
‘Ghostlight,' ‘Watcher' and More Streaming Gems
So few films concern the daily lives of the working class, in any meaningful way, that it's sort of astonishing when one comes along that feels so embedded there. That's the case with this heart-tugging drama from the directors Kelly O'Sullivan and Alex Thompson ('Saint Frances'), in which a grieving father stumbles into a community theater production of 'Romeo and Juliet.' Keith Kupferer is marvelous as the father, beautifully capturing the frustrations and emotional limitations of his class and generation, while Katherine Mallen Kupferer performs modestly as his wife, until a late moment that absolutely clobbers you. And that, in many ways, holds true for the entire movie.
'Goodrich' (2024)
'This midlife crisis is no walk in the park, I'll tell you that,' snorts Andy Goodrich (Michael Keaton) near the end of this poignant comedy-drama, and while his daughter Grace (Mila Kunis) notes the mathematical improbability that 60-something is 'midlife,' the sentiment stands. Andy, the owner-operator of a Los Angeles art gallery that's seen better days, is in free-fall. His wife has just checked herself into rehab, much to his bafflement (he's so checked out, he never noticed her addiction), leaving him to care for their elementary-school aged twins himself. Keaton is credited as an executive producer, and it's easy to see why the project was important to him; the writer-director Hallie Meyers-Shyer hands him a stellar showcase, a guy who talks fast and thinks faster, and whose inherent likability helps soften his obvious flaws. The result is a poignant examination of getting older and wondering if you've lost it — whatever your particular 'it' may be.
'Saint Maud' (2021)
A fair number of minds were blown by 'Love Lies Bleeding,' last year's mash-up of crime thriller, queer romance and surrealist semi-fairy tale from the writer and director Rose Glass, but those who caught this, her debut feature, saw greatness in her future. This nerve-jangling, Catholic-coded psychological thriller stars the bracing Morfydd Clark (currently starring in 'The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power') as the title character, an introverted nurse whose unwavering, self-punishing religious faith coexists uneasily with her own demons and skeletons. Glass's filmmaking is equal parts intellectual and visceral; she pushes the viewer to consider the full ramifications and implications of such unquestioning faith, while taking pains to place us in Maud's shoes (literally, at one point, and quite painfully). It's a debut of striking confidence and exciting, undeniable cinematic skill.
'Watcher' (2022)
The haunted, melancholy visage of Maika Monroe, so well used in 'It Follows' and 'Longlegs,' gets a workout in this deliberately paced, unnervingly crafted thriller from the director Chloe Okuno. Monroe stars as Julia, who accompanies her husband, Francis (Karl Glusman), to Bucharest, Romania, for a career opportunity. He's working all the time, so she's a stranger in a strange land, and Okuno nails the specific, aching solitude of being alone in a crowd where you don't even speak the language — and the feeling that you're being watched and followed. The picture's tension comes from the commonplace, and Okuno uses the simplest of tools (rumbling on the soundtrack, knocks on doors, sudden movements, incoming texts) to build dread and unease. Most of all, she offers a gutsy female interpretation of the male gaze, a story explicitly about being watched, by men, and all of the dangers that can represent.
'Eileen' (2023)
This sublime and absorbing adaptation of Ottessa Moshfegh's 2015 novel takes some of the most durable tropes of pulp literature and film noir — the small-town schlub looking for a way out, the femme fatale whose sexy exterior hides a dark heart — and turns them upside down. Thomasin McKenzie is the title character, a file clerk at a boys' correctional center who cares for her miserable, alcoholic father (Shea Whigham) and can only escape her drab existence with messy sexual fantasies. One day, a new one arrives: the new counselor Rebecca (Anne Hathaway), a blonde knockout who exudes the kind of effortless self-confidence that Eileen can only dream of. Where their attraction goes from there is best left unspoiled; suffice to to say that the director William Oldroyd ('Lady Macbeth') knows the genre road map, and is keenly aware of when to follow it and when to go off-road.
'Waitress: The Musical' (2023)
'Waitress' had quite a circular journey, something akin to those of 'The Producers,' 'Hairspray,' and 'Mean Girls': it began as a nonmusical film (also streaming on Max), was then adapted into a Broadway musical, and then turned back into a movie. The twist here is that rather than restaging it as a traditional movie musical, the directors Diane Paulus and Brett Sullivan instead captured live performances from its 2021 post-lockdown stage revival, creating something of a cross between musical theater and concert performance. The latter influence is especially strong since the production is fronted by singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, who wrote the words and music and periodically played Jenna, the show's long-suffering protagonist. It's a risky gambit, but it works; Bareilles is a live performer, first and foremost, and Paulus and Sullivan's frisky photography gives the scenes a you-are-there immediacy and intimacy.
