logo
The Studio: Seth Rogen's triumph of a Hollywood satire is absolutely stuffed with career-best acting

The Studio: Seth Rogen's triumph of a Hollywood satire is absolutely stuffed with career-best acting

The Guardian22-03-2025

The Studio has some notes for Hollywood. Like in The Oner, the second episode of Apple TV+'s new industry comedy (out Wednesday 26 March) from the Superbad team of Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. The incoming head of Continental Studios, Matt Remick (Rogen), is careening through the Hollywood Hills in his convertible, racing to the set in time to catch the director's virtuoso oner. That is a scene filmed in one single, continuous take, which – in this case – must also be completed in 'the magic hour' before sunset when the light is just so.
As Matt and fellow executive Sal (Ike Barinholtz) make their clumsy entrance (patronising a PA, offering unwanted feedback, debating whether the oner really is 'the ultimate cinematic achievement' or 'just a director jacking off'), it becomes clear that the episode will itself unfold in a oner. Very clever.
Did you already know all about oners? Perhaps you have an opinion on the Goodfellas tracking shot v Roger Deakins's Oscar-winning work on Sam Mendes's war movie 1917? If so, you are very much The Studio's target audience: an unabashed cinephile who bemoans the never-ending churn of bankable 'IP' while wishing for a return to the days of classics such as Roman Polanski's Rosemary's Baby, Woody Allen's Annie Hall or, as Matt ruefully reflects, 'some great film that wasn't directed by a fucking pervert'.
You are, in fact, quite a lot like Matt, a man whom corporate big boss Griffin Mill (Bryan Cranston) suspects of unsuitable instincts: 'You're obsessed with actors and directors liking you, rather than being obsessed with making the studio as much money as possible.' Griffin's got Matt bang to rights there, as we see in another episode when Matt delegates, delays and otherwise weasels his way out of delivering a necessary note to famous nice-guy director Ron Howard.
Unlike Matt, though, The Studio has plenty of constructive criticism to offer, with a point of view on every live industry issue, from overlong running times to gender parity. All the episodes zip along like an assistant in a golf cart crossing the lot on an emergency coffee run, but all contribute something interesting to the big picture. Because Matt's personal dilemma is also the dilemma at the heart of cinema: are we making art here? Or are we making money? Is it possible to do both? And if it is, can you do so without turning into a total lying, scheming scumbag, who'd sell your grandmother for an awards speech shoutout?
Rogen and Goldberg seem to be managing, at least judging by The Studio's crammed cameo list, which overflows with the friends they've made – and kept – along the way. I mean, they managed to get Scorsese for the first episode. And let me tell you, no one plays 'Martin Scorsese' like Martin Scorsese. This guy's got talent!
Indeed, every cameo in The Studio is a career-best, and every supporting actor is perfectly cast. It's a treat whenever Kathryn Hahn enters a room as marketing maven Maya, giant adult sippy-cup in hand, to ream out Matt for even aspiring to cool ('Who are you? The fucking Fonz?'). Or when ex-studio head Patty (Catherine O'Hara) turns up to reminisce – very respectfully, mind – about some dearly departed dick ('He had a package like a caramel leather sofa … rest in peace').
One evergreen criticism is that, like La La Land or Entourage, The Studio is another example of the industry's self-obsession which risks alienating the average audience member, who's never set foot on a soundstage nor sampled the delights of on-set catering. Not even a single M&M.
But, as Maya could tell you – might scream in your face, in fact – not everything needs to be relatable, Matt. Whatever happened to being awestruck by glamour? This is Hollywood, baby, the town where, actually, magic hour lasts all day. Or all decade, back in the 70s; that era of Easy Riders and Raging Bulls, which the Continental team are subconsciously, sartorially reaching for in every scene. But wait, maybe the glory days aren't over just yet, because The Studio is a triumph! You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll pre-order the Blu-ray. Two thumbs up. Five stars. No notes.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The 1% Club stumps 30 contestants with tricky traffic question – but could you get the right answer?
The 1% Club stumps 30 contestants with tricky traffic question – but could you get the right answer?

The Sun

time26 minutes ago

  • The Sun

The 1% Club stumps 30 contestants with tricky traffic question – but could you get the right answer?

