Deborah plays angel and devil in Hacks' latest twofer
'D'Christening' opens some time after Ava and Deborah's reconciliation, after they've injected some of their own personalities into Late Night With Deborah Vance. Thanks to Dance Mom and bits like Celebrity Strip Poker, they've managed to inch their way up to the number-three spot in the ratings. The network is delighted by the headway they've made, but the show within the show is still looking rough. Dance Mom's quickly becoming a liability, both on and off the set (and in Adam Levine's marriage). The strip poker segment is probably edgier than what the Jimmys are doing, but aside from Seth Rogen cracking wise about Louis C.K.—'I'm about to be the first white male comedian to expose himself to a bunch of women, but someone had to break that barrier'—it hardly points to the type of show Ava professes to want to make.
It does highlight just how much Ava and Deborah remain in creative limbo, unable to fully break free of the confines of late night but also unwilling to just go along with the way things have always been. The modest gains they've made with viewers are the result of trying new things, but the network thinks the way to capitalize on that is to invite high-profile stars as guests. Ava pushes back, saying they should use their platform to bolster up-and-coming comedians rather than give airtime to an alleged sex pest like Ethan Sommers, but Deborah just suggests they focus on musical guests for now. The sidestep works, but, as we can see from their physical positioning at the table during this discussion, Deborah hasn't fully come around to Ava's side of things just yet.
Ava's already taken her leap of faith, but Deborah is still hovering at the precipice. What 'D'Christening' suggests, in ways both trenchant and blunt, is that she's looking for something to believe in. Not that she'd put it that way—for much of the episode, she rails against organized religion in general and Catholicism in particular. D.J.'s decision to raise her son A.J. (Aidan Jr., naturally) Catholic turns out to be the latest round in a previously untold feud between Deborah and the Catholic Church that began with a joke on Comic Relief VI about the latter providing cover to its own sexual predators within. She agrees to attend the christening, despite her fear of clergymen and Mark Wahlberg, but from the get-go, she's pushing her own agenda. Deborah's disgust grows with every murmured prayer, but seeing D.J. take her post as a Eucharistic minister is too much. Their dustup leaves the priest covered in wine, which is worth it for Deborah's fantastic retort: 'You know, if you believe that magic, you can get your guy to turn that back into water.'
But D.J. isn't the Catholic Church or Mark Wahlberg: She's not interested in escalating her feud with her mom; she's ready to end it. She won't subject Aidan to an upbringing like her own, with Dennis Miller as a pen pal and virtually no other friends; she wants to make sure he has community. Showing better instincts in her first two months as a parent than her own mom did across multiple decades, D.J. threatens to cut off all contact with Deborah unless she falls in line. What's even more amazing is that it works. So, D.J.'s right. Women can have it all: a great job, hot husband, beautiful baby, and boundaries. Someone tell Ava about that last part.
The church setting leads all of the major players to ponder their own beliefs, with Ava first balking at then embracing being a godmother, but only after proclaiming that she doesn't 'fuck with' church dogma or misogyny; Marcus realizing he's his own higher power, at least, when it comes to how he spends his time; and D.J. admitting that the natural beauty of the world has opened up her mind to the divine. It's enough to make Deborah, who might previously have been confident in her lack of belief, suddenly feel its absence. She confesses to Ava that she's worried about being disconnected from her grandson—even if D.J. allows 'regular contact' with him, they live in separate states, and the late-night job is all-consuming. Ava tries to reassure Deborah about the legacy she's leaving behind, sneaking in her own gentle reminder about the importance of making the best show they can.
At the end of 'D'Christening,' it looks like Deborah sees the light as she invites Ahamed Weinberg to do a set on her show. And for much of 'Witch Of The Week,' she seems committed to being on the same page as Ava. She's charming at lunch and conciliatory in one-on-ones. Instead of taking advantage of her friendship with Jo Pezzimenti to take shots at her with precision in the opening monologue, she takes advantage of their friendship to, as Ava suggests, nab an exclusive interview with the mayor, post-orgy scandal. Jo is more wry than rueful on the couch, crushing jokes about not looking for wedding rings when so many hands are involved and reminding the audience that she's the mayor of Sin City, after all.
