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Ruben Östlund's ‘The Entertainment System Is Down' Sells to Memento for France
Ruben Östlund's ‘The Entertainment System Is Down' Sells to Memento for France

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ruben Östlund's ‘The Entertainment System Is Down' Sells to Memento for France

French distributor Memento has acquired the distribution rights to the star-studded upcoming film The Entertainment System Is Down from director Ruben Östlund (Triangle of Sadness, The Square) for France. The darkly satirical movie is set on a long-haul flight between England and Australia where the entertainment system fails, and passengers are forced to face the horror of being bored. The ensemble cast includes Kirsten Dunst, Daniel Brühl, Keanu Reeves, Nicholas Braun, Julie Delpy, Tobias Menzies, Connor Swindells, Daniel Webber, Wayne Blair, Dan Wyllie, Lindsay Duncan, Allan Corduner, Sofia Tjelta Sydness, Erin Ainsworth, Myles Kamwendo, Elle Piper, Thibaud Dooms, Sanna Sundqvist, Tea Stjärne, Swedish artist Benjamin Ingrosso and Sanjeev Bhaskar. More from The Hollywood Reporter June Squibb on Her Nonagenarian Career High: "A 70-Year-Old Will Say, 'I Want To Be You When I Grow Up!'" Cannes: Wes Anderson Teases His Next Film Cannes: Wes Brings The Whimsy in 'Phoenician Scheme' Press Conference Previous sales of the project include A24 for the U.S., Lionsgate Films (U.K.), Alamode Film/Wild Bunch Germany (Germany & Austria), Lucky Red/Teodora Film (Italy), Sharmill Films (Australia & New Zealand), Elevation Pictures (Canada), Elastica/BTeam Pictures (Spain), September Film (Benelux), Bord Cadre Films (Switzerland), Gutek Film / Aerofilms (Eastern Europe), Feelgood Entertainment (Greece), Alambique Filmes (Portugal), Filmstop (Baltics), Sun Distribution Group (Latin America), Falcon (Middle East), and Road Pictures (China). World sales are handled by Coproduction Office. The Entertainment System Is Down is produced by Plattform Produktion (Sweden) with Essential Films (Germany) and Parisienne de Production (France). Co-producers include BBC Film, Film i Väst, Sveriges Television, ARTE France Cinéma, ZDF/ARTE, SF Studios, Eye Eye Pictures (Norway), Paloma Productions (Denmark), and Good Chaos (U.K.). The film is produced in association with Proton Cinema, Bord Cadre Films, Sovereign Films, Cinema Inutile, and Gold Rush Pictures. Financing was secured through the Swedish Film Institute, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, Filmförderungsanstalt (FFA), the Norwegian Film Institute, the Danish Film Institute, with participation from Canal+, Disney+ and ARTE France, as well as support from Creative Europe Media. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now "A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked

Magic movies: The 25 best comedies of the past 25 years
Magic movies: The 25 best comedies of the past 25 years

Irish Times

time28-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Magic movies: The 25 best comedies of the past 25 years

