yeah, I’ll play some songs for you.” That was like, “Oh, he has the right heart.”

YOUSE: And that is David playing the piano in that beautiful scene, which I love so much.

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Building a Movie Around Music From Day One

Jake leans over a mixing desk in a studio.
Jake leans over a mixing desk in a studio.
Image via Cromono International

That actually leads me to my next question, which is specifically the music, because it’s really hard. You have to have songs that the audience really believes could be on the radio and could be pop songs. So talk a little bit about the music. Obviously, you’re making this on a budget, and you have a schedule, so talk about crafting those songs.

YOUSE: So I went to New York and Julie and myself had lunch with Glenn Schloss and Erik Blicker because they scored our first movie, and we sat at lunch at The Smith and had some eggs Benedict or something. I remember I said to Glenn, “I know you’re writing movie music and for television shows like that, so can you write a pop song?” He’s like, “Yeah, I can write a pop song.” I was like, “Could you write a pop song three different ways?” We just said, “Why don’t you guys take a crack at it?” And they worked with Adam, the screenwriter, about what the characters were feeling and what Adam was envisioning, and then Greg got involved.

JBARA: We were hiring them, and they were going to score the soundtrack no matter what, but then the writing of the songs, they wanted to do it. They said, “We’d really like to get a shot at it.” They’re standalone singer-songwriters — they’re ridiculous musicians — and they were willing. We hadn’t even figured out what the music contract would be, like who’d own what and what the rights were. They were going, “Yeah, but that’s fine. We’ll work it out. We’ll get it on paper. We just want the opportunity to do it.”

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So, they worked with David, and they worked with Laura. It was a collaboration, and all those songs were studio-recorded and ready to go before our first day of filming because we needed clip tracks for our actors to lip-sync to, as well. Then we had our sound designer able to capture everything live, as well, because we knew that if we could make the audience know that this was real, instead of having it be like, “Oh, they’re lip syncing and that’s a studio sound,” then we would help the audience take the ride along with us. We were gifted with a sound department and actors who were like, “Yeah, we’ll sing live.”

Did you take for the movie their attitude with Danny’s attitude towards the contract? There’s a very real symmetrical thing to the movie. They’re like, “We don’t need a contract,” and you’re like, “I’ll take a crappy contract. I just want to get out there.”

YOUSE: Julie Crosby does not make a move without a contract. She’s a great business partner. I’m like, “Sure. Why not?” Julie’s like, “No. Everything’s always written.”

I’m totally joking around, but you know what I’m getting at.

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YOUSE: But I will say, also, that first week we shot, we did all the music. The first time David and Laura met in person, I believe, was in the studio at the very end with the dog. That’s the actual studio where we recorded everything for the first week, and we thought, “Let’s get all the music done first, and then let’s continue with our first shooting day.”

Our biggest day with extras and background actors was Hugo’s nightclub scene, which had all the background people, and that was our first day, because we thought that they’d been singing for a week and let them continue to sing rather than waiting three weeks, like, “What was that song that we recorded four weeks ago?” We still never had the location for the recording studio, and through that week of recording, we finally turned to the guy who owned it, and said, “Can we just shoot it here?” And that staircase that was crookedly with the elevator, you guys carried up that equipment. We actually recorded the music in that recording studio.

JBARA: It looks so good.

BRANDES: Then I looked at you guys, and I said, “Could you guys do it, like, double the speed so that we could shoot it in slow motion? [Laughs] So David had to rap at twice the speed in the nightclub so that we could shoot it in slow motion. That was amazing.

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LAMBERT: Wow. I completely forgot about that. Yes. Thank you for that. I had to rap that rap twice as fast for a couple of takes there. That was a fun experience.

BRANDES: You did great.

LAMBERT: Just to kind of touch on what David said, the first week in New York was Laura and I doing all of the music, and Glenn and Erik and everyone else being involved.

YOUSE: And Eric Stoltz would just stop by, just like, “I want to hang out. I want to get the feel of all this.” It was amazing.

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LAMBERT: It was a great way to start the whole shoot, at least for me. We had a week of getting into the music, which was so prominent throughout the story, and so prominent in the end product, too. It really comes through. The amount of music, too. So, for me, it was a fantastic way to meet everybody and set a tone. I think that’s what I’m getting at. It was a really good way to set a tone.

The Two Leads Established Their Chemistry Before the Cameras Rolled

Lambert says the music was the key to their characters’ relationship.

Danny plays keyboard and Ryan Reed sings on stage.
Danny plays keyboard and Ryan Reed sings on stage.
Image via Cromono International

David, you share a lot of screen time with Laura, who plays Ryan Reed. How did you two work together to build that contentious yet creative chemistry that drives the collaboration?

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LAMBERT: Laura’s amazing, first off. She has really great energy, and she just has a really good strength, and she’s very grounded. So to work with someone like that, it’s very comforting and made me feel very comfortable, very fast. We both understood the assignment, and we had fun getting into those characters. Recording the music before we were shooting anything definitely helped with that, as well. We got to collaborate not in front of the camera type of way where we were creating, we were collaborating, recording music, but we didn’t have these added elements that we normally have to worry about. So it was a cool, interesting, creative week, and then going into shooting from there.

The other thing, too, the way the schedule worked, was a lot of Laura’s and my stuff, we were on separate days, so it would be Laura’s stuff and then my stuff. Then we would have our moments where we come together for the rehearsal space or something like Hugo’s. So, before those scenes, Laura and I were taking time to meet up prior, and we were running beats. We were running how we wanted it to go or things that we felt strongly about bringing. So a lot of this we were mapping out and being very intentional with so by the time we were shooting it, everyone knew what was going on. So, she was great. I can’t speak highly enough of Laura. She was so fun to work with.

