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‘Videoheaven' Required Maya Hawke's Voice, a Decade of Close Viewing, and Seinfeld Jokes

‘Videoheaven' Required Maya Hawke's Voice, a Decade of Close Viewing, and Seinfeld Jokes

Yahoo10-07-2025
There's a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment in 'Lethal Weapon 3,' a tracking shot, that isn't meant to draw any kind of attention to itself. But it did draw the eye of director Alex Ross Perry and appears as part of his essay film, 'Videoheaven' because in the background of the shot, there are not one, but two video stores.
Perry and editor Clyde Folley have watched movies and television shows for a decade now, hunting out depictions of video stores in cinema. 'Videoheaven' isn't just charting their rise and fall across the American commercial landscape, but the ways in which the cultural reception of video stores in films and TV shows allowed cinema to speak to and about itself, and to position us as viewers and consumers in a moment in history.
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The resulting documentary – narrated by Maya Hawke from a script Perry wrote with deep fondness whether she's talking about her father's work in 'Hamlet,' the significance of Troma posters, her own throwback video store scenes in 'Stranger Things,' the social peril of picking out tables as demonstrated in multiple episodes of 'Seinfeld,' or the soft power of the video store clerk — is a beautiful balance of films and shows that tackle the video store as a setting head-on and those that simply reflect what it was like to live in a now-vanished world where they existed. Creating it required, simply, the time to watch a lot of movies.
'I'm confident no one has ever noticed that [shot from 'Lethal Weapon III'] except for me,' the writer/director behind 'Pavements' and 'Her Smell' told IndieWire. 'Between 2014 and November of last year when we were conceivably finishing 'Videoheaven,' either I watched this movie, Clyde watched this movie and texted me, a friend of ours watched it and said, 'I got one for you,' I saw a clip of it on Instagram… everything came piecemeal, which is the benefit of doing something for so long.'
'Videoheaven' has about 200 sources from films, TV shows, commercials, news reports, and related media. But acquiring that material is not the same time as creating a narrative and every single clip was up to Perry's and Folley's discretion about where, how, and why it should be used in visually demonstrating the message of the documentary. Perry knew from early on that he wanted to start with the clip of the 'To Be Or Not To Be' soliloquy in Michael Almereyda's 2000 version of 'Hamlet,' which takes place as Hamlet (Ethan Hawke) experiences choice paralysis in the aisles of a Blockbuster. But beyond that, there was no roadmap.
'We don't know what the next thing you see is. It could be literally one of 200 things. And the challenge for us is looking at every single clip and saying, 'What visual goes hand in hand with what our narration is saying right here.' But also, what do you show people at minute three that they know there's 160 more minutes? Because it could be anything, but it has to be something that is the exact right clip,' Perry said.
The process of building and swapping out clips happened slowly, in Folley's and Perry's spare time as they worked on other projects, but Folley told IndieWire that ended up being a benefit to their work. 'Something that's really unique about this project is that, ostensibly, we didn't have deadlines for a very long time. We didn't have producers breathing down our necks. We didn't have money people to answer to. It's just one of those things where it took as long as it took and then it just started feeling, at some point, more like a movie,' Folley told IndieWire.
The project started as a hard-drive of around 60 notable examples of video stores in film, given to the 'Videoheaven' team by film scholar Daniel Herbert, and a script idea. Folley spent a couple of years, in moments of free time, putting together rough assemblies and guessing at what clips might work well against his scratch VO track of Perry's script. Two or three years into the process, the team started to watch the latest four hour assemblies in Folley's apartment and use weekly edit sessions to refine it. 'We would just huddle around my desk and work on this. It really felt a lot like chiseling away at this larger stone before it becomes the statue,' Folley said.
Films like 'Be Kind, Rewind,' and 'Watching The Detectives,' which are set in video stories, required lots of time and effort to find the essential clips, both video-only and audio-included, that would fit inside of 'Videoheaven.' But sometimes the process of chiseling away at the statue could be incredibly streamlined. 'Literally mid-stride between last week's session and next week's session, I see online [that] they went to a video store in last night's episode of 'Yellowjackets,' here are the tapes they talked about. I send it to Clyde and to Drew, our downloader… and that episode was in our timeline probably within 10 days of it airing,' Perry said.
Perry and Folley's refining work wasn't just at the level of clip selection, of course. The team needed to make sure that the film said absolutely what it needed to say in the right tonal mix between academic interest and pop history. ''Los Angeles Plays Itself' has like one and a half feet in the academic and 'Room 237' has two feet in the pop. And I wanted to straddle the difference,' Perry said.
Once 'Videoheaven' went from having temp narration to Hawke's voiceover, it started to feel even more like the bones were in place. A festival acceptance at Rotterdam gave it a helpful deadline to meet. It's a mark of the finished film's success that Folley observed that he keeps referencing points the film itself is making when talking about the making of it. 'The movie says so much,' Folley said. 'I feel like there's not a lot that's just left on the table.'
Even so, Perry told IndieWire there's an alternate world where they're still working on 'Videoheaven,' because the act of making it was such a pleasure. 'I just can't overstate the joy of working on something with no pressure, no external necessity, no money on the line, no deadlines, no anxious producers, and no reason to finish it other than because we think it's the best version it could be, and that purity is entirely — I mean, you can't do that at a profession level. That's called a passion project. That's called being an artist.'
'Videoheaven' is now playing at the IFC Center in New York City.
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Fantastic Four's box office drop proves Marvel is losing average moviegoers
Fantastic Four's box office drop proves Marvel is losing average moviegoers