'Nomad: In the Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin' (2020)
Werner Herzog's documentaries are never just about their surface subject, as his own interests and preoccupations are ever-present. That's especially true in this tribute to his friend and occasional collaborator Bruce Chatwin, a writer and adventurer whose 1989 death clearly left a hole in Herzog's heart. But this is no cradle-to-grave bio-doc, with Herzog instead serving up a thoughtful rumination on the 'wild characters, strange creatures, and big ideas' that fascinated him and this extraordinary man.
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Newsweek
08-08-2025
- Newsweek
Jamie Roy on How ' Blood of My Blood' Will Engage 'Outlander' Fans
Profile shot of Jamie Roy Profile shot of Jamie Roy David Needleman "The whole reason I got into this acting thing was to tell stories that meant stuff to people." In taking on the monumental task of joining the Outlander universe, actor Jamie Roy is very prepared. "I'm very guilty of reading comments," Roy admits, referring to what people are saying about the prequel series Outlander: Blood of My Blood (August 8 on STARZ). "Thankfully, they've all been very, very positive. And it's just so great to see how excited people are to see the show. I don't think there's another fan base like that in the world." Roy plays Brian Fraser, the father of Jamie Fraser from the original series. Blood of My Blood tells the origin stories of the Outlander main characters' families, in this epic romantic drama. He describes the story as a "kind of Romeo and Juliet love story" that explores "the lengths that humans will go to be with the one that they're supposed to be with." As a Scotsman himself, he's proud of how the show "really does paint Scotland in such a beautiful light." And because so much of the show is based there, he's most proud of one very specific thing. "You're going to see a lot of men in kilts, and who doesn't love men in kilts?" SUBSCRIBE TO THE PARTING SHOT WITH H. ALAN SCOTT ON APPLE PODCASTS OR SPOTIFY AND WATCH ON YOUTUBE Editor's Note: This conversation has been edited and condensed for publication. People are rabid fans of Outlander. So what was it like joining the franchise with Outlander: Blood of My Blood? Oh man, even when I was going through the audition process for everything, I knew the scale of what this could potentially be. And for me, I tried to put that to the side because the story itself is, for Blood of My Blood, so important and so beautiful. And that was the thing that I wanted to really focus on first and then when I got the role, then I realized, "Oh wow, your life's about to change because you're now doing this thing where everybody knows it all around the world." The fans are so passionate about it. "You better do a good job, buddy!" But it's been fantastic. The fans are so passionate and it's great. I'm very guilty of reading comments. I know a lot of people say I shouldn't read comments and things, but thankfully, touch wood, they've all been very, very positive. And it's just so great to see how excited people are to see the show when it comes out. I don't think there's another fan base like that in the world. I mean, there's Star Wars, I guess, but I mean, that fan base is divided three different ways. So at least it feels like very unified at this point in time. Jamie Roy ("Brian Fraser") and Harriet Slater ("Ellen MacKenzie") in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Jamie Roy ("Brian Fraser") and Harriet Slater ("Ellen MacKenzie") in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Starz So, in Blood of My Blood, where do find these characters in this prequel? What about the story did you respond to? First of all, it was the danger of the characters, like the situation that they're in, right? This kind of Romeo and Juliet love story that Brian and Ellen have. I'm big fan of Shakespeare, so when I realized that our story was gonna pay homage to that, that got me very, very excited because I was like, "Oh, man, we get to tell this kind of story." So it was danger, I think, that really drew me to it. But also being able to show the lengths that humans will go to to be with the one that they love and the one that they're supposed to be with. You're working with that sort of material in this fictional world and getting to explore those themes, which feels real for you when you're doing the thing because you're the person doing it. It's really special because then as a human when I'm Brian and then I come out and I'm Jamie, it does make you appreciate your loved ones and the relationships that you have. Makes you question like, I'm working hard at this relationship, I'm not working hard enough at this friendship. And I honestly do think, since we started the show, filming-wise, back at the start of last year, I do think I've become a better person for it. What was it like working on a production of this scale? It's huge. I mean, it was crazy. It was one of these things that I was terribly nervous for at the start, but also so excited for, because I'd always wanted to work, first of all, in a studio. I'd never been in a studio before, or like a proper studio, where the ceilings are like 50 meters [164 feet] high or whatever. Even though you're surrounded by 200 people, doing this intimate scene where you're whispering in each other's ears or whatever, everybody there is so supportive, and it's such a collaborative effort. Nobody's judging