One of the tough things to do in a movie or show is trying to show the creative process and make it cinematic and real. Can you talk about the way you wanted to show that collaboration, the way you were making music, from how you wanted it to look with the cinematography to how you wanted it to be directed and feel on screen?

BRANDES: One part in specific that really comes to mind is the scene where David is playing piano. That was really such an important scene, especially to the executive producer. But then Greg had this amazing idea that we would do this dramatic lighting change to showcase the whole thing. So, we had all these beats for what the room would look like ahead of time and what it would look like after, and what we wanted the feel to look like.

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I remember I sat down with the executive producer, who we love, love, love so much — love you, Kit — and I said, “What is it about that scene that you want the audience to feel?” And she said, “Well, when I saw the play, what I loved so much about this was that I forgot that the rest of the world existed at that moment.” And I was like, “Greg, how are we going to do that?” [Laughs] Then we really did our best, and we figured it out, and I think we did a pretty good job.

JBARA: Yeah, you did!

BRANDES: We asked her in the end, “Did you forget?” And she goes, “Uh, yeah. You changed the lighting?” She was like, “Oh my God. I was in a whole other world.” She loved it so much that she didn’t even notice. She just felt like it was on a stage.

Honestly, I agree with Greg. I felt like every day was just a joy to show up. Everybody was so on board for the collaboration and the process, and being together every day was just this little band of 15, 20, or 30 of us, depending on the day, just moving around with the actors and everything.

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YOUSE: I just want to add again, and it’s probably the last time I’ll say it, it really is about working with people that you like and people that you want to be around. Even the first AD, Monica [Palmieri], would say, “Oh, I have my team,” and Julie and I would say, “That’s great. We want to meet your team.” We had to go to some departments and say, “Well, we didn’t click with that one, so do you have another person?”

It’s really about really interviewing and talking to people who you want to hang out with, who are going to be there and get your back when something goes wrong, when the truck has a flat tire, or the rig breaks down in Texas on your way to Albuquerque, right? And you’ve got Pat, who’s like, “I’ll handle it.” So, it really comes down to that. That’s why everything went so smoothly.

LAMBERT: I loved shooting that sequence. I got to write the piano piece for that sequence, which was a great honor. Going back to Glenn and Erik, they were so open to allowing that to happen. I didn’t have necessarily too much prep time on that. I was already in New York when I wrote that piece because I wasn’t sure exactly how it was going to go. So, even being able to contribute that was amazing for me.

Then, shooting outside the box a little bit, getting a little unconventional with it, and interesting with the lighting and the camera moves, that’s super fun. So, the whole sequence was super fun for me.

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David Lambert speaks on stage for Original Sound Q&A.
David Lambert speaks on stage for Original Sound Q&A.
Image via Le Studio Photography

BRANDES: I just want to add one more thing about Greg and I, and our process together, which was absolutely amazing. When we first started dreaming this whole thing up, we would meet in pre-production every week, once or twice a week on Zoom, and really just go by the entire script, scene by scene, and talk about the emotional and who’s winning, and trying to come up with ways to shoot it and do things. So, we really had an amazing idea, but we also just liked each other so much. We would just crack each other up.

How much did he actually pay you to say that?

BRANDES: Like $7. One latte’s worth, but it was worth it.

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JBARA: Early on, one of the other genius things Sarah said was she goes, “So if he’s a beatmaker, hip hop, I want to show you this graphic novel. It’s the history of hip hop.” She goes, “Look at this. Do you see how the characters were doing, like, nine million things in the same frame?” And she goes, “We can do boxes and do this whole thing like it’s a graphic novel.” I went, “Whoa. I wouldn’t have thought of that. Let’s go there.” And really, that’s your signature look when you’re splitting frame, and that was Sarah Brandes magic.

How many Davids did we have on screen at one time in that first wake-up? Maybe five at one point. This is Sarah going, “We’re gonna lock a camera, and everything has to stay exactly the same.” And there are a few things, like a piece of art in the back fell off, and so we ended up having to spend a little bit of money to digitally remove the artwork from the beginning of that long shoot, so that it never existed.

I don’t know if you noticed, but there was a scene where we do a couple of pushes. When Danny comes in, and right before he pulls that picture of his dad out, there are tables and chairs and furniture in between us and where Danny’s character is, and if we had the budget, that camera would have been on a screen that would have just moved over the top of everything. But Sarah goes, “I still want to get that shot, so let’s rehearse, and we’re gonna get everybody to pull tables and chairs and rugs and things out of the way once it’s out of frame. I have some of the most amazing self-footage because I’m watching the monitor, and I’m supposed to be watching the shot, but I’m filming everybody accomplish that amazing shot.

You don’t even know, but there are 10 or 15 people all sneaking in and pulling everything out of the way so that the camera moves in on Danny’s face at the end. That’s what Sarah Brandes was able to make happen. Everybody went, “Oh, that’s amazing. How can I help?” That’s just one of the many magical things that Sarah brings.

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Hunger Can Matter More Than Experience on a Film Crew

From coffee runs to cinematography, Sarah Brandes shares her on-set philosophies.

Sarah Brandes and David Youse on stage for Original Sound Q&A.
Sarah Brandes and David Youse on stage for Original Sound Q&A.
Image via Le Studio Photography

Speaking of Sarah, you’ve worked on a lot of high-profile projects in your career, and I’m just curious, what were two or three big lessons that you learned on those sets that you’ve really taken with you for when you’re shooting and you’re the DP?

BRANDES: I’ve done every job in the camera department throughout my career. I’ve gotten people coffee, I’ve made sandwiches, I’ve protected the film, I’ve clocked the slate, changed lenses, and now I get to make bigger decisions. I have enjoyed every step of that process and have so much respect for the camera department in that regard. But I think making your team and making anybody that you feel is a part of your team feel important and valid and seen is the biggest thing.