Their bold move pays off, with the interview racking up 1.5 million views across platforms. More importantly, it births a whole new strategy for the show: Ditch the topical angle and focus on original ideas that show off Deborah's strengths as an interviewer and performer. The air fairly crackles as they brainstorm. (It's not for nothing that they sit side by side in this scene.) Instead of bringing on twentysomethings with injectable fillers who Deborah has to pretend to be charmed by, they'll invite her plastic surgeon to give them the dirt on who's been, let's say, freshened up. 'We need our show to be more of an event,' Ava tells Rob. So, they'll tape a day early, which will cost them the news cycle but will give them time to cut promos that properly tease what Late Night With Deborah Vance has to offer. Deborah declares, 'It's time to show people that what's different about this show is not just the fact that the host wears a skirt,' at long last answering my prayers for the show-within-the-show to fully come into view.
The timing is right for an extended look at Late Night With Deborah Vance—there's no more hesitation on either lead's part, and they're finally presenting a united front. Hacks' flurry of clips do tease a show that's more interesting than the usual 'tell us about your latest project and weave in a charming anecdote if you can' format, even if it's skewing toward daytime, what with the plastic surgeon and psychic guests. The problem is that the show they've been dreaming of making still seems so…ordinary. Deborah and Ava's changes might propel them to the number-one spot in late night, with all the bragging rights and billboards that come with that distinction, but it still feels like something's missing. Once again, it's hard to tell if that's a narrative choice—a way to extend the suspense or point to some unresolved issue—or something lacking in the writing. Despite being Deborah's white whale, the late-night show seems like just a pit stop on her journey with Ava rather than the endpoint. 'Well, duh,' you say, and I don't disagree; the relationship between Deborah and Ava is the main attraction, not whatever job they're doing at the moment. But for me, their relationship is rooted in a creative partnership, a belief bolstered by the week's motifs of birth and motherhood. What is their show if not their baby? So, when that partnership lacks inspiration, it's harder to invest in it.
But maybe I'm speaking too soon, because 'Witch Of The Week' boasts a devious cliffhanger. 'D'Christening' ends on a sweet note, with D.J. telling Ava that the reason she picked her to be Aidan Jr.'s godmother is because she's found the good in Deborah, and she believes in her. D.J. will always be skeptical of that side of her mother, but she wants her son to be a believer too. 'Witch Of The Week' is more tart in comparison. Deborah, just hours after tipping her hat to Winnie for backing her bid to host Late Night, asks Bob Lipka to get the studio executive off her back. 'I would just like a little goodwill. I got to number one; haven't I earned that?' she says, with just the right mix of frustration and flirtiness. The next day on set, the news breaks that Winnie's been fired. Bob really seems to have 'heard' Deborah.
While the new queen of late night cackles and basks in the admiration of the studio audience, Ava tries to force a smile but ends up looking concerned. Just last night, Deborah said she wished Winnie would get out of her way. Deborah plays innocent, of course, and it's not as if Ava has a reason to suspect her of any wrongdoing—aside from their entire history, that is. That delightful frisson of shared doubt, of Ava wondering if Deborah would go to such lengths and the audience questioning if Deborah knew exactly what she was doing when she called Bob, comes late in the hour. But it's worth it.
• Although the late-night elements didn't come together for me, this was the week for throwaway lines. See: 'I had to park illegally at the Museum Of Tolerance. But if they have me towed, that is the height of hypocrisy' and just about everything Kayla and Dance Mom said.
• 'I'm newly allergic to shrimp,' 'I think I got sick from the thermometer'—Ava's medical mysteries deepen.
• Deborah's ever-growing enemies list also includes Nora Ephron, who once called her a 'bitch.' But in the late rom-com legend's defense, Deborah 'was being a bitch.'
• 'Honey, are you still waiting to meet Leonardo DiCaprio to have a child? Because I've been reading some of your old diaries and I think there's something to that.' I love how supportive, if delusional, Nina (a wonderfully kooky Jane Adams) is as Ava's mom.