USA Today

time21 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Fantastic Four's box office drop proves Marvel is losing average moviegoers

Marvel Studios might be staring down the endgame for its cinematic universe as we know it. With The Fantastic Four: First Steps estimated for a difficult 66-percent box office drop from its respectable opening weekend of $118 million domestic, the comic book movie giant has watched its 2025 strategy lose some of the core audience that cemented the MCU as appointment viewing for years... the average moviegoers. Right now, Marvel most likely won't have one of its films situated within the top five of domestic earners at the box office for the first time since 2011 (excluding 2020, of course), just looking at Box Office Mojo. REVIEW: The Fantastic Four: First Steps plays it too safe to get it just right After running Hollywood for the better part of 15 years and change, Marvel is stuck with all three of 2025 films likely falling behind their peers in domestic box office competition. February's Captain America: Brave New World (roughly $200 million) suffered from lackluster reviews and a convoluted fit into the grander storyline, while May's Thunderbolts* (roughly $190 million) boasted good reviews but lacked marquee characters casual fans knew about. The Fantastic Four: First Steps should outgross both of those films domestically when it's all said and done, but it's unlikely to top the ultimate grosses of films like A Minecraft Movie (roughly $424 million), Lilo & Stitch (roughly $421 million and counting), Jurassic World: Rebirth (roughly $311 million and counting), Superman (roughly $306 million and counting) and even April's surprise horror hit Sinners (roughly $278 million), an original project. New films await. The new Fantastic Four film earned good notices from critics, but the substantial drop shows that, once the big fans got in their viewings during opening weekend, there weren't as many casual moviegoers left waiting to see the new MCU project as in years past. This is the third time this year that a Marvel film has shown an inability to leg out. With probable global hits like Avatar: Fire and Ash, Wicked: For Good and Zootopia 2 on the horizon, a Marvel film will also possibly miss the top 10 globally at the box office (outside of 2020) for the first time since 2011. The Fantastic Four: First Steps isn't doing big business internationally and is already proving to lack legs stateside. Compare this film's lukewarm results to 2024's Deadpool & Wolverine, a monster success with two primarily non-MCU characters that grossed roughly $637 million domestically. Marvel's biggest success since 2021's Spider-Man: No Way Home relied on two characters whose previous films were created by other studios under the generic Marvel banner. Both of those films had rampant nostalgia in their corner to go along with big-name characters. Marvel will next partner with Sony on next July's Spider-Man: Brand New Day, which will reportedly boast Mark Ruffalo's Hulk and Jon Bernthal's Punisher. We're assuming another Tom Holland Spider-Man vehicle will do big business, as will December 2026's Avengers: Doomsday that boasts Robert Downey Jr.'s MCU return. However, even those big projects lean on past glories to wrangle in the casual moviegoers. This year, a new Captain America in Anthony Mackie, a new anti-hero squad and the MCU's first go at the Fantastic Four all failed to reach past the expected audience. At least one of those films (Captain America) got awful reviews, but none of them really hit the zeitgeist in the way, say, James Gunn's Superman did just a couple of weeks before The Fantastic Four: First Steps. Perhaps that's why Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige hinted that a "reset" awaits his cinematic universe. Nostalgia can power your film to success, but even Marvel Studios has a finite amount at its disposal. Qualifying the Downey Jr. days of the MCU as nostalgic is dangerous business, as the original grand finale to that run, Avengers: Endgame, only came out about six years ago. If Marvel's best trick up its sleeve is playing the hits to get regular moviegoers off the couch and into the cinema, the studio is going to run out of that goodwill pretty quickly. Avengers: Doomsday has Downey Jr. going for it, sure, but the film has no narrative payoff on the horizon. The grander MCU storyline post-Endgame has been, to put it mildly, a jumbled mess. The thematic denouement of the Infinity Stones saga was a decade-plus in the making, and the entire globe flocked to see how it concluded. Right now, the next Avengers film seems to be hinging on brand recognition and nostalgia to get audiences to the movies. Unless your wardrobe primarily consists of Marvel t-shirts, can you plot out how this gigantic story has gone lately? While the next Avengers film will partially work at the box office because brand recognition and nostalgia are still perniciously attractive to a wider audience, you just can't expect the same impact of past Avengers films. The payoff just isn't there to nearly the same degree. Downey Jr. will be the big draw; the new characters compiling the expected Avengers ensemble is a strange hodgepodge of film and television successes and failures. The disastrous rollout of so many Disney+ streaming shows particularly diluted the brand and made the grander story nearly impossible to follow. Again, everything that's happened since Thanos turned to dust has been a gigantic shrug. If Doomsday hits and word spreads of a confusing plot, even an Avengers movie with RDJ can wither on the vine. You can't say the Marvel Cinematic Universe is dead because the machine will keep turning out just enough of its die hards to pop on opening weekend. However, Disney will only be willing to fund so much MCU content comparative to years past if these movies keep popping up and evaporating the weekend after release. Big movies need legs. They need to get casual moviegoers interested. For years, Marvel did so with admirable consistency, even if every movie didn't hit a billion dollars globally. Right now, the studio can only rely on yesterday to make tomorrow viable. The new projects aren't working as well as before; the casuals are tuning them out. Unless a project is directly harping on what's been done before, the golden age of Marvel is probably over by now. In order for there to be even the faint chance of a second one, the studio is going to have to reboot this entire ordeal and simplify all of this for general moviegoers. Until it does, expect more of those big second-weekend drops. All financial numbers this piece originate from Box Office Mojo.