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I would rather have someone who wants to be there every day than someone who’s incredibly experienced to be there every day, because I just always want to take a shot on somebody who wants to learn and do better. Those people will always be hungry, and those are the people I want to make movies with. So that’s one thing, because I’ve been that person, and I still am that person. And I always want to get a different shot, or I want to see something in a movie, like, “I want to do that, and I want to do that, but I want to tell it this way.” So, I want to stay hungry, and I want hungry people around me. That’s number one.

Then number two is probably just like, less lights are better.

I think it depends on the camera.

BRANDES: Yeah. Or face your lighting. I don’t know. Just feel it and be emotional about it. If you’re just doing something, and you’re like, “I don’t know, I like this thing here. I’m going to keep that thing there,” and lead with your heart. I think if you go into something with a pure heart and, emotionally, you are open to something, fuck-ups are great. They can be great, you just need to enjoy the process.

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As a director of photography, you have to leave every day and feel like you did the best you could. Somebody is going to cut your stuff. They’re not going to maybe use your favorite take. There are a lot of things that are going to happen that you’re not going to be a part of the process for later, and you just have to feel good about that at the end of that day of filming. So, knowing that ahead of time, going into it, just being in love with your crew and in love with the story, and enjoying your collaborators is probably the best thing that I have learned, and I take with me every day.

‘Original Sound’ Refuses to Follow the Typical Love Story

“It’s not a rom-com.”

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Something that I especially loved about the movie is that Danny and Ryan do not hook up. Because I’ve seen a thousand Hollywood productions where they do. There’s that scene on the street where she kisses him in friendship, and I’m like, “Oh, is it going to walk down this path?” and it doesn’t. Can you talk about that aspect, and was there ever talk of “Should they hook up?”

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JBARA: Well, we shot the wedding, and we tested it, and everybody went, “Boo!”

LAMBERT: It was definitely talked about, and it was definitely a thing that we thought about. We had versions where that kiss didn’t happen.

YOUSE: I was going to say, that kiss was the last… We were ready to leave that location. Remember? And we were like, “Let’s just have them try the kiss.” Because from the beginning, even in pre-production, working with Adam, it was like, “They’re not making out. They’re not going to hook up. It’s not a rom-com. We’re not doing that.” And then some people have different opinions, so during shooting it was like, “Wait, shouldn’t they kiss?”

JBARA: Sarah and I believed they should kiss. We did.

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YOUSE: Anyway, I hate working with these guys. [Laughs] So really, it was like, “Let’s just do it.”

JBARA: We shot one without it. We shot two or three. There were a couple of extra takes of that.

YOUSE: Yes, it was definitely talked about. But all three of these young adults go their own way, and that’s life. That’s what we wanted to show. It’s not a happy ending.

LAMBERT: Yeah, it’s not. Everyone kind of does what they need to do. For Danny, it’s back to the drawing board, but it’s this full circle thing for him. I think everyone is entering a new chapter by the end of the movie, and I think that’s really what life is more than anything else.

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YOUSE: We even thought that Laura’s last song in the recording studio, “When is the Hard Part Over?,” which is one of my favorite songs, it was like, “Is she going to help Danny now? Is she going to get him credit on this?” There’s so many discussions that happen with all of that kind of creative stuff.

One of the things I really enjoyed is that it felt like life rather than a movie.

YOUSE: We didn’t want to have it too sweet and tied up.

BRANDES: And one of the things that Greg and I had talked about in pre-production, too, is that it does sort of complete this circle. Each character ends up nearly in, theoretically, the exact same place that they started the movie in, except now they have this wealth of knowledge to be able to move forward. They can move past where they were, and I thought that that was really a beautiful thing.

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I could be wrong about this, but isn’t the first shot of the movie and the last shot of the movie very similar?

JBARA: Identical.

That’s what I mean. Was that on purpose because of where they start and stop in life?

BRANDES: Exactly. Very good observations.

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This Final Change Completely Transformed the Ending

The team also discusses the painful process of killing your darlings.

Original-Sound-Feature

I’m fascinated by the editing process. It’s where it all comes together. What did you learn from any early screenings from friends and family that impacted the finished film?

JBARA: I don’t know that really friends and family saw anything until we… It was us, David, Julie, me, Soojin [Chung], Adam, our writer, Soojin, our editor. At the end of the movie, it was a collaborative experience. Sometimes choices were made outside of Sarah’s input. There were some babies that we had to kill.

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BRANDES: There’s that personal sense of satisfaction we were talking about.

JBARA: You know what it is? It’s a unique communication thing. When we started the editing process, we finished shooting, and for 10 or 12 days, I’m in a room with Soojin, our editor, and she’d already done a rough assemble of the film. Now, Sarah is notating, “This is the ratio. Here’s where it’s going. This shot goes with this.” We did overwhelm our editor to the point where, if we were shooting with one camera, you have one day’s worth of footage. We did a lot of days where we had one camera shot here because we had a lot of stuff that was synced. There were a lot of things that were happening. So, there were a lot of days that were two full cameras full of footage that we were just going, “Here you go, Soojin! Start assembling.” And she’s by herself because we are budgeted for an editor, not an editor and a team of 30 people to help.

YOUSE: In her apartment.

JBARA: In her apartment. But there were moments. There were some things that were done. I will throw myself on the sword. There’s a shot, the first time we see Kari with Kari’s father, and Sarah had framed this like two long letterbox shots, and I’d forgotten that that’s what it was about, and we didn’t go to the notes, and we had assembled it where the scene starts much more close up on their faces. We all liked the intimacy of that, but what we did was we abandoned a really amazing stylistic choice that would have stayed in the frame idea, and it would have worked. It did look good. But we, outside of Sarah, had gotten so married to this other assembly, and Sarah said, “Oh, you guys didn’t do that right. It’s supposed to be this.” And we went and did it, and we went, “Oh yeah, but we kind of like seeing the nostril hairs coming out of their faces.” And Sarah went, “Okay, that was the plan.” “I know. I know, Sarah.” That might have happened.

