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Aussie AI tool used on Furiosa, Sinners is taking Hollywood by storm
Aussie AI tool used on Furiosa, Sinners is taking Hollywood by storm

AU Financial Review

time7 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • AU Financial Review

Aussie AI tool used on Furiosa, Sinners is taking Hollywood by storm

When Anya Taylor-Joy was promoting her starring role last year in the film Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, the last thing one would expect her to talk about was artificial intelligence. And yet, that's what she did on one US talk show. Taylor-Joy, an actor with a unique face and striking eyes, plays the protagonist Furiosa in the George Miller prequel that explores her backstory. It shows her as an adult, and as a child, played by Australian actor Alyla Browne.

Fans hail Netflix period drama 'one of the best TV shows ever'
Fans hail Netflix period drama 'one of the best TV shows ever'

Daily Record

time15 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

Fans hail Netflix period drama 'one of the best TV shows ever'

Netflix's The Queen's Gambit was released in 2020 and quickly became one of the streaming giants' most-watched series of all time - and it's not hard to see why "Arguably, the best show ever made" reads one review of The Queen's Gambit, a sentiment that appears to be universally shared. Netflix's 2020 coming-of-age period drama set during the Cold War captivated audiences when it was released at the height of the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. ‌ Boasting an impressive 96 per cent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the series' grip on viewers, regardless of their interest in chess, could almost serve as a case study. ‌ Debuting on the streaming platform on October 23, 2020, The Queen's Gambit quickly became Netflix's most-watched scripted miniseries within just four weeks of its release. It went on to top the charts in 63 countries, prompting Netflix to release a statement: "The Queen's Gambit now stands as our biggest scripted limited series ever. The series has captivated 62 million households in its first 28 days." Based on Walter Tevis's 1983 novel of the same name, The Queen's Gambit was written and directed by Scott Frank, who co-created it with Allan Scott, the rights holder of the book. The title, Queen's Gambit, refers to a well-known chess opening, reports Surrey Live. Set in the mid-1950s to 1960s, this fictional miniseries follows the life of orphan Beth Harmon (Anya Taylor-Joy), a rising chess prodigy competing against the sport's elites, while simultaneously grappling with her alcohol and drug addictions and emotional struggles. The series garnered critical acclaim, securing 11 Primetime Emmy Awards – including the prestigious accolade for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series – this marked the first occasion a show on a streaming platform clinched the title. Fans also agreed, with one saying: "The Queen's Gambit is one of my favorite miniseries of all time and one of Netflix's best productions. The scoring behind the cinematography is perhaps one of its greatest strengths, creating an air of intrigue throughout." ‌ The show also claimed two Golden Globe Awards, one for Best Limited Series or Television Film and another for Best Actress – Limited Series or Television Film, which Anya Taylor-Joy earned. She further won the SAG Award for her remarkable performance as a female actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series. Critics heaped praises on Taylor-Joy, with one commentator writing: "It's so natural it's easy to overlook, but growing up onscreen is hard, precise work, and this young talent makes it look easy." ‌ Another review highlighted Taylor-Joy's standout performance: "What makes The Queen's Gambit so satisfying comes in large measure from the character Taylor-Joy brings to screen: a charming, elegant weirdo who delivers her lines with a cool, wintergreen snap, and never really reacts the way one might expect." A different critic focused on her presence: "The budding star at the center of Scott Frank's new Netflix series has a rare magnetism, the kind that can sell even the most esoteric of subjects." The miniseries also left reviewers captivated, with comments like "with excellent pacing and a sure sense of itself out of the gate, The Queen's Gambit is a work of art-riveting, radiant, and simply spellbinding. Like Beth, it triumphs through its devotion to a love of the game." ‌ One critic said: "Just as you feel a familiar dynamic forming, in which a talented woman ends up intimidating her suitors, The Queen's Gambit swerves; it's probably no coincidence that a story about chess thrives on confounding audience expectations." Another lavished the show with praise, saying: "This is the sort of delicate prestige television that Netflix should be producing more often. It's smart and gentle and tastefully assured in the worthiness of its subject." Audience feedback echoed these sentiments, with one viewer adding: "The Queen's Gambit is one of my favourite miniseries of all time and one of Netflix's best productions. The scoring behind the cinematography is perhaps one of its greatest strengths, creating an air of intrigue throughout. "Perhaps what I find most enjoyable about the series is watching Anya Taylor Joy's character build her life through fascinating trials and tribulations. She's a fighter and a winner and shows what it takes to get to that next level that few will ever ascertain." Another viewer review said: "I mean WOW! ! Brilliant, captivating, and nerve-wracking in the best way! I've literally watched it 4 times in the past 3 years (and I don't rewatch things), and I'm STILL not sick of it! ! ! It's literally my favourite limited series on Netflix! ! I never thought I'd find a show about Chess so here we are! I love shows that invoke emotion, and this one will give you ALL of them!". A viewer disclosed a profound emotional attachment to the series, posting: "I connected with The Queen's Gambit in an emotional and intellectual way that will last my lifetime. It's a rich and complex story with every character and plot point perfectly crafted, every location exquisitely designed and lensed, and all performances - especially Anya Taylor-Joy in the lead - among the best I've ever seen."