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community
Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

Indianapolis Star

timean hour ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Ralph Lauren's Oak Bluffs collection celebrates historic Black beach community

Cricket sweaters, patchwork blanket, and distressed baseball caps. Each is part of the new collection called Polo Ralph Lauren for Oak Bluffs, celebrating the historically Black community of Oak Bluffs in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The collection is an evolution of the 2022 collection based on Historically Black Colleges Morehouse and Spelman, who are again partners in the Oak Bluffs collection, and is a part of the company's "Design with Intent" portfolio. "Ralph Lauren as a man, as a brand is sort of the world ambassador to Americana," James Jeter, Creative Director for Polo Men's at Ralph Lauren told USA TODAY. "With that comes this incredible responsibility for us to tell these incredible American stories as fully, as broadly, as accurately as possible." The collection deftly weaves HBCU campus style drawn from Morehouse and Spelman with resort wear that references the historic Black beach town and Black traditions. "It was just very important to tell that story, the multi-faceted, multi-dimensional experience that is the Black experience that also translates into the American experience," Dara Douglas, Product and Brand Lead for Design with Intent, told USA TODAY. It is accompanied by a documentary on the community directed by Cole Brown titled "A Portrait of the American Dream: Oak Bluffs" that debuted on the brand's YouTube page on July 24. "Oak Bluffs' unique history, traditions and sense of community deeply inspire me and speak to what we are all searching for – a place where you can be free, uncontrived, joyful and truly at home," Ralph Lauren, Executive Chairman and Chief Creative Officer of the eponymous preppy stalwart, said in a July 23 press release. Oak Bluffs was once a part of nearby Edgartown and was deemed to be the place "suitable" for Black workers at nearby resorts, according to the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The Oak Bluffs community envisioned by the collection started in earnest when Charles Shearer opened Shearer Cottage in 1912, according to The Root. The Black news outlet described the inn as, "an act of defiance in an America riddled with discrimination and racial segregation, where safe lodging for Black travelers was a rare luxury." "So by default really, Oak Bluffs becomes the place ... for young, educated, affluent African Americans—the politicians and the movie stars." Dr. Elaine Weintraub, historian and co-founder of the Martha's Vineyard African American Heritage Trail, told the Trust. At the heart of Oak Bluffs, according to the Root, is a beach called the Inkwell that served as a place where, "Black folks could swim, sunbathe, and just be, without getting side-eyed or harassed." Weintraub described vacationers to the Inkwell, Shearer Cottage, and Oak Bluffs throughout the decades as a "who's who" including Madame C.J. Walker, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., actress Ethel Waters, and singer Lionel Richie. "Well, I think perhaps I should say what you I think are aware of. Our people are deeply mystical, you might say spiritual and we have a an appreciation for place," Dr. Lawrence E. Carter Sr., the Dean of the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel, said in the documentary. "How Martha's Vineyard became Martha's Vineyard has an awful lot to do with traffic, who came through here and by coming through here bequeathed something." Dorothy West, the youngest member of the Harlem Renaissance, said of Oak Bluffs, "I