THE 1% Club left a whopping 30 players stumped with a tricky traffic question - but could you get it right? A challenging 45% question proved too difficult for some contestants. 5 5 5 Lee Mack hosts the ITV game show testing players' logic and common sense, rather than general knowledge. Round by round, the puzzles get increasingly difficult as more people are eliminated. This particular question asked: "There's something wrong with one of these pictures of London traffic. Which one?" Players were shown three side-by-side photos with red double decker buses, pedestrians and taxis. After the 30 seconds were up, Lee revealed 11 people had answered incorrectly and were out of the game. The correct answer was A), as it showed vehicles driving on the wrong side of the road. Lee then added: "Interestingly on that one, there were 19 passes used." This meant a total of 30 people altogether had been left flummoxed. It's not the first time that the ITV show has stumped its contestants. Viewers previously saw 23 people eliminated on an "easy" question. The 1% Club players stumped by 'easy' question that knocks out 23 people - would you have got it- For a 70% round, Lee had asked: "John writes with his right hand and the last word he'd right if he was writing this sentence would be be. "If Keith writes with his left hand, what would be the last word he would write in the sentence above?" The answer was the word "be", as a different writing hand would not change the last word, something which many viewers playing along got correct. Elsewhere, 13 players were left bamboozled on a tricky picture question. This was the 80% question - meaning 80% of the public would be expected to answer correctly. Contestants were shown three seemingly identical photos of people dressed as a gorilla, clown and horse respectively. A) was right side up, B) was upside down and C) was tilted to the right. Hardest Quiz Show Questions Would you know the answers to some of quizzing TV's hardest questions Who Wants To Be A Millionaire - Earlier this year, fans were left outraged after what they described as the "worst" question in the show's history. Host Jeremy Clarkson asked: 'From the 2000 awards ceremony onwards, the Best Actress Oscar has never been won by a woman whose surname begins with which one of these letters?' The multiple choice answers were between G, K, M and W. In the end, and with the £32,000 safe, player Glen had to make a guess and went for G. It turned out to be correct as Nicole Kidman, Frances McDormand and Kate Winslet are among the stars who have won the Best Actress gong since 2000. The 1% Club - Viewers of Lee Mack's popular ITV show were left dumbfounded by a question that also left the players perplexed. The query went as follows: "Edna's birthday is on the 6th of April and Jen's birthday falls on the 15th of October, therefore Amir's birthday must be the 'X' of January." It turns out the conundrum links the numbers with its position in the sentence, so 6th is the sixth word and 15th is the fifteenth word. Therefore, Amir's birthday is January 24th, corresponding to the 24th word in the sentence. The Chase - The ITV daytime favourite left fans scratching their heads when it threw up one of the most bizarre questions to ever grace the programme. One of the questions asked the player: "Someone with a nightshade intolerance should avoid eating what?" The options were - sweetcorn, potatoes, carrots - with Steve selecting sweetcorn but the correct answer was potatoes. Lee asked the players: "Which of these is not the same photo as the other two?" As usual, contestants had just 30 seconds to suss out the challenging puzzle. The correct answer turned out to be B), as "In A and C, the gorilla is on the left and the horse on the right but they have swapped in B." The 1% Club airs on ITV1 and ITVX. 5 5

Miley Cyrus takes cheeky swipe at ex-husband Liam Hemsworth after bitter divorce
Miley Cyrus takes cheeky swipe at ex-husband Liam Hemsworth after bitter divorce