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And Danny’s dad’s music sequence was actually shot over two and a half hours. We shot two and a half hours continuously. The idea was we were going to then speed the whole thing up. And cool as it was, outside of Sarah’s approval…

BRANDES: Okay, give me the microphone really quickly because I just have to say that there’s one little tiny window… Just a brief side story that’s really worth it. There’s a tiny little side window, and that’s the only window inside that apartment, and we had the electric team and my amazing gaffer, Julia [Gowesky], who is just one of the most incredible people in the world, she built this rig and had the electricians make little tick marks so that we knew exactly how long they had to move this light so that we could have a fake sunset. We were trying to make eight hours go by in about two hours. So they were going to move the sun, and then it was going to set, and then the dad was going to come over and close the thing. So we had this whole thing, and it was just the most amazing thing, and then it got killed.

JBARA: I’m sorry, still.

David Youse offers his microphone to Sarah Brandes at the Original Sound Q&A.
David Youse offers his microphone to Sarah Brandes at the Original Sound Q&A.
Image via Le Studio Photography
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I am curious, if you can remember, what was the last thing that you cut before picture locking?

BRANDES: Good question.

And was there something that came close to being in the movie, but ultimately it didn’t make it?

JBARA: Actually, everyone’s finish at the end, Kari’s finish, Danny’s finish, and Ryan’s, they were complete. We saw the whole journey, and David, I feel like it was you who went, “Can we mix that up a little bit? Can we intersperse? Can we bounce back and forth so you don’t have all the answers from everybody at one time, so that everybody arrives at their finale at the same time? In the script, it was separate full journeys of closure, and in collaboration, I can’t take credit for it, we rebuilt it so that that arc, we saw the beginnings, the middles, and the ends of all the characters, so that everybody arrived at the end at the same time, and that was the right choice.

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Original Sound is in select theaters now.


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Release Date
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April 24, 2026

Director

Gregory Jbara

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Writers

Adam Seidel

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Taylor Sheridan’s ‘Yellowstone’ Spin-Off Fires Showrunner 3 Weeks Before Release

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Taylor Sheridan’s TV empire has never exactly been short on drama behind the scenes, but this latest shake-up is landing at a pretty awkward moment and it’s a pretty embarrassing one at that. Dutton Ranch is still weeks away from making its debut, with the Beth and Rip-led spinoff set to launch as one of Paramount+’s biggest spring plays. The series is supposed to push two of Yellowstone’s most popular characters into a new chapter in South Texas, and all of that is still happening, but just before the show gets in front of audiences, it’s already losing the person who ran its first season. Which could mean nothing, or it could mean the season is shaping up to be a disaster.

According to Variety, Chad Feehan will not return as showrunner on Dutton Ranch if the series is renewed for a second season. The report notes that Feehan ran Season 1 and is also credited as the show’s creator, based on characters created by Sheridan and John Linson, but that he is now out in that role ahead of the show’s May 15 premiere. Variety also cites a prior Puck report claiming that Kelly Reilly, Cole Hauser, Sheridan, and 101 Studios boss David Glasser were unhappy with Feehan’s handling of production after Season 1 was completed.

The odd thing is, this isn’t even the first time this has happened in the last year with a Sheridan-produced series. Tulsa King began production on Season 4 without a showrunner in place, while Frisco King also went through its own leadership change before cameras rolled, so that makes this feel less of a random one-off and more of a larger pattern over how these shows are overseen.

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Collider Exclusive · Taylor Sheridan Universe Quiz
Which Taylor Sheridan
Show Do You Belong In?

Yellowstone · Landman · Tulsa King · Mayor of Kingstown

Four worlds. All of them brutal, complicated, and built on power, loyalty, and the price of survival. Taylor Sheridan doesn’t write heroes — he writes people who do what they have to do and live with the cost. Ten questions will reveal which one of his worlds you were made for.

🤠Yellowstone

🛢️Landman

👑Tulsa King

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⚖️Mayor of Kingstown

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01

Where does your power come from?
In Sheridan’s world, everyone has leverage. The question is what kind.




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02

Who do you put first, no matter what?
Loyalty in Sheridan’s universe is always absolute — and always costly.




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03

Someone crosses a line. How do you respond?
Every Sheridan protagonist has a line. What matters is what happens after it’s crossed.




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04

Where do you feel most in your element?
Sheridan’s worlds are as much about place as they are about people.




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05

How do you feel about operating in the grey?
Nobody in a Sheridan show has clean hands. The question is how they carry the dirt.




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06

What are you actually fighting to hold onto?
Every Sheridan character is fighting a war. The real question is what they’re defending.




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07

How do you lead?
Authority in Sheridan’s world is never given — it’s established, maintained, and constantly tested.




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08

Someone new arrives and tries to change how things work. Your reaction?
Every Sheridan show has an outsider disrupting an established order. Sometimes that outsider is you.




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09

What has your position cost you?
Nobody gets to where these characters are without paying for it. The bill is always personal.




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10

When it’s over, what do you want people to say?
Sheridan’s characters all know the ending is coming. The question is what they leave behind.




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Sheridan Has Spoken
You Belong In…

The show that claimed the most of your answers is the world you were built for. If two tied, both are shown — you’re complicated enough to straddle two Sheridan universes.

