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The U-turn coincides with a surge in new coronavirus cases in Ontario and a social media backlash.

The Toronto Film Festival has changed its controversial policy on face masks in its theaters on the eve of its virtual 2020 edition.

TIFF will now require fest-goers to wear face coverings during all in-person movie viewing at its Bell Lightbox multiplex. Fest organizers cited a surge in new COVID-19 cases in Ontario for the U-turn on an earlier mask-optional policy that allowed fest-goers to decide if they wear a face covering "when seated in-cinema."

The change of tack also follows The Hollywood Reporter on Sept. 8 reporting on TIFF's mask optional policy for movie screenings, which had raised concerns, including on social media, for an increase in COVID-19 infections in the city.

"...Due to recent public health reports indicating that there has been an increase in COVID cases in the GTA, we have made the decision that for the safety, comfort and peace-of-mind of our audiences, TIFF Bell Lightbox will close its concession stands, thereby eliminating a point of contact for patrons," the festival said in a statement on Tuesday night.

"As no food or beverage is being consumed, TIFF will require that audience members’ masks remain in place for the entirety of the time they are in TIFF Bell Lightbox," TIFF added.

The festival's reversal brings Toronto into line with the Venice Film Festival and additionally with major U.S. cinema chains that have mandated face masks during movie screenings, except when eating and sipping drinks, to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.

And TIFF is also conforming with Toronto City bylaws that has required the wearing of a face mask or covering in indoor public space.

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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North America Makes Slow Production Recovery

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Filming in North America can be a tricky proposition — with no federal COVID guidelines, states, counties and local municipalities are charged with setting their own rules for navigating the pandemic. And while film commissions report that crews are ready to get back to work, other factors including coronavirus-testing capacity, health and safety guidelines and insurance needs have meant a cautious restart.

That said, in production hot spot Georgia, mega-multihyphenate Tyler Perry (pictured) seems to have figured it all out. During the past month and a half, he completed filming BET series “Sistas,” and is currently shooting “The Oval.” All without a case of COVID.

“I made sure that the cast and crew and everybody wore their masks when they weren’t on set because I do know for a fact that masks help stop the spread — scientifically, I know that,” Perry told Variety on Aug. 5. “And everybody adhered to that, even though we were all testing negative. I just didn’t want someone to be incubating with [COVID-19] for three to 12 days, and we not know it.”

New York has been given the OK to go forward with filming but again, productions are moving carefully, and late September looks more promising. Although production is slow, Steiner Studios is moving ahead with a second, 500,000-sq.-ft. facility in the Sunset Park area of Brooklyn.

California is also back in business and in August announced the latest round of projects to tap into the state’s incentives plan including Netflix’s big-budget “Gray Man” starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans. TV series are starting to shoot around Southern California, where “SWAT” recently shot on location in Santa Clarita under strict safety protocols.

COVID hit Louisiana hard but in late August, the state announced safety guidelines and productions are expected to resume filming this month.

Canada is once again hosting shoots albeit with travel restrictions, and each provice has a detailed set of protocols. Vancouver is currently hosting production shoots and foreign workers with a work visa are allowed entry into the country, although a 14-day self-quarantine is required before they hit the set.

For more information:

Canada

The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit (CPTC) provides eligible productions with a fully refundable tax credit, available at a rate of 25% of the qualified labor expenditure.

Web: canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/funding/cavco-tax-credits/film-video-production-services

Ontario: ontariocreates.ca/tax-incentives/ofttc

British Columbia: gov.bc.ca/gov

California

California’s $1.55 billion Film & Television Tax Credit Program 3.0 runs for five years, with a sunset date of June 30, 2025, and each fiscal year, from July 1 to June 30, the $330 million funding is categorized in TV projects, relocating TV, indie features and non-indie features.

Web: film.ca.gov

Georgia

Tax credits of up to 30% for film, television, music videos, commercials, interactive games and animation. The Entertainment Industry Investment Act provides a 20% tax credit for $500,000 or more spent on production and post-production in Georgia, either in a single production or on multiple projects. The state also grants an additional 10% tax credit if the finished project includes a promotional logo provided by the state.

Web: georgia.org/industries/film-entertainment

Louisiana

Productions can get up to a 40% tax credit on total qualified in-state production expenditures, including resident and non-resident labor. Tax credits may be transferred back to the state for 90% of face value (requires a 2% transfer fee).

Web: louisianaentertainment.gov

New York

New York boasts a 30% tax credit on qualified costs incurred in in-state and a post-production tax credit that provides 30% savings on qualified post-production expenses, for productions that do their post-production in New York City, but are not eligible for the film production tax credit program.

 

Web: esd.ny.gov

 

Article by: Carole Horst for Variety.

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The Oscars made a historic move when they announced their new inclusion requirements for best picture eligibility. For some, this was a welcomed change from the Academy, while others found it to be intrusive to the sanctity of movies and the stories that people want to tell.

For people like me, it was the single bravest act I’ve witnessed from an awards body that I’ve loved my entire life. As a Latino/Black man from an inner-city community, who has often felt like he didn’t belong in this very arena, it was by far the most appreciated gesture. It encapsulated the example of the change that people in the street have been asking for since the murder of George Floyd.

I’m not comparing the murder of an innocent man to a few actors getting a part in a movie; I’m referring to those with the capacity to undo the wrongs, to actually undo them. It’s about the systemic and alienating structure that is built, not “broken.” To say it’s “broken” is to say that it was initially constructed correctly, inclusively. It was not. The system must be reformed, molded and adjusted to a world that is drastically more diverse.

There are many filmmakers, producers and studio executives that are not pleased with the announcement. Actress Kirstie Alley shared on Twitter, “this is a disgrace to artists everywhere…can you imagine telling Picasso what had to be in his f—ing paintings.”

The Academy isn’t telling Picasso what to put in his paintings. Still, if he wants to submit his artwork for an Oscar, he’s got to use more vibrant colors or invite a local young painter to watch his process so that perhaps one day when Picasso is dead and gone, this young observer — who’s been watching him for all these years — can grab his own canvas and draw a picture.

We have many masters in our industry, from Steven Spielberg to Quentin Tarantino to Roger Deakins. These icons won’t live forever. It is their responsibility to take their knowledge and bestow it to the next generation. This doesn’t mean they invite the nephew of the studio head, who already has ample opportunity to follow him on set. It’s time for Hollywood to step outside of itself and look beyond the Sherman Oaks, Brentwood and Beverly Hills zip codes for their next proteges.

The arts are the most undervalued and underfunded items in our education system. When budgets are cut in schools, the arts are first on the chopping block. Here’s a gentle reminder for Hollywood. There are places all over this country where a teenager has never seen a theater stage before or has no idea what a cinematographer is or does. You have been afforded one of the most unusual professions that exist. You express your deepest, most personal feelings on the world and share that with millions. The Academy, journalists, artists and countless others are merely asking you to pay it forward. Reach out, connect and be open to a different interpretation of what your films can be and what your sets can look like.

Imagine Martin Scorsese’s “The Departed,” looking exactly the same. No change in cast or swaps of technical artists. It’s very probable that under the new rules, Scorsese and Warner Bros. won’t qualify under standards A and B, regarding on-screen representation and creative leadership. Your only chance now is the road provided by C and D standards.

If you’re Warner Bros., one of the largest, most profitable studios in the world, you must create a paid apprenticeship and internship opportunity for women, POC, LGBTQ+ and people with disabilities. Along with that, you’re also training and providing potential skills to new crew members. Do you have the younger versions of Chloé Zhao, Bradford Young, Joi McMillon and Mica Levi in your midst, partaking in your process?

I just painted a picture for you, and “The Departed” is now eligible for best picture under this model. You didn’t change a single thing about the film. It still wins the Oscar, and you now have a pipeline of new innovative talent that is going to make you a lot more successful.

The Oscars are not a requirement to make art. Art is a requirement for the Oscars. There are still 22 out of 23 categories where you are eligible without having to change anything. I’m unsure if it fits under this model, but the headlines at the end of the evening on Feb. 29, 2004, would have been very interesting if they read “‘The Return of the King’ Goes 10 for 10 and Not Best Picture.” My instinct says you want to be on the right side of history on this one.

The initial and natural go-to analysis of the Academy’s announcement was going to be, “How many films would have met the criteria in the past 92 years?” In the last 20 years, and without actively going through financial documents, the initial estimate seems to be probably no film would have been excluded by these new standards. There are some that can surely be questioned such as “The Departed,” “The King’s Speech” and “The Artist.” You can also investigate some closer calls like “A Beautiful Mind,” “Million Dollar Baby,” “No Country for Old Men” and “Spotlight,” but this looks to not change the makeup of the last 20 years.

One potential issue with the Academy’s new rules is it leaves itself open for “loopholes.”

“Spotlight” is a close call because does distributor Open Road Films, when they submit their paperwork to the Academy, say, “Spotlight is an LGBTQ+ film?” It deals with a marginalized group, with themes that surround and directly talk about homosexuality. Would I classify “Spotlight” as an LGBTQ+ film? I would not, but Open Road could, and in a world where art is subjective, who’s to say it is not? As we struggle to have the Academy understand the correct definitions of lead and supporting performances (i.e., Rooney Mara vs. Cate Blanchett in “Carol”), this seems like something that leaves the door open for scrutiny and even more members airing their grievances.

