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George Clooney Has His Best Film In 12 Years, Adam Sandler Sensational in “Jay Kelly,” Emotional Comedy About Hollywood, Friendship, and Fame

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After the kind of meh response to Noah Baumbach’s “Jay Kelly” in Venice a month ago, I didn’t know what to expect.

But seeing the comedy about fame, friendship, and the meaning of life last night at the New York Film Festival, I’m relieved to say “Jay Kelly” is a tremendous film.

George Clooney and Adam Sandler lead a really stunning cast who never miss a beat. Baumbach, directing from a screenplay he wrote with actress Emily Mortimer, has made maybe his most accessible and embracing film, certainly since “The Meyerowitz Stories,” which featured Sandler in a similarly sympathetic role.

There was much talk out of Venice that “Clooney plays himself” in “Jay Kelly,” which, of course, isn’t correct. He does play a very successful aging movie star who’s grown disillusioned with a life that includes three failed marriages, two daughters, and an entourage that trails around after him. Sandler is part of that entourage as Jay Kelly’s loyal manager and personal fixer, Ron, upon whom Jay relies entirely.

Even though other people trail around after Jay, like Laura Dern as his long time publicist, the movie is basically a two hander supported by wonderful players who come in and out of the picture. Apart from Dern, there’s also the great Stacy Keach as Jay’s father, Riley Keough and Grace Edwards his daughters, and Jim Broadbent as his mentor.

The linchpin supporting player, though, is Billy Crudup as a former acting school friend turned rival who believes Jay stole his life from him. As in every movie, TV show, and play, Crudup memorably lights up the proceedings, creating an entire backstory for the movie in just a couple of pungent scenes.

This whole gang lives and dies on Baumbach and Mortimer’s inventively constructed screenplay. A big chunk of the movie takes place on a train from Paris to Florence, Italy where Jay — who’s genially stalking his youngest daughter on a summer vacation before she goes to college — will receive a lifetime achievement award. (This is very funny sunplot featuring Patrick Wilson as a younger star getting the same honor.)

There are a number of well woven flashbacks to Jay’s early days, so we can see how he got to this summer of discontent. There also several tropes that play back and forth in that screenplay, all very gentle send ups of stars’ lives including contract riders that insist on slices of cheesecake that Jay doesn’t even like, and so on.

Both actors are revelations. Clooney has needed a part like this for a long time. It’s his best work since his “Up in the Air”/”Michael Clayton” days. There’s none of that self-referential goofiness that sometimes pervades his roles. He’s restrained and dead serious, which makes the laughs and tears around him and from him so much more pungent. This is Clooney’s best role since “Gravity” in 2013, and “The Descendants” in 2011, roughly 12 years.

Sandler — whose main career is built on juvenile silliness — is a wise owl here, just as he was in “Meyerowitz.” He’s a mensch juggling is life and Jay’s. As Jay is having a late in life crisis he sets off Ron’s own questioning if, after maybe 30 years, is this all worth it? Ron is constantly trying to placate Jay while rationalizing his own investment in a career he’s helped to create. Jay and Ron’s friendship reminded me of Rick Dalton and Cliff Booth’s duet in “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.” They can’t live without each other, and it’s vexing.

I shouldn’t leave out Nicholas Britell’s lovely score and Linus Sandgren’s rich cinematography. Production designer Mark Tidlesley’s gets kudos for making a train its own character.

“Jay Kelly” joins my list of “Sinners,” “One Battle After Another,” “Blue Moon,” and “Deliver Me from Nowhere,” and — yes, “Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale” — as one of the best films of what”s turning into an excellent year. See it on a big screen starting November 14th, and then on Netflix December 5th.

Trump Announces 100% Tariff on All Movies Made Outside the United States, Presumably Including Mel Gibson’s New Christ Saga

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Mel Gibson, Donald Trump’s Hollywood ambassador, will have trouble with his latest movie.

Trump has announced a 100% tariff on all movies made outside the United States.

Gibson is shooting his two part “Passion of the Christ” sequel, and it’s not in Altoona, trust me.

Shooting is set for Rome, other locations in Italy, Morocco, and Israel.

It’s a two part movie that is costing Gibson, a Hollywood pariah, hundreds of millions of dollars.

Trump knows nothing about the movie business, but he likes to make random declarations which have to be walked back later.

