logo
‘Eddington' Trailer: Joaquin Phoenix Scrolls Through Social Media Clips Of Austin Butler, Emma Stone And Pedro Pascal In Pandemic-Set Western Thriller

‘Eddington' Trailer: Joaquin Phoenix Scrolls Through Social Media Clips Of Austin Butler, Emma Stone And Pedro Pascal In Pandemic-Set Western Thriller

Yahoo13-05-2025

The first teaser trailer for Ari Aster's next thriller film Eddington has arrived.
The Western thriller and black comedy film will have its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival in May. It stars Joaquin Phoenix, Pedro Pascal, Emma Stone, Austin Butler, Luke Grimes, Deirdre O'Connell, Micheal Ward, Clifton Collins Jr. and Amélie Hoeferle.
More from Deadline
Juliette Binoche Named 2025 Cannes Film Festival President Of The Jury
Darius Khondji Says A24's 'Eddington' Is Headed To Cannes Film Festival
Pedro Pascal On The "Really Intimidating" Process Of Embodying Reed Richards In 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps'
'Of course, they keep looking at that lab in China. If you look at that lab in Wuhan,' a man's voice narrates at the beginning of the clip. 'When that was established, it was 1956, of course, that was the year Tom Hanks was born, the first celebrity with the virus.'
Phoenix stars as a small-town sheriff in the titular small New Mexico town, where he challenges his mayor (Pascal) in a pandemic-set situation, as evidenced in the trailer.
Phoenix's character can be seen scrolling through social media clips of himself talking about how 'the people of Eddington like guns' so those who value their lives should think twice followed by Austin Butler's character making a rousing speech about pain not being a coincidence. Next comes Emma Stone's character 'speaking now to deny [her] husband's announcement yesterday, which was false.'
Next comes Amélie Hoeferle's character, who posted a TikTok-like video with the words 'When you finish reading James Baldwin's Giovanni's Room' and captioned, '1 like = 1 ACAB.'
Following a conspiracy post about Michael Jackson and 9/11 and a #blackouttuesday post of the black square, a video of Pascal's Mayor Ted Garcia can be seen vowing to keep Eddington safe during the pandemic as part of his mayoral campaign.
RELATED: Ari Aster's 'Eddington' Adds Four To Cast
Another video of Phoenix's policeman is captioned, ' 'Law and Order' Sheriff Assaults Protestor in Town Rocked By Murders' as a headline.
Aster wrote, directed and is producing the film alongside Lars Knudsen under their Square Peg Banner. This marks his fourth feature film after Hereditary, Midsommar and Beau is Afraid.
The film is financed and produced by A24, which rolled out sales on the film at Berlinale's European Film Market in February, which signaled a potential Cannes entry.
RELATED:
Best of Deadline
2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery
2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More
A Full Timeline Of Blake Lively & Justin Baldoni's 'It Ends With Us' Feud In Court, Online & In The Media

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Clint Eastwood Says Hollywood Has Too Many Sequels: Where Is the Next ‘Casablanca'?
Clint Eastwood Says Hollywood Has Too Many Sequels: Where Is the Next ‘Casablanca'?

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Clint Eastwood Says Hollywood Has Too Many Sequels: Where Is the Next ‘Casablanca'?

