Margot Robbie's Latest Love Story 'A Big Bold Beautiful Journey' Is Perfect For 'About Time' Fans
Margot Robbie is officially headed back to the big screen in her first film since Barbie debuted in 2023! The Wolf of Wall Street star joins Colin Farrell (The Penguin) in this fantastical romance — and based on the trailer, it's sure to be a tear-jerker! Wanna know more about the film? Keep scrolling to find out everything we know about A Big Bold Beautiful Journey.
At it's core, A Big Bold Beautiful Journey is a story about love — love for someone else, but also love for yourself. When two strangers meet at a wedding, their lives intertwine on a strange and unique way. The pair finds themselves walking through the many different doors of their lives, traveling through time and taking each moment as it comes in all it's unbelievable glory.
Star Colin Farrell told that it's "a kind of love story." He said, "It's grounded in a world that we recognize, but it also is removed enough into the world of fantastical that it goes into these kinds of whimsical places."
The official log line for A Big Bold Beautiful Journey is, "An imaginative tale of two strangers and the unbelievable journey that connects them."
The cast for A Big Bold Beautiful Journey is honestly STACKED. It includes:
Margot Robbie
Colin Farrell
Jodie Turner-SmithPhoebe Waller-BridgeA Big Bold Beautiful Journey filmed in .
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey lands in theaters on September 19, 2025.
We don't have details on when A Big Bold Beautiful Journey will hit streaming services, but for now you can expect to watch the fantastical film in movie theaters on September 19, 2025.
Yes, there is a trailer for A Big Bold Beautiful Journey — and you can stream it on !
Looking for more , , and news? Follow us on so you never miss a thing!
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sydney Sweeney Just Broke Her Silence On Jonathan Davino Breakup
Sydney Sweeney's alleged extended hotel stay has taken a more permanent turn. After postponing her wedding to fiancé Jonathan Davino at the end of February, Sydney turned heads when she stepped out in Barbie pink at the Vanity Fair Oscars party — and then joined Glen Powell at his sister's wedding. And after a few sources revealed the actress and her fiancé called it quits, Sydney is speaking out about her single gal summer. Sydney Sweeney broke her silence on all those relationship rumors and conversations in an interview with the Times, where she reveals, "yes," she is single. "I'm learning a lot about myself, spending more time with my friends," she adds. "And I'm loving it.' Time is a very important currency to Sydney, who only sleeps 4 hours a night and works a lot. 'I hear it more from my family than myself," she says. "'Sydney, you're going to burn out. Sydney, you need to slow down. Sydney, you need to take a break.'' But she knows she won't slow down anytime soon. "I just knew that I'd never allow myself to fail," she continues. "No matter how long it took. It's not fear. It's determination.' Sydney Sweeney and Jonathan Davino have called off their wedding. However, the actress is "exactly where she wants to be. Most people would feel overwhelmed by her working schedule this year, but not Syd. She's all about working right now and very excited about all her projects," People. The Anyone But You actress is "in the middle of this magical career that she could only dream of a few years is what she wants to focus on right now." "What did make her overwhelmed though was her relationship and her wedding," the source adds. "She didn't feel right about it." According to on March 11, Sydney Sweeney was having a solo stay at the Beverly Hills Hotel since "around the middle of February." Apparently she hasn't been joined by Jonathan Davino throughout her time, instead sticking with some friends and one of her bodyguards. We don't have official news on a breakup just yet, but while actress' decision to postpone her wedding definitely made headlines, Sydney's always maintained that she's been too busy with work to rush to the altar. "I am so busy working!" she told when asked about the wedding. "I'm a workaholic and I love it, I love it." Sydney Sweeney and Jonathan Davino were together from 2018 until 2025. They kept their relationship pretty low-key since they were first linked in 2018. And in 2023 she revealed why she keeps those details close to her chest. 'Everyone is always so curious about who I'm with and what's that like, but I think it's important to have something for me,' Sydney Glamour UK. 'I'm very open [otherwise]. I talk about so much, and sometimes, it gets me in trouble, but I do try to keep something for me.' 'I've been in a steady relationship for a really long time, which is not normal in this industry and not normal for my age,' she continued. 'What I've noticed about the idea of celebrity is people really love to build someone up and then tear them down.' Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell aren't in a public relationship, but they started major buzz when in Texas. And whether there's romance between or not, there's clearly a lot of love. . Read all about it — and her . This post has been updated.
Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
Margot Robbie Opens Up About Returning To Work Post-Barbie After Years Away From A Set, And Her Description Already Has Me Hooked
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. After Barbenheimer dominated the box office, Forbes declared Margot Robbie as 2023's world's highest-paid actress. But after Barbie (which is streaming with your Netflix subscription) premiered, we haven't seen the Australian actress on the big screen. With Robbie returning to acting with September's A Big Bold Beautiful Journey, the talented actress opened up about returning to work after years away from a set, and her description has me hooked. While the About Time actress hasn't starred in movies since Barbie, she's been the producer of top movies like Saltburn and My Old Ass. But as A Big Bold Beautiful Journey makes us happy that she hasn't stepped away from acting, she got candid with Vanity Fair about what it was like to step back onto a movie set, and I love her description: I think that's the longest break I've ever had between jobs. I thought it would be more scary to be walking onto the Big Bold set on day one, but it wasn't. Everything about this film was immediately comfortable. Compared to the challenging prep work that Margot Robbie did for Barbie, working with acting, dialect, and movement coaches, I can understand why starring in Kogonada's A Big Bold Beautiful Journey would be 'comfortable.' The light rom-com movie has Robbie starring alongside Colin Farrell as two people directed by a GPS to step into different doors of their past that would pull the duo closer in the present. With such a fun story, it's easy to see how the Birds of Prey actress could feel relaxed filming the 2025 movie release. If walking back onto set was a breeze after a long break, it proves the actress is right where she belongs. To say that Barbie was a big movie in 2023 would be an understatement. Making $1.4 billion at the box office, the comedy broke an insane record for Warner Bros. as their highest-grossing movie and the biggest movie of the year in general. But while sharing an update on the Ocean's Eleven prequel, Margot Robbie's honest reason for taking a break from acting was feeling 'everyone's probably sick of the sight of me for now,' but that 'producing is 24/7.' As the Greta Gerwig movie came with lots of promotions and a big press tour that had the actress in full-on Barbiecore, I can imagine an overwhelming experience like that can make anyone want to take a step back. Other than Barbie, Margot Robbie has starred in plenty of big movies like The Wolf of Wall Street, Suicide Squad, Birds of Prey, and more. But the Academy Award nominee explains why A Big Bold Beautiful Journey will hit close to the hearts of audiences: If audiences feel even a tiny slice of how magical it felt making this movie, then they'll have the most incredible experience in the theater. Making this movie was truly one of the most magical experiences of my life. If a movie like Kogonada's A Big Bold Beautiful Journey can make Margot Robbie feel 'magical,' it's already making me psyched for the effect it'll have on me after I watch it in theaters. With the visuals inspired by phenomenal movies like Hayao Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli movies and The Truman Show, it'll be a breath of fresh air to see an original movie that will bring audiences into a dream they won't want to wake up from. Margot Robbie is saying a lot of good things about how returning to set is 'comfortable' and 'magical.' If A Big Bold Beautiful Journey can give the I, Tonya actress some feel-good vibes, this makes me excited for the impact the new movie will have on audiences. We'll all get to feel some magic with Robbie's new flick in theaters on September 19th.