It will be interesting to see how studios decide to pivot their financial models to support this diversity initiative, which isn’t required until 2024. The hard truth is, there may be a lot of studios that can’t financially support a model such as this. Smaller, independent studios that struggle to get their films seen by the general public, and compete in the awards season machine against more affluent brands, may not have the capital to expand their headcounts or support mentorships. This may result in fewer films submitted for the Oscars because they’ll need to be more strategic in their festival purchases throughout the year.

Here’s a thought to leave for the “grumpy” members who are vocally not pleased with this news. 2020 is a standard practice year. There are a minimum of 33 women directors that are in the race and have created films that should be on your radar and worth your consideration. How about we revisit this conversation on March 15, 2021, the day the Oscar nominations are announced? I am currently predicting and believe the Academy has an opportunity to nominate two women in best director, for the first time in the 92-year history: Regina King (“One Night in Miami”) and Zhao (“Nomadland”). Let’s see, without having your hands forced, if you can think outside the box.

Until then, history has its eyes on you.

 

Articles by: Clayton Davis for Variety.

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Jessie Buckley and Jesse Plemons play a couple on a trip to some very odd places in Charlie Kaufman’s latest film.

When I accepted the assignment to review Charlie Kaufman’s new movie, “I’m Thinking of Ending Things,” I vowed that I would avoid the recursive, self-conscious, Kaufmanesque flourishes that afflict so much writing about this screenwriter and filmmaker. What follows is the record of my abject failure to live up to that promise.

In my defense: He made me do it. Exercising professional due diligence — in other words, seizing an opportunity to procrastinate on deadline — I acquired a copy of “Antkind,” Kaufman’s recently published novel, only to discover that I’m a minor character in it. A few hundred pages after faintly praising me as “a nice enough fellow and I’m sure a very smart guy for a hack,” the book’s narrator (a quondam critic with nothing nice to say about Charlie Kaufman) challenges me to a barroom argument about cinema. I barely get a word in edgewise, and in the wake of his “vanquishment of A.O. Scott,” my fictional nemesis makes a bold prediction: “Never will he write again. Of that I am certain.”

I would like to think I am right this minute proving him wrong, but I’m not so sure. What is certain is that Kaufman (whom I’ve met a couple of times at film festivals) is living in my head, as I seem to be living in his. And so, whether I like it or not — and to be honest, I don’t really mind — I find myself ensnared in a low-key version of one of his favorite predicaments.

At least since “Being John Malkovich,” in which various schemers, dreamers and paying customers literally inhabit the consciousness of Malkovich, Kaufman has explored the philosophical vertigo and emotional upset caused by the inconvenient fact that other people exist. Again and again, his movies ask: Are we even real to one another, or does each of us project inner desires and anxieties outward, turning the faces and feelings of lovers, colleagues and family members into mirrors of our own narcissism?

Often — notably in “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” in “Anomalisa” and now in “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” — that question arises in, and threatens to spoil, a heterosexual romance. Men, in particular, have a habit of confusing the objects of their fantasies with the real women in front of them. This can be funny, creepy, sad, toxic or sweet, sometimes all at once.

In “I’m Thinking of Ending Things,” the effects arrive before our understanding of their causes. We know what we’re feeling, but we don’t know why. As far as we can guess, we are in the head of a woman named Lucy (Jessie Buckley), who is taking a car trip with her boyfriend, Jake (Jesse Plemons). “You can’t fake a thought,” Lucy muses to herself, and one of her thoughts is summed up in the movie’s title. She and Jake haven’t been dating that long, and she doesn’t see much of a future for them. Does Jake somehow know what she’s thinking? He startles her from time to time by seeming to read her mind, which seems to keep changing.

It’s not the only thing that does. As the couple makes their way through a snowstorm toward the farm where Jake’s parents live, little inconsistencies pop up, mostly about Lucy’s interests and background. One minute, she says she has no interest in poetry and the next she is reciting a heart-rending lyric she claims to have written herself. She is variously said to be studying physics, or painting, or gerontology. Her peacoat is pink, until it is blue. Her name might not even be Lucy.

Once she and Jake are out of the car, the weirdness accelerates. Jake’s mother and father (Toni Collette and David Thewlis) grow older and younger each time they leave the room. Their awkward, high-strung table talk is interrupted from time to time by scenes of an old, lonely school custodian making his rounds, a character whose connection to Jake and his family is implied but not spelled out.

Until the end, that is, but even then maybe not quite. “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” is based on a novel by the Canadian writer Iain Reid, a spare and elusive story that provides Kaufman with a stable enough trellis for his own florid preoccupations. The film is suspenseful because it generates uncertainty about its own premises, and because the movements of the camera, the strangeness of Molly Hughes’s production design and the tremors of Jay Wadley’s musical score guide the viewer toward dread. Lucy is often puzzled, sometimes curious, but maybe not as afraid as she should be. Unless, that is, her perspective isn’t one we should trust. Maybe she is faking her thoughts.

Or at least borrowing them. Kaufman’s dialogue is larded with passages that sound like quotations, only a few of them attributed. Jake helpfully — or pompously — informs Lucy when he’s quoting Oscar Wilde or David Foster Wallace. But at other moments, you may find yourself tempted to pause the movie (which is streaming on Netflix) so you can Google what you just heard, thus discovering (for example) that Lucy’s lengthy, wised-up critique of John Cassavetes’s “A Woman Under the Influence” is lifted verbatim from Pauline Kael’s review of that movie. A visual clue of sorts has been provided by the appearance in an earlier scene of a copy of Kael’s collection “For Keeps.” The weird thing is that the “Woman Under the Influence” review doesn’t appear in the book.

An annotated version of “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” might be nice to have, though it might also undermine the sense of knowingness that is both one of the film’s minor pleasures and one of its major provocations. Jake, who is defensive about David Foster Wallace and oblivious to the rapeyness of the song “Baby It’s Cold Outside,” is a guy with a clear need to know, explain and control things.

He’s proud of how smart he is, though also a little ashamed that he won a medal in school for “diligence” rather than “acumen.” (His mother couldn’t be prouder.) When Lucy makes an offhand reference to Mussolini making the trains run on time, Jake is quick to point out that improvements in Italian rail service actually predated the fascist dictatorship. His behavior toward her — his moodiness, his evasive answers to her questions, his passive-aggressive efforts to shut her down — is increasingly alarming, even as it is also the most consistently realistic aspect of the film.

Much of the second half takes place against the backdrop of a howling nighttime blizzard, an almost too-perfect metaphor. “Anomalisa” partly camouflaged its melancholy cynicism in the absurdist whimsy of R-rated stop-motion animation. “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” has some of its own flights of inventiveness and fantasy — a ballet sequence, a satirical poke at Robert Zemeckis, a couple of songs from “Oklahoma,” a curious homage to “A Beautiful Mind”— but they always land in the same dark and lonely place.

That place is at once vividly cinematic — this is Kaufman’s most assured and daring work so far as a director — and deeply suspicious of the power of movies to infect our minds with meretricious and misleading ideas. Both Jake and Lucy at times share this suspicion, and both of them can be seen as victims of the art form that has summoned them into being. Plemons and especially Buckley play this somewhat abstract conundrum for real existential stakes, either tricking you into caring about them or sincerely expressing the need to be cared about.

I was sometimes puzzled and sometimes annoyed by their story, and by the other possible stories in which they are embedded, but I was also moved. More evidence that I’m a hack, for sure, but who am I to argue?

 

Article by: A.O. Scott for the New York Times.

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Gary Oldman, Amanda Seyfried and Lily Collins are featured in first look images of David Fincher's 1930s drama.

First look images from Mank, David Fincher's biopic of Citizen Kane co-writer Herman Mankiewicz, were released Saturday — subsequently the 79th anniversary of "Citizen Kane Day."

Mank, the nickname for Mankiewicz, will show a 1930s Hollywood re-evaluated through the eyes of the scathing social critic and alcoholic screenwriter as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane for Orson Welles.

Gary Oldman will portray Mankiewicz, who alongside collaborating with Welles, had an outsized influence in the Golden Age of Hollywood. Amanda Seyfried is also set to star in the film as Marion Davies. Lily Collins will star as Rita Alexander in the film and Charles Dance will portray William Randolph Hearst.

Mank also stars Tom Burke, Joseph Cross, Monika Gossmann, Arliss Howard, Jamie McShane, Tuppence Middleton, Toby Leonard Moore, Tom Pelphrey, and Sam Troughton.

The journey to get Mank in front of cameras has been a 20-plus-year ordeal for Fincher, who initially wanted to tackle the story after making his 1997 feature The Game. The director’s father, Jack Fincher, also a newspaper man, wrote the script. Cean Chaffin, Fincher’s longtime cohort who has worked on the filmmaker’s movies since The Game, is producing. Also producing is Doug Urbanski, who was nominated for an Oscar for 2017's Darkest Hour.

Mank will be Fincher’s first movie since 2014’s Gone Girl. There is no official release date for the film, but it is set to hit Netflix this fall.

View more first look images below.

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Article by: Sharareh Drury for the Hollywood Reporter.