UPDATE: In a statement to Deadline on Monday, June 2, Clint Eastwood disputed ever giving the interview with the Austrian newspaper Kurier and called the comments in it 'entirely phony.' 'A couple of items about me have recently shown up in the news,' Eastwood told Deadline. 'I thought I would set the record straight. I can confirm I've turned 95. I can also confirm that I never gave an interview to an Austrian publication called Kurier, or any other writer in recent weeks, and that the interview is entirely phony.' More from IndieWire Luca Guadagnino Attached to Direct AI Business Comedy 'Artificial' for Amazon MGM Austrian Publication That Ran 'Phony' Clint Eastwood Interview Cuts Ties with HFPA Member Author ORIGINAL STORY: Clint Eastwood wants Hollywood to only greenlight original films instead of relying on sequels and franchise installments. The auteur, who yes, did have his own franchise with five 'Dirty Harry' films, clarified that after directing features for decades, he now sees the value in standalone works instead. The 'Juror #2' director told Austrian newspaper Kurier, as translated by Reuters, that Hollywood has to exit the 'era of remakes and franchises' to usher in new classics. 'I long for the good old days when screenwriters wrote movies like 'Casablanca' in small bungalows on the studio lot, when everyone had a new idea,' Eastwood said. 'We live in an era of remakes and franchises. I've shot sequels three times, but I haven't been interested in that for a long while. My philosophy is: do something new or stay at home.' Eastwood credited the studio system for inspiring his directing career, which began in 1971 with 'Play Misty for Me,' in which he also starred. His enduring legacy will continue so long as he can still make movies, the Oscar winner assured. 'As an actor, I was still under contract with a studio, was in the old system, and thus forced to learn something new every year,' Eastwood said, 'and that's why I'll work as long as I can still learn something, or until I'm truly senile.' He added that he has no plans to retire and will still be working 'for a long time yet,' saying, 'There's no reason why a man can't get better with age. And I have much more experience today. Sure, there are directors who lose their touch at a certain age, but I'm not one of them.' Eastwood previously told The Metrograph that he doesn't reflect on past films too much. 'If I'm happy with it, that's it. As far as if anybody else has a different feeling about it, well that's theirs. I'm sure I've had disappointments. If I did, I wouldn't dwell on them,' he said, adding of his film legacy as a whole, 'That would be up to them, to the audiences, to answer. Up to the people on the outside. I just kind of go along. I consider this, again, emotional. It comes upon you. You have a story, you make a movie of it. You have to just go for it. If you think too much about how it happened you might ruin it. I go back and look at films I've made, and I could easily ask, 'Why the heck did I make this?' I don't remember! It might have been a long time ago…' Best of IndieWire Guillermo del Toro's Favorite Movies: 56 Films the Director Wants You to See 'Song of the South': 14 Things to Know About Disney's Most Controversial Movie Nicolas Winding Refn's Favorite Films: 37 Movies the Director Wants You to See

The Met's new wing honors a vanished Rockefeller — who may have been kidnapped and eaten by cannibals
The Met's new wing honors a vanished Rockefeller — who may have been kidnapped and eaten by cannibals

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

The Met's new wing honors a vanished Rockefeller — who may have been kidnapped and eaten by cannibals

Dissatisfied at being remembered merely as oil barons, real estate tycoons, political bellwethers, and lavish philanthropists, at some point the Rockefellers began to specialize in dramatic exits. Politician Nelson, at least as Johnny Carson would tell it, died doing what he loved best: his aide and alleged mistress Megan Marshack. But it was Nelson's son, Michael Rockefeller, whose tragic ending added 'eaten by cannibals' to the family lore. Advertisement 7 Young Michael Rockefeller died on an expedition to New Guinea in 1961. It's unknown if he drowned or was captured and consumed by tribesmen. ASSOCIATED PRESS His story has again captured the imagination of New York with the reopening of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art after a refresh that took four years and $70 million. First opened in 1982, the 40,000-square-foot wing now displays 1,726 artifacts — including the collections of the former Museum of Primitive Art — with the latest scholarship and technology. Advertisement 'We have the finest surveys of art from these three areas of the world – sub-Saharan Africa, Oceania, and the ancient Americas in a U.S. museum,' Alisa LaGamma, the curator in charge of the wing, told The Post. The wing also houses more than 400 items Michael collected on his travels — though whether or not it contains pieces created by the very tribe that might have brought about his death is still open for debate. In March 1961, Michael — a newly minted Harvard history and economics cum laude and the son of the Governor of New York at the time — joined the Harvard-Peabody Expedition to New Guinea. Its mission was to study the Ndani people of the Baliem Valley in the remote western portion of the island. But the 23-year-old Rockefeller had an ulterior motive: The stripling anthropologist was on an adventure to trade fish hooks, axes and pouches of tobacco for great masterpieces of tribal art. 7 His story has again captured the imagination of New York with the reopening of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art after a refresh that took four years and $70 million. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement The art would be sent back home to his father's innovative Museum of Primitive Art — a groundbreaking effort to extol the fetishes, tools and handicrafts of Africa, the Americas, Asia and Oceania in a townhouse mansion at 15 West 54th Street. At a time when these objects of cultures were rotting in museum ethnography cabinets, the new home would place them at eye level with Western fine art. In September 1961, the young Rockefeller returned to New Guinea accompanied by Dutch anthropologist René Wassing. This time he would venture deep into the jungle swamps of South Papua inhabited by the Asmat people, famed for their well-endowed bisj pole woodcarvings — and for their cannibalistic headhunting. On November 19, 1961, while sailing the coast of Asmat, their boat overturned. Wassing could not swim, but shore within sight, Rockefeller decided he could make it with an improvised floatation device. He was never seen again. 7 The 40,000-square-foot wing now displays 1,726 artifacts. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement Of course, the official explanation for Michael's disappearance was drowning, and, in 1964, a Westchester County judge declared the descendent of John D. Rockfeller legally dead. 'All the evidence, based on the strong offshore currents, the high seasonal tides, and the turbulent outgoing waters, as well as the calculations that Michael was approximately 10 miles from shore when he began to swim, supports the prevailing theory that he drowned before he was able to reach land,' Michael's twin sister Mary Rockefeller Morgan writes in her 2014 book, 'When Grief Calls Forth the Healing: A Memoir of Losing a Twin.' But the stewpot was the better story. Almost immediately after Michael's disappearance, rumors spread that he was alive and had gone native — or that his skull had been found in the clutches of headshrinkers. In 1962, missionaries claimed to have met villagers who confessed to his killing in the village of Otsjanep. 7 Michael travelled to New Guinea shortly after graduating from Harvard. This is supposedly the last picture of him ever taken. AP 7 Michael's father, Nelson (sitting down), was the governor of New York at the time. His immediate family also included mother Mary Todhunter Clark, twin sister Mary and brothers Rodman and Steven. Getty Images 'It was cocktail party lore all through the 60s, 70s and 80s,' publicist R. Couri Hay, whose family had a house near the Rockefeller's retreat in Maine at the time, told The Post. 'I was a kid but I still remember. Nobody could believe it. It became kind of a funny threat. My father would say that if I wasn't good he would send me away to be eaten by cannibals like Michael Rockefeller.' In 1977, the documentary filmmaker Lorne Blair wrote in an article in the girlie mag Oui, claiming that he had found the man who had consumed Michael. Advertisement A slippery private sleuth named Frank Monte told anyone who would listen that he found Michael's skull and was paid royally by the Rockefeller family for it. National Lampoon had a heckle. Leonard Nimoy hosted a TV special in 1978 called 'In Search of Michael Rockefeller.' Dozens of books, podcasts, documentaries and magazine articles have tried to prove the cannibal theory. Novels, short stories, rock songs and even an off-Broadway show have mined the incident for subject matter. 7 Journalist Carl Hoffman makes the best-researched argument that Michael was indeed likely killed and ceremonially eaten by three Asmat tribesmen in his 2014 book 'Savage Harvest.' 7 Michael is pictured on a small motorboat in New Guinea in 1961. The photo was brought back by a companion on his Harvard expedition. AP Advertisement Journalist Carl Hoffman makes the best-researched argument that Michael was indeed likely killed and ceremonially eaten by three Asmat tribesmen in his 2014 book 'Savage Harvest.' 'In a perverse way,' he writes, 'it seemed to level the playing field that this scion of American power could have been not just killed but consumed, cooked and digested and shat out by his opposite — wild men who had nothing, no power, no money, no influence.'