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🤠
Yellowstone

🛢️
Landman

👑
Tulsa King

⚖️
Mayor of Kingstown

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You are a Dutton — or you might as well be. You understand that some things are worth protecting at any cost, and that the modern world’s indifference to history, to land, to legacy, is not something you’re willing to accept quietly. You lead from the front, you carry your family’s weight without complaint, and when someone threatens what’s yours, you don’t escalate — you finish it. You’re not cruel. But you are absolute. In Yellowstone’s world, that combination of ferocity and loyalty doesn’t make you a villain. It makes you the only thing standing between everything that matters and everyone who wants to take it.

You thrive in the chaos of high-stakes negotiation, where the money is enormous, the margins are thin, and the wrong word in the wrong room can cost everyone everything. You’re a fixer — the person called when a situation is already on fire and needs someone with the nerve to walk into it. West Texas oil country rewards exactly what you are: sharp, adaptable, unsentimental, and absolutely clear-eyed about what people want and what they’ll do to get it. You’re not naive enough to think this world is fair. You’re smart enough to be the one deciding who it’s fair to.

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You are a Dwight Manfredi — someone who has served their time, paid their dues, and arrived somewhere unexpected with nothing but their reputation and their wits. You adapt without losing yourself. You build loyalty through respect rather than fear, though you’re not above reminding people that the two aren’t mutually exclusive. Tulsa King is for people who are still standing when everyone assumed they’d be finished — who find, in an unfamiliar place, that they’re more capable than the world gave them credit for. You don’t need a throne. You build one, wherever you happen to land.

You carry the weight of a system that is broken by design, and you do it anyway — because someone has to, and because you’re the only one positioned to do it without the whole thing collapsing. Mike McLusky’s world is for people who are comfortable operating where there are no good options, only less catastrophic ones. You speak every language: law enforcement, criminal, political, human. That fluency makes you invaluable and it makes you a target. You’ve made your peace with both. Mayor of Kingstown belongs to people who understand that keeping the peace is not the same as being at peace — and who do the job regardless.

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Who Stars in ‘Dutton Ranch’?

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The cast of Dutton Ranch is led by Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler, with Finn Little returning as Carter alongside Juan Pablo Raba, Jai Courtney, J.R. Villarreal, Marc Menchaca, Natalie Alyn Lind, Ed Harris, and Annette Bening. The official synopsis reads:

“As Beth and Rip fight to build a future together – far from the ghosts of Yellowstone — they collide with brutal new realities and a ruthless rival ranch that will stop at nothing to protect its empire. In South Texas, blood runs deeper, forgiveness is fleeting, and the cost of survival might just be your soul.”

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Dutton Ranch premieres on May 15.


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Release Date
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May 15, 2026

Network

Paramount+

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Showrunner

Chad Feehan

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Damson Idris Says Messi Made Him Quit Soccer

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Damson Idris LFW 2019 GQ Dinner

Damson Idris has revealed the exact moment he knew his dreams of becoming a soccer star weren’t going to work out… and it came while watching Lionel Messi do what he does best.

The British star, who once seriously considered a future in the sport, admitted that seeing Messi’s level firsthand forced a reality check he couldn’t ignore. Rather than chase a dream he felt he couldn’t match, Idris made the difficult call to walk away.

That decision ultimately paved the way for his rise in Hollywood and, more recently, his growing ties to the world of Formula 1.

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Damson Idris LFW 2019 GQ Dinner
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Long before he found fame on screen, Idris had his sights set on becoming a professional soccer player. He was fully committed to the path, training and playing through his teenage years, until one moment changed everything.

Speaking with AP, the 34-year-old actor revealed that watching Lionel Messi in his early 20s forced a reality check he couldn’t ignore. Faced with the Argentine star’s extraordinary level, Idris said he quickly realized he wasn’t going to match it and made the call to walk away from the sport.

“I wanted to be a footballer. I played up until the age of 18, and then I remember seeing Lionel Messi play. He was around 23 years old. And I was like, ‘I’m never going to be as good as this guy,’” Idris said, via CentreGoals on X.

Fans Cast Doubt On Idris’ Messi Claim

Lionel Messi CLERMONT at the PRINCES PARK in Paris
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The comments section wasn’t exactly sympathetic to Idris’ reasoning, with several fans pushing back on the idea that watching Lionel Messi could be enough to abandon a lifelong dream.

“He actually wanted to play pro football, but this dumb reason can’t be why it didn’t happen,” one X user wrote, while another added, “Well, that’s a d*mb decision and we ain’t buying it.”

Others questioned the logic behind his takeaway, arguing that Messi’s greatness should have been a source of motivation rather than discouragement. “Isn’t Lionel Messi supposed to be the reason you’re inspired to play football and not the other way around?” one person asked.

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Damson Idris Named F1 Global Ambassador

Damson Idris on the red carpet
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Despite falling short of his football ambitions, Idris is carving out a growing presence in the world of Formula 1. The actor was recently named a global ambassador for the sport, further cementing his ties to F1 following his on-screen role.

Idris helped usher in the new Formula 1 season by appearing in the “All To Drive For” campaign alongside all 22 drivers, positioning him at the center of the sport’s global push to expand its audience.

The British star also took his connection to F1 to the big screen, starring opposite Brad Pitt in the film “F1: The Movie.”

According to Variety, the film grossed over $630 million at the box office, making it the most successful sports movie of all time.

F1 CEO Praises Idris’ Appointment

Formula 1 leadership has made it clear they see Idris as more than just a celebrity face for the sport.

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Speaking on the appointment, Stefano Domenicali, President and CEO of Formula One Group, welcomed Idris into the fold and pointed to his growing influence as a key reason behind the decision.

“I’m delighted to welcome Damson Idris officially to the Formula 1 family. Following his starring role in ‘F1: The Movie,’ which made history at the box office and helped bring our sport to new audiences, he is joining us as an official Global Brand Ambassador,” Domenicali said in a statement.