I can’t wait to hear how “Passion of the Christ 2” will get some exemption from Trump, who’s obviously forgotten that cronies like Jon Voight and Sylvester Stallone also make movies abroad.

Another movie this will likely affect: Christopher Nolan’s “Odyssey,” shooting in Greece, Morocco, Sicily, and the United Kingdom.

There are plenty more, too. And who will pay for it? Moviegoers. Just like people who like to eat are paying for higher grocery bills!

Donald Trump’s latest insane rant on Truth Social:

“Our movie making business has been stolen from the United States of America, by other Countries, just like stealing “candy from a baby.” California, with its weak and incompetent Governor, has been particularly hard hit! Therefore, in order to solve this long time, never ending problem, I will be imposing a 100% Tariff on any and all movies that are made outside of the United States. Thank you for your attention to this matter. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN! President DJT”

Former Cat Stevens aka Yusuf Islam Cancels North American Book Tour as US Denies Visas, US Entry: Peace Train Derailed

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Former Cat Stevens aka Yusuf Islam has had to cancel his US book tour.

Stevens was coming to the US in October to promote his memoir, “On the Road to Find Out.”

A lightning rod Muslim who once had his hit records bulldozed into dust by radio stations, Stevens has performed here in the past.

But with the Trump administration blocking Muslims and anyone with an opinion contrary to theirs, Cat Stevens’ peace train has been derailed. He’s been denied entry into the US before — in 2004 — but was approved in 2006.

He’s been back a few times since then. I interviewed him in 2006 when he played at Jazz at Lincoln Center. He was a charming subject. But his pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel stand is objectionable.

We are all great fans of Cat Stevens’ records from the 1970s, not so much his politics since then. Still, he shouldn’t be denied entry to the US. However, under Trump, it may be impossible.

The cancellation is certainly a blow to Genesis Publications, which publishes the $35 tome on October 7th.

Meantime, Cat Stevens’ music is heard everywhere, reflecting an innocent time before the former Steven Demetre Georgiou, born in London to Greek parents, became politicized and changed his name.

Bruce Springsteen Serenades NY Film Festival Crowd After Sensational Premiere of “Deliver Me from Nowhere” (Watch Video)

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Yes, that was Bruce Springsteen on stage last night with just his guitar at Alice Tully Hall.

Bruce made some nice remarks and then serenaded the crowd at the NY Film Festival after a big standing ovation for the opening of Scott Cooper’s movie, “Deliver Me from Nowhere.”

Jeremy Allen White of “The Bear” plays Bruce circa 1982 and Jeremy Strong of “Succession” is his manager and closest friend, Jon Landau in a film about creativity, depression, loss, and friendship.

“Deliver Me” — based on the book by Warren Zanes — is a very different music film than last year’s “A Complete Unknown” because Springsteen was a decade into being a star when ghosts of his childhood haunted him, and he decided to make a stripped down, personal album called “Nebraska.”

This was right before “Born in the USA” turned him into a worldwide superstar in 1984.

Cooper, director of “Crazy Hearts” which gave us Jeff Bridges’s Oscar winning performance, has shaped a moody movie of rich colors that never loses sight of the friendship between the two men and the pain of creating an album that satisfies an artist’s vision. It’s beautiful work.

White is smaller than Springsteen in real life, but he projects himself as a big presence on screen. He sings the “Nebraska” songs when Bruce is writing and recording, although Cooper uses the real Bruce recordings when they’re playing the music back.

Bruce is just coming off his big hit, “Hungry Heart,” when he decides to pull back and re-evaluate his burgeoning career. He is indeed haunted memories of abusive father — who’s still alive in the movie and played by “Adolescence” star Stephen Graham — and a kind, put upon mother (Gaby Hoffman).

Returning to Asbury Park, Bruce hooks up with the sister of an old friend, played with a lot of warmth and appeal by Odessa Young. Paul Walter Hauser is guitar tech and buddy Mike Batlan who helps Bruce set up a makeshift studio in the bedroom of a rented house where Springsteen can be alone while he composes the album. David Krumholtz is Sony records exec Al Teller who’s not too happy when he hears “Nebraska” for the first time.


“Deliver Me” is less about plot — not a lot really happens — than it is about mood, and the way a real artist finds his way into the great unknown of creating a project. There’s the subplot of the girlfriend, and the father, but really it’s about Bruce emerging from his cocoon into a full grown Monarch butterfly.