Here's What Denzel (Likely) Told Handsy Photog During Heated Exchange, According To Lip Reader
Here's What Denzel (Likely) Told Handsy Photog During Heated Exchange, According To Lip Reader

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Here's What Denzel (Likely) Told Handsy Photog During Heated Exchange, According To Lip Reader

While Denzel Washington is currently attending the 2025 Cannes Film Festival in support of upcoming Spike Lee joint Highest 2 Lowest, his heated red carpet exchange with a handsy photographer is what went viral, as he was seen giving the man a stern talking-to for grabbing the 70-year-old stage veteran's arm. Washington's body language indicates he wasn't pleased with his personal space being violated, with lip reader Jackie 'G' Gonzalez giving some insight into what was likely said via her social media pages. 'Hey, you're the one that grabbed me, right? Let me tell you something, let me tell you something, stop! You ever put your hands on me again, and that'll be [camera loses focus]. I'm warning you, you heard me, right? Ok.' Denzel then turns to walk away and is grabbed a second time. 'Stop. Stop. Stop. You got me? Stop.' While Washington's red carpet experience was less than stellar, he was soon awarded with a surprise Honorary Palme d'Or, the festival's highest accolade, during the Highest 2 Lowest premiere Monday (May 19) night. 'This is a total surprise for me, so I'm a little emotional, but from the bottom of my heart, I thank you all,' said Washington during his speech. 'To be here once again in Cannes — we're a very privileged group in this room that we get to make movies and wear tuxedos and nice clothes and dress up and get paid for it as well.' He was also sure to recognize director Spike Lee as his 'brother from another mother.' Highest 2 Lowest, co-starring Jeffrey Wright, Ilfenesh Hadera, A$AP Rocky, Ice Spice, and more, will be released in select theaters on Aug. 22. It will then stream exclusively on Apple TV+ beginning Sept. 5. Check out the teaser below. More from Denzel Washington Has Tense Exchange With Photographer At Cannes Film Festival A$AP Rocky Says Denzel Washington Listens To Rappers From This Southern City The Most 'Highest 2 Lowest' Teaser: Spike Lee And Denzel Reunite For Fifth "Joint" Of Their Careers

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store