42 Actors Who Weren't Acting In These Movie Scenes That Were Way More Genuine Than You Realized
42 Actors Who Weren't Acting In These Movie Scenes That Were Way More Genuine Than You Realized

Buzz Feed

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Buzz Feed

42 Actors Who Weren't Acting In These Movie Scenes That Were Way More Genuine Than You Realized

1. Anya Taylor-Joy actually got a nosebleed in the Emma scene where Mr. Knightley confesses his love. "I don't know what happened, but I guess I believed I was in the moment enough that my nose really started bleeding. It was just so magic, and Johnny and I were looking at each other like, 'Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, roll the cameras.'" Apparently, Taylor-Joy used to get lots of nosebleeds as a kid, but she never expected to spontaneously get one at the perfect moment. "The plan was to pause filming and add the blood and then continue," Taylor-Joy said. "I provided the blood, so there was no need." 2. Tricky was not told just how big the explosion behind him and Gary Oldman would be in this scene from The Fifth Element — in fact, the fire was even scarier than expected, as the wind brought the flames back towards the actors and even melted some of Oldman's costume. As such, Tricky's reaction was real. "Tricky soiled his costume," Oldman joked. 3. Similarly, the maid in Ghostbusters, played by Frances Nealy, was truly scared by the cart explosion in the film. She had been told it was going to blow up, but didn't expect the level of pyrotechnics. Visual effects director John Bruno said, "It scared the hell out of her. She fell to the ground, looked up, and was like, 'What the hell are you doing?' It wasn't scripted. It's just what happened." 4. Multiple actors in Casablanca were real-life refugees who had fled the Nazis. In the La Marseillaise scene, many of the actors were truly moved by singing the song of resistance. Madeleine Lebeau, in particular, had fled Nazi-occupied France two years before filming the scene, and her teary-eyed close-up became famous for how authentic it felt. Leslie Epstein, whose father Philip Epstein and uncle Julius Epstein wrote the film, noted, "They're not tears of glycerin shed by an actress. The tears in her eyes are real." Epstein also said, "When people speak here, the accents are real. ... In a sense, they're playing themselves." 5. James Marsden was really hit by bikers in this scene from Enchanted. In the first few takes, the bikers would lightly bump him, and he'd fake falling over, but Marsden didn't feel it was funny enough. It was also his last day of shooting, so he wasn't too worried about delaying production with an injury. "'Just take me out!'" Marsden recalled telling the stuntpeople. "So he knocked the hell out of me, but it's funnier. My voice squeaks and he just knocks me down, but there was a pad in front of me, and, actually, the prince's suit is pretty padded." 6. Jack Nicholson and his costars were really high in the Easy Rider campfire scene. "We were all stoned the night we shot the campfire scene," Nicholson recalled. "The story about me smoking 155 joints – that's a little exaggerated. But each time I did a take or an angle, it involved smoking almost an entire joint. After the first take or two, the acting job became reversed. Instead of being straight and having to act stoned at the end, I was now stoned at the beginning and having to act straight." 7. Similarly, Norm Macdonald was really drunk while filming some of Billy Madison."They wanted me to play a drunk, so I said, 'You got some booze?'" he revealed on Conan. In fact, in one pool scene, he fell asleep while the camera was rolling, he was so drunk — and didn't understand why everyone was calling him Frank (his character's name). 