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Business Wire
7 minutes ago
- Business Wire
ReFrame Analysis of IMDbPro Data Finds Gender-Balanced Series have Higher Viewership
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- ReFrame, the initiative launched in 2017 by Sundance Institute and WIF (formerly known as Women In Film Los Angeles) to advance gender equity in the screen industries, and IMDbPro, the essential resource for entertainment industry professionals, today announced that 45 of the 100 most popular series of 2024-25 meet ReFrame Stamp criteria for gender-balanced production including Emmy-nominated series Dying for Sex, Hacks, The Bear and The Pitt (full list below). The 2024-25 ReFrame Report on Gender and Hiring in TV, which examines hiring across key roles in these series based on IMDbPro data, saw a rebound of 6.5% this year from last year's tally, which was the lowest for gender-balanced series since 2020. ReFrame and IMDbPro today announced that 45 of the 100 most popular series of 2024-25 meet ReFrame Stamp criteria for gender-balanced production. Share When content is produced by a gender balanced team, viewers tune in. ReFrame reviewed viewership data for the IMDbPro Top 100 Series and found that on average, ReFrame Stamped series have 1.33M more viewers than their non-Stamped counterparts. This preference for inclusive content held strong in the coveted target demographic of viewers 18-49. ReFrame looked at a larger pool of the Top 200 series to examine hiring of writers and directors and the total episode count. Last year, the total number of episodes dropped from 1,977 to 1,773 (-204) and saw nearly equivalent losses for women, nonbinary and trans writers (-187) and directors (-199). This year, the total number of episodes rebounded to 1,979 (+206), but the hiring of underrepresented writers and directors did not recover proportionately. Only 134 of the restored episodes were attributed to writers and 117 to directors of underrepresented genders, an overall loss across those episodes of 28.3% and 41.2% respectively. Additional findings of the ReFrame Report include: Women, nonbinary and trans directors shot 35.8% percent of episodes this year, a slight increase from last year's 33.4% (+2.8%). While they still lag disproportionately in their share of pilots and first episodes, some ground was gained this year: those directors helmed 35.2% of pilots or first episodes, nearing their share of regular episodes with a gap of only 1%. That said, their overall share is still far from parity. Showrunners are still the single role with the highest correlation for overall gender-balanced hiring; 92.9% of series with women in that position qualified for the ReFrame Stamp. A significant number of series (82%) had at least one woman in a non-writing executive producer role, but women of color in the role fell to 18% (down 7.5%). There were increases in several key crew roles including unit production managers who reached 33%, first assistant directors who reached 46% and directors of photography which reached 26%, historic highs for women, nonbinary and trans persons in these roles. This year there were notable decreases for two key crew roles already lacking in inclusion; representation for women, nonbinary and trans persons fell 7.5% to 12% for line producers and 4% to 14% for composers. Only Editors and Costume Designers, positions where women, nonbinary or trans people have held more than 50% of positions year over year, have ever exceeded 10% of those persons also being people of color. No other key crew position has exceeded 5.5% of role attributed to women, nonbinary and/or trans people of color. There was an increase in lead characters portrayed by trans and nonbinary performers from one last year to three this year; however, gender diversity in co-leads fell from 14 to seven. Three series hired one nonbinary and one trans director of photography to lens their episodes. This year 85% of the Top 100 series were released by streamers, who have more than quadrupled their share of top series over the last eight years, rising from 19% to 85% (+66%). Network series were down to 5% from 48% (-43%) and cable projects down to 10% from 33% (-23%). For the third consecutive year, the majority of Emmy nominees for Outstanding Comedy Series received the Stamp: Five of the eight (Abbott Elementary, The Bear, Hacks, Nobody Wants This and Only Murders in the Building) met gender-balanced production criteria. Two of the eight nominated series in the Outstanding Drama category were Stamped (The Diplomat and The Pitt), as were three of the five Limited or Anthology Series (Black Mirror, Dying for Sex and The Penguin) and one of five Animated Series (Arcane). COMPANY REPORT CARD The ReFrame Report includes a report card showing the percentage of Top 100 series that met ReFrame Stamp criteria from each company. This year, two streaming companies, Amazon MGM Studios and Netflix, as well as projects