Monday, December 22, 2025
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Broadway: “Wicked” Gets COVID, Cancels Performances, “MJ Michael Jackson Musical” Gets 3 Standing Ovations

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There’s a lot going on on Broadway.

“Wicked,” the long running hit musical, has been hit with COVID. First they cancelled yesterday’s shows (Saturday), now today’s performances are not happening. The show says they’ll be back on Tuesday. No word on who at the show tested positive, or how many, cast or crew.

I’m actually surprised more shows aren’t having COVID issues. Putting Broadway productions on right now is very tricky, and everyone is doing their best to avoid trouble. But the shows must go on for the sake of the Broadway economy.

Meanwhile, good news from “MJ The Michael Jackson Musical.” The dress rehearsal Saturday night, I’m told, was such a success that there were THREE standing ovations during the show. First preview is this week, and the opening is in February. Everyone is hoping for a success here, and it’s looking good so far, I will try and sneak in this month and take an early look.

 

Box Office: Lady Gaga “Gucci” Makes 3 Times Ridley Scott’s “Last Duel” in 2 Weeks, “Ghostbusters” Crosses the Line

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Ridley Scott has a good news, bad news fall. The esteemed director has had a big hit and a big flop simultaneously. You see, even at 83 there’s still room for things that haven’t happened before!

Scott’s “House of Gucci” — even with mixed reviews — has taken off at the box office. In two weeks, “Gucci,” starring Lady Gaga, has made $33.6 million. At MGM, they must be opening Champagne after so many flops. But Gaga won the New York Film Critics Award for Best Actress on Friday which spurred audiences into theaters. An NBC special on the history of the Gucci murder didn’t hurt. So “Gucci” is a hit. Now all they need is the Gucci family filing a lawsuit, and the PR will go through the roof. (Not like the MGM PR department has done a thing. But they can reap the benefits.)

The bad news: “House of Gucci” has made more than 3 times the money Scott’s “The Last Duel” has taken in domestically– and in just two weeks. It’s actually made made more than “The Last Duel” earned worldwide ($29 mil). How crazy is that? “The Last Duel” was a 20th Century Fox holdover release for Disney, which did nothing for it. And they don’t care. They have big hits in “Encanto” and “Eternals.” Since “The Last Duel” does not start with an E or end with a dollar sign, what’s the difference?

Meanwhile, Sony’s “Ghostbusters: Afterlife” has crossed the $100 million mark after middling reviews threatened to tank it when it opened. But the early reviews were positive and the audiences flocked to it. Congrats to Jason Reitman, who obviously will make a couple more with this cast. A franchise has been rebooted!

Princess Diana Movie “Spencer” Vanishes and With It, Maybe, Oscar Chances for Kristen Stewart

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The Princess Diana movie, “Spencer,” has vanished from regular release in theaters.

A check of Fandango shows it still playing in a few spots, but even then just one or two shows a day. Basically. it’s gone. On December 2 it was down to 346 theaters and made just $28,634. It had been up to 1,200 theaters during November.

“Spencer” stars Kristen Stewart as Princess Diana. Few movies have gotten this much press. Or ink for Stewart as an Oscar contender.

But with just $7 million in the box office, the movie is gone and so may be its chances for Oscars. Kristen Stewart was so touted for her performance. But without any commercial weight and so far no love from critics groups, the dream may be over.

Right now, the Best Actress leading contenders are Lady Gaga for “House of Gucci,” now on the fast track thanks to the New York Film Critics, “Rachel Zegler for “West Side Story,” Nicole Kidman for “Being the Ricardos.” Jessica Chastain for “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.” Olivia Colman for “The Lost Daughter.” Jennifer Hudson for “Respect.” I would have included Penelope Cruz for “Parallel Mothers,” but there’s no sign of the film and I don’t know what’s happened to it.

So Kristen Stewart’s fine work may just go into the books as just that. and her Oscar— which I do think will come one day– is not for this year.

Adele’s “30” Album Stays at Number 1 Second Week, Drops 66% in Sales, Crosses 1 Million Mark

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Adele continued to sell a lot of copies of her “30” for a second week in a row.

She finished week 2 down 66% from her first week but still managed to fob off 285K albums approximately. That should put her total for “30” at around 1.1 million. It’s way off from her “25” album six years ago, but these days she’s rolling in the dough.

Two thirds of Adele’s sales come from CDs, downloads, and LPs. Her streaming is minor. Fans want to own her product, have it in their homes so they can swoon while drinking white wine and little chocolates. According to hitsdailydouble, her first week of streaming revenue probably was around $1 million or a tad less. The big hits are “Easy On Me” and “Oh My God.”

In 2015, Adele’s second week of sales would have brought her to around 5 million copies sold. Well, nothing is like it used to be, is it?

In a few weeks– late January– Adele will have her first “sit down” at Caesar’s Palace, where she will play two shows per weekend through April, not a heavy schedule. That’s where she’ll hit a gold mine. If want to see her, you’ll have to go to her.  In the past, big pop stars would wait til their late 40s or 50s before surrendering to Vegas. But Adele, 33, is an old soul apparently. She’s not chugging around the US, no effin’ way.