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A wave of coordinated social media activity in several Asian countries over the weekend urged for filmgoers to skip the movie because of past controversial comments made by its star Liu Yifei.

As Disney's mega-budget live-action remake of Mulan prepares to roll out in theaters in select markets across Asia, pro-democracy activists in several countries in the region are calling on audiences to steer clear of the movie via the growing #BoycottMulan movement.

A wave of coordinated social media activity in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Thailand over the weekend urged for filmgoers to skip the movie because of past comments made by its star, actress Liu Yifei, supporting Hong Kong's police force.

Among the most prominent voices calling for the boycott is Hong Kong activist leader Joshua Wong. "Because Disney kowtows to Beijing, and because Liu Yifei openly and proudly endorses police brutality in Hong Kong, I urge everyone who believes in human rights to #BoycottMulan," he wrote Friday on Twitter.

He added that Liu was "betraying" the values that Hollywood "purports to champion."

Controversy has dogged Mulan since the heat of Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests last summer, when Liu, a Chinese American, took to Chinese social media service Weibo to share an image, originally released by the state-backed People's Daily, which read: "I support Hong Kong's police, you can beat me up now." In English, she added: "What a shame for Hong Kong."

Her remarks prompted an instant backlash from the city's pro-democracy activists, who have repeatedly accused local police of brutality, unlawful arrests and even torture.

Liu was circumspect when addressing the protests and her past comments in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter earlier this year. "I think it's obviously a very complicated situation, and I'm not an expert. I just really hope this gets resolved soon ... I think it's just a very sensitive situation."

Because of the tiny scale of Hong Kong's movie box office relative to the mainland Chinese market — the city has a population of just 11 million compared to 1.3 billion in China — activists have repeatedly called on pro-democracy supporters from afar to get behind the #BoycottMulan hashtag. Since Friday, they appear to have found that backing among Thailand and Taiwan's endemic activist communities, which have recently sought common ground under the #MilkTeaAlliance hashtag, a reference to the sweet drink that is popular across Southern China and Southeast Asia.

The protestors have deployed the hashtag to symbolize their shared pro-democratic mission and concerns over China's growing influence over the region. In recent weeks, Thailand has been roiled by street protests as thousands of young people call for reforms of the country's monarchy.

In July, a group of student protestors in Seoul, South Korea staged another small-scale protest against Mulan, arguing that the film and its star had come to symbolize support for political violence rather than the progressive values of the movie's themes.

Mulan, which cost $200 million to make before marketing, released exclusively over Disney+ in the U.S. over the weekend, but it is scheduled to hit the big screen in various Asian markets on Friday. Although the boycott campaign could take a bite out of earnings in some markets, many analysts expect the film to do gangbusters business in mainland China. The film is based on a beloved Chinese legend and was shot in China and New Zealand. It also stars, alongside relative newcomer Liu, a slew of Chinese cinema icons, including Gong Li, Jet Li and Donnie Yen.

Some analysts believe that blockbuster earnings in China are far less certain, however. Despite its Chinese provenance and cast, the film was shot in English, and later dubbed into Mandarin, which could be awkward for local viewers. Grandly staged Chinese period dramas of Mulan's kind also haven't been in fashion for years in Chinese cinema, where the market has shifted towards more international genres like sci-fi or the modern war epic.

 

Article by: Patrick Brzeski for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The fest's decision not to require face coverings in theaters is raising concerns about the safety of in-person viewings.

While the Venice film fest and major U.S. cinema chains have mandated face masks during movie screenings to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, the Toronto International Film Festival — which is offering both in-person and virtual screenings — has adopted a more relaxed stance that makes masking up compulsory in its TIFF Bell Lightbox venue, but not "when seated in-cinema."

In a statement to THR, Toronto organizers insist they’re strictly following the advice of public health experts, which limits the Bell Lightbox venue to 50 socially distanced patrons per screen, among other safety precautions (the five Lightbox theaters can collectively seat more than 1,200 moviegoers).

Mandates from the Toronto Public Health office can be opaque. Masks are mandatory "in indoor public spaces" and filmgoers must wear them everywhere in the theater, but can remove them when in their seats. At TIFF’s screenings at outdoor venues, including drive-ins, wearing a mask is optional, "though it’s recommended when physical distancing cannot be maintained," according to Toronto Public Health spokesperson Dr. Vinita Dubey.

The widely held opinion is that Canada’s response to the novel coronavirus pandemic has been effective, but that perception may not match the north-of-the-border reality. Pollsters say many Canadians shrugged off coronavirus fears and were reluctant to wear masks in public until July, when the government required them to do so in response to rising infection rates. "Canadians in larger cities were generally pretty lax about mask-wearing until laws were put in place," says Graeme Bruce, a business data journalist with British polling firm YouGov.

Infectious disease experts warn that beyond TIFF screenings, the social nature of the fest could increase the risks of COVID-19 transmission. "The reason people want to go is for interaction. [So] you have tension already," says Thomas Tenkate, associate professor of occupational and public health at Ryerson University in Toronto.

For Canadian actress Ramona Pringle, a TIFF regular who is also director of Ryerson University’s Transmedia Zone, the mixed messaging on face masks is a cause for concern. "Unfortunately, I fear we’ve tumbled into this situation where you could have one of those superspreader events," says Pringle, "because people are in a confined space, which very likely could be a movie theater."

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Variety is marshaling its global resources to launch digital and print franchises devoted to tracking the restart of content production around the world amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Sept. 9, Variety will publish its largest-ever special report on international filming locations, “Location Update: The Big Restart,” produced in collaboration with the Association of Film Commissioners International. The 18-page section covers the latest updates for major territories on the status of production rebates, tax incentives, film commissions, facilities, crew availability and other infrastructure including vfx and post-production services. The report will also be made available to industry professionals as a free e-book.

“Throughout this difficult year, Variety‘s team of global entertainment experts have kept the international production community informed and connected. ‘Location Update: The Big Restart’ is a critical tool in bringing the world’s entertainment pros together to begin their return to safe, responsible and financially savvy content production,” said Steven Gaydos, Variety’s executive VP of global content and executive editor.

Launched in conjunction with “Big Restart,” Variety’s weekly newsletter Production Restart offers a curated selection of stories and data from Variety’s global reporting team about how and where the TV and film industries are going back to work.

The free newsletter features charts detailing start dates, shooting locations and cast and crew members for high-profile projects, powered by the Variety Insight production industry database. Production Restart is published on Thursdays and can be accessed by signing up here. Kate Aurthur, Variety editor-at-large, is overseeing editorial content for the newsletter.

“Production Restart extends our comprehensive business coverage and is a great addition to Variety’s new and innovative product suite designed to address a rapidly evolving industry dynamic,” said Michelle Sobrino-Stearns, group publisher and chief revenue officer of Variety.

 

Article by: Variety Staff for Variety.

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You know what they say about WarnerMedia’s HBO: It’s not TV. In a few months, however, its streaming-video edition will start to run TV commercials.

In a marketing survey sent to consumers last week, WarnerMedia explained that an ad-supported version of its HBO Max streaming service could potentially carry just two to four minutes of advertising per viewing hour, a figure that would be less than the five minutes per hour that runs on NBCUniversal’s Peacock and the nine minutes per hour often utilized on Disney’s Hulu. And while commercials are not likely to appear in any original HBO programs, or the most recent movies playing on HBO, the survey suggests ads could surface alongside content from WarnerMedia’s other TV networks;  in original series that launch on HBO Max only; and in older films, which currently include classics shown commercial-free on the company’s Turner Classic Movies cable network.

WarnerMedia declined to make executives available for comment, and has yet to unveil firm plans for the ad-supported version of HBO Max, which is expected to debut next year. Subscribers who opt for an HBO Max “with ads” would pay a lower rate, the survey suggests, and the concept could allow consumers to watch HBO shows commercial-free for a price that is less than what they currently pay for the offering. These ideas are not guaranteed to be part of the eventual concept, and the company could specify different plans at a later date.

The survey’s details point to some of the somersaults AT&T must turn in order to bring advertising dollars to its streaming hub. Madison Avenue is eager to place money in Hollywood’s streaming wars, conscious that more consumers are making streaming part of their overall media diet. But WarnerMedia may not be immediately able to monetize some of HBO Max’s most popular programs with commercials.

HBO has firm contracts with both the cable and satellite operators that distribute its programming and many of the studios that supply it to keep its shows commercial-free for a predetermined “window” of time, according to three executives with knowledge of such agreements. That means advertisers on HBO Max will be barred from aligning themselves for the time being with popular series such as “Succession,” “Last Week Tonight With John Oliver” or “Lovecraft Country,” and will instead have to be content with HBO Max originals like “Love Life” or the sitcom “Friends.”

Advertiser interest in the possibility of aligning ads with HBO programs has been robust enough that WarnerMedia recently called several media buyers to reiterate that those shows will not be open for advertising when the ad-supported version of HBO Max debuts, according to one buying executive. Despite the guidance, media buyers continue to hope their clients will eventually gain access to HBO material.  One buying executive envisions WarnerMedia working in months to come to make older seasons of HBO programs available for commercials, as well as so-called “library content,” or older series. This concept, the buyer suggests, could keep current seasons of HBO series ad-free, while allowing the company to run commercials in programming no longer in a first-run window on the service.