On his part, Idris said stepping into the role carries real meaning for him. While he already respected Formula One, the actor admitted that getting a behind-the-scenes look at the sport gave him an even deeper appreciation for what it takes to compete at the highest level.

Damson Idris Has Other Ventures Beyond F1

Damson Idris at FX's "Snowfall" premiere
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Away from the world of sport, Idris has been quietly building a diverse portfolio across business and entertainment.

The actor has stepped into design with his luxury jewelry house, Didris, a venture inspired by his mother and rooted in personal storytelling. At the same time, he continues to solidify his reputation on screen, with standout roles in projects like “Snowfall,” “Outside the Wire,” and “Farming.”

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Zach Galifianakis’ Panic Is Palpable in New Sneak Peek of AMC’s Most Outlandish Thriller [Exclusive]

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In the world of AMC‘s buzzy new drama The Audacity, Silicon Valley is dominated by big egos with massive wallets and even bigger dreams of not just changing the world, but building the future, ethics be damned. However, the tech bros, billionaires, and other eccentric characters are really just deeply flawed humans deep down, and sometimes, they let those outsized egos boil over. That’s where Sarah Goldberg‘s JoAnne Felder comes into play. An ethics-damaged psychiatrist, she primarily works with Hypergnosis CEO Duncan Park (Billy Magnussen), but has built a successful career out of treating the upper crust. Ahead of Episode 3, Collider can exclusively share a new sneak peek that sees her responding to a slight crisis involving Zach Galifianakis‘ Carl Bardolph while also juggling family drama.

The footage opens on JoAnne rolling up to Carl’s house, where it’s been “Zero days since I stabbed someone.” Specifically, he stabbed Duncan in the face with a fork, not enough to seriously hurt the manic tech CEO, but enough to send him into a panic. All Carl really cares about is himself and seeing all his work in therapy go right down the drain after he let his intrusive thoughts about shooting Duncan “right between his sniveling little wormy eyes. As JoAnne tries to calm him down and set up an appointment, she gets a call from her ex-husband and is forced to juggle two men who absolutely try her patience at once. Now, she has an accusatory Ethan (Patrick Gilmore) in her ear asking about their son, who’s apparently not at school despite her tracker saying so, and completely misunderstanding her metaphors as digs at Orson (Everett Blunck).

Though the focus is often on the Silicon Valley movers and shakers in the tech satire, JoAnne shoulders a lot throughout The Audacity. The struggling therapist is very good at her job, keeping people like Duncan and Carl in check and cleaning up their messes while still balancing her own troubles in life. Yet, in working with Duncan, she winds up caught in a scandal over the exploitation of personal data. Blackmail and insider trading keep her tied to the hip of the data mining CEO as he pursues profit and power and, perhaps, a bit of personal redemption while navigating the eccentric tech bubble. Lucy Punch, Simon Helberg, Rob Corddry, Meaghan Rath, Paul Adelstein, Thailey Roberge, Ava Marie Telek, and Randall Park also star.

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Collider Exclusive · Oscar Best Picture Quiz
Which Oscar Best Picture
Is Your Perfect Movie?

Parasite · Everything Everywhere · Oppenheimer · Birdman · No Country

Five Oscar Best Picture winners. Five completely different visions of what cinema can be — and what it can do to you. One of them is the film that was made for the way your mind works. Ten questions will figure out which one.

🪜Parasite

🌀Everything Everywhere

☢️Oppenheimer

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🐦Birdman

🪙No Country for Old Men

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01

What kind of film experience do you actually want?
The best movies don’t just entertain — they leave something behind.





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02

Which idea grabs you most in a film?
Great films are driven by a central obsession. What’s yours?





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03

How do you like your story told?
Form is content. The way a story is shaped changes what it means.





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04

What makes a truly great antagonist?
The opposition defines the protagonist. What kind of opposition fascinates you?





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05

What do you want from a film’s ending?
The final note is the one that lingers. What do you want it to sound like?





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06

Which setting pulls you in most?
Where a film takes place shapes everything — mood, stakes, what’s even possible.





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07

What cinematic craft impresses you most?
Every great film has a signature — a technical or artistic element that makes it unmistakable.





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08

What kind of main character do you root for?
The protagonist is the lens. Who you choose to follow says something about you.





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09

How do you feel about a film that takes its time?
Pace is a choice. Some films sprint; others let tension accumulate slowly, deliberately.





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10

What do you want to feel walking out of the cinema?
The best films leave a mark. What kind of mark do you want?





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The Academy Has Decided
Your Perfect Film Is…

Your answers have pointed to one Oscar Best Picture winner above all others. This is the film that was made for the way your mind works.

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Parasite

You are drawn to films that operate on multiple levels simultaneously — that begin in one genre and quietly, brilliantly migrate into another. Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite is a film about class, desire, and the architecture of inequality that manages to be darkly funny, deeply suspenseful, and genuinely shocking across a single extraordinary running time. Your instinct is for cinema that hides its true intentions until the moment it’s ready to reveal them. Parasite is exactly that — a film that rewards close attention and punishes assumptions, right up to its devastating final image.

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Everything Everywhere All at Once

You want it all — and this film gives you all of it. The Daniels’ Everything Everywhere All at Once is one of the most maximalist films ever made: action comedy, multiverse sci-fi, family drama, existential crisis, and a genuinely earned emotional core that sneaks up on you amid the chaos. You are someone who responds to ambition, who doesn’t want cinema to choose between being entertaining and being meaningful. This film refuses that choice entirely. It is overwhelming by design, and its overwhelming nature is precisely the point — because the feeling of being crushed by infinite possibility is exactly what it’s about.

