Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Bob Weinstein, Purveyor of Horror Films and Cheap Comedies, Accused of Sexual Harassment

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You knew this day was coming.

Now Bob Weinstein, Harvey’s brother, the one who helped bring Harvey’s downfall and who acted like a poor, put up on victim, has been accused of sexual harassment.

While Bob and what’s left of the Miramax board were busy kicking Harvey off the Weinstein Company board, Bob was field accusations from the show runner of his just cancelled series “The Mist.”

According to Variety, Amanda Segel, an executive producer of “Mist,” said Weinstein repeatedly made romantic overtures to her and asked her to join him for private dinners.

Bert Fields, the 85 year Hollywood scare machine of a lawyer who used to represent Harvey, told Variety:  “Variety’s story about Bob Weinstein is riddled with false and misleading assertions by Ms. Segel and we have the emails to prove it, but even if you believe what she says it contains not a hint of any inappropriate touching or even any request for such touching,” Fields said. “There is no way in the world that Bob Weinstein is guilty of sexual harassment, and even if you believed what this person asserts there is no way it would amount to that.”

Well, if he had the emails, wouldn’t he have shown them to Variety and gotten it over with?

Bob Weinstein’s disloyalty to his brother isn’t playing as well as he thought. Even though Harvey has monstrous accusations against him, Bob can’t convince anyone he didn’t know what was going on. Now he’s about to try and sell the company to Colony Capital’s Tom Barrack, a major supporter of Donald Trump. What a travesty.

While Harvey made the Oscar movies, Bob made the shlock films like Scream, Scary Movie, and Teaching Mrs. Tingle. Bob had no taste, but he was said to be making the money that allowed the quality films to exist. Really.

Meantime, Amazon cut ties with Roy Price, their head of TV and son of former studio chief Frank Price. Roy — not Ray Price, the country singer — is accused of saying stupid, dirty, and illegal things to the showrunner daughter of famed sci fi writer Philip K. Dick.

Bob Weinstein Takes Bridge Loan from Trump Adviser-Backer After Blowing Up Company

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The Weinstein Company is over. Bob Weinstein — after blowing up the company in act of perfidy rarely seen — has accepted a bridge loan from an odd source, perhaps on purpose.

While TWC negotiates a fire sale, Bob has taken money from Tom Barrack, owner of Colony Capital. Of course, Barrack is a very important backer of Donald Trump. He even organized the famously small inauguration back in January. He also helped engineer Michael Jackson’s downfall via “Doctor” Tohme Tohme– but that’s another story.

Irony number 1: Harvey Weinstein did what he could to defeat Trump. Now his brother has taken money from the enemy.

Irony number 2: Colony Capital– which snatched Neverland from Michael Jackson and has never been able to sell it — previously owned the Miramax library after Disney sold it to them. CC already picked over Weinstein bones and then sold them off. This is the second time around.

It’s hard for me to read statements from Bob Weinstein depicting him as some kind of ignorant angel and victim in all these matters. Bob was always considered the more unpleasant of the two brothers, the more venal, and less artistic. Or not artistic at all. That he didn’t know what Harvey was doing all these years — in any arena — is absurd.

But what is really outrageous is Bob’s behavior toward his own brother. Yes, it does appear that Harvey has done terrible things. Bob, however, would have no life and a much different career if Harvey had not produced all those Oscar films. It was Harvey’s taste and aptitude for making quality films that put Miramax on the map. Without “The English Patient” et al, Miramax under Bob would have been Troma without the irony.

Oscar Bound “Mudbound” But First Carey Mulligan Had to Learn How to Keep the Snakes Away