8. And Nicolas Cage was truly blackout drunk while filming this breakdown scene in Leaving Las Vegas. He spent most of the film sober — besides what he said was a taste here and there "just to get a sense of, like, the Albert Finney" — but he decided he would try out, just once, getting blackout drunk. He actually had a "drinking coach" who got him drunk on Sambuca. "I was drinking the Sambuca and I went downstairs, and I was like, whatever happens, get it, because this isn't gonna happen again," Cage recalled. The resulting footage of the devastating moment was used in the film. 9. In The Deer Hunter, writer/director Michael Cimino told Christopher Walken to truly spit in Robert De Niro's face in this scene. De Niro had no idea he was going to do this, and was reportedly truly angry at the time, though he later said, "It worked. It got the reaction the scene needed." 10. In the same film, Walken was truly slapped in the Russian Roulette scene. "We shot that in the jungle," Walken said. "We were put in bamboo cages. It was all for real. Right down to the slap in the face." De Niro had actually told the actor to slap Walken, who wasn't expecting it. 11. In Deep Blue Sea, the cast dealt with an accident on-set that made it into the film. In the helicopter scene, after hooking up Whitlock, the crew runs back to the elevator as waves crash around. "At one point, three tons of water got thrown on us by accident, and we got swept toward those cargo bays, and everyone thought we were going into the drink, and people were tumbling around this metal grating," star Samuel L. Jackson revealed."They hit us full on with three tons of water. That was not supposed to happen, and we didn't have safety harnesses on, and we were flailing around on this deck." While Jackson claimed they were "still acting," it was still a genuinely unexpected moment that ended up in the film and made it seem more real. 12. This memorable scene at the end of Captain Philips, where Philips is evaluated by a corpsman, was made to feel even more genuine by using a real corpsman. The scene wasn't in the original script, and director Paul Greengrass decided to add it on the day while shooting at Norfolk Naval Station. He asked a corpsman there, Danielle Albert, to improvise a scene with star Tom Hanks. She wasn't an actor, and she really treated Hanks as if he were a patient. 13. Russell Crowe was actually talking about his own home when his character talked about home in Gladiator. He ad-libbed much of the speech, throwing in references to his real home in Australia. 14. The people talking about dust storms at the start of Interstellar were actual witnesses of the 1930s Dust Bowl. The clips are an excerpt from the 2012 documentary The Dust Bowl. 15. The scene in Spider-Man when Peter caught the food on MJ's tray was not done with CGI — Tobey Maguire actually caught it (though his hand was glued to the tray). It took 156 takes. 16. Similarly, you can see from the bloopers that Michael Cera really made this package-throwing shot in Scott Pilgrim vs. the it took him 33 tries. Universal Pictures / Via 17. Even more impressively, Kurt Russell actually made all those shots in the basketball scene from Escape From L.A. Rysher Entertainment / Via 18. Tippi Hedren was truly attacked by birds in this horrifying scene from The Birds. They were originally going to use mechanical birds, but Hedren was told they were not working and that she would be attacked by live birds instead. For five days, Hedren said, live birds trained to peck her were thrown at her and even tied to her. When one almost pecked her eye, she broke down and had to spend a week in bed due to exhaustion. This is the footage you see in the film. Distributed by Universal-International Pictures / Via 19. Jake Gyllenhaal was always meant to hit the mirror in Nightcrawler, but it wasn't supposed to break. When it did, it cut Gyllenhaal's hand, and he had to go to the ER to get stitches. This take, with Gyllenhaal's real-life injury, actually ended up in the movie. Open Road Films / Via 20. Director Ivan Reitman had most of the kids ad-lib about their real dads' jobs in this Kindergarten Cop scene. Universal Pictures / Via 21. The opening airport scene of Love Actually featured real couples and families genuinely embracing. Universal Pictures / Via 22. In the beginning scene of 22 Jump Street, when Schmidt is attacked by a