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Aronofsky and Soderbergh Collaborator Eddie Alcazar Debuts Surreal Animated Pilot Inspired by '90s Golden Age of Cartoons — Watch the Trailer

Aronofsky and Soderbergh Collaborator Eddie Alcazar Debuts Surreal Animated Pilot Inspired by '90s Golden Age of Cartoons — Watch the Trailer

Yahoo3 days ago

Eddie Alcazar is the under-the-radar, up-and-coming visionary filmmaker who's collaborated with everyone from Steven Soderbergh to Darren Aronofsky and The Weeknd. Soderbergh executive-produced Alcazar's 2018 sci-fi debut 'Perfect' before teaming up with the filmmaker again for his 2023 black-and-white Sundance premiere 'Divinity,' which IndieWire deemed one of that year's 'best-looking movies.'
Aronofsky, meanwhile, executive-produced Alcazar's short film 'The Vandal,' released by New Yorker Studios in 2021. And filmmaker Alcazar, who also works as a writer and game developer, also wrote and directed The Weeknd's stop-motion music video 'Red Terror' earlier this year.
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But Alcazar's next project is 'Bullet Time,' a hand-drawn TV pilot, fours years in the making, that he created and directed that tributes the Golden Age of '90s animation (think 'The Ren & Stimpy Show,' which immediately comes to mind when you see the surreal trailer below). Alcazar hopes the DIY, tactile approach to the storytelling will be an antidote to AI-driven times. Danny Elfman also composed the music.
IndieWire debuts a first look at the project before it heads to the Fantasia genre film festival this summer. Watch below.
Here's a synopsis: 'In a surreal world fueled by retro gaming nostalgia and Saturday morning cartoon mayhem, Bullet Time follows Bullet — an emotionally unstable bull terrier — as he battles his way through a bizarre digital gaming universe. Fueled by frenetic action, heart, and absurd humor, 'Bullet Time' delivers a visually explosive ride that blends '90s cartoon weirdness with cutting-edge animation and a pulse-pounding original score.' Alcazar produces the project with Javier Lovato. Bob Jaques ('Ren and Stimpy,' 'SpongeBob SquarePants') serves as animation director, while voice actors include Eric Bauza, Luis Bordonada, David Firth, and Uly.
'Happy to finally share a project that holds a lot of meaning to me,' Alcazar said in a statement. 'Four years ago, this film was started, and at the same time, I lost my dog Bullet, who I still think about everyday. His memory kept me going as I made this animation. This experience instilled a stronger appreciation to all the talent and detail that goes into the cartoons we all grew to love.'
He added, 'The '90s seemed like a golden era of cartoon inspiration, innovation, and love, and I wanted to go back to that feeling. The team behind this project are a mix of experienced talent from classics like 'Ren & Stimpy,' 'Pee Wee's Playhouse' and 'Big Adventure,' and 'Gumby' to name a few. Plus, a combination of fresh new artists who were also inspired by the houses they built. Finishing this all completely hand drawn animation TV pilot as we turn towards the AI age feels a bit bitter sweet. Times do change but I hope the appreciation of hard work and passion doesn't and that we will always find value in creation from skills and experience. Without it we are lost. … Without it things will lose all meaning.'
The full Fantasia Festival lineup will be announced soon, with the event running July 18 to August 4. But we can confirm 'Bullet Time' will be featured. Watch the trailer below.
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The Weeknd brings ‘After Hours Til Dawn' back to Soldier Field, closing a chapter on the bad boy you can dance to
The Weeknd brings ‘After Hours Til Dawn' back to Soldier Field, closing a chapter on the bad boy you can dance to

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

The Weeknd brings ‘After Hours Til Dawn' back to Soldier Field, closing a chapter on the bad boy you can dance to