PS with that Caesar’s schedule expect to see Adele on the Grammy Awards on CBS Monday, January 31st. I’m told it’s part of her deal with CBS starting with the Oprah interview special.

 

Alec Baldwin’s Big Non Mea Culpa With George Stephanopolous Finishes 3rd in Ratings for Time Period

Alec Baldwin’s big non mea culpa nonburger fess up was a bust in the ratings last night.

ABC finished third at 8pm behind “Annie” on NBC and “Young Sheldon” and “The United States of Al” on CBS.

George Stephanopolous managed to get no news out of Baldwin concerning the accidental on set death of Holyna Hutchins. Baldwin maintains he didn’t pull the trigger and wonders how a live bullet got in the gun that killed her.

Takeaway: this has been hard on Alec but he didn’t do anything wrong. The lawyer for the Assistant Director agrees. This is not a big surprise. All these people are terrified of civil lawsuits not to mention criminal negligence.

But only 4 million million people tuned in for this exercise in self-preservation. Interestingly, this came from not ABC News but George Stephanopolous Productions. GS is now making shows and licensing them to ABC News as part of his new deal. This was a non news event. Kind of a Hamptons sit down.

UPDATING LIVE NY Film Critics: Lady Gaga for “Gucci,” Kathryn Hunter for “Macbeth,” 3 for “Power of the Dog,” Best Film “Drive My Car”

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The New York Film Critics Circle is choosing winners in real time.

BEST FILM: “Drive My Car.” Why? Just to be different.

Lady Gaga wins Best Actress for “House of Gucci.” Very cool. She’s guaranteed an Oscar nod now, along with Nicole Kidman, Jennifer Hudson, Jessica Chastain, and Kristen Stewart.

Benedict Cumberbatch is Best Actor for “The Power of the Dog.” (This means the NY Film Festival party at Tavern on the Green was a success.) Jane Campion wins Best Director for “Power of the Dog.” After NBR went against Netflix, NYFCC is all in!

Most lovely choice for Best Supporting ActressKathryn Hunter, who plays the three witches in Joel Coen’s “Tragedy of Macbeth.” Really thrilling choice. She played Puck in Julie Taymor’s extraordinary “Midsummer Night’s Dream” in Brooklyn and was incendiary. Gifted actress.

Best Supporting Actor goes to Kodi Smit-McPhee for “The Power of the Dog,” also an inspired and spot on decision.

Best First Film: “The Lost Daughter” from Maggie Gyllenhaal. Congrats to Maggie!

Best Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson for “Licorice Pizza”

Foreign film goes to “The Worst Person in the World.” Non fiction film to animated doc, “Flee.”

Best Animated Film: “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.”

Best Cinematography: “West Side Story”

SPECIAL AWARD: Maya Cade for the creation of the Black Film Archive.

SPECIAL AWARD: Diane Weyermann, posthumous award for supporting daring and impactful filmmaking at Sundance and Participant.

SPECIAL AWARD: Marshall Fine for his years of service as NYFCC’s General Manager and decades on the NY film scene

So far they’re batting a thousand.

Keep refreshing…

 

Exclusive: National Board of Review Fraud: 7 Awards to Studio Whose Marketing Chief is On Their Board

 

Unforgivable: Netflix Premieres a Stealth Sandra Bullock Movie Panned By Critics And Dumped

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Netflix is very high on “The Power of the Dog,” and a bunch of other movies they hope will get awards season attention.

But last night they had an actual premiere for a Sandra Bullock movie they’ve quietly dumped into the ocean of movie mistakes.

“The Unforgivable” is apparently just that, unforgivable for being made. Rotten Tomatoes has it at a lowly 35%. And that’s among critics who’ve seen it. Not many have or will until it crawls onto the Netflix platform December 10th.

According to reports, “The Unforgivable” was delivered into movie theaters on November 24th. But no one knows where, or when, and it doesn’t seem to be there now.

How did our Sandy get into this mess? (Not to mention Oscar winner Viola Davis?) “The Unforgivable” is a first time US film for German director Nora Fingscheidt. It’s based on a failed TV series from British phenom Sally Wainwright, who went on to write one of my favorite UK series, “Last Tango in Halifax.” But this thing looks pretty grim, and not how anyone wants to see Our Miss Bullock.

These things happen I guess.

 

 

Taylor Swift Rare PR Mistake: Sends Flowers to Accused Domestic Abuser Singer Don McLean

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Taylor Swift rarely makes a PR mistake. But she made a big one this time. She sent flowers and a hand written note to Don McLean, singer of the 8 minute “American Pie” when her 10 minute song, “All Too Well,” eclipsed his on the charts.

Taylor seems unaware that McLean’s reputation has been sorely damaged by accusations of physical and mental abuse by his daughter and ex wife. What is going on here? This McLean Insta post will become part of “Folklore” for “Evermore.” Maybe she should read this link as a start. And this one.

 

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Exclusive: National Board of Review Fraud: 7 Awards to Studio Whose Marketing Chief is On Their Board

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I’ve written a lot about the National Board of Review and its phony baloney way of selecting winners for its awards.