bird, Jonah Hill's reaction is authentic — he really is terrified of birds. Sony Pictures Releasing/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 23. In a comedic moment of 1941, John Belushi's Kelso falls not once but twice as he's trying to get back onto his plane. He then recovers with an ironic bravado. The second fall — the more serious one — truly happened by accident. Belushi actually fell off the wing and landed on his head, sustaining such a serious injury that he had to go to the hospital. However, it made the scene even funnier, and it was kept in. Universal Pictures/Columbia Pictures / Via 24. While filming The Passion of Christ, Jim Caviezel was hit by a cross that weighed over 250 pounds. "It fell on my head, and I bit through my tongue and my cheek," he said. "And it was actually in the film. You see blood streaming out of my mouth." Newmarket Films / Via 25. In the Anchorman scene where Ron wanders the streets, drinking milk, Will Ferrell improvised the "milk was a bad choice" — because it was exactly what he was thinking. "He's sitting there with a carton of milk — we're shooting in San Pedro and it's hotter than hell — and Will just said it for real. It's perfect, because it was an honest moment from the human Will Ferrell speaking through Ron Burgundy," David Koechner revealed. DreamWorks Pictures / Via 26. In Cheech & Chong's Up in Smoke, the dog that eats Chong's burrito was a real stray that just wandered up and ate the burrito. It wasn't in the script. Paramount Pictures / Via 27. At one point in Blade Runner, Daryl Hannah's Pris runs and falls onto a van, jamming her elbow into the window before continuing to flee. This was Hannah genuinely slipping. She finished the take, then had her elbow looked at and found out it was chipped in eight places. However, it added to her character's desperation and was kept in. Warner Bros / Via 28. Dustin Hoffman actually accidentally farted in the phone booth scene in Rain Man, and Tom Cruise's reactions were improvised and somewhat real. Hoffman called it his "favorite moment" of any film he's done. "That includes Shakespeare that I've done on stage, anything." MGM/UA Communications Co. / Via 29. In Burnt, Bradley Cooper improvised his character's suicide attempt, and his costar Matthew Rhys was genuinely afraid Cooper might die. "It was late at night, and we didn't have much time, and the bag thing just sort of happened in one of the takes," Cooper said. Rhys acted quickly, saving Cooper, and the scene made it into the final film. The Weinstein Company / Via 30. The actors' reactions to the gunfire in this Boyz n the Hood scene were real, according to star Ice Cube. Director John Singleton didn't tell the actors there would be real gunfire in the scene. Columbia Pictures / Via 31. Child actor Oliver Robins truly was being strangled in the clown scene in Poltergeist. Robins explained to Fright how the extended arm of the clown got caught around his neck: "I was in a tight, confined space under the bed, and ... it's almost like a car accident. You know how a car accident happens so fast, you don't remember, but if you don't act, something is going to happen? Well, Steven saw that, probably in the video assist, and he pulled me away from it. Who knows what might have happened otherwise." Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 32. Lorenza Izzo was really drowning in one frightening scene from The Green Inferno, where Justine tries to escape a canoe of cannibals and jumps into the water. Izzo grabbed a rock and fought against the current as she screamed; she had a safe word to use if she was really in danger, but it was too loud for anyone to make it out. They thought she was acting until they realized she was shouting in English and Spanish. The footage ended up in the film. High Top Releasing/BH Tilt 33. The lion attack from Tarzan, the Ape Man was real. The lion unexpectedly darted for star Bo Derek while filming a scene where she first meets Tarzan (played by Miles O'Keeffe). O'Keeffe put himself between the lion and Derek, who tried to crawl to safety into