Metro

timean hour ago

  • Metro

Miley Cyrus takes cheeky swipe at ex-husband Liam Hemsworth after bitter divorce

Miley Cyrus took a cheeky swipe at her ex-husband Liam Hemsworth during a fan interaction this week. The Climb hitmaker, 32, was married to the Australian actor, 35, from 2018 to 2020, but things ended abrupty 10 years into their relationship. In 2023 Miley burst back onto the scene with her fist-pumping, Grammy Award-winning Flowers, which included heavy nods to Liam and celebrated single life. Now, a fan has taken to social media with an amusing story about meeting Miley at a recent album signing. Posting a photo of Miley's scrawl on a vinyl of her album Something Beautiful, which dropped on May 30, X user Liam explained: 'Miley writing 'the best Liam' on my vinyl.' Taking this as a nod to her ex-husband, many fans said on how 'real' the Angels Like You hitmaker is for comment. 'Lol she's so real for that,' said @Pstigger, while @anth0nvy said: 'I love this woman so much.' 'This is HILARIOUS,' commented @1975XO, as @anabiebsmiler wrote: 'HAHAHAHA WHAT AN ICON.' Fans were shocked when Liam and Miley announced their split in August 2019, just seven months after tying the knot. Both have moved on since in relationships kept largely out of the public eye, as Miley has been with Lilly drummer Maxx Morando since 2021, while Hemsworth has been seeing model Gabriella Brooks for even longer. 'Everyone close to Miley says Maxx brings out the best in her,' a source told US weekly of their relationship recently. 'They work very well as a team,' the source shared. 'Maxx shares the same passion for music, and he's one of Miley's biggest cheerleaders.' In August 2019, Cyrus shared a series of posts on X, formerly known as Twitter, where she explained why she and the Hunger Games actor ended their relationship. 'Liam and I have been together for a decade,' she wrote. 'I've said it before & it remains true, I love Liam and always will. BUT at this point I had to make a healthy decision for myself to leave a previous life behind. 'I am the healthiest and happiest I have been in a long time. You can say I am a twerking, pot smoking, foul-mouthed hillbilly but I am not a liar. I am proud to say, I am simply in a different place from where I was when I was younger.' Meanwhile, Liam wrote: 'Hi all. Just a quick note to say that Miley and I have recently separated and I wish her nothing but health and happiness going forward.' To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Having previously attributed the untangling of her relationship with Liam to her Malibu house burning down in November 2018, just a month before their wedding, Miley recently reflected on this time again. 'When my house burned down, that was the biggest blessing I've ever had in my life, actually,' the star said during a Q&A at her Something Beautiful event earlier this month, according to People. 'Losing everything and being able to rebuild, and to be able to be purposeful and choose every piece that I'm gonna collect or also just about the people in my life. 'And I guess for me, when my house burned down, a lot of my relationships also burned down, and that again just led me to such magic and to have so much gratitude.' Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Alex Cooper's net worth as her podcast empire expands with major new deal MORE: Chris Martin and Dakota Johnson 'quietly split' after seven-year relationship MORE: Billy Joel, 76, shares defiant health update after brain condition diagnosis

Fans have just days to watch ‘perfect' rom-com that swept board at Oscars
Fans have just days to watch ‘perfect' rom-com that swept board at Oscars

Daily Record

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Fans have just days to watch ‘perfect' rom-com that swept board at Oscars

A rom-com musical that earned its main star a Best Actress Oscar is available on Netflix - but not for much longer. A romantic musical that dazzled critics, stormed the awards season and left audiences swooning is about to vanish from BBC iPlayer. La La Land (2016), the film that reignited the movie musical for a new generation, will leave the platform on June 9. Damien Chazelle's film is a full-hearted tribute to old Hollywood, youthful ambition, and the romanticising of dreams that don't come true. ‌ Starring Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, the film follows aspiring actress Mia and jazz pianist Sebastian as they navigate the highs and heartbreaks of chasing stardom in Los Angeles. ‌ Their romance, full of vintage flourishes and spontaneous song, plays out against the backdrop of a city where every barista is auditioning, and every traffic jam could become a dance number. The opening sequence - a musical number set on a gridlocked LA freeway - became an instant classic and set the tone for a film that blends fantasy and realism. Chazelle, who had just come off Whiplash, directed with a master's eye for style and rhythm. But La La Land's emotional power comes largely from its two leads. Gosling oozes cool as the jazz purist with a dream of owning his own club, while Stone brings warmth and fragility to Mia, a woman always on the cusp of both failure and greatness. At the Oscars, La La Land famously won six awards - including Best Director and Best Actress for Stone - and briefly claimed Best Picture before the now-infamous envelope mix-up, which ended up seeing Moonlight take the biggest prize. ‌ That viral moment aside, the film's impact was undeniable: a critical and commercial triumph, and the highest-grossing original live-action musical of all time at the time of release. On Rotten Tomatoes, where it holds a sparkling 91% score, viewers still sing its praises. One reviewer said: 'La la Land truly depicts the atmosphere that Hollywood brings to the world, everyone with their ambitions trying to bring them to life, but at what cost". ‌ Another added: 'From the way it was written and portrayed by the actors to the way it was received, it's all amazing. I really enjoyed watching this movie because of its colours and shots - you can really see that somebody put effort and heart into this." A third wrote simply: 'Masterpiece. My favourite musical of all time. My favourite movie of all time." The soundtrack - with songs like 'City of Stars' and 'Audition (The Fools Who Dream)' - became a sensation in its own right. Justin Hurwitz's original score, paired with lyrics by Pasek and Paul, brought a new wave of jazz-infused ballads into the public mind, and helped secure the film's legacy. If you've somehow never seen it, or just want to revisit Mia and Sebastian's story under the golden Los Angeles sky, the clock is ticking: La La Land is available to stream on BBC iPlayer, but only until June 9.

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