Ads on HBO Max “would mostly be standard video commercials (like you would see on streaming services like Hulu) before, during and/or after shows and movies,” the marketing survey says, “along with some more innovative, interactive, and/or less disruptive types of ads.” Commercials will not appear “in around half of the movies on HBO Max, including the most recent/popular movies.”

AT&T has good reason to try and capture streaming-video ad dollars. Marketers are beginning to earmark greater levels of spending on venues like VIacomCBS’ Pluto, NBCUniveral’s Peacock and Walt Disney’s Hulu. In this year’s second quarter, spending on ad-supported streaming hubs  – much of it only a fraction of what gets placed on the TV networks – increased, according to the research firm MoffettNathanson. Ad spending on  Pluto rose 60%, while advertising outlays at Roku rose 31.2% and spiked 12.2% at Hulu. Ad-supported streaming hubs “benefited from heightened usage and a mix shift in advertising budgets,” noted analyst Michael Nathanson in a late-August research note.

Meanwhile, he noted, ad spending at WarnerMedia’s Turner networks fell  45% in the same period,

While the HBO series remain off limits, WarnerMedia may grant advertisers access to a previously untouched frontier. HBO Max features a hub of films curated from the company’s Turner Classic Movies outlet, which has never run commercials.

Allowing access to some of Hollywood’s finest films –  Arthur Penn’s “Bonnie and Clyde” and Robert Altman’s “The Player” are among the selections that have been amde available on HBO Max – could help offset business declines at TCM. Subscribers to the cable network are projected to fall 13.4% to 60.1 million by the end of 2020, according to Kagan, a market-research firm that is part of S&P Global Market Intelligence, compared with 69.4 million last year. Meanwhile, cash flow at the network is seen tumbling nearly 15.9% to $138 million in 2020, according to Kagan, compared with $164 million in 2019.

Keeping classic films ad free is tough. TCM’s one-time main competitor, American Movie Classics, started placing commercial “intermissions” in the films it showed in 2001. The network, now known as AMC and operated by AMC Networks, needed to generate more revenue as it sought to upgrade its programming lineup to include more recent films. People who want to watch TCM’s films without interruption would have to pay for the ad-free HBO Max, or, more simply, keep watching the movies on cable.

 

Article by: Brian Steinberg for Variety.

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Luca Guadagnino, who is helming the latest remake of Scarface, is determined to make a hard R-rated movie that will shock audiences.

Luca Guadagnino, who is helming the latest remake of Scarface, is determined to make a hard R-rated movie that will shock audiences. The 1982 version, directed by Brian DePalma, starred Al Pacino as Tony Montana, a Cuban immigrant who quickly becomes the most powerful criminal in Miami. Scarface also starred Michelle Pfeiffer in a star-making turn as Montana's girlfriend turned reluctant trophy wife. Written by Oliver Stone, it was a blood-soaked, violent and shocking remake of the 1932 Howard Hawks film, and caused controversy upon its release.

Despite this, the movie was a box office success and has since become a pop-culture staple. It's been parodied in countless movies, music videos, and even video games like Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, which features a climactic battle that copies the movie's iconic final scene almost exactly. A remake, written by Joel and Ethan Coen, is currently in development, to be helmed by Luca Guadagnino. The Italian director is best known for his adaptation of Call Me By Your Name and the 2018 remake of classic horror Suspiria.

Speaking to Collider, Guadagnino has revealed that he is intent on making the remake as shocking as DePalma's 1982 version was upon release. Calling the character of Tony Montana an "archetype," Guadagnino says that evil characters like him are a "symptom" of the immigrant's need to achieve the American Dream. The director adds that his film will be a hard R-rated movie and that the script, which he calls great, is one that will lead to a film that is "shocking."

The truth is that I’m interested in the Tony Montana character. He’s a symptom of the American Dream. And I think that these movies are made for their times. My own Scarface will arrive 40 years after the previous one. I think the important thing about these movies is not the fact that they’re lush and fundamental like Brian De Palma’s one. The important thing is knowing that Tony Montana is an archetypal character. The important things are A. It has to be well done, the script has to be great – and it is. B. Our Tony Montana has to be current. I don’t want to imitate anything. C. This movie has to be shocking. I told you about Suspiria and I kept the promise to you then. I think I will surprise you with this movie too. Brian De Palma’s movie was Rated R, so I want a big R on my movie too.

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The Italian director seems to love courting controversy with his movies and certainly seems suited to directing Scarface. Just how shocking the film will be (and why) will have to be seen when the long-in-development movie is eventually released. But given that the Coen brothers, who are not known for shying away from realistic depictions of violence in their movies, are writing the script, fans can expect this remake not to hold back. 

Whether it will be able to live up to comparisons with the 1983 films is less clear. After launching to controversy, DePalma's Scarface has been immortalized thanks, in part, to various rap star's love of its tale that seems to glorify doing anything to achieve the American Dream. As a result, it's become a sort of movie legend, something larger than itself, and as such, it is held up by many fans as perfect, despite its faults. Whether this version will be able to create as much regard remains to be seen.

 

Article by: Daniel Gillespie for ScreenRant.

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UPDATED: Robert Pattinson has tested positive for coronavirus, prompting “The Batman” to suspend filming in the United Kingdom days after it went back into production, according to a source familiar with the situation.

Warner Bros. confirmed earlier on Thursday that production was being halted after a crew member tested positive but did not confirm the person’s identity. Vanity Fair first reported that Pattinson was the one who had coroanvirus.

“A member of ‘The Batman’ production has tested positive for COVID-19 and is isolating in accordance with established protocols,” a Warner Bros. spokesperson said in a statement. “Filming is temporarily paused.”

The studio declined to comment about whether or not Pattinson had contracted the virus; a representative for the actor did not immediately respond to request for comment.

Depending on the amount of time that Pattinson has to self-isolate, suspending production could be a costly proposition. “The Batman,” starring Pattinson as the Caped Crusader, was about seven weeks into filming when they had to turn off cameras in March due to the pandemic. The gritty comic book adventure has approximately three months of material left to shoot and hopes to be done filming by the end of the year.

Numerous productions were put on pause when the virus began to intensify last spring, and very few blockbusters have resumed filming amid the global health crisis. “Jurassic World: Dominion” was the first major movie to restart and has been back to work at Pinewood Studios in the U.K. since July. Universal Pictures, the studio releasing the latest “Jurassic” sequel, has taken expensive and extensive measures to ensure the set will remain coronavirus-free. Those safety procedures involve everything from routine temperature checks to renting out a hotel for the cast and crew for 20 weeks.

Since production for “The Batman” was put on hold, Warner Bros. pushed back its theatrical release and now plans to unveil the movie on the big screen on Oct. 1, 2021.

Matt Reeves directed “The Batman,” which also stars Zoë Kravitz as Catwoman, Paul Dano as the Riddler and Jeffrey Wright as Commissioner Gordon. John Turturro, Peter Sarsgaard, Jayme Lawson, Andy Serkis and Colin Farrell round out the cast.

Reeves, in a recent panel during DC FanDome, revealed that “The Batman” takes place during “Year Two” of the Dark Knight’s emergence — before his enemies have become full-fledged supervillains.

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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Miller's nonprofit Film2Future is working to make sure talent from underserved communities gets the gear they need: "We specifically look for students who don't know or don't believe they have access to the industry."

The COVID-19 pandemic halted film production in Los Angeles for months, but once it was safe to venture out, manager-producer Rachel Miller — a founding partner of Haven Entertainment, where her clients include Ben Schwartz — made sure her filmmakers had what they needed to do the job.

A total of 25 were set up with fully equipped “tech pods” supplied with laptops, headphones, Wi-Fi hotspots, Adobe and Final Draft software, comfortable chairs and even a weekly delivery of fruits and vegetables from CropSwap. But those 25 are not accomplished Hollywood auteurs one might find on Miller’s client list. Instead, the group is the latest crop of high school students to spring from Film2Future, the nonprofit Miller founded to help pump Hollywood’s pipeline with talent from underserved communities.

The students get storytelling and filmmaking training in addition to courses in financial literacy, how to nail interviews, internship placement and more. Guest speakers like Insecure’s Prentice Penny and Daniel Dae Kim even have made appearances during special Q&As.

“The system is rigged, but the great thing is Hollywood is finally waking up. In order to make real change you have to support training programs and pipelines by giving access,” explains Miller, who adds that they receive applicants from a slew of L.A. charter and public schools like Lynwood and South El Monte high schools and by word of mouth. “We are specifically looking for students who don’t know or don't believe or have access to the industry.”

Launched in 2016, Film2Future’s alumni network now includes 125 students in total. In November, Miller and her team will celebrate at the org’s first virtual gala, during which five films will be screened from this year’s student participants. The theme? “Origin stories, and the films are incredibly impactful.”

Film2Future, she adds, is not looking for students with perfect grades and transcripts. Instead, they request essays that display voice and passion with an optional video component as well as recommendation letters that don’t have to be from a teacher. “Not every student excels in school — I certainly didn’t,” she said, citing one favored letter that came from an applicant’s sibling. “We are not reactionary to this moment. We have been doing the work for five years and it’s working. Hollywood just has to support and support early to build a practical pipeline program [like this].”