Three years ago, Abel Tesfaye — better known as The Weeknd — first brought his 'After Hours Til Dawn Tour' to Soldier Field. An acclaimed spectacle, the tour that started on such a high eventually brought the artist to his lowest low. In September 2022, during a show at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles near the end of his tour's North American leg, The Weeknd abruptly lost his voice while performing 'Can't Feel My Face.' The incident, brought on by 'self-imposed pressure' and stress, he said, left the artist reckoning with the realities of the world he'd built since breaking out of his underground, internet anonymity into global superstardom. It inspired a complete overhaul of his latest album, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' (released Jan. 31), as well as a companion film of the same title, with actors Jenna Ortega and Barry Keoghan co-starring alongside Tesfaye in what's been widely regarded as a hyper-stylized, hollow vanity project. Upon the album and film's releases, Tesfaye announced he'd be leaving his famed moniker behind. He felt he had 'said everything he could say' under the Weeknd name and was looking to explore different creative avenues musically. Despite the critical reception for his ventures outside of music, fans showed up in droves Friday night for the first of two nights of the 'After Hours Til Dawn Tour' (part deux), and to say goodbye (sort of). After opening sets from Mike Dean and Playboi Carti, the lights went down and a deep, crimson haze eclipsed the stage. Brooding and slightly ominous, it was a similar production to what graced the lakefront stadium in the summer of 2022, with a mainstage rising from a city of ruins, multiple runways and a towering, chrome Stargirl replacing what had been the moon. Tesfaye wasted no time getting right into the thick of it. Flanked by nearly three dozen shrouded and masked dancers, one of R&B's most enigmatic figures appeared as a glam Darth Vader or space-age Phantom of the Opera — ready to lead his followers through a celebration of excess, contradiction and dissociation like no one else can. Lyrically, The Weeknd's signature is oscillating between yearning lover boy and the worst guy you'd meet at the afters, set to a breakbeat pace. His career, both on the mic and on film ('Uncut Gems,' 'The Idol'), is built upon various layers and dynamics of who is ultimately the same person: himself. A hedonist hustler never satisfied. The predator and the prey. Secure in his insecurities and wreaking havoc because of it. As one concertgoer shared in passing, 'His music does remind you of a bad boyfriend, but when they make you like them again.' Is it survival mode? Maybe. For over the past decade, it has worked — making Tesfaye a cultural force. Adeptly walking the ever-thinning line between sexy and sleazy, he's undeniably one of modern pop music's most influential hitmakers and collaborators. For Stephanie Escobedo, longtime fan and owner of Through the Body Dance & Fitness Studio in West Town, the artist's latest album and film project heightened the anticipation ahead of this weekend's shows. 'It's visually beautiful, like a giant music video,' Escobedo said of the movie. 'I liked the imagery and how he played himself because he can't act for (expletive). I thought it was a cool omission of how awful of a person he was and how he used the two characters of Jenna and Barry to portray sides of himself. 'From what I understand,' she continued, 'he's going to step away from The Weeknd persona and just go by Abel. I'm interested to hear how Abel sounds, as opposed to this version of him I've loved since 2011.' For just over two hours, there were no breaks in the concert. 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Woman Starts Recording Someone's Proposal, Then Sees Who the Groom-To-Be Is
Woman Starts Recording Someone's Proposal, Then Sees Who the Groom-To-Be Is

Newsweek

time8 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Woman Starts Recording Someone's Proposal, Then Sees Who the Groom-To-Be Is

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A woman has gone viral for her incredible reaction to walking in to her own surprise proposal—and not realizing it was for her. Tonia Olikiabo lives in Manchester, United Kingdom, and has been in a long-distance relationship with her partner Tobi, who lives in Colorado, for close to five years. At the start of 2025, Olikiabo visited her partner in Denver, and when she returned to England after the trip, she didn't expect to see her now-fiancé for a long time, telling Newsweek she was "so surprised" when he unexpectedly showed up to propose. Tonia Olikiabo records her cousin's reaction, thinking it's her surprise proposal. Right, the moment she realized her boyfriend was in the room. Tonia Olikiabo records her cousin's reaction, thinking it's her surprise proposal. Right, the moment she realized her boyfriend was in the room. TikTok @toniaoliks To put her off the scent, Tobi had even told her that he was traveling to Texas to visit a friend—but it worked too well. So, when Tobi showed up in Manchester in February, wearing a suit in a room adorned with flowers to propose, Olikiabo could not process it, and thought the proposal was for someone else. In a hilarious clip posted to Olikiabo's TikTok account, @toniaoliks, on April 19, which has been viewed more than 29 million times, Olikiabo opens the door and walks into a room where Ed Sheeran's 'Perfect' is playing, while her cousin stands behind her, recording her every move. But instead of a gasp, cry or shout, Olikiabo stays quiet—and when her cousin walks in the room to record her reaction, Olikiabo is hiding in the corner, recording her right back. Olikiabo explained to Newsweek that her cousin "told me a whole different story to get me in the room," and "as I stepped in, the first thing I noticed was the petals on the floor. "Immediately, I thought my cousin behind me was being proposed to—not sure what was going on in my head to think the person behind me is being surprised!" She went on: "I immediately scooped myself in the corner in an attempt to get myself out of the way for my cousin, and quickly got out my phone. Then I heard my name." In the video, Olikiabo stays hidden in the corner, until her now-fiancé calls her name—and she suddenly realizes what's happening, and runs over to him with an excited scream. From left, Olikiabo walks towards her now-fiancé, and right, the newly engaged couple sharing a hug. From left, Olikiabo walks towards her now-fiancé, and right, the newly engaged couple sharing a hug. TikTok @toniaoliks A second video showed the moment in more detail, along with a sweet montage of the actual proposal and her reaction, Tobi slipping the engagement ring on her finger before they dance together by a heart made of petals. Commenters were in stitches at the behind-the-scenes video, one commenter asking: "Who was she recording?," and another writing "whose proposal did she think it was?" Another pointed out how Olikiabo tried to "close the door to not ruin the surprise," and as another put it: "She didn't even see the fiancé cause she was rooting for someone else. You deserve all the happiness, stranger." And as one moved commenter summed it up: "The way she quickly tried to close the door to not ruin the surprise and didn't even realize it was her man. All she cared about was her friend. So many small beautiful details I love this woman." More than half of couples began discussing engagement more than a year before the proposal, at 57 per cent, according to The Knot's 2024 Jewelry and Engagement Study. The vast majority of those proposing prepared for the big moment ahead of time (87 per cent)—just like Tobi did, evident by his set-up—while just 13 per ent reported that it was a spontaneous gesture. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures you want to share? Send them to life@ with some extra details, and they could appear on our website.