Watching “The Bear,” we know no one does angst like White. He is the real Tortured Poets Department, which makes the way he creates Springsteen’s arc so fascinating. He’s very charming as he plumbs the depths of his soul. There’s a heart wrenching scene I don’t want to give away involving father and son, White and Graham, that is unexpected and disarming. It’s what makes “Deliver Me” a great, not a good, movie.

Strong, of course, brings Landau to life, and it’s very key to see how much the singer depends on the manager for support and guidance.

You’re not going to hear the Springsteen catalog, this is no jukebox musical. “Born in the USA” is the only that gets the star treatment. Otherwise, it’s all “Nebraska,” a work of art that echoes Springsteen’s interests in Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. The record company has no hope for a hit but “Nebraska” — without any singles — made it the top 3 and remains a Springsteen staple.

In the audience was Bruce’s famed drummer Max Weinberg, also Clive Davis, who was so instrumental in Bruce’s early career. Also on hand: famed artist and director Julian Schnabel. I was thrilled to run into my old friend, Molly Sims, who’s married to Scott Stuber, one of the producers. Strong and Graham put in appearances at the after party at Ascent in the Time Warner Center, but Bruce, White, and Cooper were all absent. (Also the after party turned out to be an A list, B list affair, which was very weird.)

The most interesting guest: famed director and screenwriter Paul Schrader, who back in 1982 sent Springsteen a screenplay the singer never read called “Born in the USA.” Schrader wanted Bruce to sing and star in the movie. Bruce declined. Schrader told me later that he was in Japan and saw the “Born in the USA” album on sale, with his title and the art work from the unmade screenplay.

Was Schrader mad, I asked? “No,” he said, “I got him to write the title song for another movie I made, Light of Day, with Michael J. Fox and Joan Jett.”

Can Disney — which isn’t really part of the annual awards marathon unless it’s with animation — make this 20th Century Studios film a contender? I sure hope so. It deserves to be in the conversation.

Bruce gave Schrader a sweet shout out, as you’ll see below.

Pop Poop Out: First Maroon 5, Now Ed Sheeran Sales Disappear for New Album as Generational End Comes in Music Cycle

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First they came for Maroon 5.

Now it’s Ed Sheeran’s turn.

A generational cycle in pop music has ended apparently.

Sheeran’s new album, “Play,” has sold just 50,000 copies in downloads and CDs. Another 150,000 copies are accounted for by streaming.

Sheeran is now selling one tenth of his zenith moment from a decade ago. He’s still talented, but his audience has moved on.

It doesn’t help that there’s no breakout single from “Play.” The album is being swept away in short order.

The same thing happened to Maroon 5 this year. Their new album, called “Love is Like,” was put to sleep on the day it arrived. Total sales were about 50,000 in all formats.

Audiences age out, and if music artists don’t keep up with the times, they head to the nostalgia bin. Let’s say they get Three Dog Night-ed.

Justin Bieber released his “Swag” album twice and had a similar commercial response. He’s sold around 580,000 copies, almost all from streaming. No real hits from the album except for a minor one, “Daisies.” He added 12 songs and sent it out again and no one cared.

Bieber can console himself with a reported (maybe) $10 million fee to play Coachella in the spring.

The pop charts are a cruel and forbidding mistress, that’s for sure.

Global Citizen Concert Yields Huge Drop of Views on YouTube From Last Year as The Weeknd Bows Out of Show, Cardi B Headlines

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A lot of people didn’t care about the Global Citizen concert in Central Park this year.

On YouTube, views come to around 600,000 around the world. That’s down 40%, from 1 million last year.

Attendance — which was mostly free — was estimated in person at around 60,000. It was a nice day, too.

But once The Weeknd smartly dropped out, and Cardi B was announced as his replacement, interest waned.

People have caught on Global Citizen as a fraud. The charity’s execs spend millions on themselves and producing rock concerts. They’ve ignored Ukraine and Gaza, where hundreds of thousands are starving and need medical assistance.

And what happened to Mars Rodriguez? She won the Global Citizen Rolling Stone prize of $50,000 and a chance to perform on the show. She’s put nothing on social media. There’s one picture of her from the GC Twitter account indicating she may have played on the pre show. Otherwise, she’s not in any of the publicity.

Did she perform? Did she get the money? Who knows? (email me at showbiz411@gmail.com if you saw her.)