 

Article by: Chris Gardener for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Over the next five years, it will contract at a 2.4 percent compound annual rate, says PricewaterhousCoopers in its 'Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024.'

After a 3.6 percent increase in global cinema revenue in 2019 to $45.1 billion, the coronavirus pandemic will this year "cause the global market to contract sharply," research and accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers says in its annual forecast, predicting a 65.6 percent drop to $15.5 billion "as many screens are forced to close and major Hollywood releases are delayed."

For the U.S., the firm's annual study projects a 65.7 percent decline from $11.4 billion in 2019 to $3.9 billion this year.

The firm warned that "the whole cinema ecosystem will be dramatically affected," with cinema revenue, comprised of box office and cinema advertising (but excluding concession sales in cinemas and movie merchandising), set to contract globally at a 2.4 percent compound annual rate from 2019 to end 2024 with $39.9 billion.

PwC's Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024 says that the global recession caused by the pandemic will mean that 2020 will "see the sharpest fall in global entertainment and media revenue in the 21-year history of this research," with a decline of 5.6 percent, or more than $120 billion, from 2019 to $2.02 trillion. That includes a 7.3 percent drop in the U.S. from $712.9 billion to $660.6 billion.

In 2009, the last year the global economy shrank, total global entertainment and media (E&M) spending fell by just 3.0 percent. PwC's projections show that in 2021, spending will grow by 6.4 percent. Looking across the five-year forecast period to 2024, the firm is forecasting a 2.8 percent compound annual growth rate.

The Global Entertainment & Media Outlook 2020–2024 report also highlights that "the way U.S. studios now reach their customers is changing." Most have been setting up their own streaming platforms, for example. "Fewer films are being released theatrically in North America, but this hasn’t been affecting revenues," PwC also noted. "With such high demand from streaming platforms, rates of production are likely to remain constant or to increase over the forecast period, although there will be a short-term pause in 2020 due to the pandemic."

Speaking of streamers, PwC argues though that they haven't hurt Hollywood's movie sector like some have warned. "Just as in the past, the disruptors have ultimately benefited rather than damaged the film industry," it said.

The annual PwC report highlighted a 2019 rise in box office revenue from Chinese films as four of them made it into the global box office top 20. even if "almost entirely on the basis of their domestic performances."

"China has had box office hits before, such as Wolf Warrior 2 in 2017, but these have tended to be sporadic," PwC explained. "The successes of Ne Zha ($726 million), The Wandering Earth ($699 million), My People My Country ($450 million) and The Captain ($416 million) showed that the Chinese are making Hollywood-style production values in every field: action, animation and sci-fi." While they had "limited success" in other Asian countries and overseas profits were "minimal," the firm highlighted: "As their success attested, the Chinese market on its own is now big enough to generate revenues similar to those of the biggest Hollywood titles."

However, after in 2019 forecasting that China will in 2020 overtake the U.S. as the top box office market in the world, it has changed its tune amid the pandemic. "The U.S. will weather the COVID-19 storm more successfully than China, due in part to its more developed market," the firm argued in its latest forecast. "Over the next five years, the U.S. will extend its lead as the world’s largest market, despite revenue contracting over that time period. In 2024, revenue will total $10.0 billion in the U.S., while China’s market will be worth $8.1 billion."

 

Article by: the staff of the Hollywood Reporter.

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Ann Sarnoff, head of WarnerMedia Studios and Networks Group, took in a preview screening of “Tenet” at a movie theater on Wednesday night in Connecticut.

Normally, that would not be a big deal. But with the Christopher Nolan espionage thriller leading the charge for the reopening of multiplexes in the U.S., Sarnoff was eager to check out the moviegoing experience for herself.

“I can’t tell you how exciting it was,” Sarnoff told Variety about her first visit to a theater since the pandemic forced the shutdowns of exhibitors across the U.S. in March. “It felt so good to go see a movie with friends. It felt incredibly safe. We weren’t crowded together. We all had reserved seats and we were socially distanced.”

“Tenet” is unspooling domestically this week about 2,800 screens. That’s a smaller footprint than what a typical wide release would enjoy, but it was enough to get the movie off the shelf after its original July 17 release date had to be scrapped.

Sarnoff said she’s encouraged by the returns from the film’s international debut last week. Moreover, Warner Bros. is committed to keeping “Tenet” in U.S. theaters for a good stretch in order to give prospective ticket buyers time to get comfortable with the idea of returning to multiplexes.

“We’re using the old marathon-versus-sprint approach. We’re in it for the long game,” she said. “It’s so unprecedented to launch it this way. We’re feeling good and waiting for some numbers to start coming in.”

Nolan is famously a proponent of the big-screen experience for his work, so there was little chance that Warner Bros. would have considered a VOD release strategy for “Tenet.” But that was never a source of strain between the filmmaker and the studio because both camps were in agreement that it made sense to wait until the COVID-19 conditions improved. At present about 60%-70% of theaters in the U.S. are open, with the big exception of markets like New York and Los Angeles.

“We love this movie. We really thought it deserved to be on the big screen,” she said. “We’re very grateful for the fact that we have movie theaters back now. We’re getting so much press that it’s another layer of publicity that we are grateful for. We are hearing very good indicators from our research.”

Sarnoff gave credit to AMC, Regal, Cinemark and other exhibitors for being collaborative with the studio on “Tenet” launch plans and for working to communicate the message that it is safe to return to theaters. NATO has helped drive the push for exhibition industry standards for protocols and cleaning programs between screenings.

Because there are so few new movie titles available, WB has been able to secure more screens per multiplex than they would typically command, even for a blockbuster title. At some locations, “Tenet” screenings will be as frequent as every hour.

“We’re excited that the theaters have really stepped up for this movie,” she said.

Although “Tenet” is a hopeful sign, COVID-19 outbreaks are still a major threat to health and the work of Warner Bros. Production on “The Batman” in the U.K. was shutdown again this week amid the news that a cast or crew member — reportedly star Robert Pattinson — has come down with the virus. Sarnoff declined to comment on the specifics of the situation, citing privacy concerns, and pointed to the studio’s earlier statement that it is following contract tracing and quarantine protocols.

 

Article by: Cynthia Littleton for Variety.

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In a first for the “Star Trek” franchise, characters who are gender non-binary and transgender will appear on the third season of “Star Trek: Discovery,” CBS All Access announced on Wednesday.

Ian Alexander (“The OA”) will play Gray, a trans man who has spent his life as a Trill planning to be a host for a symbiotic alien species that lives in different hosts over its lifetime.

Newcomer Blu del Barrio will play Adira, a non-binary character who bonds with Lt. Commander Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) and Dr. Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz), the first same-sex couple in “Trek” TV series history.

“‘Star Trek’ has always made a mission of giving visibility to underrepresented communities because it believes in showing people that a future without division on the basis of race, gender, gender identity or sexual orientation is entirely within our reach,” co-showrunner and executive producer Michelle Paradise said in a statement.

The production worked closely with GLAAD, especially director of transgender media and representation Nick Adams, in crafting Gray and Adira for Season 3.

“We take pride in working closely with Blu del Barrio, Ian Alexander and Nick Adams at GLAAD to create the extraordinary characters of Adira and Gray, and bring their stories to life with empathy, understanding, empowerment and joy,” said Paradise.

When Alexander first appeared as a trans character on the Netflix sci-fi series “The OA,” he was the first out trans Asian American actor on TV. He most recently played the trans character Lev on the acclaimed video game “The Last of Us Part II.”

Del Barrio was cast on “Discovery” while in their final year at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. They’ve been acting in theater and short film productions since they were 7; “Discovery” will be their TV debut.

In an interview with Adams posted to GLAAD’s website, Del Barrio says Adira is “an introvert” suffering from memory loss who doesn’t tell people that they’re non-binary right away — which ended up mirroring their own experience coming out as non-binary.

“When I got the call that I’d been cast as Adira, I hadn’t yet told the majority of my friends and family that I was non-binary,” Del Barrio says. “I had only recently discovered the word and realized that it described how I’d felt for a long time. I knew I wanted to tell my friends and family, so when this happened, it felt like the universe saying ‘go ahead.'”

Although the original “Star Trek” TV series, which first ran on NBC from 1966 to 1969, was groundbreaking at the time for its depiction of Black and Asian characters, until the 2010s, the “Trek” franchise largely avoided LBGTQ characters of any significance.

For years, the most explicit depiction of any LBGTQ characters in “Trek” was in a 1992 episode of “Star Trek: The Next Generation” titled “The Outcast,” in which the crew of the Enterprise encounter the J’naii, an alien race that has no gender and views any expressions of gender or sexuality to be taboo. Commander Riker (Jonathan Frakes) ends up falling in love with a J’naii who identifies as female, until she is forced by her society to undergo a form of therapy that eradicates her gender identity. (Frakes has said the episode was not “gutsy” enough.)

The Trill species has also allowed “Star Trek” to dip into queer issues, if tentatively. In the 1991 “TNG” episode “The Host,” Dr. Crusher (Gates McFadden) falls passionately in love with a male Trill, but when the host body dies and the symbiont alien is placed in a female host, Crusher says she can’t continue with the relationship. A 1995 episode of “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine” flipped that equation, with the female Trill Jadzia Dax (Terry Farrell) reuniting with a woman who was Dax’s wife when Dax lived inside a male host. Dax wants to restart their relationship, and the two women kiss, but the episode ends with the ex-wife deciding instead to move on.