What happened to the modern comedy film ? They still arrive in cinemas, but few stick around as they used to. The romcom is no longer a staple. The teen romp is nowhere near as bankable as the big dumb family flick. With that in mind we have, a quarter of the way through the 21st century, gathered the 25 best from that period for you to stream, rent or (you never know) take down from the shelf. The usual compromises apply. No more than one film per director. The century begins in 2000. We are leaving animation for another day. And, yes, all these films are comedies. That genre can deal with the grimmest of issues. All titles listed as streaming are also available to rent from services such as Apple, Sky and Google. READ MORE 25. Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy Michael Morris, 2025 By far the best in the Bridget Jones series. Far better than it needed to be. Jonsey slips into middle age with enormous dignity. Hugh Grant softens his definitive cad. Available to rent. Read our full review here 24. Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan Larry Charles, 2006 One sensed a certain cooling, over time, on the borderline racism in this first Borat film's treatment of its title character, but the sequel was a smash – and picked up an Oscar nomination – during the Covid years. Still funny. Streaming on Prime Video 23. Force Majeure Ruben Östlund, 2014 Ruben Östlund has since won the Palme d'Or twice, but he has yet to surpass this excruciating comedy about a dad abandoning his family to an avalanche. Yes, it's a variation on George Costanza fleeing the fire in Seinfeld, but so what? Available to rent. Read our full review here 22. The Banshees of Inisherin Martin McDonagh, 2022 Not every Irish person was on board with the heightened version of island life, but Martin McDonagh's taste for the mordant humour remains as pungent as ever. 'How's the despair?' Streaming on Disney+. Read our full review here 21. Sorry to Bother You Boots Riley, 2018 Boots Riley's satirical swipe at corporate insensitivity came out of nowhere to carve out its own space. LaKeith Stanfield plays a black man who adopts a white persona to succeed at work – with predictably compromising results. Available to rent. Read our full review here 20. The Death of Stalin Armando Iannucci, 2017 Armando Iannucci assembled an incomparable cast – Simon Russell Beale, Steve Buscemi , Andrea Riseborough , Michael Palin and more – to make a grimly hilarious study of what happened after Stalin left the planet. Jason Isaacs stands out for his bluff Yorkshire take on Field Marshal Zhuko. Streaming on Netflix. Read our full review here 19. Love & Friendship Whit Stillman, 2016 It may be a stretch to call this the best Jane Austen adaptation – Ang Lee's Sense and Sensibility probably retains that title – but Whit Stillman's take on the author's obscure Lady Susan is surely the funniest. Shot in Ireland. Streaming on Disney+ and Mubi. Read our full review here 18. 24 Hour Party People Michael Winterbottom, 2002 Steve Coogan stars as Tony Wilson, founder of Factory Records, in the definitive take on Manchester's postpunk scene. 'It's a pity you didn't sign the Smiths,' God tells him. 'But you were right about Mick Hucknell. His music's rubbish.' Streaming on Plex 17. The Lobster Yorgos Lanthimos, 2015 Yorgos Lanthimos's transition from Greek weird wave to the quasi-mainstream of Poor Things and The Favourite began with this pitch-black Irish production set in a world where the single life is not tolerated. Colin Farrell is heartbreakingly pathetic. Rachel Weisz is equally strong. Available to rent. Read our full review here 16. Shaun of the Dead Edgar Wright, 2004 Pretty much nobody saw it coming when Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg , colleagues from the TV show Spaced, moved into cinema with an endlessly inventive pastiche of the zombie film. Pegg is now in Mission: Impossible. Wright is all over Hollywood. Available to rent 15. Punch-Drunk Love Paul Thomas Anderson, 2003 Paul Thomas Anderson essentially asks what life would be like with an Adam Sandler character in the real world. The answer is: pretty darn terrifying. Emily Watson is equally strong as a variation on the demure heroines who fall for Sandler in his mainstream comedies. Streaming on Prime Video 14. The Grand Budapest Hotel Wes Anderson, 2014 Opinions vary on what has become of Wes Anderson . Some think he has gone from strength to strength. Others feel he has slipped into self-parody. But all agree he was at the top of his game with this period comedy inspired by the work of Stefan Zweig. Ralph Fiennes confirms his comic chops. Streaming on Disney+. Read our full review here 13. May December Todd Haynes, 2023 A masterpiece of unsettling tone from Todd Haynes . Natalie Portman catches up with Julianne Moore some years after the latter's character got in hot water for an affair with a teenager. Pitched at the level of comic melodrama throughout. Streaming on Sky Cinema. Read our full review here 12. Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Jake Kasdan, 2007 Twenty years after This Is Spinal Tap finished off the rockumentary, Jake Kasdan's comedy did the same for the music biopic. John C Reilly's Dewey Cox is Jim Morrison. He's Johnny Cash. He's Brian Wilson. 'I want an army of didgeridoos!' Available to rent 11. Sexy Beast Jonathan Glazer, 2000 Yes, the director of Zone of Interest does make this list. Jonathan Glazer's debut feature is one of a kind: a geezer gangster film that features an unclassifiable comic performance from Ben Kingsley . His Don Logan is simultaneously terrifying and hilarious. Available to rent 10. Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World Radu Jude, 2023 Entirely original satire from the Romanian oddball Radu Jude about a young woman seeking cast members for a corporate video in contemporary Bucharest. Makes swift turns at every juncture. Ruthlessly funny throughout. Available to rent. Read our full review here 9. Adaptation Spike Jonze, 2002 Spike Jonze and the writer Charlie Kaufman followed up Being John Malkovich with an alleged adaptation of Susan Orlean's book The Orchid Thief that largely abandoned the text for an investigation of the screenwriting process. Nicolas Cage , as Charlie and his fictional brother Donald, has never been better. Streaming on Mubi and Plex 8. Get Out Jordan Peele, 2017 Few films listed under 'comedy' at the Golden Globes generated more disagreement than Jordan Peele's rattling horror about a young black man embarrassed by the patronising – but initially benign – attentions of white liberals. The film is, however, plainly a descendant of Peele's satirical TV sketches on race. Available to rent. Read our full review here 7. Songs from the Second Floor Roy Andersson, 2000 Roy Andersson's 21st-century films are always the same yet always surprising. As was the case with later projects, this sombre, wry collection of sketches finds various Swedes trapped in comic despair. 'What can I say? It's not easy being human,' one character says. True enough. Available to rent 6. Step Brothers Adam McKay, 2008 Like Walk Hard – another John C Reilly flick on our list – Adam McKay's comedy landed softly with audiences and critics before going on to become an endlessly quoted classic. 'You and your mom are hillbillies,' he tells his new stepbrother, Will Ferrell . 'This is a house of learned doctors!' Streaming on Prime Video 5. Frances Ha Noah Baumbach, 2012 Noah Baumbach looked to have lost his way with missteps such as Greenberg before teaming up with Greta Gerwig and finding a lighter touch with this tale of a young woman contemplating her own lack of direction in a monochrome New York City. Streaming on Prime Video. Read our full review here 4. A Serious Man Joel and Ethan Coen, 2009 So many options this century from Joel and Ethan Coen. This intricate tale of an academic in 1960s Minnesota losing his cool as his wife falls for another man and his son takes up marijuana just steals it from O Brother Where Art Thou? and Inside Llewyn Davis. Available to rent 3. Team America: World Police Trey Parker, 2004 The US didn't really get it at the time, but the South Park team's puppet-led examination of the war on terror has given the world endless memes. In truth it's as much about Hollywood's self-indulgence as it is about global politics. 'You are worthress, Arec Barrwin!' Streaming on Paramount+ 2. Anora Sean Baker, 2024 The most satisfactory retooling of screwball comedy since the 1950s. There is real poignancy to Mikey Madison's performance, but the picture is most memorable for the clattering pace of its pursuits through New York City. Antic madness combined with emotional depth. Winner of the Palme d'Or and best-picture Oscar. Available to rent. Read our full review here 1. Lady Bird Greta Gerwig, 2017 Greta Gerwig looks back to her own upbringing in Sacramento, in California, and discovers a wealth of teenage traumas for Saoirse Ronan's plucky title character to process. The tense relationship between Lady Bird and her mother – a brittle Laurie Metcalf – is particularly well handled. A contemporary classic. Available to rent. Read our full review here