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“We had a snake wrangler on set,” Carey Mulligan told me on the red carpet of the New York Film Festival screening of “Mudbound.” I asked what it was like filming in the rural area of New Orleans where Dee Rees’ epic was shot.
Based on Hillary Jordan’s novel, “Mudbound” is a giant story that features an all-star cast. In addition to the “Far From the Madding Crowd” actress, the stars of the ensemble are Mary J. Blige, Jason Mitchell, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Clarke and Rob Morgan, all of whom were on the red carpet at Alice Tully Hall Thursday evening.  (Jonathan Banks is also featured in the film but sadly didn’t attend the event.)
Distributed by Netflix, the movie opens in theaters Nov. 17.
Set in 1940s Mississippi, the story revolves around two farming families, one white, and the other black. Their common struggles involve providing for their family in an inhospitable land in which they are literally and metaphorically drowning in the mud. The movie looks at many things, including what happens to people when they come back from War, how family drowns you and racism in the Deep South after World War II.
Mulligan plays Laura McAllan, a woman on her way to becoming a spinster at the late age of 31 when she finds a suitable mate. Raised with the comforts of the city, her options are dwindling and she settles for Henry (Jason Clarke), a rough hewed man who moves her and her daughters to a rural area of the Delta without electricity or running water. A once-a-week bath is a great luxury. (Mary J. Blige, in a remarkably restrained performance, plays the matriarch of the other family, sharecroppers on Henry’s land.)
A remote area of New Orleans, on former plantation country, was a stand in for the Mississippi Delta of Rees’ film. The snake wrangling bit of information from Mulligan was one of many challenges.
“I’ve never been on a film where you needed a snake wrangler before,” said Mulligan. She added, “It was hot, really hot. I’m British so I suffered. It was really hot but it was great… I’ve done films where it’s meant to be really hot and I’m really cold and I had to act a lot harder to make it look like I’m hot, but I was boiling all the time and sweating and I felt disgusting and covered in mud and being eaten by mosquitoes.”
By the way, what kind of snakes, I backtracked?
“Like deadly ones from what I’m told. His job was to protect the actors and crew from being bitten by snakes. I mean it was crazy. But all of that stuff was great because it sort of plays into the atmosphere,” Mulligan told me.
So what was key to getting into the character of Laura I asked?
“Actually it started with a haircut,” she told me. “I loved the idea she was this sort of, she was destined to be a spinster and that she didn’t really fit in anywhere. And I found this image of this woman in the 40’s and she had this really terrible fringe and it really was too short, but I thought that’s Laura. Like Laura would probably cut her hair like that in an effort to look sophisticated and it worked for her so I had my hairdresser cut this really, really awful full fringe. And it sort of helped.”
So that wasn’t a wig?
“That was my actual hair. Yeah, I lived with that fringe for about six months until it grew out so that actually helped. And then it was really about the relationships in the film. It was about their marriage. It was about working with Jason Clarke. And particularly the relationship with Florence even though we (Mary J. Blige) didn’t have a lot of scenes together I felt there was a sort of parallel running through the film, a bound that was kind of integral to the story.”
As for working with Dee Rees, who should be recognized for her directing as awards season warms up, Mulligan described her as “a genius… She knows exactly what she wants but it’s without ego, so it’s not prescriptive and she doesn’t tell you what to do, but you know when you look at her at the end of the scene, and even if you’ve done like one take, you know that she’ll say you’ve got it and you can trust that she does have it, which is rare.”
To immerse herself in the era of the 1940’s, Mulligan said she turned to images from the time for inspiration.
“I found the advertising around that period really interesting,” she said. “It was women in the household and the advertising in the magazines were geared towards, ‘Buy your wife this fantastic vacuum cleaner, she’ll love you for it!’ And women wearing their aprons and bringing a freshly baked pie out of the oven and all of these ideas that were so ingrained in women and young girls growing up.”
Jason Clarke, who is Australian, is also getting a crash course in American history. To get into his character and period of time he told me he listened to Shelby Foote.
“He’s in the Ken Burns documentary about the American Civil War but he wrote an incredible tome on the Civil War and that was really key actually. Understanding the Civil War and that whole period, Henry, my character, was a child of the Civil War and out of that came the mess that was sharecropping after emancipation… Usually we go straight from Civil War, Emancipation, Lincoln, jump that to Martin Luther King, and then Civil Rights, and I think sharecropping is a forgotten part, or not a taught part of what happened to several million people who had no education, no jobs, no money, no help in a part of the country that had been destroyed by Civil War and had no economy or finances. It was a big mess.”
Next up for Clarke is another historical figure: he plays Teddy Kennedy in “Chappaquiddick” due out later this year. (The film screened at the Toronto Film Festival and will be released November 22.) Photos have been circulating already and the resemblance is remarkable although he told me he wore only a wig and some false teeth to get the physical likeness.
After that he plays another figure from a key moment in American history. “Now I’m about to do Damien Chazelle’s film (‘First Man’) playing Ed White, the first American to walk in space, so I’m specializing in modern, 20th Century American history,” he laughed.

Small World: New Weinstein Accuser Lysette Anthony was Once Sister-in-Law of Suspended Amazon Executive Roy Price

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Among the many Harvey Weinstein accusers is actress-model Lysette Anthony. She says Weinstein attacked her in London years ago.

But in a weird case of Small World, it turns out that Anthony was also once the sister in law of now suspended Amazon Media exec Roy Price. Anthony was married to Price’s brother David from 1999-2003.