you. Nobody is watching you being like, "Oh, this guy's not up to much or whatever." Like everybody's there to support one another. So there could be 200, 300, 400 people, I don't care, it wouldn't make a difference to me because I know that everybody who is there wants to be there and wants to do their best. So that honestly took so much pressure off me when you're working on something like this. And then also, like the stuff I'd done before, you're shooting 13, 14 pages a day, which is insane. So you're getting one take, two takes maximum. With this, I've found that we have a lot more freedom to be like, hey, can I try something here? I've got an idea for this. Can we take it back? Whatever. I found a lot more freedom doing that, way more than I thought I would have on this show. And that's been great because it allows you to really be bold, make strange choices, see if they work. If they don't, who cares? We'll just do another one. Jamie Roy ('Brian Fraser') and Harriet Slater ('Ellen MacKenzie') in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Jamie Roy ('Brian Fraser') and Harriet Slater ('Ellen MacKenzie') in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Starz How do you make the character your own? Especially considering that the fans have a connection to this character and this story from another source. How do you make it your own? I think the pressure and the idea is always going to be there. People are going to make comparisons, I think, a lot between Brian and Jamie, rightly so, because it's his father, so they're going to look for things, similarities and such. But what I think they'll find is, Jamie [Fraser, from Outlander] is a combination of two characters, right? He is the son of both Brian and Ellen. So it wouldn't make sense for Brian to be a carbon copy of Jamie, nor would it make sense for Ellen to be carbon copy, so he definitely has traits from both characters. But that allows me to have a little bit more freedom in the way that Brian's portrayed because he doesn't have to be like Jamie. And then the thing is, as well, if he was just like Jamie Fraser, it wouldn't be as fun for people to watch. People would one, make the comparison and two, it'd be like, "Oh, we're just watching Outlander 2.0," which isn't what this show is. It is an homage to Outlander, or should I say, it has aspects of Outlander which people will love. But it also really does stand by itself and it has its own feel, it has its own tone, its own mood and everything. That is really gonna make the difference between like, "Oh, this is Outlander," and, "This is Blood of My Blood." So exploring Brian, the character Brian, in the realms of this freedom, it was really nice to make discoveries that way, as opposed to having a target and trying to play an idea, just like what happens. And I think going through season one, Brian has this really lovely arc where we see him start off as a young lad and hopefully you'll see him turn into a man. So that was really, really fun to play. Because of how big this production is, it's remarkable how intimate so much of the story feels. I can imagine filming it would be interesting, especially filming it out of order. How do you keep up with the ups and downs of all those emotions? There are times where you're filming something that's really, really emotional, there's a couple of scenes throughout the season, and when we were filming them, we definitely weren't goofing off. It was very serious. It was in the romance. We were there in the story between takes, being like, "Okay, right, we'll go back to one." Like, "How can we make this deeper?" But it was very serious. And then there was other times which were romantic scenes where we'd burst out in the middle, like laughing in the middle of the thing. We're like, "Oh my God, like, what are we doing?" Like if we're trying to unbutton a corset or something and you're there for like 30 seconds being like, it's not moving. Or you're there and all of a sudden your kilt falls off. You have those moments, but it is a real nice blend of both. Obviously when I'm doing those kind of scenes, it's with Harriet [Slater], and we have both had this really good relationship with each other where we feel safe, we feel comfortable to do these things. We both know intuitively like, "Okay, we're focusing in here," or we can relax a little bit because we know we've got one, so we'll goof a wee bit and it'll be fun. We'll see what happens, be a bit more playful. But there definitely is this knowing between us and this respect where we know what versions of ourselves we're doing. Also, your other work has been notable, but this is certainly your first really big international project and will certainly get you more attention in the United States. So what is it like for you as a Scottish person to be in this big Hollywood show that's portraying this really romantic Scottish story? It's so funny you say that, because there's so many times you forget the platform. It's an American show filming in Scotland, but when you're here [in Scotland], you're surrounded by all these local crews, those guys from Glasgow. So it makes it so far removed from any of that, which is nice, because you don't have this pressure of feeling like you're in the middle of Hollywood or something. You're 20 minutes outside of Glasgow in an ex-steel mill factory, I think the studio is before it was turned into Ward Park Studios. So I think you forget about that whole side of things