Screen Talk's Winners and Losers of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival
Screen Talk's Winners and Losers of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Screen Talk's Winners and Losers of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

As IndieWire wraps up our Cannes Film Festival coverage — see our favorite films of the festival here and our annual critics survey here — so does the Screen Talk podcast. This week, hosts Anne Thompson and Ryan Lattanzio debate the late-breaking premieres like 'The History of Sound' and 'The Mastermind,' finally get a chance to gush over 'Sentimental Value,' and speculate on what countries might submit Cannes premieres for the International Feature Oscar. Since Iran will never submit its dissident director Jafar Panahi, who's back in his home country post-Cannes despite legal battles and decades of censorship attempts by the Islamic Republic, for Palme d'Or winner 'It Was Just an Accident,' we're going with Luxembourg as the country to pick this film for the Oscars. Both France and Luxembourg have production stakes in the film, though France will have plenty of other contenders to work with. More from IndieWire Cannes 2025 Films Sold So Far: Kino Lorber Buys 'Amrum' from Director Fatih Akin Ariana Grande Joins 'Meet the Parents 4' Cast with Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro Norway, no question, will submit Grand Prix winner 'Sentimental Value' from Joachim Trier, which Anne says has one of the great onscreen sister bonding moments of all time shared by actresses Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas. Both could be in the Oscar running with the right Neon campaign. (Check out our no-holds-barred interview with Tom Quinn on the ground here.) Anne finally saw 'Sîrat,' the French-Spanish co-production directed by Oliver Laxe, another late-festival Neon pick-up, despite watching some of it with her hands over her eyes. She compares the film to 'The Wages of Fear' and its remake 'Sorcerer' as a road odyssey in which trucks plow across the Moroccan desert. The great Sergi López stars as a father who, traveling with his young son, searches for his missing daughter amid marauding throngs of drug-fueled ravers. Ryan rewatched the film and has a better grasp of what it's trying to say now. That morning in Cannes, he just wasn't in the mood for this particularly fatalistic, dance-until-we-die apocalyptic vision. The hosts are split on Kelly Reichardt's anti-heist movie 'The Mastermind,' which rigorously stages with impeccable 1970 detail a story of a clumsy art thief (Josh O'Connor) falling down the hole of his own poorly hatched plan. Anne points out that Reichardt is 'slow as molasses' as ever, while Ryan lapped up the period elements and casting, even if the charismatic Alana Haim is gravely underused. Also, we wanted more heat (i.e. sex) from Oliver Hermanus' 'The History of Sound,' which features a great O'Connor performance as well as another moving turn from Paul Mescal. Ryan likes this film more than Anne, though they both admit it's a perhaps too handsomely made period love story. Finally, we share thoughts on the season finale of 'The Last of Us,' which ends with a soap-operatic-level cliffhanger that will keep us on edge for the show's return more than a year from of IndieWire Nightmare Film Shoots: The 38 Most Grueling Films Ever Made, from 'Deliverance' to 'The Wages of Fear' Quentin Tarantino's Favorite Movies: 65 Films the Director Wants You to See The 19 Best Thrillers Streaming on Netflix in May, from 'Fair Play' to 'Emily the Criminal'

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