released by Warner Bros. Discovery, earned the ReFrame Stamp for more than 50% of their releases. None of the three series released by NBCUniversal on Peacock obtained the Stamp, and there were no Top 100 series from 'Other' distributors, a category that has historically included companies like AMC, Lionsgate and IFC. The ReFrame Stamp is an acknowledgement of gender-balanced hiring, so every production—regardless of subject matter or the gender of its director or lead talent—can achieve gender parity. The Stamp is awarded to series that hire 'qualifying candidates,' or women or individuals of other underrepresented gender identities/expressions (including those who are transgender, nonbinary, or gender non-conforming) in at least 50% of key roles, including showrunner, directors, writers, executive producers, lead, co-leads, director of photographer, production designer, costume designer, editor, composer, music supervisor, VFX supervisor, line producer, unit production manager, first assistant director, stunt coordinator and intimacy coordinator. Additional points are awarded to productions that hire qualifying candidates of color in these key positions, and to those with overall gender parity in their crews. View the full ReFrame Stamp criteria here. To award the Stamp, ReFrame examined IMDbPro data on the 100 most popular scripted television and streaming series with a full season of episodes released during the Emmys eligibility period of June 1, 2024 - May 31, 2025. In 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2024-25, percentages are based on analysis of the Top 100 series; from 2020-21 to 2023-24, they are based on the Top 200 series. Each show was considered for the list based on its top-performing four weeks during the eligibility period on the IMDbPro proprietary ranking of titles, factoring in the removal of sports, news, non-fiction and reality programs. IMDbPro rankings are based on the actual page views of the more than 250 million monthly visitors to IMDb worldwide. 2024-25 Top 100 ReFrame Stamp Recipients † Denotes series nominated for 2025 Emmy Award 9-1-1 / ABC: Season 8 The Acolyte / Disney+: Season 1 Agatha All Along / Disney+: Season 1 A Good Girl's Guide to Murder / Netflix: Season 1 A Man on the Inside / Netflix: Season 1 Apple Cider Vinegar / Netflix: Season 1 † Arcane / Netflix: Season 2 A Thousand Blows / Hulu: Season 1 Bad Sisters / Apple TV+: Season 2 † The Bear / Hulu: Season 4 † Black Mirror / Netflix: Season 7 The Bondsman / Prime Video: Season 1 † The Boys / Prime Video: Season 4 Cross / Prime Video: Season 1 † The Diplomat / Netflix: Season 2 Dune: Prophecy / HBO Max: Season 1 Emily in Paris / Netflix: Season 4 † The Four Seasons / Netflix: Season 1 Good American Family / Hulu: Season 1 Grey's Anatomy / ABC: Season 21 Grotesquerie / Hulu/FX Network: Season 1 † Hacks / HBO Max: Season 4 † The Handmaid's Tale / Hulu: Season 6 House of the Dragon / HBO Max: Season 2 Kaos / Netflix: Season 1 The Lincoln Lawyer / Netflix: Season 3 Lioness / Paramount+: Season 2 Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power / Prime Video: Season 2 The Madness / Netflix: Season 1 † Matlock / CBS: Season 1 Missing You / Netflix: Season 1 My Lady Jane / Prime Video: Season 1 The Night Agent / Netflix: Season 2 † Nobody Wants This / Netflix: Season 1 No Good Deed / Netflix: Season 1 † Only Murders in the Building / Hulu/ABC: Season 4 † The Penguin / HBO Max: Season 1 The Perfect Couple / Netflix: Season 1 † The Pitt / HBO Max: Season 1 Ransom Canyon / Netflix: Season 1 † The Residence / Netflix: Season 1 Secret Level / Prime Video: Season 1 Tell Me Lies / Hulu: Season 2 Toxic Town / Netflix: Season 1 Yellowjackets / Showtime: Season 3 2024-2025 ReFrame Stamp Recipients Outside the Top 100 These series independently applied for the ReFrame Stamp as part of their production process. The Better Sister / Prime Video: Season 1 Cruel Intentions / Freevee: Season 1 Disney Jr.'s Ariel / Disney+: Season 1 Harlem / Prime Video: Season 3 Mayfair Witches / AMC: Season 2 Queenie / Hulu: Season 1 The Road Trip / Paramount+: Season 1 The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy / Prime Video: Season 2 UnPrisoned / Hulu: Season 2 The Upshaws / Netflix: Season 4 About ReFrame Founded by Sundance Institute and Women In Film, Los Angeles (WIF), ReFrame is an initiative that employs a unique strategy: a peer-to-peer approach, in which ReFrame Ambassadors engage with senior industry decision-makers at over 50 Partner Companies to implement ReFrame systemic change programs. The initiative's goals are to provide research, support, and a practical framework that can be used by Partner companies to mitigate bias during the creative decision-making and hiring process, celebrate successes, and measure progress toward a more gender-representative industry on all levels. ReFrame is made possible by support from Netflix's Creative Equity Fund, IMDbPro, WME, Adobe and Pivotal Ventures. About IMDbPro