Roy Price has been suspended by Amazon for sexual harassment in another case altogether. He had been running the TV side of things. Amazon cancelled the red carpet last night for Woody Allen’s “Wonder Wheel” lest there be questions about Price. Ironically, one of Anthony’s few good film credits is Woody’s “Husbands and Wives” from 1992.

Meantime, Anthony made headlines in the UK years ago for taking the father of her son, composer Simon Boswell, to court for assault in 2011. Boswell was acquitted.

In 2014 Anthony told the British press: ‘Over the years I’ve had a lot of expensive husbands. I have been homeless and on welfare. That was during what I called ‘the troubles’, and I had a mucky break-up with my son’s stepfather.”

Roy Price, meantime, has had his imminent marriage to Lila Feinberg called off because of accusations against him. And in another small world moment, Feinberg’s wedding dress was being designed by Weinstein’s wife, Georgina Chapman, for Marchesa.

Now see if you can repeat all that out loud without looking!

Justin Timberlake Wows in Woody Allen Movie, Says Super Bowl Deal Is Not Done, No Announcement

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Justin Timberlake acquits himself as an actor in Woody Allen’s “Wonder Wheel,” a gorgeous looking drama that offers Kate Winslet in an Oscar buzzy performance, and Jim Belushi as a breakout possible Supporting Actor nominee.

“Wonder Wheel” doesn’t open until December 1st, but it won raves last night at the closing of the New York Film Festival. Allen and Winslet waved to the audience at Alice Tully Hall from a box high above, but declined to accept kudos at Tavern on the Green, where they were absent. But Timberlake and Belushi were happy to make the scene, as well as Tony Sirico and Steve Schirrippa, the two former Sopranos who make a cameo in the film.

Justin was accompanied by his beautiful wife, Jessica Biel, who just wrapped her USA TV series. They are happy as clams, and Jessica raved about their two and a half year old son, Silas.

But when I asked Justin what to expect at his Super Bowl performance come February, I was surprised by the answer. “There’s no announcement,” he said. (Funny– so much time had passed I thought this was all done. Last year the NFL announced Lady Gaga on September 29th.) He and manager Rick Yorn each shook their heads. “No, nope, no, the NFL is still having issues of course with kneeling,” Justin said. “There is nothing to announce.”

So, that’s a downer.

But “Wonder Wheel” — which I see is dividing press who saw it this week– I feel is a strong drama with moral twist that will surprise the audience. Winslet is extraordinary in her transition through the arc of the film. And her work in the third act will yield her many nominations and awards.

 

Box Office: “Blade Runner 2049” Hits $100 Mil Mark Worldwide, “Christoper Robin” Takes Off with Margot Robbie

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Is “Blade Runner 2049” a hit? Uh, no, not really. The Ryan Gosling future adventure is just clearing $100 million worldwide– $50 mil US, $50 mil all in everywhere else. Sounds good, but “2049” probably cost $200 million. And it’s already fallen to number 3 in the US behind a cheapo horror movie, “Happy Death Day,” from Jason Blum. “Happy Death Day” cost $5 million to make, and has already earned $11.6 million.

PS There is no one you’ve ever heard of in “Happy Death Day.” But I have– Ruby Modine, daughter of Matthew Modine and his great wife, Cari. Ruby is a talented actress and singer songwriter. Mazel tov! This is just the beginning for her. Her brother, Boman  Modine, is working all the time as a 1st and 2nd director on shorts. He’s also producing a new feature for release next year. “Stranger things” have happened! What a family!

Meantime, Simon Curtis’s “Goodbye Christopher Robin” had a great opening night very limited release from Fox Searchlight. The story of how A.A. Milne created Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin– whom he named after his own son– is a wonderful, charming film that will stay with you. Domhnall Gleeson is superior as Milne, and his scenes with the younger actors who play Christopher are remarkable. Kelly MacDonald is a stand out as Christopher’s nanny. And Margot Robbie makes for a beautiful, detached and humorous Mrs. Milne.

Fox Searchlight threw quite a shindig for “Goodbye Christopher Robin” at the New York Public Library on Thursday night. I tried like crazy to find out from Domhnall what he’s going in “The Last Jedi.” “Very tricky!” he declared. “You’ll never get it out of me!” Robbie, 27, has become something of a movie mogul. She’s producing films everywhere. “We even have a television division,” she told me.