Finally, the 2016 feature film “Star Trek Beyond” — set in an alternate “Trek” universe — revealed that character of Sulu (John Cho) has a husband and daughter, though the husband character (played by the film’s co-screenwriter Doug Jung) had no lines, and the characters only briefly hug on screen.

It wasn’t until Stamets and Culber were introduced on “Discovery” in 2017 that two male “Trek” characters were depicted in a fully expressed romantic relationship — and played by two out queer actors.

 

Article by: Adam B. Vary for Variety.

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The event's slimmed-down 2020 film lineup will be 45 percent directed, co-directed or created by women.

As the Toronto Film Festival gets set to host a slimmed-down and virtual 45th edition in September, the traditional awards season launch pad for Hollywood is nearing gender equality.

On Wednesday, TIFF organizers revealed that the 2020 lineup of around 50 movie titles will be 45 percent directed, co-directed or created by women. "Even though TIFF 2020 is a smaller festival, adapted to the moment we’re all in, women are still centre stage," festival organizers said as they touted their Share Her Journey initiative to get more women and their work into the film industry's content pipeline.

Toronto plans gala screenings for Halle Berry's directorial debut, Bruised, Chloe Zhao's Nomadland, starring Frances McDormand, and Regina King's One Night in Miami. Also booked into TIFF are Michelle Latimer's documentary Inconvenient Indian, Emma Seligman's family drama Shiva Baby, Naomi Kawase's True Mothers and Suzanne Lindon's debut feature Spring Blossom.

Last year, TIFF's bigger 2019 lineup of 328 movies — 244 features, 82 shorts — featured 36 percent of its films directed, co-directed or created by women, up slightly from 35 percent in 2018.

Also this year, actors Sheila Atim (Bruised), Rainbow Dickerson (Beans), Tanya Maniktala (A Suitable Boy) and Madeleine Sims-Fewer (Violation) will be feted as TIFF Rising Stars, and veteran Canadian director Tracey Deer will be honored at the TIFF Tribute Awards when she receives the Emerging Talent Award as she premieres her latest film, Beans, in Toronto.

A pandemic-era Toronto Film Festival will run mostly online from Sept. 10-19.

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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"You guys knew what to do with Daisy Ridley, you knew what to do with Adam Driver. But when it came to Kelly Marie Tran, when it came to John Boyega, you know fuck all."

John Boyega has spoken out about the treatment of Black characters in the latest Star Wars trilogy, accusing Disney of capitalising on their casting before pushing them to the periphery of the story.

"You get yourself involved in projects and you’re not necessarily going to like everything," he told British GQ magazine in a wide-ranging interview. "[But] what I would say to Disney is do not bring out a Black character, market them to be much more important in the franchise than they are and then have them pushed to the side. It’s not good. I’ll say it straight up."

Boyega, whose Stormtrooper-turned-Resistance fighter Finn was introduced as a prominent character in The Force Awakens but was seen by many critics as having been largely ignored in the climactic The Rise of Skywalker, claimed that his fellow white lead actors had not suffered the same fate.

"Like, you guys knew what to do with Daisy Ridley, you knew what to do with Adam Driver. You knew what to do with these other people, but when it came to Kelly Marie Tran, when it came to John Boyega, you know fuck all," he said. "They gave all the nuance to Adam Driver, all the nuance to Daisy Ridley. Let’s be honest. Daisy knows this. Adam knows this. Everybody knows. I’m not exposing anything."

Boyega, next appearing in one installment of Steve McQueen's three-part anthology Small Axe, also asserted that he had been the only Star Wars cast member to have "their own unique experience of that franchise based on their race.”

"Nobody else in the cast had people saying they were going to boycott the movie because [they were in it]," he said. "Nobody else had the uproar and death threats sent to their Instagram DMs and social media, saying, ‘Black this and black that and you shouldn’t be a Stormtrooper.’ Nobody else had that experience. But yet people are surprised that I’m this way. That’s my frustration."

 

Article by: Alex Ritman for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The boffo global box office for “Tenet” is proof of the public appetite for Christopher Nolan’s abilities as a filmmaker, but as the film opens in more countries and, gradually, the United States, familiar questions are being raised about the director’s idiosyncratic approach to sound, and its impact on how much — or how little — of the film audiences are able to comprehend.

Messages posted on Reddit in the past week reflect some of the frustration among filmgoers. User Moff_tarkin wrote, “The sound mix was awful. This is really unacceptable and reduced my enjoyment of this movie considerably,” while user Linubidix said, “There was some crucial dialogue that was nearly inaudible.” Elsewhere, user JaydenSpark remarked, “I couldn’t hear a solid 30 minutes of dialogue because everyone was mumbling through masks.” And so it continued.

Many commentators also noted that similar complaints had been voiced about previous Nolan films. In “The Dark Knight Rises,” for example, Tom Hardy’s Bane wore a heavy muzzle that garbled so many of his lines that the character has become a cultural touchpoint for incomprehensible dialogue in movies. Meanwhile, foghorn scores in “Dark Knight Rises” and “Inception,” as well as “Interstellar,” also serve to overwhelm the dialogue.

“This isn’t unusual for Chris’ films,” says a studio insider. “But with eight nominations for sound and five wins, the record speaks for itself.”

One U.K. exhibitor responding to gripes about inaudible exchanges in “Tenet” said on Twitter that the fault lay with the 35mm print and said that it was switching to a digital version for improved sound quality. Given that these complaints were trickling in from multiple venues in different cities, towns and countries, that makes it seem as if all of this is a deliberate artistic choice. That makes it even more exasperating for some.

The frustration is heightened further because of the pent-up anticipation caused by the COVID-19 shutdown, and the repeated delays to “Tenet’s” release. Nolan’s status as “the savior of cinema,” in the words of one European exhibition professional recently, has only added to the weight of expectation the film has had to carry.

Sound professionals contacted by Variety were reluctant to comment on the work of others, especially given the stellar track record of “Tenet’s” sound team, led by supervising sound editor Richard King, who won Oscars for Nolan’s “The Dark Knight,” “Inception” and “Dunkirk,” and received an Oscar nomination for “Interstellar.”

One supervising sound editor, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity, notes that “the sound mixes for Christopher Nolan films are painstakingly considered.

Everything you hear (or don’t hear) is the result of “ultra-conscious direction.” He adds: “If you understand ‘the gist’ of the dialogue, then they’re happy. As a dialogue editor I prefer to understand each word, but that’s my preference.”

Mentioning that the film had an “excellent sound team,” an award-winning sound mixer says: “I know Nolan does like to push the envelope. He’s an artist and I don’t think he believes in working to the lowest common denominator of projection environments.”

He adds: “When you are listening in a perfect mixing theater environment and push the limits of the system, it’s surprising how much this sound mix can translate differently in different theaters.”

Peter Albrechtsen, a sound designer who worked on “Dunkirk,” disagrees. Nolan tries to ensure that “every cinema is playing the film exactly as he wants it,” he claims. “And that’s why he’s still mixing sound in 5.1, even though we now have Atmos, because that’s the format most cinemas have.”

In Albrechtsen’s opinion, “Tenet” is “a spectacular movie.” He likens it to a “James Bond movie on steroids.”

The way Nolan uses sound is “very visceral,” he says. “It is a physical experience.” He adds: “It’s a very intense sonic experience, and I can see why, for some, that’s quite overwhelming. The environments in his film are very vibrant,” and their complex sound design helps create that, he says.

Although he concedes that “small dialogue details” may be difficult to catch as a consequence, he likes the fact that everything isn’t “served up on a plate” for the viewer. “You have to be on your toes to really get all the details,” he says.

Albrechtsen notes that the filmmaker rarely uses ADR (Automated Dialogue Replacement) — the process by which dialogue is re-recorded in a sound studio — so the dialogue on his films is mostly production sound. “This means that the dialogue might be a little more gritty,” he says. “But it also feels extremely real and I really like the contrast between this and the intense sonic soundscapes of effects and ambiences.” In comparison, he says, most big effects movies use a lot of ADR, so the audio is “very clean.”

He says the “sonic experience” in “Tenet” is “extremely creative” in the way that it “utilizes sound effects backwards and forwards,” which reinforces the concept of inverted time in the story.

He accepts that Nolan’s use of sound as part of a film’s storytelling divides cinemagoers and critics alike, with some finding it too much, and others being “exhilarated” by it. But this, he says, is part of Nolan’s identity as a filmmaker.

To bear the expectation of being “the savior of cinema” is too much for any filmmaker, Albrechtsen says, but Nolan’s “passion for cinema is very inspiring,” nonetheless.

 

Article by: Leo Barraclough for Variety.

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The 77th Venice Film Festival opened in earnest Wednesday evening with a moving ceremony that served as a passionate rallying cry in defense of the collective moviegoing experience in the face of a perceived threat posed by streaming giants.

The opening film was Italian director Daniele Luchetti’s marriage drama “The Ties,” which was generally well received. But the ties that took center stage just prior to the screening were those between film festivals and movie theaters around the world.