IMDbPro is the essential resource for entertainment industry professionals. This membership service empowers professionals with information and features designed to help them achieve success throughout all stages of their career. IMDbPro premium membership includes the following: detailed contact and representation information; tools for members to manage and showcase their IMDb profile, including selecting their primary images and the credits they are best 'known for'; exclusive STARmeter rankings determined by page views on IMDb; the IMDbPro app for iPhone, iPad, and Android; IMDbPro Track, which empowers members to receive personalized entertainment industry news and notifications on the people and film and TV projects they want to follow; and a convenient feature that generates custom digital assets to promote their work on social media and other platforms. IMDbPro is a division of IMDb, the world's most popular and authoritative source for information on movies, TV shows, and celebrities. Industry professionals can join IMDbPro today at Follow IMDbPro on Facebook, Instagram, and X. About IMDb IMDb is the world's most popular and authoritative source for information on movies, TV shows, and celebrities. Hundreds of millions of customers all over the world rely on IMDb to discover and decide what to watch, advance their professional entertainment careers through IMDbPro, and grow their businesses using IMDb data and trending insights. Products and services to help fans decide what to watch and where to watch it include: the IMDb website for desktop and mobile devices; apps for iOS and Android; and X-Ray on Prime Video. For entertainment industry professionals, IMDb provides IMDbPro and Box Office Mojo. IMDb licenses information from its vast and authoritative database to third-party businesses worldwide; learn more at IMDb is an Amazon company. For more information, visit and follow @IMDb. Sundance Institute As a champion and curator of independent stories, the nonprofit Sundance Institute provides and preserves the space for artists across storytelling media to create and thrive. Founded in 1981 by Robert Redford, the Institute's signature labs, granting, and mentorship programs, dedicated to developing new work, take place throughout the year in the U.S. and internationally. Sundance Institute Collab, a digital community platform, brings a global cohort of working artists together to learn from Sundance Institute advisors and connect with each other in a creative space, developing and sharing works in progress. The Sundance Film Festival and other public programs connect audiences and artists to ignite new ideas, discover original voices, and build a community dedicated to independent storytelling. Through the Sundance Institute artist programs, we have supported such projects as Beasts of the Southern Wild, The Big Sick, Bottle Rocket, Boys Don't Cry, Boys State, Call Me by Your Name, Clemency, CODA, Dìdi (弟弟), Drunktown's Finest, The Farewell, Fire of Love, Flee, Fruitvale Station, Half Nelson, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Hereditary, The Infiltrators, The Last Black Man in San Francisco, Little Woods, Love & Basketball, Me and You and Everyone We Know, Mudbound, Nanny, One Child Nation, Pariah, Raising Victor Vargas, RBG, Requiem for a Dream, Reservoir Dogs, Sin Nombre, Sorry to Bother You, Strong Island, Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), Swiss Army Man, A Thousand and One, Top of the Lake, Won't You Be My Neighbor?, and Zola. Through year-round artist programs, the Institute also nurtured the early careers of such artists as Paul Thomas Anderson, Gregg Araki, Darren Aronofsky, Lisa Cholodenko, Nia DaCosta, Ryan Coogler, The Daniels, Robert Eggers, Rick Famuyiwa, David Gordon Green, Sterlin Harjo, Marielle Heller, Miranda July, Nikyatu Jusu, James Mangold, John Cameron Mitchell, Kimberly Peirce, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Boots Riley, A.V. Rockwell, Ira Sachs, Walter Salles, Quentin Tarantino, Erica Tremblay, Taika Waititi, Lulu Wang, Sean Wang, and Chloé Zhao. Support Sundance Institute in our commitment to uplifting bold artists and powerful storytelling globally by making a donation at Join Sundance Institute on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, and Bluesky. About WIF Founded in 1973 as Women In Film, Los Angeles, WIF has been fighting for gender equity for more than 50 years. Its advocacy, career programs, and research efforts are a driving force for increasing gender representation in Hollywood. WIF works to dismantle gender bias in the screen industries by building the pipeline, sustaining careers, and advocating for change. Membership is open to all screen industry professionals, and more information can be found on our website: WIF is led by Chief Executive Officer Kirsten Schaffer and Chair of the Board of Directors Syrinthia Studer. Follow WIF on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and YouTube.