Me? I caught up with “Only Murders in the Building.” Best season yet. Scene with Steve Martin and Tea Leoni at dinner like something from the best of original “Naked Gun.”

Box Office: Leo, Sean Penn Win the “Battle” with $22.4 Mil Opening Weekend, Sony Resorts to Old Spider Man Trio for $2.1 Mil Take

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The folks at Warner Bros must spend every Monday morning drinking mimosas.

Now “One Battle After Another” has launched with z $22.4 million weekend on its way to awards galore and a long life.

“WB has scored six hits this year, including “Superman,” “WB has scored six hits this year, including “Superman,” “Sinners,” “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” and “Weapons.”

Mike DeLuca and Pam Abdy have had a banner year after nearly every single newsletter like Puck and Ankler said they were going to be fired any minute. Talk about having the last laugh!

But over at Sony Pictures, it’s a different story. Nothing has worked. It’s been one disappointment after another.

So what did they do? They re-released into theaters Sam Raimi’s trio of Tobey Maguire “Spider Man” movies from the 2000s. “Spider Man 2,” the best one, was the winner with $1.1 million. With the two others, the trilogy brought in around $2.1 million.

I guess the logic is that Tobey will make an appearance in the next Tom Holland “Spider Man” movie, which has been slowed down by the actor’s accident on set.

Disney is also slugging it out this year. They’re waiting for the new “Avatar” movie — which, to me, looks like all the others — in December to rescue them from a bad cycle. The only bright spot was Marvel’s “Fantastic Four.”

Tonight Disney — thanks to 20th Century former Fox — debuts the Bruce Springsteen movie, “Deliver Me from Nowhere” — at the New York Film Festival. Can they turn a contemplative film about one of the world’s greatest rockers into gold at the box office? Depends on if they have a Hungry Heart, or they’re just dancing in the dark!

Brian Cox (aka Logan Roy), June Squibb, Lucy Liu, More Hit Star Studded BAFTA NY Tea Party at Swanky Mandarin Oriental

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BAFTA NY — the British Academy outpost started by my late friend Freddie Hancock many years ago — is stepping up its game.

New dynamic chair Joyce Pierpoline hosted a swanky New York Film Festival tea party at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel today in Columbus Circle.

This was a little like the great BAFTA LA tea party that comes in the winter over Critics Choice Awards weekend.

Plenty of stars and well known industry types showed up including irascible “Succession” actor Brian Cox, plus “James Bond” star Ben Whishaw, “Brutalist” director Brady Corbet and director wife Mona Fastvold, Gaby Hoffmann, Joan Chen, Aasif Mandvi, theater great Kathleen Chalfant, “Dreamgirls” and now “Kiss of the Spider Woman” director Bill Condon, and Sean Bean, of “Lord of the Rings” fame.

Everyone wanted their picture taken with 95 year old June Squibb, star of “Eleanor the Great” just a season after her hit, “Thelma.”

Also, Joan Chen — fondly remembered from “Twin Peaks” — not trapped in that doorknob anymore!

“Our tea parties are a way for us to bring together our entertainment community in New York and continue to showcase the important year-round work of the organization. BAFTA has had a home in New York since 1996, and it’s inspiring to gather so much talent from this city across film, television, and games. Community is at the heart of who we are, and tonight is about celebrating the creativity in this room while also looking to the future.” said Pierpoline.

We can thank Delta Air Lines, Virgin Atlantic, Morgan Stanley Global Sports & Entertainment, and Mandarin Oriental, New York for presenting the much needed get together.

Plenty of stars and well

Julia Roberts Strikes Out in New, Confusing Movie, Mispronounces Director’s Name

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I love the New York Film Festival, and they have a lot of great movies playing now or coming this week and next.

Luca Guadagnino’s “After the Hunt” is not one of them.

“Hunt” already accrued negative reviews in Venice, after the NYFF signed it up and was stuck with it, so don’t blame them.

On paper, a movie by the director of “Challengers” starring Julia Roberts and Andrew Garfield sounds like a winner. But it’s a mess, and an unpleasant one, that left people saying afterwards that it’s “challenging.” Maybe Luca, who’s Italian, got confused.

Two things to know upfront: “Hunt” opens like a Woody Allen movie, stealing the signature typeface and look of his best dramatic films right through the opening shot of cool people hanging around a richly appointed apartment. It’s ridiculous.