TV tonight: James May's new series takes him on an eye-opening voyage
TV tonight: James May's new series takes him on an eye-opening voyage

The Guardian

time13-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

TV tonight: James May's new series takes him on an eye-opening voyage

9pm, Channel 5James May's new series is about the explorations of Christopher Columbus, Walter Raleigh and James Cook and their contentious legacies. May starts by taking the helm of his own sailboat in south-west Spain, where he discovers the origins of the stubborn young sailor Columbus, who dreamed of sailing to Asia but ended up on two continents previously unknown to Europeans. James's visits to the Alcázar palace in Seville and St Barts back in London fill in details of a man driven by daring and greed. Hollie Richardson 8pm, Channel 4Two pooches desperately in need of love are given a special helping hand by best-job-in-the-world dog behaviour specialist Sue this week: Barley the labradoodle meets his third potential new owner, while longtime resident Lady the staffie cross might finally be taken to a new home. HR 9pm, BBC One It sounds like a simple enough mission: find nine items and negotiate the best price for them. But it's immediately a face-palm disaster when Alan Sugar lets his wannabe business partners loose in Stratford-upon-Avon, and Nadia offers just £1.50 to a farmer to shear a sheep for its coat. HR 9pm, Channel 4A man has sliced through his ankle with an angle grinder, a 50-year-old has crashed a mountain bike, and a young festival-goer has somehow managed to dislocate his shoulder mid-revelry. More staggering tales of medical mishaps emerge as the long-running show heads to Queen's medical centre, Nottingham, one of Europe's busiest accident and emergency departments. Alexi Duggins 9pm, Sky DocumentariesThings get dark in the final episode of this documentary series about a family of YouTubers whose mega-popular depictions of their perfect domestic life suddenly ended with the internet turning on them. When they announce that they've rehoused their adopted son, sponsors drop them and mum Myka goes digitally awol. AD 10pm, U&AlibiIt's the last in the series of this comedy drama about an ordinary couple who took down an international crime organisation. We're promised devastating losses, confrontations with the police, and the incongruous combination of a troupe of hardened criminals and a campsite. AD The Square (Ruben Östlund, 2017), 12.35am, Film4 Ruben Östlund's satirical fire turns towards the art world in his provocative 2017 comedy drama. Specifically, it is aimed at Claes Bang's Christian, the preening director of a Stockholm modern-art gallery, whose spurious concerns for the world's troubles – expressed through the works he promotes – are exposed as a sham when his wallet is stolen. His attempt to get it back sets in train a conflict between his comfortable bourgeois life and the everyday world of homeless people and immigrants that surrounds him. An easy target, perhaps, but it's still fun to witness the unruly takedown. Simon Wardell

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