the water, where the lion would not follow. She got away, but not before the lion sliced her shoulder with his paw. The footage stayed in the final cut — in fact, the scene was adjusted so that the attack could be included. United Artists/Cinema International Corporation 34. Michael McDonald was truly hit by a phone book in this scene from The Heat. McCarthy ended up being positioned closer than McDonald had thought she would be, and he didn't have time to dodge, meaning he was hit directly in the face, and his reaction was real. "Everyone, including Melissa and me, was thinking that my nose was broken," he revealed. "All I could think of was, 'Nobody break. Nobody laugh.' Because I only want to do this once." Luckily, his nose was alright, though Melissa was soon injured as well: "She ran over so fast to see if I was all right that she slid on the phone book on the floor, and then everybody just ran to Melissa, of course." He joked, "I knew where I ranked." 20th Century Fox / Via 35. In Clueless, Alicia Silverstone actually thought"Haitians" was pronounced that way — she wasn't trying to act dumb. The director, Amy Heckerling, thought it was so funny that she declined to correct her. Paramount Pictures / Via 36. The actors' reactions in this scene from Rocky Horror Picture Show — where Dr. Frank-N-Furter pulls off the tablecloth to reveal a dead body — were real. None of the actors, except Tim Curry, knew it was there, as director Jim Sharman wanted a genuine reaction. Michael White Productions / Via Facebook: TheZENRoom 37. Will Ferrell's reaction of surprise to the Jack-in-the-box in Elf was also real. Director Jon Favreau controlled the jack-in-the-boxes from offscreen so that Ferrell's surprise would be genuine. New Line Cinema 38. And finally, we'll end with some behind-the-scenes facts from 1974's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, which was a real-life nightmare to shoot. The cast and crew were pushed to their breaking point while acting in horrible conditions, particularly during the 26-hour shoot of the dinner scene, which took place in over 100-degree heat around rotting animals (cast and crew would periodically go outside to puke). Vortex Inc. / Via 39. At one point, Gunnar Hansen, who played Leatherface, got impatient with problems involving the fake blood and really did cut star Marilyn Burns's finger and put it to actor John Dugan's lips. Dugan reportedly didn't realize he drank her real blood until years later, when he called it "kind of erotic." Vortex Inc. 40. Allen Danziger was genuinely frightened the first time his character saw Leatherface — as it was also his first time seeing the actor in-costume. His scream was real. Vortex Inc. / Via 41. Hansen also used a real chainsaw while chasing the actors around, and at one point, he was doing so while high after accidentally ingesting pot brownies during the shoot. Burns also really did twist her ankle when jumping six feet for her character's escape scene. Hansen was so terrifying that at one point, Burns said, she began to question whether this was actually a snuff film and he really did want to hurt her. Vortex Inc. / Via 'You scared me to death,' Burns later told Hansen. 'I didn't know you really at all, and by this time, you're not sure if it's real or a movie. And snuff films were just coming in at this time, and I'm thinking, This is too real. The leering, leering when you started coming at me, that was really scary.' 42. In the scene where actor Jim Siedow beats Burns, he really did hit her multiple times (with her permission). She actually passed out when filming cut. "Every time we'd try it, she'd come up with a few more bruises. Finally, I got with it and started having fun doing it and started really slugging her, and we kept that up — we did eight shots — and then they finally said, 'That's a take.' She just fainted dead away. The poor girl was beaten up pretty badly," Siedow said. TL;DR: The film was a LOT more real than you thought. Vortex Inc. What's your favorite movie moment that was actually genuine? Let us know in the comments!