Fast Company
a day ago
- Fast Company
New frontiers of brand storytelling: Why the NewFronts matter more than ever
Media is in a constant state of transformation. To understand how we got here, and where we're going, it's worth looking back to 2008 as the tipping point. It was a year most might remember for the global economic meltdown. But at the same time, the future growth of interactive media was forming in the background: Netflix was a year into its transition from DVD mail rentals to unlimited streaming and Hulu launched publicly with YouTube, introducing us to the world of high definition. The same year, my company, Digitas, unveiled a bold vision for the media industry. We recognized that digital media wasn't just a supplement to traditional campaigns; it was the future. That vision sparked the creation of what was first called the 'Digitas Digital Content NewFronts' on June 11, 2008. Today, those values surpass the confines of media. The NewFronts now encompass the world of the broader C-suite, tying brand storytelling to connected media and converging technology more closely together. The core question remains the same: What are the new frontiers for connected brand storytelling across an ever-evolving media landscape? Today's most impactful brands aren't waiting for permission to tell their stories. They aren't hoping for placement opportunities. They're becoming producers in their own right. When brands step into this role, they move from interrupting entertainment to creating content that is authentic, inspiring, and entertaining. Simply put, like any creative production house or media network, brands are focused on making content that connects with people on an emotional level. This shift reflects how audiences perceive and engage with brand messaging. Rather than enduring advertising to get back to content they love, audiences seek out brand-produced entertainment because it resonates with them personally and as part of the wider cultural conversation across every interface that matters to them today. Think about how audiences react to James Bond reluctantly drinking a beer brand that feels disconnected from his character's typical 'shaken, not stirred' martini. It's a terrific example of a traditional product placement—but it's not a meaningful part of the story. It doesn't redefine the relationship between the character and the audience and the brand in between. Audiences expect more from the entertainment presented to them. Those new expectations also implicate brands in viewers' judgment of what's worthy or not. TELLING YOUR STORY BEFORE SOMEONE ELSE DOES All brands face a critical choice right now: Define your narrative or let others define it for you. The phenomenal success of the 2023 summer movie blockbuster Barbie demonstrates how a brand like Mattel's active involvement in storytelling can create cultural moments that transcend traditional marketing. Without the brand's participation, Barbie would have been a vastly different film—and that would have been a major missed opportunity to reshape the brand narrative for new generations. Seeing brands show up as the star or supporting player in big screen entertainment can be a meaningful way to merchandise their brand truth and mission. By striking out to tell their own stories, brands are better able to strike a deeper emotional chord with consumers while elevating and clarifying their commercial objectives. Sephora's 'Faces of Music' showed the depth of the cosmetics retail brand's intellectual and artistic sides through a three-part docuseries. The series offered an intimate look at how these musicians use makeup and beauty rituals to express their identities and enhance their performances. It underscored Sephora's commitment to celebrating individuality and self-expression through the arts. Your brand story is more important than ever, and there is a new role brands' agency partners need to play. It's not limited to creating 30-second spot or arranging the ad buys or product placements. It's about being fully embedded in the creative process itself. Creativity in this new environment is everyone's business. THE RETURN OF APPOINTMENT VIEWING Despite predictions that this endless cascade of content and the mainstreaming of on-demand viewing would kill scheduled programming, we're witnessing a renaissance of appointment viewing. My college-age daughter texts me when The Handmaid's Tale drops a new episode; she wants to watch it immediately to participate in the cultural conversation. This behavioral shift offers a powerful opportunity for brands and their agency partners. By crafting and aligning with 'must-see content' that drives conversation, brands can become central to these cultural moments. The hunger for quality storytelling amid tightening studio budgets can only be supported by brands' largesse. Think of Severance' s collaboration with State Farm, or White Lotus 's alliance with the Four Seasons hotel chain, or connecting Flonase with Bridgerton. These are examples of creating spaces where brands can meaningfully contribute to narratives audiences crave rather than simply advertising alongside them. THE NEW BRAND-PRODUCER AGE Perhaps the most significant evolution is the blurring of boundaries between platforms and experiences. Content discovery has become its own challenge—consumers struggle to find shows even after seeing billboards promoting them. Platforms like Roku are developing interfaces to help content rise above algorithmic limitations. Retailers like Walmart are becoming entertainment companies, just like they're becoming publishers within the retail media network space. It's another way brands are taking advantage of additional channels to reach audiences. Walmart's 23-part holiday rom-com series, Add to Heart, launched across Roku, TikTok, YouTube, and its own platforms. As the drama played out, viewers could shop over 330 featured products directly from the episodes. On Roku, users could click a button to get product links sent to their phone for easy shopping. This 'RomCommerce' experience blended entertainment and e-commerce to appeal to younger shoppers during the holidays. This convergence of commerce and content opens new possibilities for integrating storytelling with business outcomes. The new frontier isn't just 'branded content'—it is about competing for attention against entertainment itself. From documentaries that continue to resurface during culturally relevant moments to intellectual property partnerships that feed audience hunger between seasons, creating 'culture-breaking content' that stands out in a crowded landscape is critical.