39 minutes ago
What happens when a fan gets too close? ‘Lurker' explores the dark side of celebrity
Fandom is a funny thing in the age of social media. Spend enough time scrolling and it's easy to feel like you really know a celebrity, and all their friends. The new film 'Lurker,' a Sundance breakout in theaters Friday, explores the question of what might happen if a certain type of fan got a foot in the door, and what they might do to stay there. Archie Madekwe's Oliver hardly knows what's coming when he walks into a trendy Los Angeles clothing shop. A rising music star, Oliver seems already accustomed to a certain amount of attention wherever he goes, with asks for selfies and autographs just part of the deal. So of course he's taken aback when one of the employees, Théodore Pellerin's Matthew, doesn't seem to know or care who he is. Oliver doesn't see that it's an act and is soon asking this stranger to come around and hang with his entourage. 'At the beginning Matthew thinks Oliver has this god-given place of celebrity and success,' Pellerin said. 'He quickly understands that he will have to give things to serve a certain purpose in Oliver's world and his ego. But also that they're not dissimilar. They're both playing by a certain rule book that is written by Oliver. If the power becomes Matthew's, he can also write the rules.' The film is the directorial debut of Alex Russell, whose own star is rising. He wrote 'Forks,' widely considered one of the best episodes of 'The Bear,' and won an Emmy for co-executive producing the Netflix series 'Beef.' His script for 'Lurker,' which he wrote sort of as a challenge for himself during COVID lockdowns, immediately became a hot commodity. Madekwe remembers being bummed when he didn't hear back after he put himself on tape to play the hanger-on. A few years later, Madekwe's agent called and said Russell wanted to meet him. Not for Matthew, but for Oliver. 'I had to completely rethink the film and the structure and the what it was about,' Madekwe said. 'But it was most daunting to imagine myself needing to go and meet Alex and convince him that I could play somebody like this cool character.' He needn't have been so worried. Unbeknownst to Madekwe, Russell had been doing some stealth behind-the-scenes work. After someone recommended his name, Russell saw Madekwe in a coffee shop one day and just watched him for 20 minutes. His conclusion: This is Oliver. Russell was cognizant of the limitations he was faced with as a first-time director making an independent film, where things like casting and hiring are often rushed. 'My goal was to get what I felt like were underrated actors,' Russell said. 'People who could come in and really hit it out of the park. Then people would look at this movie and be like wow they really took a step up here. That's kind of where you can punch above your weight if you're making your first movie and don't have a huge budget.' It wasn't just his leads either, but the full ensemble including Sunny Suljic, Havana Rose Liu, Zack Fox and Daniel Zolghadri — faces you might recognize, but names you might not yet know. Putting it together was hard work, with strict limits on budget and time, but Russell said the experience of 'Lurker' was charmed nonetheless. 'It's only because I got so lucky with decisions I made early on with casting and hiring,' he said. 'So much of it is like I'm just a kid with a screenplay and everyone else has to be really good at their job.' When it came to directing the actors, he had a simple litmus test: 'Do I believe it? 'You're watching the monitor and like do I buy that? Because everyone else is going to have to,' he said. 'I just think my cast was very good. I didn't have to force any performance.' Often times Russell's friends in the music world would come around set, giving the off camera times a bit of a meta quality. 'It didn't feel a little like the movie sometimes, like just like a group of like young creatives,' Pellerin said. 'There was a real LA film and music scene that was very present. That was helpful for me — it was like the fun aspect of the movie, not the hard-core humiliation.' Many involved describe the process as uniquely collaborative. Madekwe also stepped up as a producer, which wasn't just a vanity title. He was actually involved in many major creative decisions, including recommending Suljic, who he'd just worked with on a music video, and finding locations and some of the music for the film, including a song called 'Love and Obsession,' written by Rex Orange County. 'It's an incredibly important film for now,' Madekwe said. 'The relationship that we have with people that we don't know? I think that conversation is really interesting and exciting. But most importantly, I think it's really exciting to be at the beginning of Alex Russell's career and to invest into a filmmaker that I think is gonna be making incredible films for a very long time.' The film shares some DNA with what Russell calls 'obsessive thrillers' like 'Whiplash' and 'Black Swan.' In 'Lurker,' he wondered 'what if the drumming was social climbing.' The power shifting power dynamics between Matthew and Oliver aren't just relevant to celebrities and hangers on. It could apply to any group of friends.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