I told Margot my running joke. Because she was so effective explaining the plot of “The Big Short” in a broken fourth wall in that movie, I think she should be added to every confusing film as on screen Director of Information. She doesn’t even have to be in a bathtub. “I could just be drinking tea,” she said, laughing. Imagine her in most of 2017’s films. Box office would go right up!

Review: Bruce Springsteen’s Transcendent One Man Broadway Show: He’s Just Like Us and Not At All

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Bruce Springsteen is just like us and then again, not at all.

He’s like us: he struggles with his childhood, has father issues, and admits to stretching the truth at times. In this way, he is disarming as hell. That makes his Broadway show– for which people seem to have paid thousands of dollars– transcendent. And transplendent. And kind of magnificent.

bruce and patti 1He’s not like us at all: he is a master showman, a gifted musician, a writer of fiction worthy of his own Nobel prize. Yes, you know all these songs he plays, reworks, reimagines, and redefines during his two unbroken hours on stage. But now, without the E Street Band, a wall of sound and eighteen thousand people singing along, we are hearing the lyrics. And they are quite amazing. Bruce is a great writer.

Bruce is a fiction writer. How he disarms the audience is to admit that the experiences of his songs are not necessarily his– they are made up, projected, cooked and digested from observations. His hometown? “I live [a couple of miles] from my hometown,” he admits. All the cars from songs like “Racing in the Street” or “Born to Run”? At least at the time he wrote them he did not drive, he had not driven a block. He didn’t have a drivers license the first he and his band drove across the country.

He does admit at the start of the show in one his many monologues– “I have never held a job.” But of course, he has: he’s the last of the great poets. I remember when Bruce first came on the scene with “Greetings from Asbury Park,” he was maybe the new or next Dylan. People didn’t like that. There were a few maybe new Dylans in the mid 70s before “Blood on the Tracks” re-established the Master. And people were wary of Springsteen. Then came “Born to Run.” And the rest was chaos.

Now, with a stage book that’s very shaped and the songs stripped down and devoid of their popular ornamentation, you can see Springsteen was the next Dylan. He was also the next Springsteen. Unlike Dylan, he had nothing really to rebel against. He came from the singer songwriter era. But he had echoes of R&B, and a joyful looseness that James Taylor and Jackson Browne lacked. Bruce was rarely somber. He was telling stories. Or as he says in this show, he was tell us his story and our story. (His story includes wife Patti Scialfa, who has two lovely duets with the father of her children. She’s value added on this ticket.)

Sometimes he is somber. A highlight of this show is “The Rising,” written about 9-11. His face is different when he sings it. That’s when he transcends a night with a rocker on Broadway. Equally moving is “Land of Hope and Dreams,” toward the end, segued into from the rousing “Dancing in the Dark.” Because you  see, like Steven Spielberg who admitted to being a patriot in his documentary, Springsteen is one, too. That’s always his bigger picture.

Oh yes: “Born in the USA” is quite brilliantly a blues number. And Bruce does talk about the “mess” we’re in now. But he touches lightly enough on politics. And the ticket prices? I asked around. If you told everyone they could stay and see the show again right away for $500, I think most would have remained.

In my audience: Senator Cory Booker, Chazz Palminteri (his show “A Bronx Tale” is playing across the street),  director Paul Schrader and actress wife Mary Beth Hurt, rock manager Ken Levitan, and Charles “Chip” Esten — star of “Nashville” — with his wife Patty.

Weinstein Company Shut Down Will Leave Four or Five Movies High and Dry

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The Wall Street Journal is reporting the obvious: The Weinstein Company is soon going to shut down and sell off its assets. They have no choice. Bob Weinstein and David Glasser activated a doomsday mission when they apparently cooperate in the ousting of Harvey. There was no way the company could go on, even with a different name.

But the end of TWC in the middle of awards season is tougher on the filmmakers than on the executives, all of whom have lots of money and real estate.

Right away, the biggest loster is “The Current War” with Michael Shannon and Benedict Cumberbatch. It didn’t play that well in Toronto. Harvey was trying to “fix” it with with a re-edit. But then all hell broke loose. Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon may never see a finished cut he’s happy with make it to theaters.

Really in a worse situation is “The Upside,” directed by Neil Burger adapted from the French hit “The Untouchables.” This comedy played really well in Toronto. Weinstein had it set for a last week of December qualifying run for the Oscars followed by a March release. Burger and the all star cast deserve better than oblivion. Any studio could pick this up and do well.

But then there’s “Mary Magdalene,” starring Rooney Mara and waiting for an Easter 2018 release. Garth Davis directed “Lion,” so there’s a lot of buzz here. Will “Mary” be sacrificed?