Today the NBR gave no fewer than 7 awards to movies made by independent studio A24. David Laub, head of marketing for A24, sits on the NBR board. That’s all you need to know. He’s listed on a 2021 mentorship website as “a distribution executive for film and television studio A24, where he works in all aspects of film distribution including acquisitions, marketing, publicity, and exhibition.’

The NBR gave two of its biggest awards to Joel Coen’s “The Tragedy of Macbeth.” Coen won for Screenplay and Bruno Delbonnel won for cinematography.

Two of the NBR’s top 10 films of the year were from A24, “Macbeth” and “Red Rocket.”

Two of the top 10 indie films on the NBR list also came from A24: “C’mon C’mon” and “The Green Knight.”

In foreign films, the NBR cited “Lamb,” another A24 film. They weren’t sheepish about it either.

Is it a scandal? Yes. Netflix, for whom no one feels any sympathy, was almost totally shut out of the NBR with their films “The Lost Daughter,””Tick Tick Boom” and “Power of the Dog.” And also for a foreign film, “The Hand of God.” Amazon was shut out for “Being the Ricardos.” There were dozens more oversights including Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch,” which was at least worthy of mention, and Edgar Wright’s “Last Night in Soho.”

But A24 had the advantage. The little studio doesn’t like me because I write this every year. They don’t invite to me to screenings or send me review links. They don’t send press releases or emails. I had to buy my ticket to “Macbeth” at the New York Film Festival. The NBR equally snubs me for their big gala in January. But this is a fraud perpetuated on the public, and I don’t mind calling it out.

Review: Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” Soars As One of the Last Great Storytellers Paints His Masterpiece

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Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” asks the question Imagine if you could do life over knowing what you know now.

So Spielberg has reimagined Robert Wise and Arthur Laurents’s movie of the Broadway musical 60 years later. Actually, 64 years later, because “WSS” opened on Broadway in 1957. Lincoln Center did not exist on Manhattan’s West Side. The world of the Sharks and Jets was real. It had yet to be paved over for the future.

It’s six decades later. We can look back at it now that that world was wiped out. Someone I mentioned this to yesterday didn’t even realize there had been a neighborhood where Lincoln Center stands, that people lived there.

Well, they did, which is why Tony Kushner’s resonant screenplay and the lavish set built in New Jersey to look like New York in 1957 instantly give the Spielberg film weight and verisimilitude. From the very beginning when we see the wrecking balls, the signs that say “Future Home of Lincoln Center,” you know that Spielberg and co. have got it right. It’s thrilling to know they understand.

In this growing rubble come the Jets and the Sharks, Tony and Maria and all their friends. It feels as though Spielberg has always been waiting for this moment despite his decades of authoritative, big budget filmmaking. Did he always have this in mind when “ET” was phoning home, and Richard Dreyfus was talking to aliens, when Oskar Schindler was saving Jews, and Tom Hanks was saving Private Ryan? It sure seems like it. “West Side Story” 2.0 is the perfect distillation of Spielberg, combining fantasy and violence.

To get beyond the detailed nuanced production we’ll have to see this movie twice, But let’s get to the show. Spielberg has done everything right, the opposite of what the cowards who mounted “WSS” on Broadway in 2019 did. He used Bernstein-Sondheim music, the Jerome Robbins dancing, the Laurents story. Kushner expanded, deepened every character with history and motivation. Early tweets declared this movie better than the original! But it’s not it can’t be. It’s just that the filmmakers had the gift of hindsight. They had a text to work from, whereas Laurents et al built it from the ground up.

The actors: I’m sorry but the entire ensemble is perfect, starting with Ansel Elgort and Rachel Zegler as Tony and Maria. I’m so glad I said from the outset that Elgort was right for this job. I saw it when he was in “Baby Driver.” Zegler is the find of finds. Ariana DeBose and Mike Faist are sensational as Anita and Riff. Audiences are not going to stop talking about them. Brian D’Arcy James and Corey Stoll are memorable as Krupke and Schrank, D’Arcy James is beautifully certain and perplexed about how to handle his gangs as the tractors and forklifts make way for a new world.

And then there is Rita Moreno, who won her Oscar 60 years for playing Anita, and now returns as Valentina, who runs the corner store. Spielberg gives her the gift of a lifetime (she’s 90 now) as the wise owl. And he resets the show’s most famous song, “Somewhere,” as an anthem in her voice for all the ages. She’s going to get another Oscar. You can’t not have a lump in your throat when she sings it.

Spielberg often is criticized for too much corniness, or not being serious when he needs to be. A master filmmaker who we’re not even appreciating now, he is taken for granted a lot of the time. He’s had his masterworks– ET, Schindler, Ryan, Close Encounters, Minority Report, War of the Worlds. But now he’s painted his masterpiece. (Plus he brought back the corner of 31st and 6th, where Gimbels, Willoughys cameras and the hot dog shop used to be. I cried.) “WSS” 2.0 is an 11/10. See it on the biggest screen you find.