and you really are just filming this little thing in the Scottish countryside and sometimes you think, "Oh, we're just doing like a little indie or something like that." After the fact we were like, "Oh they've put the VFX in, they've got all the music, all the scoring and the editing, this amazing camera work and coloring all put together" and you're kind of like, "Oh holy sh**, yeah, this is so much bigger than what we thought." But I think as a Scotsman, doing this, for me personally it makes me really proud to be from here, because it really does paint Scotland in such a beautiful light, as rightly it should because it's such a beautiful country. I know the last few seasons of Outlander, they were in America, but now we actually get to show off Scotland's beauty and all these shots. I hope it's really going to pick up Scottish tourism again, not that it's dying, but people are going to watch the show and be like, "Oh man, I think a trip to Scotland's in the cards." Rory Alexander ('Murtagh Fraser') and Jamie Roy ('Brian Fraser') in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Rory Alexander ('Murtagh Fraser') and Jamie Roy ('Brian Fraser') in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Starz I've been to Scotland a lot, and one thing I know about Scotland is that they like to have fun. There's a phrase in Scotland that we say, "No Scotland, no party." Well, this show is going to make every other thing you do after Outlander different. Are you prepared for that change? Yeah, it's one of these things that hasn't really sunk in yet, if I'm completely honest. When you're filming in Glasgow, you can have a relatively normal life because the show is not as big over here. And then when you go to America, obviously things change. But I think it's the trade-off that you have to make as an actor. If you wanna tell these amazing stories with amazing production teams on platforms which reach people, that's the sort of thing that you have to trade off and you have give up a little bit of your privacy and things like that to be known. And I'm happy to do that because the whole reason that I got into this acting thing was to tell stories that meant stuff to people. So the more people who know who I am means they've seen what I've done, and hopefully the story meant something to them. They've seen something that they saw themselves and the character or whatever and that's something that I'm more than happy to trade off a little bit of my own privacy for, to be honest. Sure, just be careful with that partying part, because more people take pictures now. I'm the sensible one of the group. I'm pleased to say so. Normally I'm the one taking the pictures. So for the hardcore Outlander fans who might be on the fence with Blood of My Blood or new viewers, what's in it for them? Firstly, I'd say, I think the show has all the best parts of Outlander. So everything that you loved about Outlander, you're gonna see in Blood of My Blood. And there's something for everybody, you know? Even if you're a guy who's being dragged along to watch it with their partner, whatever, they're gonna love it as well, because we've got fights, we've got battles, we have war. We have beautiful love stories, we have jokes, it's funny. It's just really got something, I think, for everybody. And I think also the pace of the show is a really good pace because there's no points where you feel like, "Oh, this is dragging on," or anything. Like things are just go, go, and go. And there's so many storylines throughout the show, not just the two main couples, but just the kind of things that's simmering underneath. And they all kind of cross over at different points. And when we see those happening, we're like, "That character is going to see this character, and I wonder how they're going to interact." That's the sort of thing that I think are going to make fans of the original show and fans of the new show just as equally excited. Jamie Roy ("Brian Fraser") in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Jamie Roy ("Brian Fraser") in Outlander: Blood of My Blood. Starz And you're in a kilt! You're going to see a lot of men in kilts, and who doesn't love men in kilts? I mean, do you own a kilt, like in your private life? Yeah, I've got a kilt and I've got, we call it "trusers," which are like tartan trousers, which are cool. So they're like the same material as a kilt, but they're just in the shape of woolen trousers. They're essentially just trousers, but they are all tartan. So it's just like having a kilt back on your legs and they're very bold and they are very cool. I think I need to start wearing kilts. I think I could pull off a kilt. The only thing I'll say is don't get one of these things, they're called like utility kilts or something, and they have like pockets on the kilts. I saw one of these at like a Highland Festival over in America one time, and I wanted to rip the pockets off them because I'm like, "That's no a kilt." Sporen's a big thing. It goes in the front and you put all your stuff in. So yeah, I would 100 percent endorse you getting a kilt. Also, that's very American of us. To turn a kilt into like a cargo short. We're obsessed with cargo shorts and pants. It's an epidemic, really, I don't understand it. That's exactly what it is, the cargo pant version of the kilt. But I do think people are going to start wearing kilts because of you. Oh man, well I should probably start my own kilt company. Yeah, just no pockets.