Also up in the air would be “Paddington 2.” The sequel to the original hit is set for January 12th. But again any studio can pick this one up, too.

What will New York be like without the Weinstein Company? Very, very different. Even though TWC was in decline, it was still a presence.  There was no movie business here at all before Miramax. Young people or people with short memories don’t realize this. But they will now.

 

How George Michael Wanted to be Remembered: “As One of Those Last Big Stars in the Sense That There Was a Glamour to It”

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George Michael wrote his own obituary with a documentary he’d almost finished about himself. Now this extraordinary film called “Freedom” comes to Showtime October 21st. Michael’s music partner David Austin completed the work, but it’s George’s film, don’t be fooled. And it it quite wonderful.

The main story about the making of his great solo album, called “Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1,” in 1990. But it’s really bigger than that, explaining quite a bit — in George’s own words– about his early life, Wham!, his solo career, being gay and coming out, even some acknowledgement of his brushes with the law and what happened to him that brought him to make the movie.

Of course, as with all the great stars we’ve lost to drugs and fame, all you can think is what a shame it is he can’t see the results.

How does George want to be remembered: “As a great singer songwriter… from a period of time we won’t be seeing again, like Prince or Madonna… As one of the last big stars in the sense that there was a certain glamour to it. And someone who had some kind of integrity.” He pauses and thinks about. “Very unlikely.” Adding ruefully, not quite meaning it: “It’s all been a waste of time, a waste of effort.”

“Freedom” is notable for many things, including Nile Rodgers’ reworking of “Fantasy” to Chris Martin’s over end credits singing of one of the most beautiful songs of all time, “A Different Corner,” which the Coldplay singer used a memorial to George at the February 2017 Brit Awards. Otherwise, there is plenty of music and lots of video clips, although as far as I can see there is no mention of “Wake Me Up Before You Go Go” or it’s accompanying video.

But “Freedom” is about freedom– freedom to become a solo star, to get freedom from Sony his record label, in court, to find sexual freedom, and freedom to express himself as an artist.

There is much talk about the love of his life, a man named Anselmo, who died of AIDS after their brief affair. That relationship seems to have wrecked Michael in a way maybe no one understood before this.It’s incredibly moving.

But there’s also the career side. “Listen Without Prejudice” was a rebuke to fans who first embraced and then criticized his first solo album, “Faith,” in 1987. A long sequence recalls that after winning the American Music awards prize for Best R&B album Michael was suddenly accused of cultural appropriation– of trying to be a modern Pat Boone. It was far from the case, but a lynch mob mentality (sound familiar or current?) crushed him.

“Freedom” contains interviews with Stevie Wonder, Elton John, Ricky Gervais, Nile Rogers, Mark Ronson, Tracey Emin, Liam Gallagher, Mary J. Blige, Jean Paul Gaultier, James Corden and Tony Bennett– as well as the models who apeeared in the “Freedom 90” video including Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington, Cindy Crawford, Tatjana Patitz and Linda Evangelista.

The whole thing is just stunning and not be missed.

 

Angelina Jolie Among the Stars Helping to Celebrate Animal Activist Jane Goodall’s New Documentary

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At the Hollywood Bowl this past Monday night, Angelina Jolie– along with 17,000 adoring fans — feted her longtime friend, the esteemed 83 year old animal activist Jane Goodall. The occasion was the recent premiere of the exquisite documentary, National Geographic’s “Jane.”

Director Brett Morgen– who also helmed “Kurt Cobain; Montage of Heck” and “The Kid Stays In The Picture”– does a masterful job telling the story of this true pioneer who began her work with chimpanzees 50 years ago.  Goodall’s unassuming nature combined with her fierce will and honesty makes her and this glorious doc mesmerizing to watch.  The film comprises 16 mm color footage shot during the early years by Jane’s eventual husband Hugo van Hawick. It was thought to be lost until it was discovered 2014 in the Nat Geo archives. Phillip Glass’s gorgeous, emotional score is nothing short of award worthy.   

Goodall spoke before the screening to the packed crowd: “I hope you can all spread the word.  We need to get together to save the planet. I’ll never get tired of telling this story to do whatever I can.” After the screening, the pioneer expressed her appreciation.  “I wish I could embrace every single one of you.  I want to thank you for being here. I hope you had a wonderful time.”

This doc will be hard to beat come Oscar time. Like the real Jane, this film is singularly unique. “Jane” will in limited release in theaters on Oct 20th