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Oppenheimer

You are drawn to cinema on a grand scale — films that understand history not as a backdrop but as a force, and that place their characters inside that force and watch what happens. Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is a film about the terrifying gap between what we can do and what we should do, told with the full weight of one of the most consequential moments in human history behind it. You want your films to feel important without feeling self-important — to earn their ambition through sheer craft and the gravity of their subject. Oppenheimer does exactly that. It is enormous, complicated, and refuses easy comfort.

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Birdman

You are drawn to films that foreground their own construction — that make the how of the filmmaking part of the what it’s about. Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, shot to appear as a single continuous take, is cinema examining itself through the cracked mirror of a fading actor’s ego. You respond to formal daring, to the feeling that a film is doing something that probably shouldn’t be possible. Michael Keaton’s performance and Emmanuel Lubezki’s restless camera create something genuinely unlike anything else — a film that is simultaneously about creativity, relevance, self-destruction, and the impossibility of ever truly knowing if your work means anything at all.

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No Country for Old Men

You are drawn to cinema that trusts silence, that refuses to explain itself, and that treats dread as a form of meaning. The Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men is a film about the arrival of a new kind of evil — implacable, arbitrary, and utterly indifferent to the moral frameworks we use to make sense of the world. It is one of the most formally controlled films ever made, and its controlled restraint is what makes it so terrifying. You want your films to haunt you, not comfort you. You are not interested in resolution if resolution would be dishonest. No Country for Old Men is honest in a way that most cinema never dares to be.

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‘The Audacity’ Is Already Rewarding AMC’s Confidence

Created by Emmy-winning Succession writer Jonathan Glatzer, The Audacity marks AMC’s return to the prestige television realm after having previously delivered era-defining hits like Mad Men, Breaking Bad, and The Walking Dead. That history is hard to live up to, but so far, the blend of dark comedy and tech drama has critics and audiences tuning in. The series owns a Certified Fresh 78% Rotten Tomatoes score and even managed to dethrone the ever-popular Dark Winds on the platform’s streaming charts. Collider’s Shawn Van Horn particularly praised Magnussen’s performance as the perfectly punchable Park in his 7/10 review, writing, “The Audacity isn’t perfect, but the effort Magnussen gives nearly is.”

It’s a big win so far for AMC, which has been profoundly confident in what they have with its gritty Silicon Valley show. The series earned a rare Season 2 renewal ahead of its premiere, and the network went to great lengths to get its first episode in front of as many eyes as possible, including posting it entirely on TikTok in three-minute shorts. The inaugural run is far from over, but so far, everything’s coming up Duncan Park.

The Audacity Episode 3 airs this Sunday, April 26, at 9 p.m. ET/PT. AMC+ subscribers can also watch it now and see new episodes a full week early. Check out our exclusive sneak peek in the player above.


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Release Date

April 12, 2026

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AMC

Showrunner

Jonathan Glatzer

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Jimmy Kimmel roasts 'trembling drama queen' Donald Trump in scathing mock White House Correspondents' Dinner speech

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Nothing was off-limits, from the Epstein files to Trump’s AI-generated Jesus photo to Melania’s documentary.

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Andy Cohen Slams Leaked ‘Summer House’ Reunion Audio

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Andy Cohen and John Mayer.

Andy Cohen and the cast of “Summer House” filmed the season 10 reunion on April 23. Following the taping, he took to social media to call it one of the most intense reunions he’s hosted. However, hours later, audio leaked, featuring the cast discussing the Amanda Batlua, West Wilson, and Ciara Miller love triangle.

Andy Cohen and John Mayer.
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Cohen took to his Threads account on April 24 to wish his followers a “good morning.” However, one person replied, “Andy, stay offline, please. You won’t like the news.” After that, he responded, confirming he was aware of the “Summer House” leak and that he was pretty upset about it.

Andy Cohen, Summer House
Threads | Andy Cohen

The Bravo host said, “I don’t,” before noting that he was heading to have eye surgery and only just now reading about it.”

He continued, “People laid their souls out emotionally for ten hours yesterday, and it’s disgusting and illegal for someone to leak or distribute this. It’s disrespectful to the work and tears the cast put in yesterday.”

Cohen added, “Let the season play out. You will see it in due time.”

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The Leaked ‘Summer House’ Audio Is Over 2 Minutes Long

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As mentioned, the audio from the “Summer House” season 10 reunion was leaked mere hours after the taping. In it, some of the cast, including Batula, Wilson, Miller, what appears to be Kyle Cooke, and, of course, Cohen, are discussing the matter.

In it, Batula is asked, “Why are you doing this? You went from being married to being one of West’s side b-tches, that’s crazy.” Later, a person speaking, seemingly Wilson, explains the statement they released and why it seemed “rushed,” claiming it was due to “how insane it all became.”

A voice that we assume is Miller then says, “You got smoked out,” meaning the rumors about their relationship had become so insurmountable that they were forced to confess.

Later in the clip, Batula mentioned there having been a video, saying, “The last thing I wanted was for us to continue denying it and for this video of me taken in a very vulnerable intimate situation to be used as blackmail or to be released publicly.”

The leaked audio also features Miller discussing how Wilson and Batula did this, knowing the impact it would have. In response, Batula said, “You can’t help who you like and who you’re attracted to.”

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Fans Are Reacting To Andy Cohen’s Response

Andy Cohen at HeartRadio Jingle Ball
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Following the leaked “Summer House” audio and Cohen’s comments, fans of the show are also weighing in. One person joked, “Sorry, we listened to the leak, Andy. You should punish us by releasing the whole thing (unedited) today. We don’t deserve the edited version. Just drop the whole thing, now.”