Anya Taylor-Joy's "Lucky" First Look Photos Revealed
Anya Taylor-Joy's "Lucky" First Look Photos Revealed

See - Sada Elbalad

time26-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • See - Sada Elbalad

Anya Taylor-Joy's "Lucky" First Look Photos Revealed

Yara Sameh Production has begun on Apple TV+'s limited series "Lucky," headlined and executive produced by Anya Taylor-Joy and executive produced by Reese Witherspoon. Filming kicked off on Tuesday in Las Vegas before the show moves to its main location, Los Angeles. "Lucky", which also stars Annette Bening, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Timothy Olyphant and Drew Starkey, will be filming in LA after scoring a $10.682M California tax credit in December as an untitled Apple Studios Series. The shoot comes amid an industrywide push to bring production to Los Angeles, which has become stronger and more urgent following the devastating January wildfires. The adaptation is based on the Marissa Stapley novel of the same name. The book was a New York Times bestseller and a selection for Reese Witherspoon's Reese's Book Club. Per the official logline, Taylor-Joy stars as "A young woman who left behind the life of crime she was raised in years ago, but must now embrace her darker, criminal side one final time in a desperate attempt to escape her past.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Apple TV (@appletv) Jonathan Tropper and Cassie Pappas are adapting the book for the screen and will serve as co-showrunners and executive producers. Tropper executive produces under his overall deal with Apple. "Lucky" is co-showrun and executive produced by Tropper through his Tropper Ink banner and under his overall deal with Apple TV+, alongside fellow co-showrunner Cassie Pappas. The series is executive produced by Witherspoon and Lauren Neustadter for Hello Sunshine, a part of Candle Media. Taylor-Joy executive produces through her production banner Ladykiller. Jonathan Van Tulleken will direct several episodes, including the pilot, and serve as executive producer. Witherspoon and Hello Sunshine also currently produce the popular Apple TV+ series 'The Morning Show,' which is entering its fourth season. The series brings Taylor-Joy back to the streaming TV world, as she earned widespread acclaim for her starring role in the Netflix limited series 'The Queen's Gambit.' She won a Golden Globe for her work on that show in addition to an Emmy nomination. Taylor-Joy is primarily known for her film work, having starred in features like 'Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga,' 'The Menu,' 'The Northman,' 'Split,' and 'The Witch.' She is also starring in the upcoming Apple Original Films project 'The Gorge.'

Drew Starkey joins Apple TV+ series Lucky with Anya Taylor-Joy
Drew Starkey joins Apple TV+ series Lucky with Anya Taylor-Joy

Express Tribune

time24-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Express Tribune

Drew Starkey joins Apple TV+ series Lucky with Anya Taylor-Joy

Drew Starkey, known for his breakout role as Rafe Cameron in Netflix's Outer Banks, has joined the cast of Apple TV+'s highly anticipated limited series Lucky. The crime drama, starring and executive produced by Anya Taylor-Joy, is based on Marissa Stapley's bestselling novel and a Reese's Book Club pick. Starkey takes on a major recurring role as Cary, the husband of Taylor-Joy's character, Lucky—a woman who abandoned her criminal upbringing but must embrace her dark past one last time to escape it. He joins an ensemble cast that includes Annette Bening, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, and Timothy Olyphant. Written by Jonathan Tropper (Warrior, Banshee), Lucky is co-showrun by Tropper and Cassie Pappas. Reese Witherspoon and Lauren Neustadter are executive producing under Hello Sunshine, alongside Taylor-Joy's Ladykiller banner. Jonathan Van Tulleken will direct multiple episodes, including the pilot. Starkey recently co-starred with Daniel Craig in Luca Guadagnino's Queer, which premiered at the 2024 Venice International Film Festival. He also starred in The Other Zoey and appeared in Prime Video's The Terminal List. With Outer Banks concluding after its fifth season, Lucky marks Starkey's latest high-profile project. The series is produced by Apple Studios and is expected to premiere in late 2025.

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