thought there was always summer here" in an interview published by the Martha's Vineyard Museum Oral History Channel. "I think historically it has represented a place where African Americans could be successful, could be around other African-Americans, could share in a culture and a place in the sun and that they'll own and that they'll belong," Weintraub said. Oak Bluffs still holds that same significance today. Netflix's show "Forever", released in March, showcased this on an episode titled "The Vineyard", allowing viewers to see the vibrance and richness that still exists in Oak Bluffs. The 2022 collection was described by Jeter as a "period piece" that drew from the ephemera of Morehouse and Spelman, of which Jeter and Douglas are alumni, from 1920's to the 1960's. "You'll notice that there's this kind of decorum (in the 2022 collection). We leaned a little bit into politics of respectability, which really started such an incredible conversation," Jeter said. He added that imagery for the collection's campaign was "intentionally less serious" and leaned into a multi-generational interpretation of summers on the shore. "Quite frequently people think of the output that comes from the Black experience, whether it's through entertainment, through sports. So you constantly see the Black body in motion, but this notion of rest and relaxation as a space that the black body could occupy I think is quite revolutionary," Douglas said. The collection comes as companies have backed away from concepts labeled DEI following pressure from the Trump administration and other right-wing forces. Jeter and Douglas both pointed to the collection as a part of the company's commitment to widening the brand's view of what is included in "Americana," with James saying "we intended to stick to that."

Nancy Meyers Reacts With Surprise to News of 'The Holiday' Limited Series
Nancy Meyers Reacts With Surprise to News of 'The Holiday' Limited Series

Elle

timean hour ago

  • Elle

Nancy Meyers Reacts With Surprise to News of 'The Holiday' Limited Series

THE RUNDOWN On August 1, it was reported that Nancy Meyers's 2006 film The Holiday was in development as a limited series for Apple TV+ by Deadline. But it looks like Meyers had no idea about the new show and was quick to comment on the production in an Instagram Story. Sharing a screenshot of a report on The Holiday series, Meyers wrote over it, 'News to me. Imagine my surprise when I opened Instagram and this was the first post I saw.' Here's everything we know about the project so far. In the original film, two women trade homes in the U.K. countryside and Los Angeles after struggling with their personal lives. Amanda Woods is a Hollywood trailer editor who ends her engagement and Iris is a newspaper columnist stuck in a rut. After trading spaces, Amanda meets Iris's widower brother, Graham, and surprises herself by reconnecting emotionally to love. Iris meets Amanda's neighbor, Arthur, a forgotten Hollywood icon, and then meets a film composer named Miles; both men help her transform. The series will likely be some version of Meyers's original story, keeping 'the setup of the movie about a single American and single British woman living very different lives who swap their houses for the holidays and find love in the process.' The original cast included Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law, and Jack Black, but Deadline stated the show will feature 'new characters,' and thus new actors. But maybe we can hope for a cameo? Krissie Ducker is serving as the writer and executive producer for The Holiday series, along with comedian Rob Delaney as a consultant on the script. Not yet. This post will be updated.

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