New York Times
04-08-2025
- New York Times
Cheese and Packers Stories Help a Wisconsin Theater Thrive
Here they are again, those enamored youths hiding their passion from their feuding families in Verona. Verona, Wisconsin, that is. For this is not the latest revival of 'Romeo and Juliet' but the musical 'No Bones About It,' whose lovers, Ronny and Julie, hail from 'two smokehouses / Both alike in enmity' that are competing at a barbecue contest. The audience laughed its way through the performance I attended last month, and I'm pretty sure I wasn't the only one who left humming the song 'Better Keep Away.' The plot's transposing was par for the course for Northern Sky Theater, in Fish Creek, Wis. At a time when many companies are undergoing identity crises or struggling to connect with audiences, this one endures by programming original musicals anchored in local history, institutions, archetypes and customs. For regional audience members, the company's artistic director Molly Rhode said, a Northern Sky show 'is not just sort of about me — it's really about me.' Despite being decidedly not from the area, I very much enjoyed this summer's three offerings, which are running in repertory through Aug. 23. Along with 'No Bones About It,' the company is presenting 'Something in the Water,' set in early-20th-century Waukesha, when that city was ending an unlikely run as a tourist hot spot popularized by mineral springs, and 'Dairy Heirs,' which has a subplot involving a soothing hybrid of provolone and pepper jack called projack. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Newsweek
31-07-2025
- Newsweek
What's on Paramount+ in August 2025? Full List of New Movies, Shows
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. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors Fall officially kicks off, bringing with it a whole load of exciting new movies and shows. "Sonic the Hedgehog 3" is the biggest release on Paramount + this month. August 7 marks its streaming debut, so set a date if you want to catch the speedy blue hedgehog join forces with Keanu Reeves' Shadow and take on Jim Carey's Dr Robotnik. Michael Keaton stars in Goodrich Michael Keaton stars in Goodrich Ketchup Entertainment Before then, however, don't miss out on an underrated Michael Keaton movie. "Goodrich" released to an underwhelming reception in cinemas earlier this year, but its layered tale of an art dealer thrust into modern parenthood deserved more. If that wasn't enough, August 1 alone sees the release of 57 movies on Paramount+. The list features the likes of "Zodiac", "The Truman Show", "Shutter Island", and six "Paranormal Activity" movies, so they're far from filler. From "Migration" to "Murder 360", read on to see what else is coming to Paramount+ in August 2025. Paramount+ Releases in August 2025 August 1, 2025 Every Little Thing Goodrich A Time to Kill Adaptation Adventureland Aeon Flux American Hustle An Invisible Sign Annihilation Blazing Saddles Captive Case 39 Coming to America Crawl Death at a Funeral Double Jeopardy Dr. Seuss' The Lorax Event Horizon Georgetown Gone Baby Gone Good Mourning Love and Monsters Masterminds Milk Miss Congeniality Monster Trucks Mother! New Jack City One the Line Paid in Full Paranormal Activity Paranormal Activity 2 Paranormal Activity 3 Paranormal Activity 4 Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones Primal Fear Project Almanac Rat Race Red Eye Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse Sexterior Motives Shutter Island Snake Eyes The Assistant The Brothers Grimm The Ledge The Little Rascals The Ruins The Sense of an Ending The Town The Truman Show The United States of Leland The Yards Wayne's World What Lies Beneath Zodiac August 3, 2025 Migration Don't Knock Twice August 5, 2025 Man With No Past Murder 360 (season 1) August 6, 2025 Ridiculousness – Season 40 Jersey Shore Family Vacation (season 7, part 2) Blaze and the Monster Machines (season 8) August 7, 2025 Sonic the Hedgehog 3 August 10, 2025 Night Swim August 13, 2025 Playing Gracie Darling PAW Patrol: Jungle Pups special August 14, 2025 (No new entries) August 20, 2025 Baby Shark's Big Show! (season 3) August 24, 2025 Eileen The Killer August 27, 2025 Stans Liberation: D-Day to Berlin (season 1) August 29, 2025