The other Easter egg here is that Roberts plays a character named Alma Imhoff, which sounds like “Emhoff” in the movie, a name that we know only from Kamala Harris’s husband, Doug.

Anyway: Alma is a strident Yale professor trying to get tenure. She’s married to Michael Stulhbarg’s menschy psychiatrist husband. They have no children, and live in a fabulous New Haven home. Alma, 58, is in a heavy flirtation-relationship with Andrew Garfield’s Hank (who’s 42). He’s mad for her. But a Black lesbian student name Maggie Resnick (come on) is obsessed with Alma.

Guadagnino — whose name Roberts mispronounced on stage during the Q&A despite them now being “family” — can’t decide if this gang is involved in a #Metoo story, a psychological thriller, or a meditation of the Yale campus covered in snow from the 1996 blizzard.

Alma, the center of this “TAR”-like story, is a steel magnolia wrapped in a Brillo pad. Why are all these people so fascinated by her? She’s extremely off putting, far from the charming Roberts characters of the 1990s. Roberts is mannered and defensive, with a pinched face and dyed blonde hair, which I guess suits Alma, who keeps falling over in unexplained pain, vomiting into toilets, and taking massive painkillers.

Meantime, Maggie — who’s living with a trans student who looks like Elliot Page (but isn’t) accuses Hank of rape (it seems like they did sleep together) just to upset Alma. It’s hard to hear a lot of the muffled dialogue or even see what’s going on with the low lighting and cinema verite aspects of the production. All the characters live with dread as they navigate these humorless relationships.

At one point, Garfield’s shaggy haired Hank disappears from the movie for quite a while, and Maggie’s complaint doesn’t seem too important, so the whole endeavor just seems to sag into the abyss. When Hank does return, he proves to be the creep that was in question. Stulhbarg’s character does some gourmet cooking, says reassuring sensible things, and plays classical music loudly in the kitchen. Alma finally finds a gastroenterologist. Maggie gets a fashion makeover.

The annual after party at Tavern on the Green is one of the funnest nights of the year. I got to meet the great theater actress Kathleen Chalfont and her famous photographer husband, Henry. Another fine actress with a stellar resume, Rutanya Alda, told me about her film, “Land of the Mustaches.”

Now the NYFF turns its attention to solid films starring or about George Clooney, Ethan Hawke, Bruce Springsteen, Daniel Day Lewis, and more pressing issues. Get your tickets at filmlinc.org.

UPDATE: Oregon Governor Says No Need for Trump to Send Troops, Forget It, Trump Also Releasing Files on 1937 Disappearance of Amelia Earhart

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Just so we’re all up to date on the monkey in the White House.

Trump has declared ‘war’ on Portland, Oregon so he can later say he resolved the war there and win the Nobel Peace Prize.

On social media this morning he actually writes: “At the request of Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, I am directing Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland, and any of our ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists. I am also authorizing Full Force, if necessary. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

Oregon Governor Tina Kotek writes: “My office is reaching out to the White House and Homeland Security for more information. We have been provided no information on the reason or purpose of any military mission. There is no national security threat in Portland. Our communities are safe and calm.”

ACTUAL wars rage in Gaza and Ukraine, but Trump will fix the non existent one in Portland.

Trump is also not releasing the Epstein files, especially since newly uncovered logs show Elon Musk, Steve Bannon, and other cronies were involved with the dead sex offender, rapist, and pedophile.

However, as a nice distraction, Trump has ordered the release of the files on the 1937 disappearance of pilot Amelia Earhart. He’s also going to allow Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to release the actual reports of what happened when astronauts Tony Nelson and Roger Healey found a genie in a bottle upon their beach landing.

Says Donnie:

“I have been asked by many people about the life and times of Amelia Earhart, such an interesting story, and would I consider declassifying and releasing everything about her, in particular, her last, fatal flight! She was an Aviation Pioneer, the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, and achieved many other Aviation “firsts.” She disappeared in the South Pacific while trying to become the first woman to fly around the World. Amelia made it almost three quarters around the World before she suddenly, and without notice, vanished, never to be seen again. Her disappearance, almost 90 years ago, has captivated millions. I am ordering my Administration to declassify and release all Government Records related to Amelia Earhart, her final trip, and everything else about her. Thank you for your attention to this matter!

DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA”

Sep 26, 2025, 4:42 PM