During the ceremony, the directors of seven top European festivals, including Cannes, Berlin and Locarno, took the stage to read a symbolic declaration in support of the big screen.

“Today, movie theaters are opening their doors again, though, like festivals, with a degree of uncertainty and anxiety,” the joint statement said. “But they are also doing so with hope and conviction, because they know that now, more than ever before, no one can live without cinema.”

“No one can live without films seen in a movie theatre, on a big screen, with an audience, with all the chatter and the silence.”

“We wish to firmly repeat this tonight: we must take care of our movie theatres. And all together, they and we, the theater and the festivals, commit to taking care of the films, the artists, the professionals, the critics, of all those who bring cinema into existence,” the statement added.

When Venice jury president Cate Blanchett took the stage earlier in the evening, she, too, zeroed in on the perceived threat of streamers — as Blanchett had also done during a press conference earlier in the day — by noting that although many people have been “sustained” by the SVODs, “there is a vital component that’s been missing. And that’s here tonight: it’s strangers gathered in the dark in anticipation of a collective experience,” she said.

Tilda Swinton echoed those words after receiving a Golden Lion for career achievement when she said that “to be in a room with living creatures and a big screen,” and to see a film in Venice, is “pure joy.”

The ceremony, which officially opened the first major film event after the coronavirus crisis, kicked off with a moving tribute to the late great Ennio Morricone, who died in July. The nine-piece Orchestra Roma Sinfonietta orchestra, which the composer founded, played “Deborah’s Theme” from Sergio Leone’s “Once Upon a Time in America,” conducted by his son Andrea Morricone, prompting a standing ovation.

 

Article by: Nick Vivarelli for Variety.

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The fast-rising helmer talks about traversing the country in an RV with Frances McDormand, why she cast "misfits" in her Marvel debut and her uncompromising style: "I shot exactly the way I wanted to shoot."

Three months after she accepted the Oscar for best actress in a gold-hued gown, Frances McDormand was spending the night in an Econoline van in Chloé Zhao’s driveway in Ojai, regretting her decision to eat barbecue for dinner. McDormand and Zhao were testing out what would become the primary set for their next film, Nomadland — a van in which McDormand’s character Fern, a 60-something wanderer in search of employment, was to live.

That night in Zhao’s driveway, they had met up to figure out some practicalities of shooting in the confined space, where McDormand was going to sleep for character research. As her stomach rumbled, Zhao gently reminded the actor, "You wanted spicy chicken wings ..."

McDormand continues the story. "And so, I literally experienced the worst, not maybe the worst thing, but a not-very-pleasant thing that could happen," McDormand says. "I took a dump in the 5-gallon bucket. But it also was really great because we filmed some stuff."

What they filmed that day — and in four months traveling the American West together with real-life nomadic workers — is a movie that is about to debut with a film-world equivalent of winning the Triple Crown. All four major fall film festivals — Venice, Telluride, Toronto and New York — invited Nomadland this year (Telluride was canceled due to the novel coronavirus but still plans a hosted drive-in screening of Nomadland in L.A. on Sept. 11). At a time when the film industry and the festivals that support it have been left bereft of product by the pandemic, this moment of mass exposure is a flex, and a signal of the ambitions of Nomadland’s distributor, Searchlight, which is planning a theatrical release in December. "These four film festivals have had to adjust the conversation,” says McDormand. "It’s not about what they can do for Chloé as a filmmaker, but what she can do for them."

In Zhao, a Beijing-born, NYU film school grad who broke out in 2017 with her poetic Western The Rider, McDormand found a filmmaker as game as she is, another woman who is in Hollywood, but not of it. "I always get this feeling I want to challenge the status quo,” says Zhao. "I just don’t want to be comfortable. Because when I feel comfortable, I’m not quite sure what motivates me or gets me up in the morning."

Nomadland is a movie about discarded older Americans. That McDormand, 63, chose Zhao, 38, to tell it reflects the kind of trust Zhao tends to inspire in people. She has won the faith of the cowboys she talked into acting in The Rider, real-world nomads who co-star opposite McDormand in Nomadland and executives at Marvel who are overseeing Zhao’s next, much more expensive film, Eternals.

Since the week of Aug. 10, Zhao has been ensconced in an editing room on the empty Disney lot, completing postproduction on both Nomadland and Eternals, which is due in February and which features Gemma Chan, Angelina Jolie and Marvel’s first LGBTQ relationship in a story about an immortal alien race who has secretly lived on Earth for 7,000 years. "Chloé will go toe to toe about Malick, or as esoteric and small a film as has ever been made, but also on Star Wars or on [Japanese superhero franchise] One-Punch Man in a way that is quite unique and quite spectacular," says Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige. "She would finish some giant production meeting with us that involved the creation and approval of dozens of costumes, creature design, intergalactic designs. And then she would get into her half solar power, half corn oil or whatever it was van, and drive out to the Dakotas for Nomadland. That she can fit in in all of these environments is remarkable."

McDormand and Zhao have the easy rapport of co-conspirators. "I just love that she can pronounce my last name; it’s very rare," Zhao says in mid-August, with McDormand speaking from a friend’s home in Northern California and Zhao from her office on the Disney lot, both on Zoom. "She said it perfect. Very, very rare." (Zhao is pronounced "jaw.") The duo share a frankness in manner and an affinity for unfussy clothes like overalls. For her THR photo shoot, Zhao asked if she could wear her own clothes and brought a fleece jacket printed with dogs that she had purchased at an RV show in Arizona.

McDormand’s path to Zhao’s driveway began when the actress read Jessica Bruder’s 2017 nonfiction book Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century, which tracks older American workers traveling the country via RVs in search of jobs. "When I was in my 40s, I said to my husband [director Joel Coen], 'When I turn 65, I’m going to change my name to Fern. I’m going to start smoking Lucky Strikes and drinking Wild Turkey and hit the road in an RV,' " says McDormand. "There was something about the freedom of the road, that kind of romantic spirit in people. But what was the revelation to me [in the book] was that it was a movement about economic hardship and that it was happening in a demographic that was my age. It was a group of people that were out there, taking things into their own hands."

Shortly after McDormand and her producing partner, Peter Spears, optioned Bruder’s book, the actress was at the 2017 Toronto Film Festival settling in for a screening of Zhao’s The Rider, which stars nonprofessional Lakota Sioux actors in a story about a rising rodeo star who suffers a tragic riding accident. Stunned by the movie, when the credits rolled, says McDormand, "I said out loud, 'Who the fuck is Chloé Zhao?' " Much of Hollywood was asking the same question — The Rider would go on to collect glowing reviews and four Independent Spirit Award nominations and get Zhao’s foot in the door at Marvel.

Zhao and McDormand finally met six months later, the week of the March 2018 Independent Spirit Awards, where Zhao won a $50,000 grant for female filmmakers and McDormand won best actress for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. The next day, when McDormand was onstage at the Dolby Theatre collecting the second Oscar of her career, she delivered an inadvertently industry-shaping acceptance speech, saying, "I have two words to leave with you tonight, ladies and gentlemen: inclusion rider." At the time, few people in the room at the Dolby or watching at home knew what McDormand was talking about, a clause that actors can ask to have inserted into their contracts that would require a certain level of diversity among a film’s cast and crew. Within days, studios and agents were fielding new questions about how to draft and implement inclusion riders. While praising industry efforts at inclusion, McDormand has some regrets about how she handled the moment. "I wish I’d never fucking said it now," she says. "I was not educated enough, I didn’t have enough information about it. ... I forgot what I was going to say at the end of a very prepared speech. I wanted to say, 'Just give me a tequila now.' I had met someone at a dinner party the night before, an agent at UTA, and she had told me, 'Did you know about this?' We had had a long conversation about it, and I found it really fascinating. 'Inclusion rider' was something that was like, 'Maybe we should discuss this.' Having said that, the work that [USC’s Annenberg Inclusion Initiative] has done on inclusion in the workplace is very, very important, and it is complicated, and it has to be almost customized for every single event."

In recruiting Zhao as her writer-director on Nomadland, McDormand was fulfilling her own expressed desire for more inclusion in Hollywood, but she also was signing on to the filmmaker’s highly unconventional process. "I didn’t step into Fran’s world," says Zhao. "She allowed herself to step into mine." On Zhao’s two previous films, Songs My Brothers Taught Me and The Rider, she directed non-actors, a technique she originally adopted out of economic necessity after film school but one she has come to prize for its realism. "Non-actors are just always going to be a version of themselves, and that’s what you want them to be," says Zhao. "Especially coming from a Chinese woman’s imagination of a cowboy. You know I can’t do that. It’s never going to be as authentic."

For Zhao, McDormand was the first real Hollywood actor she ever directed, which is something akin to taking your first drive in a '63 Corvette Stingray — there’s a reason she’s a classic, but you’d better be able to handle the power. "I always thought after The Rider, if I were to work with a Hollywood actor, who would they be?" says Zhao. "I didn’t want someone who was going to come into the world of [real-world nomads] Swankie and Linda May and Bob Wells and be completely set in their craft. And just go, 'This is what I know how to do and I’m going to deliver it.' Fran has such a deep human side of her; she responded to them."