What happens when a fan gets too close? ‘Lurker' explores the dark side of celebrity
Fandom is a funny thing in the age of social media. Spend enough time scrolling and it's easy to feel like you really know a celebrity, and all their friends. The new film 'Lurker,' a Sundance breakout in theaters Friday, explores the question of what might happen if a certain type of fan got a foot in the door, and what they might do to stay there. Archie Madekwe's Oliver hardly knows what's coming when he walks into a trendy Los Angeles clothing shop. A rising music star, Oliver seems already accustomed to a certain amount of attention wherever he goes, with asks for selfies and autographs just part of the deal. So of course he's taken aback when one of the employees, Théodore Pellerin's Matthew, doesn't seem to know or care who he is. Oliver doesn't see that it's an act and is soon asking this stranger to come around and hang with his entourage. 'At the beginning Matthew thinks Oliver has this god-given place of celebrity and success,' Pellerin said. 'He quickly understands that he will have to give things to serve a certain purpose in Oliver's world and his ego. But also that they're not dissimilar. They're both playing by a certain rule book that is written by Oliver. If the power becomes Matthew's, he can also write the rules.' A hot script and a first-time filmmaker The film is the directorial debut of Alex Russell, whose own star is rising. He wrote 'Forks,' widely considered one of the best episodes of 'The Bear,' and won an Emmy for co-executive producing the Netflix series 'Beef.' His script for 'Lurker,' which he wrote sort of as a challenge for himself during COVID lockdowns, immediately became a hot commodity. Madekwe remembers being bummed when he didn't hear back after he put himself on tape to play the hanger-on. A few years later, Madekwe's agent called and said Russell wanted to meet him. Not for Matthew, but for Oliver. 'I had to completely rethink the film and the structure and the what it was about,' Madekwe said. 'But it was most daunting to imagine myself needing to go and meet Alex and convince him that I could play somebody like this cool character.' He needn't have been so worried. Unbeknownst to Madekwe, Russell had been doing some stealth behind-the-scenes work. After someone recommended his name, Russell saw Madekwe in a coffee shop one day and just watched him for 20 minutes. His conclusion: This is Oliver. A charmed production of young creatives Russell was cognizant of the limitations he was faced with as a first-time director making an independent film, where things like casting and hiring are often rushed. 'My goal was to get what I felt like were underrated actors,' Russell said. 'People who could come in and really hit it out of the park. Then people would look at this movie and be like wow they really took a step up here. That's kind of where you can punch above your weight if you're making your first movie and don't have a huge budget.' It wasn't just his leads either, but the full ensemble including Sunny Suljic, Havana Rose Liu, Zack Fox and Daniel Zolghadri — faces you might recognize, but names you might not yet know. Putting it together was hard work, with strict limits on budget and time, but Russell said the experience of 'Lurker' was charmed nonetheless. 'It's only because I got so lucky with decisions I made early on with casting and hiring,' he said. 'So much of it is like I'm just a kid with a screenplay and everyone else has to be really good at their job.' When it came to directing the actors, he had a simple litmus test: 'Do I believe it? 'You're watching the monitor and like do I buy that? Because everyone else is going to have to,' he said. 'I just think my cast was very good. I didn't have to force any performance.' Often times Russell's friends in the music world would come around set, giving the off camera times a bit of a meta quality. 'It didn't feel a little like the movie sometimes, like just like a group of like young creatives,' Pellerin said. 'There was a real LA film and music scene that was very present. That was helpful for me — it was like the fun aspect of the movie, not the hard-core humiliation.' Many involved describe the process as uniquely collaborative. Madekwe also stepped up as a producer, which wasn't just a vanity title. He was actually involved in many major creative decisions, including recommending Suljic, who he'd just worked with on a music video, and finding locations and some of the music for the film, including a song called 'Love and Obsession,' written by Rex Orange County. An obsessive thriller for the parasocial age 'It's an incredibly important film for now,' Madekwe said. 'The relationship that we have with people that we don't know? I think that conversation is really interesting and exciting. But most importantly, I think it's really exciting to be at the beginning of Alex Russell's career and to invest into a filmmaker that I think is gonna be making incredible films for a very long time.' The film shares some DNA with what Russell calls 'obsessive thrillers' like 'Whiplash' and 'Black Swan.' In 'Lurker,' he wondered 'what if the drumming was social climbing.' The power shifting power dynamics between Matthew and Oliver aren't just relevant to celebrities and hangers on. It could apply to any group of friends.