Another Bravo watcher commented, “I need you to focus ok Andy? Do not edit that reunion and give us alllllll the footage. Please and thank you. Nothing worse than taping it and showing us 25% to leave the viewers confused, also give us a release date so I can take off from work.”

A different “Summer House” fan stated, “Good morning, Andy! Just heard the leaked clip from the reunion. Yikes!! You’re going to need a vacation away with the kids!”

Lastly, someone else said, “Good morning, Andy. Hope you’ve recovered from the SH reunion. We are ready for the uncut version to be released. We will also not watch The City if Amanda is still in it. We’d much rather your team edit her out of that versus editing the reunion. You have until 12:00 p.m. on Monday to answer our request. Thank You.”

Andy Cohen Called The Reunion Intense

Andy Cohen at 2024 New York City Ballet Fall Fashion Gala in NYC, USA
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In true Cohen fashion, he took to social media after leaving the “Summer House” reunion taping, giving fans a brief preview of what they can expect when it airs in several weeks. The clip was initially posted to Instagram Stories.

He said, “Well, I’m walking out of the ‘Summer House’ reunion. I’ve probably hosted – well, it’s over a hundred reunions, maybe a hundred and fifty – something like that. This is one of the most intense we’ve ever shot.”

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Cohen continued, “This was a lot. This was a lot. It was very intense, you guys. And every question was asked.” He later said he’s hosted at least 200 reunions.

Cohen Previously Offered His Thoughts On West Wilson, Amanda Batula & Ciara Miller

Amanda Batula on the red carpet.
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Wilson and Batula confirmed their relationship in March 2026 with a social media statement. According to PEOPLE, after the news broke, Cohen responded, saying he was as shocked as everyone else. The father of two said on his radio show, “I will say that I saw a lot of conspiracy theories online yesterday that I somehow knew about this.”

The host continued, “I did not. I really feel for Ciara [Miller]. I was surprised by the statement. I was surprised by what it said, and I was surprised by what it didn’t say. I have so many questions, and the reunion is coming up and, boy, do I have a lot of questions.”

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Emily Huff Alleges Jayda Cheaves Jumped Her Three Times

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Rihanna Seemingly Addresses Baby Rumors, Talks "Little Pouch"

Roommates, the internet is back in full detective mode after tension between two familiar social media personalities. It looks like drama between Emily Huff and Jayda Cheaves has spilled beyond subtweets and into public callouts. Now, everyone is asking what really went down behind the scenes.

RELATED: Lemons Into Lemonade! Jayda Cheaves Jokes About Being The Birthday “Piñata” Following Viral Club Altercation (WATCH)

Emily Huff Accuses Jayda Cheaves In Online Callout

What began as reflection content quickly turned into accusations when Emily Huff reacted to a video of Jayda Cheaves speaking about her Lent journey and bringing up past alleged conflicts. Emily wrote:

“Idk what ‘God’ she worships but not MY GOD… because huh? Sooo…God also told her it was okay to jump me 3 times? Oh ok…”

When pressed by a confused fan, Emily doubled down, even referencing Jayda’s “BD” being present during the alleged incidents, adding, “lol that’s what I’m trying to tell you. Her BD too, smh the truth, always prevails though.”

Jayda Cheaves has one child with rapper Lil Baby. He has not publicly responded to Emily’s comments and neither has Jayda.

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Rumored Nightclub Fight Fuels Friendship Fallout Speculation

The situation has only added fuel to rumors of a falling out between the former friends, especially after reports surfaced of a physical altercation involving Jayda Cheaves and Emily Huff at an Atlanta nightclub. The alleged incident reportedly unfolded after both women attended a Mariah the Scientist concert, with friends from both sides also getting involved. Footage circulating online even shows Dess Dior stepping in to support Jayda during the chaos, though it remains unclear whether police responded or whether anyone filed official reports.

Meanwhile, Jayda’s recent video mentioning how Lentmentally prepared” her for certain situations and her comments about not “manipulating” her perspective have only left fans speculating about whether she was indirectly addressing the drama.

Comment Section Divided Over Jayda And Emily Huff Incident

Folks quickly flooded The Shade Room’s Instagram comment section, weighing in heavily on the escalating drama between Jayda Cheaves and Emily Huff. Some users suggested Jayda gives off “fake nice girl” energy. Meanwhile, others take a more heated stance, joking that Emily could get “jumped a 4th time” if tensions continue. At the same time, a portion of commenters tried to stay neutral, insisting both women are “speaking facts” in their own way. And you already know, many are refusing to pick sides in the ongoing back-and-forth.

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One Instagram user @so.obnoxious__ said, “I would never tell the internet i was jumped 3xs by the same person 😭😭😭😭😭😭”

This Instagram user @cdotmelo commented, “Girl three times?!!! I’d press charges so fast lmao 😂”

And, Instagram user @thekingkianna claimed, “Jayda, YOU be tryna rewrite reality. 😂”

Meanwhile, Instagram user @amyacianna added, “yall must forgot all the shit emily was talking, she started that unprovoked.. whooopty dooooo start shutting up

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While Instagram user @wynterbands shared, “Yup speaking facts 💯”

Lastly, Instagram user @jass_stoned wrote “Emily should press charges 🤷🏽‍♀️”

RELATED: Don’t Play With Her! Jayda Cheaves Responds To Shady Comments Following Her Viral Physical Altercation In Club

What Do You Think Roomies?

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Anna Wintour visited “Devil Wears Prada 2” set, filmed cut scene: 'Jumped her cue!'

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Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, and director David Frankel tell EW what it was like having the “Vogue” mastermind on set for a day.

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Jack Nicholson's daughter posts rare recent photo of actor with Joni Mitchell on his 89th birthday

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Lorraine Nicholson shared the image on social media, along with a throwback photo of the three-time Oscar winner.

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