On Nomadland, McDormand is surrounded by real nomads — with the exception of a key role played by David Strathairn — and the actress threw herself into adopting their lifestyle. Over four months of filming in seven states, including the Badlands of South Dakota, the Black Rock Desert of Nevada and the beet fields of Nebraska, McDormand performed several of the jobs a typical nomadic older American worker does, often slipping into the scenery unnoticed. In order to gain Zhao’s crew access to shoot the actress working in an Amazon fulfillment center, McDormand wrote a letter to Jeff Blackburn, Amazon’s senior vp business and corporate development. "I explained that we were telling the story about a woman who did migrant work and one of the jobs that she did was CamperForce with Amazon," says McDormand, referring to a kind of traveling retiree army that takes seasonal work for the online retailer during the holidays. "It was right before they started giving people $15 an hour. This was a really smart move for them because ... we are telling a story about a person who is benefiting from hard work, and working at the Amazon fulfillment center is hard work, but it pays a wage." One downside for the retailer, notes McDormand, is that "some people got some packages that I packaged that were pretty bad."

The actress also worked at a beet harvest, took reservations at a Badlands campground and cleaned campground toilets. When a man walked out of one campground restroom and asked if she was Frances McDormand, McDormand answered, "No, I’m Fern." While they traveled between locations, Zhao and her crew of roughly 25 people filmed McDormand as she drove the van, which she had nicknamed Vanguard and outfitted with some of her own belongings, including some china. Eventually, McDormand came to realize that she needn’t do everything the nomads do and opted to stay in Best Westerns and Days Inns with the crew rather than live in Vanguard. "I was 61," says McDormand. "At 61, it’s much better for me to pretend to be exhausted than to actually be exhausted. I figured that out."

In shooting the mythic American West in her first three films, Zhao joins a long tradition of immigrant filmmakers who have told quintessentially American stories, from Charlie Chaplin to Ang Lee. "Being an outsider sometimes gives you the sane and necessary distance to observe things clearly and objectively," says Alejandro G. Iñárritu, the Mexican director who met Zhao at the Telluride Film Festival in 2017 and subsequently gave her notes on a cut of Nomadland. "No matter how clearly you look at yourself in the mirror, it will always be a reflection. The Rider and Nomadland are strong and truthful American films because she can observe without filters or veil." Zhao says working in the West is liberating. "I always feel like I’m protected in a way to make films here," she says. "There’s a bit more freedom, at least psychologically, for me. If I were to go back home, make a film in China, there might be heavier things. I’m not ready to go there."

Zhao was born Zhao Ting, her father the manager of a Beijing steel company, her mother a hospital worker who was in a performance troupe for the People’s Liberation Army. "I have interesting parents," says Zhao. "They’re just a bit different than your typical parents from Beijing. They’re rebellious. They’re weird. They never stopped letting me be who I am. When my grades were so bad and I was just drawing weird manga [Japanese-style comics], I was a wild child and they just let me be. And that’s very rare."

She grew up watching American films on TV — Ghost, Sister Act and The Terminator are among her earliest recollections — and writing fan fiction, which she still does, though she declines to reveal for which properties. "When I was in China, all I read and dreamt about was in the West," says Zhao. "You want to go west, always go west." At 14, speaking little English, she left home to enroll in boarding school in London, an experience she describes as akin to attending Hogwarts. But still, the real West pulled at her, and when she was able to get a visa, at 18, she moved to Los Angeles, to a studio apartment in Koreatown, intending to attend college. After her parents dropped her off in L.A., Zhao realized she actually needed to finish high school first and enrolled in nearby L.A. High. "Back home, the best high school is usually named after the place," says Zhao. "So I went in the phone book, and I saw L.A. High. I thought, 'I’m going to L.A. High.' I just walked in one day. As I go through the metal detector and I look around, I’m like, 'This is not what I thought America is.' I definitely didn’t know America. This was not in the movies I saw or the music videos or books I read." Zhao adapted quickly, a talent she has relied on for life experiences as varied as going home for the holidays with a British boarding school classmate tending bar in New York City and shooting movies on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. When an L.A. bus driver strike prevented her from getting around the city, she bought a skateboard to get to school. "I’m used to being out here on my own in different situations and always wanting to fit in and playing different roles," says Zhao. "Being a bartender in New York — your tip is all you’ve got. So you want to make your customers feel comfortable that they can talk to you. A lot of times it’s a bit like that when you go out there and meet people while making a film. People ask me how do you get [non-actors] to feel comfortable with you. Really you just listen to their stories."

Zhao earned a bachelor’s degree in political science at Mount Holyoke and attended film school at NYU, where Spike Lee was one of her teachers. Her first feature, Songs My Brothers Taught Me, which follows a rebellious teen on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, premiered at Sundance and Cannes in 2015 and secured a tiny theatrical release. "Maybe it’s an only child thing and I wanted attention," says Zhao. "When everyone was making films in New York, I went, 'No, I just want to go somewhere that nobody goes. And to see what’s there.' " Zhao found the inspiration for her second film on Pine Ridge as well in real-life cowboy Brady Jandreau, whose story she thinly fictionalized for The Rider.

It was on the strength of The Rider that Zhao booked Nomadland and Eternals and saw major life changes. She paid off her student loans and joined the DGA, securing health insurance for the first time. She and her boyfriend, cinematographer Joshua James Richards, who has worked on all of her films, moved from Denver, where they had lived because of its proximity to Pine Ridge, to Ojai, bringing the two cattle dogs, Taco and Rooster, she had adopted from the reservation. She since has acquired three chickens after what she calls a "pandemic freakout." After a childhood spent in cities, Zhao decided Ojai was as close as she wanted to be to Hollywood. "I spent so much time in South Dakota, I realized, actually I can think better if there’s a lot of silence," she says. "And I find the industry is quite noisy. So when I go back to that very David Lynch-like [suburban] street I live on, very Blue Velvet street, I feel weirdly very grounded."

In a moment when studios are releasing some highly anticipated, once-theater-bound films like Disney’s Mulan and Lionsgate’s Antebellum on streaming services and VOD, it’s noteworthy that Zhao’s two movies remain slated for theatrical release. Searchlight, which Disney acquired as part of its $71.3 billion Fox deal in 2019, is one of the few Fox divisions that has been allowed to operate much as it did before the merger, with an emphasis on prestige awards-worthy fare headed to art house theaters. With a mid-seven-figure budget, Nomadland cost a pittance compared with one of Disney’s $200 million-plus Marvel or Pixar movies like Eternals, and it gives the media giant a toehold in the Oscar race. Though Nomadland is dated for December, Searchlight could move the release date up if public health conditions allow for more widespread theater openings in the U.S. As Searchlight president Nancy Utley notes, "Disney are big Chloé fans too, so it’s kind of all in the family." (Taika Waititi is another filmmaker who has worked for both Marvel and Searchlight.)

When Zhao met with Disney-owned Marvel about the Eternals job, says Feige, she brought reams of visuals to deliver a compelling pitch about 10 little-known immortal Marvel characters in a story set after the events of the last Avengers movie. "Her initial pitch to us was fascinating," says Feige. "And frankly one of the reasons we moved forward on the movie was because of the vision that she brought to it." One of the ideas Zhao embedded in Eternals was stylistic and rooted in her childhood. "I have such deep, strong, manga roots," says Zhao. “I brought some of that into Eternals. And I look forward to pushing more of that marriage of East and West." Zhao also was pushing big thematic ideas — Eternals is literally about the history of humanity. "How much further and bigger can we go after [Avengers:] Endgame?" asks Zhao. "Because I’m not just making the film as a director. I’m making the film as a fan."

Despite working with a much bigger budget than she ever had before, Zhao says she was allowed the same creative freedom on Eternals that she had grown used to on her smaller films. "I shot exactly the way I wanted to shoot," she says. "On location. A lot of magic hour. Three-hundred-sixty degrees on the same camera as I did on Nomadland. Same rigs. It’s a bit surreal. I’m still waiting for the shoe to drop. It hasn’t. I think I got lucky in that Marvel wants to take risks and do something different."

An LGBTQ relationship in the film "was always sort of inherent in the story and the makeup of the different types of Eternals," says Feige. "I think it is extremely well done, and I look forward to that level of inclusion in our future movies being less of a topic."

Among the movie’s unexpected set pieces is a Bollywood dance sequence, with some 50 dancers. "When I walked onto the set and saw a huge group of brown people who were going to be in a Marvel movie, I felt such gratitude towards Chloé for creating the situation," says Pakistani-American actor Kumail Nanjiani, who plays an Eternal who also happens to be a Bollywood star. "The scene was full of joy."

With her multicultural cast, which also includes Brian Tyree Henry, Salma Hayek and a deaf actress named Lauren Ridloff, Zhao describes a vision of an outsider’s superhero movie. "I wanted it to reflect the world we live in," she says. "But also I wanted to put a cast together that feels like a group of misfits. I didn’t want the jocks. I want you to walk away at the end of the movie not thinking, 'This person is this ethnicity, that person is that nationality.' No. I want you to walk away thinking, 'That’s a family.’ You don’t think about what they represent. You see them as individuals."

 

Article by: Rebecca Keegan for the Hollywood Reporter.

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